home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
-
- The Crooked Man
-
-
- One summer night, a few months after my marriage, I was seated by my own
- hearth smoking a last pipe and nodding over a novel, for my day's work
- had been an exhausting one. My wife had already gone upstairs, and the
- sound of the locking of the hall door some time before told me that the
- servants had also retired. I had risen from my seat and was knocking out
- the ashes of my pipe when I suddenly heard the clang of the bell.
-
- I looked at the clock. It was a quarter to twelve. This could not be a
- visitor at so late an hour. A patient evidently, and possibly an
- all-night sitting. With a wry face I went out into the hall and opened
- the door. To my astonishment it was Sherlock Holmes who stood upon my
- step.
-
- "Ah, Watson," said he, "I hoped that I might not be too late to catch
- you."
-
- "My dear fellow, pray come in."
-
- "You look surprised, and no wonder! Relieved, too, I fancy! Hum! You
- still smoke the Arcadia mixture of your bachelor days, then! There's no
- mistaking that fluffy ash upon your coat. It's easy to tell that you
- have been accustomed to wear a uniform, Watson. You'll never pass as a
- pure-bred civilian as long as you keep that habit of carrying your
- handkerchief in your sleeve. Could you put me up to-night?"
-
- "With pleasure."
-
- "You told me that you had bachelor quarters for one, and I see that you
- have no gentleman visitor at present. Your hat-stand proclaims as much."
-
- "I shall be delighted if you will stay."
-
- "Thank you. I'll fill the vacant peg then. Sorry to see that you've had
- the British workman in the house. He's a token of evil. Not the drains,
- I hope?"
-
- "No, the gas."
-
- "Ah! He has left two nail-marks from his boot upon your linoleum just
- where the light strikes it. No, thank you, I had some supper at
- Waterloo, but I'll smoke a pipe with you with pleasure."
-
- I handed him my pouch, and he seated himself opposite to me and smoked
- for some time.in silence. I was well aware that nothing but business of
- importance would have brought him to me at such an hour, so I waited
- patiently until he should come round to it.
-
- "I see that you are professionally rather busy just now," said he,
- glancing very keenly across at me.
-
- "Yes, I've had a busy day," I answered. "It may seem very foolish in
- your eyes," I added, "but really I don't know how you deduced it."
-
- Holmes chuckled to himself.
-
- "I have the advantage of knowing your habits, my dear Watson," said he.
- "When your round is a short one you walk, and when it is a long one you
- use a hansom. As I perceive that your boots, although used, are by no
- means dirty, I cannot doubt that you are at present busy enough to
- justify the hansom."
-
- "Excellent!" I cried.
-
- "Elementary," said he. "It is one of those instances where the reasoner
- can produce an effect which seems remarkable to his neighbour, because
- the latter has missed the one little point which is the basis of the
- deduction. The same may be said, my dear fellow, for the effect of some
- of these little sketches of yours, which is entirely meretricious,
- depending as it does upon your retaining in your own hands some factors
- in the problem which are never imparted to the reader. Now, at present I
- am in the position of these same readers, for I hold in this hand
- several threads of one of the strangest cases which ever perplexed a
- man's brain, and yet I lack the one or two which are needful to complete
- my theory. But I'll have them, Watson, I'll have them!" His eyes kindled
- and a slight flush sprang into his thin cheeks. For an instant the veil
- had lifted upon his keen, intense nature, but for an instant only. When
- I glanced again his face had resumed that red-Indian composure which had
- made so many regard him as a machine rather than a man.
-
- "The problem presents features of interest," said he. "I may even say
- exceptional features of interest. I have already looked into the matter,
- and have come, as I think, within sight of my solution. If you could
- accompany me in that last step you might be of considerable service to
- me."
-
- "I should be delighted."
-
- "Could you go as far as Aldershot to-morrow?"
-
- "I have no doubt Jackson would take my practice."
-
- "Very good. I want to start by the 11:10 from Waterloo."
-
- "That would give me time."
-
- "Then, if you are not too sleepy, I will give you a sketch of what has
- happened, and of what remains to be done."
-
- "I was sleepy before you came. I am quite wakeful now."
-
- "I will compress the story as far as may be done without omitting
- anything vital to the case. It is conceivable that you may even have
- read some account of the matter. It is the supposed murder of Colonel
- Barclay, of the Royal Munsters, at Aldershot, which I am investigating."
-
- "I have heard nothing of it."
-
- "It has not excited much attention yet, except locally. The facts are
- only two days old. Briefly they are these:
-
- "The Royal Munsters is, as you know, one of the most famous Irish
- regiments in the British Army. It did wonders both in the Crimea and the
- Mutiny, and has since that time distinguished itself upon every possible
- occasion. It was commanded up to Monday night by James Barclay, a
- gallant veteran, who started as a full private, was raised to
- commissioned rank for his bravery at the time of the Mutiny, and so
- lived to command the regiment in which he had once carried a musket.
-
- "Colonel Barclay had married at the time when he was a sergeant, and his
- wife, whose maiden name was Miss Nancy Devoy, was the daughter of a
- former colour-sergeant in the same corps. There was, therefore, as can
- be imagined, some little social friction when the young couple (for they
- were still young) found themselves in their new surroundings. They
- appear, however, to have quickly adapted themselves, and Mrs. Barclay
- has always, I understand, been as popular with the ladies of the
- regiment as her husband was with his brother officers. I may add that
- she was a woman of great beauty, and that even now, when she has been
- married for upward of thirty years, she is still of a striking and
- queenly appearance.
-
- "Colonel Barclay's family life appears to have been a uniformly happy
- one. Major Murphy, to whom I owe most of my facts, assures me that he
- has never heard of any misunderstanding between the pair. On the whole,
- he thinks that Barclay's devotion to his wife was greater than his
- wife's to Barclay. He was acutely uneasy if he were absent from her for
- a day. She, on the other hand, though devoted and faithful, was less
- obtrusively affectionate. But they were regarded in the regiment as the
- very model of a middle-aged couple. There was absolutely nothing in
- their mutual relations to prepare people for the tragedy which was to
- follow.
-
- "Colonel Barclay himself seems to have had some singular traits in his
- character. He was a dashing, jovial old soldier in his usual mood, but
- there were occasions on which he seemed to show himself capable of
- considerable violence and vindictiveness. This side of his nature,
- however, appears never to have been turned towards his wife. Another
- fact which had struck Major Murphy and three out of five of the other
- officers with whom I conversed was the singular sort of depression which
- came upon him at times. As the major expressed it, the smile has often
- been struck from his mouth, as if by some invisible hand, when he has
- been joining in the gaieties and chaff of the mess-table. For days on
- end, when the mood was on him, he has been sunk in the deepest gloom.
- This and a certain tinge of superstition were the only unusual traits in
- his character which his brother officers had observed. The latter
- peculiarity took the form of a dislike to being left alone, especially
- after dark. This puerile feature in a nature which was conspicuously
- manly had often given rise to comment and conjecture.
-
- "The first battalion of the Royal Munsters (which is the old One Hundred
- and Seventeenth) has been stationed at Aldershot for some years. The
- married officers live out of barracks, and the colonel has during all
- this time occupied a villa called 'Lachine,' about half a mile from the
- north camp. The house stands in its own grounds, but the west side of it
- is not more than thirty yards from the highroad. A coachman and two
- maids form the staff of servants. These with their master and mistress
- were the sole occupants of Lachine, for the Barclays had no children,
- nor was it usual for them to have resident visitors.
-
- "Now for the events at Lachine between nine and ten on the evening of
- last Monday.
-
- "Mrs. Barclay was, it appears, a member of the Roman Catholic Church and
- had interested herself very much in the establishment of the Guild of
- St. George, which was formed in connection with the Watt Street Chapel
- for the purpose of supplying the poor with cast-off clothing. A meeting
- of the Guild had been held that evening at eight, and Mrs. Barclay had
- hurried over her dinner in order to be present at it. When leaving the
- house she was heard by the coachman to make some commonplace remark to
- her husband, and to assure him that she would be back before very long.
- She then called for Miss Morrison, a young lady who lives in the next
- villa and the two went off together to their meeting. It lasted forty
- minutes, and at a quarter-past nine Mrs. Barclay returned home, having
- left Miss Morrison at her door as she passed.
-
- "There is a room which is used as a morning-room at Lachine. This faces
- the road and opens by a large glass folding-door on to the lawn. The
- lawn is thirty yards across and is only divided from the highway by a
- low wall with an iron rail above it. It was into this room that Mrs.
- Barclay went upon her return. The blinds were not down, for the room was
- seldom used in the evening, but Mrs. Barclay herself lit the lamp and
- then rang the bell, asking Jane Stewart, the housemaid, to bring her a
- cup of tea, which was quite contrary to her usual habits. The colonel
- had been sitting in the dining-room, but, hearing that his wife had
- returned, he joined her in the morning-room. The coachman saw him cross
- the hall and enter it. He was never seen again alive.
-
- "The tea which had been ordered was brought up at the end of ten
- minutes; but the maid, as she approached the door, was surprised to hear
- the voices of her master and mistress in furious altercation. She
- knocked without receiving any answer, and even turned the handle, but
- only to find that the door was locked upon the inside. Naturally enough
- she ran down to tell the cook, and the two women with the coachman came
- up into the hall and listened to the dispute which was still raging.
- They all agreed that only two voices were to be heard, those of Barclay
- and of his wife. Barclay's remarks were subdued and abrupt so that none
- of them were audible to the listeners. The lady's, on the other hand,
- were most bitter, and when she raised her voice could be plainly heard.
- 'You coward!' she repeated over and over again. 'What can be done now?
- What can be done now? Give me back my life. I will never so much as
- breathe the same air with you again! You coward! You coward!' Those were
- scraps of her conversation, ending in a sudden dreadful cry in the man's
- voice, with a crash, and a piercing scream from the woman. Convinced
- that some tragedy had occurred, the coachman rushed to the door and
- strove to force it, while scream after scream issued from within. He was
- unable, however, to make his way in, and the maids were too distracted
- with fear to be of any assistance to him. A sudden thought struck him,
- however, and he ran through the hall door and round to the lawn upon
- which the long French windows open. One side of the window was open,
- which I understand was quite usual in the summertime, and he passed
- without difficulty into the room. His mistress had ceased to scream and
- was stretched insensible upon a couch, while with his feet tilted over
- the side of an armchair, and his head upon the ground near the corner of
- the fender, was Iying the unfortunate soldier stone dead in a pool of
- his own blood.
-
- "Naturally, the coachman's first thought, on finding that he could do
- nothing for his master, was to open the door. But here an unexpected and
- singular difficulty presented itself. The key was not in the inner side
- of the door, nor could he find it anywhere in the room. He went out
- again, therefore, through the window, and, having obtained the help of a
- policeman and of a medical man, he returned. The lady, against whom
- naturally the strongest suspicion rested, was removed to her room, still
- in a state of insensibility. The colonel's body was then placed upon the
- sofa and a careful examination made of the scene of the tragedy.
-
- "The injury from which the unfortunate veteran was suffering was found
- to be a jagged cut some two inches long at the back part of his head,
- which had evidently been caused by a violent blow from a blunt weapon.
- Nor was it difficult to guess what that weapon may have been. Upon the
- floor, close to the body, was lying a singular club of hard carved wood
- with a bone handle. The colonel possessed a varied collection of weapons
- brought from the different countries in which he had fought, and it is
- conjectured by the police that this club was among his trophies. The
- servants deny having seen it before, but among the numerous curiosities
- in the house it is possible that it may have been overlooked. Nothing
- else of importance was discovered in the room by the police, save the
- inexplicable fact that neither upon Mrs. Barclay's person nor upon that
- of the victim nor in any part of the room was the missing key to be
- found. The door had eventually to be opened by a locksmith from
- Aldershot.
-
- "That was the state of things, Watson, when upon the Tuesday morning I,
- at the request of Major Murphy, went down to Aldershot to supplement the
- efforts of the police. I think that you will acknowledge that the
- problem was already one of interest, but my observations soon made me
- realize that it was in truth much more extraordinary than would at first
- sight appear.
-
- "Before examining the room I cross-questioned the servants, but only
- succeeded in eliciting the facts which I have already stated. One other
- detail of interest was remembered by Jane Stewart, the housemaid. You
- will remember that on hearing the sound of the quarrel she descended and
- returned with the other servants. On that first occasion, when she was
- alone, she says that the voices of her master and mistress were sunk so
- low that she could hardly hear anything, and judged by their tones
- rather than their words that they had fallen out. On my pressing her,
- however, she remembered that she heard the word David uttered twice by
- the lady. The point is of the utmost importance as guiding us towards
- the reason of the sudden quarrel. The colonel's name, you remember, was
- James.
-
- "There was one thing in the case which had made the deepest impression
- both upon the servants and the police. This was the contortion of the
- colonel's face. It had set, according to their account, into the most
- dreadful expression of fear and horror which a human countenance is
- capable of assuming. More than one person fainted at the mere sight of
- him, so terrible was the effect. It was quite certain that he had
- foreseen his fate, and that it had caused him the utmost horror. This,
- of course, fitted in well enough with the police theory, if the colonel
- could have seen his wife making a murderous attack upon him. Nor was the
- fact of the wound being on the back of his head a fatal objection to
- this, as he might have turned to avoid the blow. No information could be
- got from the lady herself, who was temporarily insane from an acute
- attack of brain-fever.
-
- "From the police I learned that Miss Morrison, who you remember went out
- that evening with Mrs. Barclay, denied having any knowledge of what it
- was which had caused the ill-humour in which her companion had returned.
-
- "Having gathered these facts, Watson, I smoked several pipes over them,
- trying to separate those which were crucial from others which were
- merely incidental. There could be no question that the most distinctive
- and suggestive point in the case was the singular disappearance of the
- door-key. A most careful search had failed to discover it in the room.
- Therefore it must have been taken from it. But neither the colonel nor
- the colonel's wife could have taken it. That was perfectly clear.
- Therefore a third person must have entered the room. And that third
- person could only have come in through the window. It seemed to me that
- a careful examination of the room and the lawn might possibly reveal
- some traces of this mysterious individual. You know my methods, Watson.
- There was not one of them which I did not apply to the inquiry. And it
- ended by my discovering traces, but very different ones from those which
- I had expected. There had been a man in the room, and he had crossed the
- lawn coming from the road. I was able to obtain five very clear
- impressions of his footmarks: one in the roadway itself, at the point
- where he had climbed the low wall, two on the lawn, and two very faint
- ones upon the stained boards near the window where he had entered. He
- had apparently rushed across the lawn, for his toe-marks were much
- deeper than his heels. But it was not the man who surprised me. It was
- his companion."
-
- "His companion!"
-
- Holmes pulled a large sheet of tissue-paper out of his pocket and
- carefully unfolded it upon his knee.
-
- "What do you make of that?" he asked.
-
- The paper was covered with the tracings of the footmarks of some small
- animal. It had five well-marked footpads, an indication of long nails,
- and the whole print might be nearly as large as a dessert-spoon.
-
- "It's a dog," said I.
-
- "Did you ever hear of a dog running up a curtain? I found distinct
- traces that this creature had done so."
-
- "A monkey, then?"
-
- "But it is not the print of a monkey."
-
- "What can it be, then?"
-
- "Neither dog nor cat nor monkey nor any creature that we are familiar
- with. I have tried to reconstruct it from the measurements. Here are
- four prints where the beast has been standing motionless. You see that
- it is no less than fifteen inches from fore-foot to hind. Add to that
- the length of neck and head, and you get a creature not much less than
- two feet long -- probably more if there is any tail. But now observe
- this other measurement. The animal has been moving, and we have the
- length of its stride. In each case it is only about three inches. You
- have an indication, you see, of a long body with very short legs
- attached to it. It has not been considerate enough to leave any of its
- hair behind it. But its general shape must be what I have indicated, and
- it can run up a curtain. and it is carnivorous."
-
- "How do you deduce that?"
-
- "Because it ran up the curtain. A canary's cage was hanging in the
- window, and its aim seems to have been to get at the bird."
-
- "Then what was the beast?"
-
- "Ah, if I could give it a name it might go a long way towards solving
- the case. On the whole, it was probably some creature of the weasel and
- stoat tribe -- and yet it is larger than any of these that I have seen."
-
- "But what had it to do with the crime?"
-
- "That, also, is still obscure. But we have learned a good deal, you
- perceive. We know that a man stood in the road looking at the quarrcl
- between the Barclays -- the blinds were up and the room lighted. We
- know, also, that he ran across the lawn, entered the room, accompanied
- by a strange animal, and that he either struck the colonel or, as is
- equally possible, that the colonel fell down from sheer fright at the
- sight of him, and cut his head on the corner of the fender. Finally we
- have the curious fact that the intruder carried away the key with him
- when he left."
-
- "Your discoveries seem to have left the business more obscure than it
- was before," said I.
-
- "Quite so. They undoubtedly showed that the affair was much deeper than
- was at first conjectured. I thought the matter over, and I came to the
- conclusion that I must approach the case from another aspect. But
- really, Watson, I am keeping you up, and I might just as well tell you
- all this on our way to Aldershot to-morrow."
-
- "Thank you, you have gone rather too far to stop."
-
- "It is quite certain that when Mrs. Barclay left the house at half-past
- seven she was on good terms with her husband. She was never, as I think
- I have said, ostentatiously affectionate, but she was heard by the
- coachman chatting with the colonel in a friendly fashion. Now, it was
- equally certain that, immediately on her return, she had gone to the
- room in which she was least likely to see her husband, had flown to tea
- as an agitated woman will, and finally, on his coming in to her, had
- broken into violent recriminations. Therefore something had occurred
- between seven-thirty and nine o'clock which had completely altered her
- feelings towards him. But Miss Morrison had been with her during the
- whole of that hour and a half. It was absolutely certain, therefore, in
- spite of her denial, that she must know something of the matter.
-
- "My first conjecture was that possibly there had been some passages
- between this young lady and the old soldier, which the former had now
- confessed to the wife. That would account for the angry return, and also
- for the girl's denial that anything had occurred. Nor would it be
- entirely incompatible with most of the words overheard. But there was
- the reference to David, and therc was the known affection of the colonel
- for his wife to weigh against it, to say nothing of the tragic intrusion
- of this other man, which might, of course, be entirely disconnected with
- what had gone before. It was not easy to pick one's steps, but, on the
- whole, I was inclined to dismiss the idea that there had been anything
- between the colonel and Miss Morrison, but more than ever convinced that
- the young lady held the clue as to what it was which had turned Mrs.
- Barclay to hatred of her husband. I took the obvious course, therefore,
- of calling upon Miss M., of explaining to her that I was perfectly
- certain that she held the facts in her possession, and of assuring her
- that her friend, Mrs. Barclay, might find herself in the dock upon a
- capital charge unless the matter were cleared up.
-
- "Miss Morrison is a little ethereal slip of a girl, with timid eyes and
- blond hair, but I found her by no means wanting in shrewdness and common
- sense. She sat thinking for some time after I had spoken, and then,
- turning to me with a brisk air of resolution, she broke into a
- remarkable statement which I will condense for your benefit.
-
- " 'I promised my friend that I would say nothing of the matter, and a
- promise is a promise,' said she; 'but if I can really help her when so
- serious a charge is laid against her, and when her own mouth, poor
- darling, is closed by illness, then I think I am absolved from my
- promise. I will tell you exactly what happened upon Monday evening.
-
- " 'We were returning from the Watt Street Mission about a quarter to
- nine o'clock. On our way we had to pass through Hudson Street, which is
- a very quiet thoroughfare. There is only one lamp in it, upon the
- left-hand side, and as we approached this lamp I saw a man coming
- towards us with his back very bent, and something like a box slung over
- one of his shoulders. He appeared to be deformed, for he carried his
- head low and walked with his knees bent. We were passing him when he
- raised his face to look at us in the circle of light thrown by the lamp,
- and as he did so he stopped and screamed out in a dreadful voice, "My
- God, it's Nancy!" Mrs. Barclay turned as white as death and would have
- fallen down had the dreadful-looking creature not caught hold of her. I
- was going to call for the police, but she, to my surprise, spoke quite
- civilly to the fellow.
-
- " ' "I thought you had been dead this thirty years, Henry," said she in
- a shaking voice.
-
- " ' "So I have," said he, and it was awful to hear the tones that he
- said it in. He had a very dark, fearsome face, and a gleam in his eyes
- that comes back to me in my dreams. His hair and whiskers were shot with
- gray, and his face was all crinkled and puckered like a withered apple.
-
- " ' "Just walk on a little way, dear," said Mrs. Barclay; "I want to
- have a word with this man. There is nothing to be afraid of." She tried
- to speak boldly, but she was still deadly pale and could hardly get her
- words out for the trembling of her lips.
-
- " 'I did as she asked me, and they talked together for a few minutes.
- Then she came down the street with her eyes blazing, and I saw the
- crippled wretch standing by the lamp-post and shaking his clenched fists
- in the air as if he were mad with rage. She never said a word until we
- were at the door here, when she took me by the hand and begged me to
- tell no one what had happened.
-
- " ' "It's an old acquaintance of mine who has come down in the world,"
- said she. When I promised her I would say nothing she kissed me, and I
- have never seen her since. I have told you now the whole truth, and if I
- withheld it from the police it is because I did not realize then the
- danger in which my dear friend stood. I know that it can only be to her
- advantage that everything should be known.'
-
- "There was her statement, Watson, and to me, as you can imagine, it was
- like a light on a dark night. Everything which had been disconnected
- before began at once to assume its true place, and I had a shadowy
- presentiment of the whole sequence of events. My next step obviously was
- to find the man who had produced such a remarkable impression upon Mrs.
- Barclay. If he were still in Aldershot it should not be a very difficult
- matter. There are not such a very great number of civilians, and a
- deformed man was sure to have attracted attention. I spent a day in the
- search, and by evening -- this very evening, Watson -- I had run him
- down. The man's name is Henry Wood, and he lives in lodgings in this
- same street in which the ladies met him. He has only been five days in
- the place. In the character of a registration-agent I had a most
- interesting gossip with his landlady. The man is by trade a conjurer and
- performer, going round the canteens after nightfall, and giving a little
- entertainment at each. He carries some creature about with him in that
- box, about which the landlady seemed to be in considerable trepidation,
- for she had never seen an animal like it. He uses it in some of his
- tricks according to her account. So much the woman was able to tell me,
- and also that it was a wonder the man lived, seeing how twisted he was,
- and that he spoke in a strange tongue sometimes, and that for the last
- two nights she had heard him groaning and weeping in his bedroom. He was
- all right, as far as money went, but in his deposit he had given her
- what looked like a bad florin. She showed it to me, Watson, and it was
- an Indian rupee.
-
- "So now, my dear fellow, you see exactly how we stand and why it is I
- want you. It is perfectly plain that after the ladies parted from this
- man he followed them at a distance, that he saw the quarrel between
- husband and wife through the window, that he rushed in, and that the
- creature which he carried in his box got loose. That is all very
- certain. But he is the only person in this world who can tell us exactly
- what happened in that room."
-
- "And you intend to ask him?"
-
- "Most certainly -- but in the presence of a witness."
-
- "And I am the witness?"
-
- "If you will be so good. If he can clear the matter up, well and good.
- If he refuses, we have no alternative but to apply for a warrant."
-
- "But how do you know he'll be there when we return?"
-
- "You may be sure that I took some precautions. I have one of my Baker
- Street boys mounting guard over him who would stick to him like a burr,
- go where he might. We shall find him in Hudson Street to-morrow, Watson,
- and meanwhile I should be the criminal myself if I kept you out of bed
- any longer."
-
- It was midday when we found ourselves at the scene of the tragedy, and,
- under my companion's guidance, we made our way at once to Hudson Street.
- In spite of his capacity for concealing his emotions, I could easily see
- that Holmes was in a state of suppressed excitement, while I was myself
- tingling with that half-sporting, half-intellectual pleasure which I
- invariably experienced when I associated myself with him in his
- investigations.
-
- "This is the street," said he as we turned into a short thoroughfare
- lined with plain two-storied brick houses. "Ah, here is Simpson to
- report."
-
- "He's in all right, Mr. Holmes," cried a small street Arab, running up
- to us.
-
- "Good, Simpson!" said Holmes, patting him on the head. "Come along,
- Watson. This is the house." He sent in his card with a message that he
- had come on important business, and a moment later we were face to face
- with the man whom we had come to see. In spite of the warm weather he
- was crouching over a fire, and the little room was like an oven. The man
- sat all twisted and huddled in his chair in a way which gave an
- indescribable impression of deformity; but the face which he turned
- towards us, though worn and swarthy, must at some time have been
- remarkable for its beauty. He looked suspiciously at us now out of
- yellow-shot, bilious eyes, and, without speaking or rising, he waved
- towards two chairs.
-
- "Mr. Henry Wood, late of India, I believe," said Holmes affably. "I've
- come over this little matter of Colonel Barclay's death."
-
- "What should I know about that?"
-
- "That's what I want to ascertain. You know, I suppose, that unless the
- matter is cleared up, Mrs. Barclay, who is an old friend of yours, will
- in all probability be tried for murder."
-
- The man gave a violent start.
-
- "I don't know who you are," he cried, "nor how you come to know what you
- do know, but will you swear that this is true that you tell me?"
-
- "Why, they are only waiting for her to come to her senses to arrest
- her."
-
- "My God! Are you in the police yourself?"
-
- "No."
-
- "What business is it of yours, then?"
-
- "It's every man's business to see justice done."
-
- "You can take my word that she is innocent."
-
- "Then you are guilty."
-
- "No, I am not."
-
- "Who killed Colonel James Barclay, then?"
-
- "It was a just Providence that killed him. But, mind you this, that if I
- had knocked his brains out, as it was in my heart to do, he would have
- had no more than his due from my hands. If his own guilty conscience had
- not struck him down it is likely enough that I might have had his blood
- upon my soul. You want me to tell the story. Well, I don't know why I
- shouldn't, for there's no cause for me to be ashamed of it.
-
- "It was in this way, sir. You see me now with my back like a camel and
- my ribs all awry, but there was a time when Corporal Henry Wood was the
- smartest man in the One Hundred and Seventeenth foot. We were in India,
- then, in cantonments, at a place we'll call Bhurtee. Barclay, who died
- the other day, was sergeant in the same company as myself, and the belle
- of the regiment, ay, and the finest girl that ever had the breath of
- life between her lips, was Nancy Devoy, the daughter of the
- coloursergeant. There were two men that loved her, and one that she
- loved, and you'll smile when you look at this poor thing huddled before
- the fire and hear me say that it was for my good looks that she loved
- me.
-
- "Well, though I had her heart, her father was set upon her marrying
- Barclay. I was a harum-scarum, reckless lad, and he had had an education
- and was already marked for the sword-belt. But the girl held true to me,
- and it seemed that I would have had her when the Mutiny broke out, and
- all hell was loose in the country.
-
- "We were shut up in Bhurtee, the regiment of us with half a battery of
- artillery, a company of Sikhs, and a lot of civilians and women-folk.
- There were ten thousand rebels round us, and they were as keen as a set
- of terriers round a rat-cage. About the second week of it our water gave
- out, and it was a question whether we could communicate with General
- Neill's column, which was moving up-country. It was our only chance, for
- we could not hope to fight our way out with all the women and children,
- so I volunteered to go out and to warn General Neill of our danger. My
- offer was accepted, and I talked it over with Sergeant Barclay, who was
- supposed to know the ground better than any other man, and who drew up a
- route by which I might get through the rebel lines. At ten o'clock the
- same night I started off upon my journey. There were a thousand lives to
- save, but it was of only one that I was thinking when I dropped over the
- wall that night.
-
- "My way ran down a dried-up watercourse, which we hoped would screen me
- from the enemy's sentries; but as I crept round the corner of it I
- walked right into six of them, who were crouching down in the dark
- waiting for me. In an instant I was stunned with a blow and bound hand
- and foot. But the real blow was to my heart and not to my head, for as I
- came to and listened to as much as I could understand of their talk, I
- heard enough to tell me that my comrade, the very man who had arranged
- the way I was to take, had betrayed me by means of a native servant into
- the hands of the enemy.
-
- "Well, there's no need for me to dwell on that part of it. You know now
- what James Barclay was capable of. Bhurtee was relieved by Neill next
- day, but the rebels took me away with them in their retreat, and it was
- many a long year before ever I saw a white face again. I was tortured
- and tried to get away, and was captured and tortured again. You can see
- for yourselves the state in which I was left. Some of them that fled
- into Nepal took me with them, and then afterwards I was up past
- Darjeeling. The hill-folk up there murdered the rebels who had me, and I
- became their slave for a time until I escaped; but instead of going
- south I had to go north, until I found myself among the Afghans. There I
- wandered about for many a year, and at last came back to the Punjab,
- where I lived mostly among the natives and picked up a living by the
- conjuring tricks that I had learned. What use was it for me, a wretched
- cripple, to go back to England or to make myself known to my old
- comrades? Even my wish for revenge would not make me do that. I had
- rather that Nancy and my old pals should think of Harry Wood as having
- died with a straight back, than see him living and crawling with a stick
- like a chimpanzee. They never doubted that I was dead, and I meant that
- they never should. I heard that Barclay had married Nancy, and that he
- was rising rapidly in the regiment, but even that did not make me speak.
-
- "But when one gets old one has a longing for home. For years I've been
- dreaming of the bright green fields and the hedges of England. At last I
- determined to see them before I died. I saved enough to bring me across,
- and then I came here where the soldiers are, for I know their ways and
- how to amuse them and so earn enough to keep me."
-
- "Your narrative is most interesting," said Sherlock Holmes. "I have
- already heard of your meeting with Mrs. Barclay, and your mutual
- recognition. You then, as I understand, followed her home and saw
- through the window an altercation between her husband and her, in which
- she doubtless cast his conduct to you in his teeth. Your own feelings
- overcame you, and you ran across the lawn and broke in upon them."
-
- "I did, sir, and at the sight of me he looked as I have never seen a man
- look before, and over he went with his head on the fender. But he was
- dead before he fell. I read death on his face as plain as I can read
- that text over the fire. The bare sight of me was like a bullet through
- his guilty heart."
-
- "And then?"
-
- "Then Nancy fainted, and I caught up the key of the door from her hand,
- intending to unlock it and get help. But as I was doing it it seemed to
- me better to leave it alone and get away, for the thing might look black
- against me, and anyway my secret would be out if I were taken. In my
- haste I thrust the key into my pocket, and dropped my stick while I was
- chasing Teddy, who had run up the curtain. When I got him into his box,
- from which he had slipped, I was off as fast as I could run."
-
- "Who's Teddy?" asked Holmes.
-
- The man leaned over and pulled up the front of a kind of hutch in the
- corner. In an instant out there slipped a beautiful reddishbrown
- creature, thin and lithe, with the legs of a stoat, a long, thin nose,
- and a pair of the finest red eyes that ever I saw in an animal's head.
-
- "It's a mongoose," I cried.
-
- "Well, some call them that, and some call them ichneumon," said the man.
- "Snake-catcher is what I call them, and Teddy is amazing quick on
- cobras. I have one here without the fangs, and Teddy catches it every
- night to please the folk in the canteen.
-
- "Any other point, sir?"
-
- "Well, we may have to apply to you again if Mrs. Barclay should prove to
- be in serious trouble."
-
- "In that case, of course, I'd come forward."
-
- "But if not, there is no object in raking up this scandal against a dead
- man, foully as he has acted. You have at least the satisfaction of
- knowing that for thirty years of his life his conscience bitterly
- reproached him for his wicked deed. Ah, there goes Major Murphy on the
- other side of the street. Good-bye, Wood. I want to learn if anything
- has happened since yesterday."
-
- We were in time to overtake the major before he reached the corner.
-
- "Ah, Holmes," he said, "I suppose you have heard that all this fuss has
- come to nothing?"
-
- "What then?"
-
- "The }nquest is just over. The medical evidence showed conclusively that
- death was due to apoplexy. You see it was quite a simple case. after
- all."
-
- "Oh, remarkably superficial," said Holmes, smiling. "Come, Watson, I
- don't think we shall be wanted in Aldershot any more."
-
- "There's one thing," said I as we walked down to the station. "If the
- husband's name was James, and the other was Henry, what was this talk
- about David?"
-
- "That one word, my dear Watson, should have told me the whole story had
- I been the ideal reasoner which you are so fond of depicting. It was
- evidently a term of reproach."
-
- "Of reproach?''
-
- "Yes; David strayed a little occasionally, you know, and on one occasion
- in the same direction as Sergeant James Barclay. You remember the small
- affair of Uriah and Bathsheba? My Biblical knowledge is a trifle rusty,
- I fear, but you will find the story in the first or second of Samuel."
-