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- The Musgrave Ritual
-
-
- An anomaly which often struck me in the character of my friend Sherlock
- Holmes was that, although in his methods of thought he was the neatest
- and most methodical of mankind, and although also he affected a certain
- quiet primness of dress, he was none the less in his personal habits one
- of the most untidy men that ever drove a fellow-lodger to distraction.
- Not that I am in the least conventional in that respect myself. The
- rough-and-tumble work in Afghanistan, coming on the top of natural
- Bohemianism of disposition, has made me rather more lax than befits a
- medical man. But with me there is a limit, and when I find a man who
- keeps his cigars in the coal-scuttle, his tobacco in the toe end of a
- Persian slipper, and his unanswered correspondence transfixed by a
- jack-knife into the very centre of his wooden mantelpiece, then I begin
- to give myself virtuous airs. I have always held, too, that pistol
- practice should be distinctly an open-air pastime; and when Holmes, in
- one of his queer humours, would sit in an armchair with his hair-trigger
- and a hundred Boxer cartridges and proceed to adorn the opposite wall
- with a patnotic V. R. done in bullet-pocks, I felt strongly that neither
- the atmosphere nor the appearance of our room was improved by it.
-
- Our chambers were always full of chemicals and of criminal relics which
- had a way of wandering into unlikely positions, and of turning up in the
- butter-dish or in even less desirable places. But his papers were my
- great crux. He had a horror of destroying documents, especially those
- which were connected with his past cases, and yet it was only once in
- every year or two that he would muster energy to docket and arrange
- them; for, as I have mentioned somewhere in these incoherent memoirs,
- tbe outbursts of passionate energy when he performed the remarkable
- feats with which his name is associated were followed by reactions of
- lethargy during which he would lie about with his violin and his books,
- hardly moving save from the sofa to the table. Thus month after month
- his papers accumulated until every corner of the room was stacked with
- bundles of manuscript which were on no account to be burned, and which
- could not be put away save by their owner. One winter's night, as we sat
- together by the fire, I ventured to suggest to him that, as he had
- finished pasting extracts into his commonplace book, he might employ the
- next two hours in making our room a little more habitable. He could not
- deny the justice of my request, so with a rather rueful face he went off
- to his bedroom, from which he returned presently pulling a large tin box
- behind him. This he placed in the middle of the floor, and, squatting
- down upon a stool in front of it, he threw back the lid. I could see
- that it was already a third full of bundles of paper tied up with red
- tape into separate packages.
-
- "There are cases enough here, Watson," said he, looking at me with
- mischievous eyes. "I think that if you knew all that I had in this box
- you would ask me to pull some out instead of putting others in."
-
- "These are the records of your early work, then?" I asked. "I have often
- wished that I had notes of those cases."
-
- "Yes, my boy, these were all done prematurely before my biographer had
- come to glorify me." He lifted bundle after bundle in a tender,
- caressing sort of way. "They are not all successes, Watson," said he.
- "But there are some pretty little problems among them. Here's the record
- of the Tarleton murders, and the case of Vamberry, the wine merchant,
- and the adventure of the old Russian woman, and the singular affair of
- the aluminum crutch, as well as a full account of Ricoletti of the
- club-foot, and his abominable wife. And here -- ah. now. this really is
- something a little recherche."
-
- He dived his arm down to the bottom of the chest and brought up a small
- wooden box with a sliding lid such as children's toys are kept in. From
- within he produced a crumpled piece of paper, an old-fashioned brass
- key, a peg of wood with a ball of string attached to it, and three rusty
- old discs of metal.
-
- "Well, my boy, what do you make of this lot?" he asked, smiling at my
- expression.
-
- "It is a curious collection."
-
- "Very curious, and the story that hangs round it will strike you as
- being more curious still."
-
- "These relics have a history, then?"
-
- "So much so that they are history."
-
- "What do you mean by that?"
-
- Sherlock Holmes picked them up one by one and laid them along the edge
- of the table. Then he reseated himself in his chair and looked them over
- with a gleam of satisfaction in his eyes.
-
- "These," said he, "are all that I have left to remind me of the
- adventure of the Musgrave Ritual."
-
- I had heard him mention the case more than once, though I had never been
- able to gather the details. "I should be so glad," said I, "if you would
- give me an account of it."
-
- "And leave the litter as it is?" he cried mischievously. "Your tidiness
- won't bear much strain, after all, Watson. But I should be glad that you
- should add this case to your annals, for there are points in it which
- make it quite unique in the criminal records of this or, I believe, of
- any other country. A collection of my trifling achievements would
- certainly be incomplete which contained no account of this very singular
- business.
-
- "You may remember how the affair of the Gloria Scott, and my
- conversation with the unhappy man whose fate I told you of, first turned
- my attention in the direction of the profession which has become my
- life's work. You see me now when my name has become known far and wide,
- and when I am generally recognized both by the public and by the
- official force as being a final court of appeal in doubtful cases. Even
- when you knew me first, at the time of the affair which you have
- commemorated in 'A Study in Scarlet,' I had already established a
- considerable, though not a very lucrative, connection. You can hardly
- realize, then, how difficult I found it at first, and how long I had to
- wait before I succeeded in making any headway.
-
- "When I first came up to London I had rooms in Montague Street, just
- round the corner from the British Museum, and there I waited, filling in
- my too abundant leisure time bv studying all those branches of science
- which might make me more efficient. Now and again cases came in my way,
- principally through the introduction of old fellow-students, for during
- my last years at the university there was a good deal of talk there
- about myself and my methods. The third of these cases was that of the
- Musgrave Ritual, and it is to the interest which was aroused by that
- singular chain of events, and the large issues which proved to be at
- stake, that I trace my first stride towards the position which I now
- hold.
-
- "Reginald Musgrave had been in the same college as myself, and I had
- some slight acquaintance with him. He was not generally popular among
- the undergraduates, though it always seemed to me that what was set down
- as pride was really an attempt to cover extreme natural diffidence. In
- appearance he was a man of an exceedingly aristocratic type, thin,
- high-nosed, and large-eyed, with languid and yet courtly manners. He was
- indeed a scion of one of the very oldest families in the kingdom though
- his branch was a cadet one which had separated from the northern
- Musgraves some time in the sixteenth century and had established itself
- in western Sussex, where the Manor House of Hurlstone is perhaps the
- oldest inhabited building in the county. Something of his birth-place
- seemed to cling to the man, and I never looked at his pale, keen face or
- the poise of his head without associating him with gray archways and
- mullioned windows and all the venerable wreckage of a feudal keep. Once
- or twice we drifted into talk, and I can remember that more than once he
- expressed a keen interest in my methods of observation and inference.
-
- "For four years I had seen nothing of him until one morning he walked
- into my room in Montague Street. He had changed little, was dressed like
- a young man of fashion -- he was always a bit of a dandy -- and
- preserved the same quiet, suave manner which had formerly distinguished
- him.
-
- " 'How has all gone with you, Musgrave?' I asked after we had cordially
- shaken hands.
-
- " 'You probably heard of my poor father's death,' said he; 'he was
- carried off about two years ago. Since then I have of course had the
- Hurlstone estate to manage, and as I am member for my district as well,
- my life has been a busy one. But I understand, Holmes, that you are
- turning to practical ends those powers with which you used to amaze us?'
-
- " 'Yes,' said I, 'I have taken to living by my wits.'
-
- " 'I am delighted to hear it, for your advice at present would be
- exceedingly valuable to me. We have had some very strange doings at
- Hurlstone, and the police have been able to throw no light upon the
- matter. It is really the most extraordinary and inexplicable business.'
-
- "You can imagine with what eagerness I listened to him, Watson, for the
- very chance for which I had been panting during all those months of
- inaction seemed to have come within my reach. In my inmost heart I
- believed that I could succeed where others failed, and now I had the
- opportunity to test myself.
-
- " 'Pray let me have the details,' I cried.
-
- "Reginald Musgrave sat down opposite to me and lit the cigarette which I
- had pushed towards him.
-
- " 'You must know,' said he, 'that though I am a bachelor, I have to keep
- up a considerable staff of servants at Hurlstone, for it is a rambling
- old place and takes a good deal of looking after. I preserve, too, and
- in the pheasant months I usually have a house-party, so that it would
- not do to be short-handed. Altogether there are eight maids, the cook,
- the butler, two footmen, and a boy. The garden and the stables of course
- have a separate staff.
-
- " 'Of these servants the one who had been longest in our service was
- Brunton, the butler. He was a young schoolmaster out of place when he
- was first taken up by my father, but he was a man of great energy and
- character, and he soon became quite invaluable in the household. He was
- a well-grown, handsome man, with a splendid forehead, and though he has
- been with us for twenty years he cannot be more than forty now. With his
- personal advantages and his extraordinary gifts -- for he can speak
- several languages and play nearly every musical instrument -- it is
- wonderful that he should have been satisfied so long in such a position,
- but I suppose that he was comfortable and lacked energy to make any
- change. The butler of Hurlstone is always a thing that is remembered by
- all who visit us.
-
- " 'But this paragon has one fault. He is a bit of a Don Juan, and you
- can imagine that for a man like him it is not a very difficult part to
- play in a quiet country district. When he was married it was all right,
- but since he has been a widower we have had no end of trouble with him.
- A few months ago we were in hopes that he was about to settle down
- again, for he became engaged to Rachel Howells, our second housemaid;
- but he has thrown her over since then and taken up with Janet Tregellis,
- the daughter of the head game-keeper. Rachel -- who is a very good girl,
- but of an excitable Welsh temperament -- had a sharp touch of
- brain-fever and goes about the house now -- or did until yesterday --
- like a black-eyed shadow of her former self. That was our first drama at
- Hurlstone; but a second one came to drive it from our minds, and it was
- prefaced by the disgrace and dismissal of butler Brunton.
-
- " 'This was how it came about. I have said that the man was intelligent,
- and this very intelligence has caused his ruin, for it seems to have led
- to an insatiable curiosity about things which did not in the least
- concern him. I had no idea of the lengths to which this would carry him
- until the merest accident opened my eyes to it.
-
- " 'I have said that the house is a rambling one. One day last week -- on
- Thursday night, to be more exact -- I found that I could not sleep,
- having foolishly taken a cup of strong cafe' noir after my dinner. After
- struggling against it until two in the morning, I felt that it was quite
- hopeless, so I rose and lit the candle with the intention af continuing
- a novel which I was reading. The book, however, had been left in the
- billiard-room, so I pulled on my dressing-gown and started off to get
- it.
-
- " 'In order to reach the biilliard-room I had to descend a flight of
- stairs and then to cross the head of a passage which led to the library
- and the gun-room. You can imagine my surprise when, as I looked down
- this corridor. I saw a glimmer of light coming from the open door of the
- library. I had myself extinguished the lamp and closed the door before
- coming to bed. Naturally my first thought was of burglar. The corridors
- at Hurlstone have their walls largely decorated with trophies of old
- weapons. From one of these I picked a battle-axe, and then, leaving my
- candle behind me, I crept on tiptoe down the passage and peeped in at
- the open door.
-
- " 'Brunton, the butler, was in the library. He was sitting fully
- dressed, in an easy-chair, with a slip of paper which looked like a map
- upon his knee, and his forehead sunk forward upon his hand in deep
- thought. I stood dumb with astonishment, watching him from the darkness.
- A small taper on the edge of the table shed a feeble light which
- sufficed to show me that he was fully dressed. Suddenly, as I looked, he
- rose from his chair, and, walking over to a bureau at the side, he
- unlocked it and drew out one of the drawers. From this he took a paper,
- and, returning to his seat, he flattened it out beside the taper on the
- edge of the table and began to study it with minute attention. My
- indignation at this calm examination of our family documents overcame me
- so far that I took a step forward, and Brunton, looking up. saw me
- standing in the doorway. He sprang to his feet, his face turned livid
- with fear, and he thrust into his breast the chart-like paper which he
- had been originally studying.
-
- " ' "So!" said I. "This is how you repay the trust which we have reposed
- in you. You will leave my service to-morrow."
-
- " 'He bowed with the look of a man who is utterly crushed and slunk past
- me without a word. The taper was still on the table, and by its light I
- glanced to see what the paper was which Brunton had taken from the
- bureau. To my surprise it was nothing of any importance at all, but
- simply a copy of the questions and answers in the singular old
- observance called the Musgrave Ritual. It is a sort of ceremony peculiar
- to our family, which each Musgrave for centuries past has gone through
- on his coming of age -- a thing of private interest, and perhaps of some
- little importance to the archaeologist, like our own blazonings and
- charges, but of no practical use whatever.'
-
- " 'We had better come back to the paper afterwards,' said I.
-
- " 'If you think it really necessary,' he answered with some hesitation.
- 'To continue my statement, however: I relocked the bureau, using the key
- which Brunton had left, and I had turned to go when I was surprised to
- find that the butler had returned, and was standing before me.
-
- " ' "Mr. Musgrave, sir," he cried in a voice which was hoarse with
- emotion, "I can't bear disgrace, sir. I've always been proud above my
- station in life, and disgrace would kill me. My blood will be on your
- head, sir -- it will, indeed -- if you drive me to despair. If you
- cannot keep me after what has passed, then for God's sake let me give
- you notice and leave in a month, as if of my own free will. I could
- stand that, Mr. Musgrave, but not to be cast out before all the folk
- that I know so well."
-
- " ' "You don't deserve much consideration, Brunton," I answered. "Your
- conduct has been most infamous. However, as you have been a long time in
- the family, I have no wish to bring public disgrace upon you. A month,
- however. is too long. Take yourself away in a week, and give what reason
- you like for going."
-
- " ' "Only a week, sir?" he cried in a despairing voice. "A fortnight --
- say at least a fortnight!"
-
- " ' "A week," I repeated, "and you may consider yourself to have been
- very leniently dealt with."
-
- " 'He crept away, his face sunk upon his breast, like a broken man,
- while I put out the light and returned to my room.
-
- " 'For two days after this Brunton was most assiduous in his attention
- to his duties. I made no allusion to what had passed and waited with
- some curiosity to see how he would cover his disgrace. On the third
- morning, however, he did not appear, as was his custom, after breakfast
- to receive my instructions for the day. As I left the dining-room I
- happened to meet Rachel Howells, the maid. I have told you that she had
- only recently recovered from an illness and was looking so wretchedly
- pale and wan that I remonstrated with her for being at work.
-
- " ' "You should be in bed," I said. "Come back to your duties when you
- are stronger."
-
- " 'She looked at me with so strange an expression that I began to
- suspect that her brain was affected.
-
- " ' "I am strong enough, Mr. Musgrave," said she.
-
- " ' "We will see what the doctor says," I answered. "You must stop work
- now, and when you go downstairs just say that I wish to see Brunton."
-
- " ' "The butler is gone," said she.
-
- " ' "Gone! Gone where?"
-
- " ' "He is gone. No one has seen him. He is not in his room. Oh, yes, he
- is gone, he is gone!" She fell back against the wall with shriek after
- shriek of laughter, while I, horrified at this sudden hysterical attack,
- rushed to the bell to summon help. The girl was taken to her room, still
- screaming and sobbing, while I made inquiries about Brunton. There was
- no doubt about it that he had disappeared. His bed had not been slept
- in, he had been seen by no one since he had retired to his room the
- night before, and yet it was difficult to see how he could have left the
- house, as both windows and doors were found to be fastened in the
- morning. His clothes, his watch, and even his money were in his room,
- but the black suit which he usually wore was missing. His slippers, too,
- were gone, but his boots were left behind. Where then could butler
- Brunton have gone in the night, and what could have become of him now?
-
- " 'Of course we searched the house from cellar to garret, but there was
- no trace of him. It is, as I have said, a labyrinth of an old house,
- especially the original wing, which is now practically uninhabited; but
- we ransacked every room and cellar without discovering the least sign of
- the missing man. It was incredible to me that he could have gone away
- leaving all his property behind him, and yet where could he be? I called
- in the local police, but without success. Rain had fallen on the night
- before. and we examined the lawn and the paths all round the house, but
- in vain. Matters were in this state, when a new development quite drew
- our attention away from the original mystery.
-
- " 'For two days Rachel Howells had been so ill, sometimes delirious,
- sometimes hysterical, that a nurse had been employed to sit up with her
- at night. On the third night after Brunton's disappearance, the nurse,
- finding her patient sleeping nicely, had dropped into a nap in the
- armchair, when she woke in the early morning to find the bed empty, the
- window open, and no signs of the invalid. I was instantly aroused, and,
- with the two footmen, started off at once in search of the missing girl.
- It was not difficult to tell the direction which she had taken, for,
- starting from under her window, we could follow her footmarks easily
- across the lawn to the edge of the mere, where they vanished close to
- the gravel path which leads out of the grounds. The lake there is eight
- feet deep, and you can imagine our feelings when we saw that the trail
- of the poor demented girl came to an end at the edge of it.
-
- " 'Of course, we had the drags at once and set to work to recover the
- remains, but no trace of the body could we find. On the other hand, we
- brought to the surface an object of a most unexpected kind. It was a
- linen bag which contained within it a mass of old rusted. and
- discoloured metal and several dullcoloured pieces of pebble or glass.
- This strange find was all that we could get from the mere, and, although
- we made every possible search and inquiry yesterday, we know nothing of
- the fate either of Rachel Howells or of Richard Brunton. The county
- police are at their wit's end, and I have come up to you as a last
- resource.'
-
- "You can imagine, Watson, with what eagerness I listened to this
- extraordinary sequence of events, and endeavoured to piece them
- together, and to devise some common thread upon which they might all
- hang. The butler was gone. The maid was gone. The maid had loved the
- butler, but had afterwards had cause to hate him. She was of Welsh
- blood, fiery and passionate. She had been terribly excited immediately
- after his disappearance. She had flung into the lake a bag containing
- some curious contents. These were all factors which had to be taken into
- consideration, and yet none of them got quite to the heart of the
- matter. What was the starting-point of this chain of events? There lay
- the end of this tangled line.
-
- " 'I must see that paper, Musgrave,' said I, 'which this butler of yours
- thought it worth his while to consult, even at the risk of the loss of
- his place.'
-
- " 'It is rather an absurd business, this ritual of ours,' he answered.
- 'But it has at least the saving grace of antiquity to excuse it. I have
- a copy of the questions and answers here if you care to run your eye
- over them.'
-
- "He handed me the very paper which I have here, Watson, and this is the
- strange catechism to which each Musgrave had to submit when he came to
- man's estate. I will read you the questions and answers as they stand.
-
- " 'Whose was it?'
-
- " 'His who is gone.'
-
- " 'Who shall have it?'
-
- " 'He who will come.'
-
- " 'Where was the sun?'
-
- " 'Over the oak.'
-
- " 'Where was the shadow?'
-
- " 'Under the elm.'
-
- " 'How was it stepped?'
-
- " 'North by ten and by ten, east by five and by five, south by two and
- by two, west by one and by one, and so under.'
-
- " 'What shall we give for it?'
-
- " 'All that is ours.'
-
- " 'Why should we give it?'
-
- " 'For the sake of the trust.'
-
- " 'The original has no date, but is in the spelling of the middle of the
- seventeenth century,' remarked Musgrave. 'I am afraid, however, that it
- can be of little help to you in solving this mystery.'
-
- " 'At least,' said I, 'it gives us another mystery, and one which is
- even more interesting than the first. It may be that the solution of the
- one may prove to be the solution of the other. You will excuse me,
- Musgrave, if I say that your butler appears to me to have been a very
- clever man, and to have had a clearer insight than ten generations of
- his masters.'
-
- " 'I hardly follow you,' said Musgrave. 'The paper seems to me to be of
- no practical importance.'
-
- " 'But to me it seems immensely practical, and I fancy that Brunton took
- the same view. He had probably seen it before that night on which you
- caught him.'
-
- " 'It is very possible. We took no pains to hide it.'
-
- " 'He simply wished, I should imagine, to refresh his memory upon that
- last occasion. He had, as I understand, some sort of map or chart which
- he was comparing with the manuscript, and which he thrust into his
- pocket when you appeared.'
-
- " 'That is true. But what could he have to do with this old family
- custom of ours, and what does this rigmarole mean?'
-
- " 'I don't think that we should have much difficulty in determining
- that,' said I; 'with your permission we will take the first train down
- to Sussex and go a little more deeply into the matter upon the spot.
-
- "The same afternoon saw us both at Hurlstone. Possibly you have seen
- pictures and read descriptions of the famous old building, so I will
- confine my account of it to saying that it is built in the shape of an
- L. the long arm being the more modern portion, and the shorter the
- ancient nucleus from which the other has developed. Over the low,
- heavy-lintelled door, in the centre of this old part, is chiselled the
- date, 1607, but experts are agreed that the beams and stonework are
- really much older than this. The enormously thick walls and tiny windows
- of this part had in the last century driven the family into building the
- new wing, and the old one was used now as a storehouse and a cellar,
- when it was used at all. A splendid park with fine old timber surrounds
- the house, and the lake, to which my client. had referred, lay close to
- the avenue, about two hundred yards from the building.
-
- "I was already firmly convinced, Watson, that there were not three
- separate mysteries here, but one only, and that if I could read the
- Musgrave Ritual aright I should hold in my hand the clue which would
- lead me to the truth concerning both the butler Brunton and the maid
- Howells. To that then I turned all my energies. Why should this servant
- be so anxious to master this old formula? Evidently because he saw
- something in it which had escaped all those generations of country
- squires, and from which he expected some personal advantage. What was it
- then, and how had it affected his fate?
-
- "It was perfectly obvious to me, on reading the Ritual, that the
- measurements must refer to some spot to which the rest of the document
- alluded, and that if we could find that spot we should be in a fair way
- towards finding what the secret was which the old Musgraves had thought
- it necessary to embalm in so curious a fashion. There were two guides
- given us to start with, an oak and an elm. As to the oak there could be
- no question at all. Right in front of the house, upon the left-hand side
- of the drive, there stood a patriarch among oaks. one of the most
- magnificent trees that I have ever seen.
-
- " 'That was there when your Ritual was drawn up,' said I as we drove
- past it.
-
- " 'It was there at the Norman Conquest in all probability,' he answered.
- 'It has a girth of twenty-three feet.'
-
- "Here was one of my fixed points secured.
-
- " 'Have you any old elms?' I asked.
-
- " 'There used to be a very old one over yonder, but it was struck by
- lightning ten years ago, and we cut down the stump.'
-
- " 'You can see where it used to be?'
-
- " 'Oh, yes.'
-
- " 'There are no other elms?'
-
- " 'No old ones, but plenty of beeches.'
-
- " 'I should like to see where it grew.'
-
- "We had driven up in a dog-cart, and my client led me away at once,
- without our entering the house, to the scar on the lawn where the elm
- had stood. It was nearly midway between the oak and the house. My
- investigation seemed to be progressing.
-
- " 'I suppose it is impossible to find out how high the elm was?' I
- asked.
-
- " 'I can give you it at once. It was sixty-four feet.'
-
- " 'How do you come to know it?' I asked in surprise.
-
- " 'When my old tutor used to give me an exercise in trigonometry, it
- always took the shape of measuring heights. When I was a lad I worked
- out every tree and building in the estate.'
-
- "This was an unexpected piece of luck. My data were coming more quickly
- than I could have reasonably hoped.
-
- " 'Tell me,' I asked, 'did your butler ever ask you such a question?'
-
- "Reginald Musgrave looked at me in astonishment. 'Now that you call it
- to my mind,' he answered, 'Brunton did ask me about the height of the
- tree some months ago in connection with some little argument with the
- groom.'
-
- "This was excellent news, Watson, for it showed me that I was on the
- right road. I looked up at the sun. It was low in the heavens, and I
- calculated that in less than an hour it would lie just above the topmost
- branches of the old oak. One condition mentioned in the Ritual would
- then be fulfilled. And the shadow of the elm must mean the farther end
- of the shadow, otherwise the trunk would have been chosen as the guide.
- I had, then, to find where the far end of the shadow would fall when the
- sun was just clear of the oak."
-
- "That must have been difficult, Holmes, when the elm was no longer
- there."
-
- "Well, at least I knew that if Brunton could do it, I could also.
- Besides, there was no real difficulty. I went with Musgrave to his study
- and whittled myself this peg, to which I tied this long string with a
- knot at each yard. Then I took two lengths of a fishing-rod, which came
- to just six feet, and I went back with my client to where the elm had
- been. The sun was just grazing the top of the oak. I fastened the rod on
- end, marked out the direction of the shadow, and measured it. It was
- nine feet in length.
-
- "Of course the calculation now was a simple one. If a rod of six feet
- threw a shadow of nine, a tree of sixty-four feet would throw one of
- ninety-six, and the line of the one would of course be the line of the
- other. I measured out the distance, which brought me almost to the wall
- of the house, and I thrust a peg into the spot. You can imagine my
- exultation, Watson, when within two inches of my peg I saw a conical
- depression in the ground. I knew that it was the mark made by Brunton in
- his measurements, and that I was still upon his trail.
-
- "From this starting-point I proceeded to step, having first taken the
- cardinal points by my pocket-compass. Ten steps with each foot took me
- along parallel with the wall of the house, and again I marked my spot
- with a peg. Then I carefully paced off five to the east and two to the
- south. It brought me to the very threshold of the old door. Two steps to
- the west meant now that I was to go two paces down the stone-flagged
- passage, and this was the place indicated by the Ritual.
-
- "Never have I felt such a cold chill of disappointment, Watson. For a
- moment it seemed to me that there must be some radical mistake in my
- calculations. The setting sun shone full upon the passage floor, and I
- could see that the old, foot-worn gray stones with which it was paved
- were firmly cemented together, and had certainly not been moved for many
- a long year. Brunton had not been at work here. I tapped upon the floor,
- but it sounded the same all over, and there was no sign of any crack or
- crevice. But, fortunately, Musgrave, who had begun to appreciate the
- meaning of my proceedings, and who was now as excited as myself, took
- out his manuscript to check my calculations.
-
- " 'And under,' he cried. 'You have omitted the "and under." '
-
- "I had thought that it meant that we were to dig, but now, of course, I
- saw at once that I was wrong. 'There is a cellar under this then?' I
- cried.
-
- " 'Yes, and as old as the house. Down here, through this door.'
-
- "We went down a winding stone stair, and my companion, striking a match,
- lit a large lantern which stood on a barrel in the corner. In an instant
- it was obvious that we had at last come upon the true place, and that we
- had not been the only people to visit the spot recently.
-
- "It had been used for the storage of wood, but the billets, which had
- evidently been littered over the floor, were now piled at the sides, so
- as to leave a clear space in the middle. In this space lay a large and
- heavy flagstone with a rusted iron ring in the centre to which a thick
- shepherd's-check muffler was attached.
-
- " 'By Jove!' cried my client. 'That's Brunton's muffler. I have seen it
- on him and could swear to it. What has the villain been doing here?'
-
- "At my suggestion a couple of the county police were summoned to be
- present, and I then endeavoured to raise the stone by pulling on the
- cravat. I could only move it slightly, and it was with the aid of one of
- the constables that I succeeded at last in carrying it to one side. A
- black hole yawned beneath into which we all peered, while Musgrave,
- kneeling at the side, pushed down the lantern.
-
- "A small chamber about seven feet deep and four feet square lay open to
- us. At one side of this was a squat, brass-bound wooden box, the lid of
- which was hinged upward, with this curious old-fashioned key projecting
- from the lock. It was furred outside by a thick layer of dust, and damp
- and worms had eaten through the wood, so that a crop of livid fungi was
- growing on the inside of it. Several discs of metal, old coins
- apparently, such as I hold here, were scattered over the bottom of the
- box, but it contained nothing else.
-
- "At the moment, however, we had no thought for the old chest, for our
- eyes were riveted upon that which crouched beside it. It was the figure
- of a man, clad in a suit of black, who squatted down upon his hams with
- his forehead sunk upon the edge of the box and his two arms thrown out
- on each side of it. The attitude had drawn all the stagnant blood to the
- face, and no man could have recognized that distorted liver-coloured
- countenance; but his height, his dress, and his hair were all sufficient
- to show my client, when we had drawn the body up, that it was indeed his
- missing butler. He had been dead some days, but there was no wound or
- bruise upon his person to show how he had met his dreadful end. When his
- body had been carried from the cellar we found ourselves still
- confronted with a problem which was almost as formidable as that with
- which we had started.
-
- "I confess that so far, Watson, I had been disappointed in my
- investigation. I had reckoned upon solving the matter when once I had
- found the place referred to in the Ritual; but now I was there, and was
- apparently as far as ever from knowing what it was which the family had
- concealed with such elaborate precautions. It is true that I had thrown
- a light upon the fate of Brunton, but now I had to ascertain how that
- fate had come upon him, and what part had been played in the matter by
- the woman who had disappeared. I sat down upon a keg in the corner and
- thought the whole matter carefully over.
-
- "You know my methods in such cases, Watson. I put myself in the man's
- place, and, having first gauged his intelligence, I try to imagine how I
- should myself have proceeded under the same circumstances. In this case
- the matter was simplified by Brunton's intelligence being quite
- first-rate, so that it was unnecessary to make any allowance for the
- personal equation, as the astronomers have dubbed it. He knew that
- something valuable was concealed. He had spotted the place. He found
- that the stone which covered it was just too heavy for a man to move
- unaided. What would he do next? He could not get help from outside, even
- if he had someone whom he could trust, without the unbarring of doors
- and considerable risk of detection. It was better, if he could, to have
- his helpmate inside the house. But whom could he ask? This girl had been
- devoted to him. A man always finds it hard to realize that he may have
- finally lost a woman's love, however badly he may have treated her. He
- would try by a few attentions to make his peace with the girl Howells,
- and then would engage her as his accomplice. Together they would come at
- night to the cellar, and their united force would suffice to raise the
- stone. So far I could follow their actions as if I had actually seen
- them.
-
- "But for two of them, and one a woman, it must have been heavy work, the
- raising of that stone. A burly Sussex policeman and I had found it no
- light job. What would they do to assist them? Probably what I should
- have done myself. I rose and examined carefully the different billets of
- wood which were scattered round the floor. Almost at once I came upon
- what I expected. One piece, about three feet in length, had a very
- marked indentation at one end. while several were flattened at the sides
- as if they had been compressed by some considerable weight. Evidently,
- as they had dragged the stone up, they had thrust thc chunks of wood
- into the chink until at last when the opening was large enough to crawl
- through, they would hold it open by a billet placed lengthwise, which
- might very well become indented at the lower end, since the whole weight
- of the stone would press it down on to the edge of this other slab. So
- far I was still on safe ground.
-
- "And now how was I to proceed to reconstruct this midnight drama?
- Clearly, only one could fit into the hole, and that one was Brunton. The
- girl must have waited above. Brunton then unlocked the box, handed up
- the contents presumably -- since they were not to be found -- and then
- -- and then what happened?
-
- "What smouldering fire of vengeance had suddenly sprung into flame in
- this passionate Celtic woman's soul when she saw the man who had wronged
- her == wronged her, perhaps, far more than we suspected -- in her power?
- Was it a chance that the wood had slipped and that the stone had shut
- Brunton into what had become his sepulchre? Had she only been guilty of
- silence as to his fate? Or had some sudden blow from her hand dashed the
- support away and sent the slab crashing down into its place? Be that as
- it might, I seemed to see that woman's figure still clutching at her
- treasure trove and flying wildly up the winding stair, with her ears
- ringing perhaps with the muffled screams from behind her and with the
- drumming of frenzied hands against the slab of stone which was choking
- her faithless lover's life out.
-
- "Here was the secret of her blanched face, her shaken nerves, her peals
- of hysterical laughter on the next morning. But what had been in the
- box? What had she done with that? Of course, it must have been the old
- metal and pebbles which my client had dragged from the mere. She had
- thrown them in there at the first opportunity to remove the last trace
- of her crime.
-
- "For twenty minutes I had sat motionless, thinking the matter out.
- Musgrave still stood with a very pale face, swinging his lantern and
- peering down into the hole.
-
- " 'These are coins of Charles the First,' said he, holding out the few
- which had been in the box; 'you see we were right in fixing our date for
- the Ritual.'
-
- " 'We may find something else of Charles the First,' I cried, as the
- probable meaning of the first two questions of the Ritual broke suddenly
- upon me. 'Let me see the contents of the bag which you fished from the
- mere.'
-
- "We ascended to his study, and he laid the debris before me. I could
- understand his regarding it as of small importance when I looked at it,
- for the metal was almost black and the stones lustreless and dull. I
- rubbed one of them on my sleeve, however, and it glowed afterwards like
- a spark in the dark hollow of my hand. The metal work was in the form of
- a double ring, but it had been bent and twisted out of its onginal
- shape.
-
- " 'You must bear in mind,' said I, 'that the royal party made head in
- England even after the death of the king, and that when they at last
- fled they probably left many of their most precious possessions buried
- behind them, with the intention of returning for them in more peaceful
- times.'
-
- " 'My ancestor, Sir Ralph Musgrave, was a prominent cavalier and the
- right-hand man of Charles the Second in his wanderings,' said my friend.
-
- " 'Ah, indeed!' I answered. 'Well now, I think that really should give
- us the last link that we wanted. I must congratulate you on coming into
- the possession, though in rather a tragic manner, of a relic which is of
- great intrinsic value, but of even greater importance as a historical
- curiosity.'
-
- " 'What is it, then?' he gasped in astonishment.
-
- " 'It is nothing less than the ancient crown of the kings of England.'
-
- " 'The crown!'
-
- " 'Precisely. Consider what the Ritual says. How does it run? "Whose was
- it?" "His who is gone." That was after the execution of Charles. Then,
- "Who shall have it?" "He who will come." That was Charles the Second,
- whose advent was already foreseen. There can, I think, be no doubt that
- this battered and shapeless diadem once encircled the brows of the royal
- Stuarts.'
-
- " 'And how came it in the pond?'
-
- " 'Ah, that is a question that will take some time to answer.' And with
- that I sketched out to him the whole long chain of surmise and of proof
- which I had constructed. The twilight had closed in and the moon was
- shining brightly in the sky before my narrative was finished.
-
- " 'And how was it then that Charles did not get his crown when he
- returned?' asked Musgrave, pushing back the relic into its linen bag.
-
- " 'Ah, there you lay your finger upon the one point which we shall
- probably never be able to clear up. It is likely that the Musgrave who
- held the secret died in the interval, and by some oversight left this
- guide to his descendant without explaining the meaning of it. From that
- day to this it has been handed down from father to son, until at last it
- came within reach of a man who tore its secret out of it and lost his
- life in the venture.'
-
- "And that's the story of the Musgrave Ritual, Watson. They have the
- crown down at Hurlstone -- though they had some legal bother and a
- considerable sum to pay before they were allowed to retain it. I am sure
- that if you mentioned my name they would be happy to show it to you. Of
- the woman nothing was ever heard, and the probability is that she got
- away out of England and carried herself and the memory of her crime to
- some land beyond the seas."
-