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- The Stock-Broker's Clerk
-
-
- Shortly after my marriage I had bought a connection in the Paddington
- district. Old Mr. Farquhar, from whom I purchased it, had at one time an
- excellent general practice; but his age, and an affliction of the nature
- of St. Vitus's dance from which he suffered, had very much thinned it.
- The public not unnaturally goes on the principle that he who would heal
- others must himself be whole, and looks askance at the curative powers
- of the man whose own case is beyond the reach of his drugs. Thus as my
- predecessor weakened his practice declined, until when I purchased it
- from him it had sunk from twelve hundred to little more than three
- hundred a year. I had confidence, however, in my own youth and energy
- and was convinced that in a very few years the concern would be as
- flourishing as ever.
-
- For three months after taking over the practice I was kept very closely
- at work and saw little of my friend Sherlock Holmes, for I was too busy
- to visit Baker Street, and he seldom went anywhere himself save upon
- professional business. I was surprised, therefore, when, one morning in
- June, as I sat reading the British Medical Journal after breakfast, I
- heard a ring at the bell, followed by the high, somewhat strident tones
- of my old companion's voice.
-
- "Ah, my dear Watson," said he, striding into the room, "I am very
- delighted to see you! I trust that Mrs. Watson has entirely recovered
- from all the little excitements connected with our adventure of the Sign
- of Four."
-
- "Thank you, we are both very well," said I, shaking him warmly by the
- hand.
-
- "And I hope, also," he continued, sitting down in the rockingchair,
- "that the cares of medical practice have not entirely obliterated the
- interest which you used to take in our little deductive problems."
-
- "On the contrary," I answered, "it was only last night that I was
- looking over my old notes, and classifying some of our past results."
-
- "I trust that you don't consider your collection closed."
-
- "Not at all. I should wish nothing better than to have some more of such
- experiences."
-
- "To-day, for example?"
-
- "Yes, to-day, if you like."
-
- "And as far off as Birmingham?"
-
- "Certainly, if you wish it."
-
- "And the practice?"
-
- "I do my neighbour's when he goes. He is always ready to work off the
- debt."
-
- "Ha! nothing could be better," said Holmes, leaning back in his chair
- and looking keenly at me from under his half-closed lids. "I perceive
- that you have been unwell lately. Summer colds are always a little
- trying."
-
- "I was confined to the house by a severe chill for three days last week.
- I thought, however, that I had cast off every trace of it."
-
- "So you have. You look remarkably robust."
-
- "How, then, did you know of it?"
-
- "My dear fellow, you know my methods."
-
- "You deduced it, then?"
-
- "Certainly."
-
- "And from what?"
-
- "From your slippers."
-
- I glanced down at the new patent-leathers which I was wearing. "How on
- earth --" I began, but Holmes answered my question before it was asked.
-
- "Your slippers are new," he said. "You could not have had them more than
- a few weeks. The soles which you are at this moment presenting to me are
- slightly scorched. For a moment I thought they might have got wet and
- been burned in the drying. But near the instep there is a small circular
- wafer of paper with the shopman's hieroglyphics upon it. Damp would of
- course have removed this. You had, then, been sitting with your feet
- outstretched to the fire, which a man would hardly do even in so wet a
- June as this if he were in his full health."
-
- Like all Holmes's reasoning the thing seemed simplicity itself when it
- was once explained. He read the thought upon my features, and his smile
- had a tinge of bitterness.
-
- "I am afraid that I rather give myself away when I explain." said he.
- "Results without causes are much more impressive. You are ready to come
- to Birmingham. then?"
-
- "Certainly. What is the case?"
-
- "You shall hear it all in the train. My client is outside in a
- four-wheeler. Can you come at once?"
-
- "In an instant." I scribbled a note to my neighbour, rushed upstairs to
- explain the matter to my wife, and joined Holmes upon the doorstep.
-
- "Your neighbour is a doctor." said he, nodding at the brass plate.
-
- "Yes, he bought a practice as I did."
-
- "An old-established one?"
-
- "Just the same as mine. Both have been ever since the houses were
- built."
-
- "Ah! then you got hold of the best of the two."
-
- "I think I did. But how do you know?"
-
- "By the steps, my boy. Yours are worn three inches deeper than his. But
- this gentleman in the cab is my client, Mr. Hall Pycroft. Allow me to
- introduce you to him. Whip your horse up, cabby, for we have only just
- time to catch our train."
-
- The man whom I found myself facing was a well-built, freshcomplexioned
- young fellow, with a frank, honest face and a slight, crisp, yellow
- moustache. He wore a very shiny top-hat and a neat suit of sober black,
- which made him look what he was -- a smart young City man, of the class
- who have been labelled cockneys, but who give us our crack volunteer
- regiments, and who turn out more fine athletes and sportsmen than any
- body of men in these islands. His round, ruddy face was naturally full
- of cheeriness, but the corners of his mouth seemed to me to be pulled
- down in a half-comical distress. It was not, however, until we were in a
- first-class carriage and well started upon our journey to Birmingham
- that I was able to learn what the trouble was which had driven him to
- Sherlock Holmes.
-
- "We have a clear run here of seventy minutes," Holmes remarked. "I want
- you, Mr. Hall Pycroft, to tell my friend your very interesting
- experience exactly as you have told it to me, or with more detail if
- possible. It will be of use to me to hear the succession of events
- again. It is a case, Watson, which may prove to have something in it, or
- may prove to have nothing, but which, at least, presents those unusual
- and outre features which are as dear to you as they are to me. Now, Mr.
- Pycroft. I shall not interrupt you again."
-
- Our young companion looked at me with a twinkle in his eye.
-
- "The worst of the story is." said he. "that I show myself up as such a
- confounded fool. Of course it may work out all right. and I don't see
- that I could have done otherwise; but if I have lost my crib and get
- nothing in exchange I shall feel what a soft Johnny I have been. I'm not
- very good at telling a story, Dr. Watson, but it is like this with me:
-
- "I used to have a billet at Coxon & Woodhouse's, of Draper Gardens, but
- they were let in early in the spring through the Venezuelan loan, as no
- doubt you remember, and came a nasty cropper. I have been with them five
- years. and old Coxon gave me a ripping good testimonial when the smash
- came. but of course we clerks were all turned adrift, the twenty-seven
- of us. I tried here and tried there, but there were lots of other chaps
- on the same lay as myself, and it was a perfect frost for a long time. I
- had been taking three pounds a week at Coxon's, and I had saved about
- seventy of them, but I soon worked my way through that and out at the
- other end. I was fairly at the end of my tether at last, and could
- hardly find the stamps to answer the advertisements or the envelopes to
- stick them to. I had worn out my boots paddling up office stairs, and I
- seemed just as far from getting a billet as ever.
-
- "At last I saw a vacancy at Mawson & Williams's, the great stock-broking
- firm in Lombard Street. I dare say E. C. is not much in your line, but I
- can tell you that this is about the richest house in London. The
- advertisement was to be answered by letter only. I sent in my
- testimonial and application, but without the least hope of getting it.
- Back came an answer by return, saying that if I would appear next Monday
- I might take over my new duties at once, provided that my appearance was
- satisfactory. No one knows how these things are worked. Some people say
- that the manager just plunges his hand into the heap and takes the first
- that comes. Anyhow it was my innings that time, and I don't ever wish to
- feel better pleased. The screw was a pound a week rise, and the duties
- just about the same as at Coxon's.
-
- "And now I come to the queer part of the business. I was in diggings out
- Hampstead way, 17 Potter's Terrace. Well, I was sitting doing a smoke
- that very evening after I had been promised the appointment, when up
- came my landlady with a card which had 'Arthur Pinner, Financial Agent,'
- printed upon it. I had never heard the name before and could not imagine
- what he wanted with me, but of course I asked her to show him up. In he
- walked, a middle-sized dark-haired, dark-eyed. black-bearded man. with a
- touch of the sheeny about his nose. He had a brisk kind of way with him
- and spoke sharply, like a man who knew the value of time.
-
- " 'Mr. Hall Pycroft, I believe?' said he.
-
- " 'Yes, sir,' I answered, pushing a chair towards him.
-
- " 'Lately engaged at Coxon & Woodhouse's?'
-
- " 'Yes, sir.'
-
- " 'And now on the staff of Mawson's.'
-
- " 'Quite so.'
-
- " 'Well.' said he, 'the fact is that I have heard some really
- extraordinary stories about your financial ability. You remember Parker,
- who used to be Coxon's manager. He can never say enough about it.'
-
- "Of course I was pleased to hear this. I had always been pretty sharp in
- the office, but I had never dreamed that I was talked about in the City
- in this fashion.
-
- " 'You have a good memory?' said he.
-
- " 'Pretty fair,' I answered modestly.
-
- " 'Have you kept in touch with the market while you havebeen out of
- work?' he asked.
-
- " 'Yes. I read the stock-exchange list every morning.'
-
- " 'Now that shows real application!' he cried. 'That is the way to
- prosper! You won't mind my testing you, will you? Let me see. How are
- Ayrshires?'
-
- " 'A hundred and six and a quarter to a hundred and five and
- seven-eighths.'
-
- " 'And New Zealand consolidated?'
-
- " 'A hundred and four.'
-
- " 'And British Broken Hills?'
-
- " 'Seven to seven-and-six.'
-
- " 'Wonderful!' he cried with his hands up. 'This quite fits in with all
- that I had heard. My boy, my boy, you are very much too good to be a
- clerk at Mawson's!'
-
- "This outburst rather astonished me, as you can think. 'Well,' said I,
- 'other people don't think quite so much of me as you seem to do, Mr.
- Pinner. I had a hard enough fight to get this berth, and I am very glad
- to have it.'
-
- " 'Pooh, man; you should soar above it. You are not in your true sphere.
- Now, I'll tell you how it stands with me. What I have to offer is little
- enough when measured by your ability, but when compared with Mawson's
- it's light to dark. Let me see. When do you go to Mawson's?'
-
- " 'On Monday.'
-
- " 'Ha, ha! I think I would risk a little sporting flutter that you don't
- go there at all.'
-
- " 'Not go to Mawson's'?'
-
- " 'No, sir. By that day you will be the business manager of the
- Franco-Midland Hardware Company, Limited, with a hundred and thirty-four
- branches in the towns and villages of France, not counting one in
- Brussels and one in San Remo.'
-
- "This took my breath away. 'I never heard of it.' said I.
-
- " 'Very likely not. It has been kept very quiet, for the capital was all
- privately subscribed, and it's too good a thing to let the public into.
- My brother, Harry Pinner, is promoter, and joins the board after
- allotment as managing director. He knew I was in the swim down here and
- asked me to pick up a good man cheap. A young, pushing man with plenty
- of snap about him. Parker spoke of you, and that brought me here
- to-night. We can only offer you a beggarly five hundred to start with.'
-
- " 'Five hundred a year!' I shouted.
-
- " 'Only that at the beginning; but you are to have an overriding
- commission of one per cent on all business done by your agents, and you
- may take my word for it that this will come to more than your salary.'
-
- " 'But I know nothing about hardware.'
-
- " 'Tut, my boy, you know about figures.'
-
- "My head buzzed, and I could hardly sit still in my chair. But suddenly
- a little chill of doubt came upon me.
-
- " 'I must be frank with yoli,' said I. 'Mawson only gives me two
- hundred, but Mawson is safe. Now, really, I know so little about your
- company that --'
-
- " 'Ah, smart, smart!' he cried in a kind of ecstasy of delight. 'You are
- the very man for us. You are not to be talked over, and quite right,
- too. Now, here's a note for a hundred pounds, and if you think that we
- can do business you may just slip it into your pocket as an advance upon
- your salary.'
-
- " 'That is very handsome,' said I. 'When should I take over my new
- duties?'
-
- " 'Be in Birmingham to-morrow at one,' said he. 'I have a note in my
- pocket here which you will take to my brother. You will find him at 126B
- Corporation Street. where the temporary offices of the company are
- situated. Of course he must confirm your engagement, but between
- ourselves it will be all right.'
-
- " 'Really, I hardly know how to express my gratitude, Mr. Pinner,' said
- I.
-
- " 'Not at all, my boy. You have only got your deserts. There are one or
- two small things -- mere formalities -- which I must arrange with you.
- You have a bit of paper beside you there. Kindly write upon it "I am
- perfectly willing to act as business manager to the Franco-Midland
- Hardware Company, Limited, at a minimum salary of 500 pounds." '
-
- "I did as he asked. and he put the paper in his pocket.
-
- " 'There is one other detail,' said he. 'What do you intend to do about
- Mawson's?'
-
- "I had forgotten all about Mawson's in my joy. 'I'll write and resign,'
- said I.
-
- " 'Precisely what I don't want you to do. I had a row over you with
- Mawson's manager. I had gone up to ask him about you, and he was very
- offensive; accused me of coaxing you away from the service of the firm,
- and that sort of thing. At last I fairly lost my temper. "If you want
- good men you should pay them a good price," said I.
-
- " ' "He would rather have our small price than your big one," said he.
-
- " ' "I'll lay you a fiver," said I, "that when he has my offer you'll
- never so much as hear from him again."
-
- " ' "Done!" said he. "We picked him out of the gutter, and he won't
- leave us so easily." Those were his very words.'
-
- " 'The impudent scoundrel!' I cried. 'I've never so much as seen him in
- my life. Why should I consider him in any way? I shall certainly not
- write if you would rather I didn't.'
-
- " 'Good! That's a promise,' said he, rising from his chair. 'Well, I'm
- delighted to have got so good a man for my brother. Here's your advance
- of a hundred pounds, and here is the letter. Make a note of the address.
- 126B Corporation Street, and remember that one o'clock to-morrow is your
- appointment. Goodnight, and may you have all the fortune that you
- deserve!'
-
- "That's just about all that passed between us, as near as I can
- remember. You can imagine, Dr. Watson, how pleased I was at such an
- extraordinary bit of good fortune. I sat up half the night hugging
- myself over it, and next day I was off to Birmingham in a train that
- would take me in plenty time for my appointment. I took my things to a
- hotel in New Street, and then I made my way to the address which had
- been given me.
-
- "It was a quarter of an hour before my time, but I thought that would
- makc no difference. 126B was a passage between two large shops, which
- led to a winding stone stair, from which there were many flats, let as
- offices to companies or professional men. The names of the occupants
- were painted at the bottom on the wall, but there was no such name as
- the Franco-Midland Hardware Company, Limited. I stood for a few minutes
- with my heart in my boots, wondering whether the whole thing was an
- elaborate hoax or not, when up came a man and addressed me. He was very
- like the chap I had seen the night before, the same figure and voice,
- but he was clean-shaven and his hair was lighter.
-
- " 'Are you Mr. Hall Pycroft?' he asked.
-
- " 'Yes,' said I.
-
- " 'Oh! I was expecting you, but you are a trifle before your time. I had
- a note from my brother this morning in which he sang your praises very
- loudly.'
-
- " 'I was just looking for the offices when you came.'
-
- " 'We have not got our name up yet, for we only secured these temporary
- premises last week. Come up with me, and we will talk the matter over.'
-
- "I followed him to the top of a very lofty stair, and there, right under
- the slates, were a couple of empty, dusty little rooms, uncarpeted and
- uncurtained, into which he led me. I had thought of a great office with
- shining tables and rows of clerks, such as I was used to, and I daresay
- I stared rather straight at the two deal chairs and one little table,
- which with a ledger and a waste-paper basket, made up the whole
- furniture.
-
- " 'Don't be disheartened, Mr. Pycroft,' said my new acquaintance, seeing
- the length of my face. 'Rome was not built in a day, and we have lots of
- money at our backs, though we don't cut much dash yet in offices. Pray
- sit down, and let me have your letter.'
-
- "I gave it to him, and he read it over very carefully.
-
- " 'You seem to have made a vast impression upon my brother Arthur,' said
- he, 'and I know that he is a pretty shrewd judge. He swears by London,
- you know; and I by Birmingham; but this time I shall follow his advice.
- Pray consider yourself definitely engaged.'
-
- " 'What are my duties?' I asked.
-
- " 'You will eventually manage the great depot in Paris, which will pour
- a flood of English crockery into the shops of a hundred and thirty-four
- agents in France. The purchase will be completed in a week, and
- meanwhile you will remain in Birmingham and make yourself useful.'
-
- " 'How?'
-
- "For answer, he took a big red book out of a drawer.
-
- " 'This is a directory of Paris,' said he, 'with the trades after the
- names of the people. I want you to take it home with you and to mark off
- all the hardware-sellers, with their addresses. It would be of the
- greatest use to me to have them.'
-
- " 'Surely, there are classified lists?' I suggested.
-
- " 'Not reliable ones. Their system is different from ours. Stick at it,
- and let me have the lists by Monday, at twelve. Good-day, Mr. Pycroft.
- If you continue to show zeal and intelligence you will find the company
- a good master.'
-
- "I went back to the hotel with the big book under my arm, and with very
- conflicting feelings in my breast. On the one hand, I was definitely
- engaged and had a hundred pounds in my pocket; on the other, the look of
- the offices, the absence of name on the wall, and other of the points
- which would strike a business man had left a bad impression as to the
- position of my employers. However, come what might, I had my money, so l
- settled down to my task. All Sunday I was kept hard at work, and yet by
- Monday I had only got as far as H. I went round to my employer, found
- him in the same dismantled kind of room, and was told to keep at it
- until Wednesday, and then come again. On Wednesday it was still
- unfinished, so I hammered away until Friday -- that is, yesterday. Then
- I brought it round to Mr. Harry Pinner.
-
- " 'Thank you very much,' said he, 'I fear that I underrated the
- difficulty of the task. This list will be of very material assistance to
- me.'
-
- " 'It took some time,' said I.
-
- " 'And now,' said he, 'I want you to make a list of the furniture shops,
- for they all sell crockery.'
-
- " 'Very good.'
-
- " 'And you can come up to-morrow evening at seven and let me know how
- you are getting on. Don't overwork yourself. A couple of hours at Day's
- Music Hall in the evening would do you no harm after your labours.' He
- laughed as he spoke, and I saw with a thrill that his second tooth upon
- the left-hand side had been very badly stuffed with gold."
-
- Sherlock Holmes rubbed his hands with delight, and I stared with
- astonishment at our client.
-
- "You may well look surprised, Dr. Watson, but it is this way," said he:
- "When I was speaking to the other chap in London, at the time that he
- laughed at my not going to Mawson's, I happened to notice that his tooth
- was stuffed in this very identical fashion. The glint of the gold in
- each case caught my eye, you see. When I put that with the voice and
- figure being the same, and only those things altered which might be
- changed by a razor or a wig, I could not doubt that it was the same man.
- Of course you expect two brothers to be alike, but not that they should
- have the same tooth stuffed in the same way. He bowed me out, and I
- found myself in the street, hardly knowing whether I was on my head or
- my heels. Back I went to my hotel, put my head in a basin of cold water,
- and tried to think it out. Why had he sent me from London to Birmingham?
- Why had he got there before me? And why had he written a letter from
- himself to himself? It was altogether too much for me, and I could make
- no sense of it. And then suddenly it struck me that what was dark to me
- might be very light to Mr. Sherlock Holmes. I had just time to get up to
- town by the night train to see him this morning, and to bring you both
- back with me to Birmingham."
-
- There was a pause after the stock-broker's clerk had concluded his
- surprising experience. Then Sherlock Holmes cocked his eye at me,
- leaning back on the cushions with a pleased and yet critical face, like
- a connoisseur who has just taken his first sip of a comet vintage.
-
- "Rather fine, Watson, is it not?" said he. "There are points in it which
- please me. I think that you will agree with me that an interview with
- Mr. Arthur Harry Pinner in the temporary offices of the Franco-Midland
- Hardware Company, Limited, would be a rather interesting experience for
- both of us."
-
- "But how can we do it?" I asked.
-
- "Oh, easily enough," said Hall Pycroft cheerily. "You are two friends of
- mine who are in want of a billet, and what could be more natural than
- that I should bring you both round to the managing direetor?"
-
- "Quite so, of course," said Holmes. "I should like to have a look at the
- gentleman and see if I can make anything of his little game. What
- qualities have you, my friend, which would make your services so
- valuable? Or is it possible that --" He began biting his nails and
- staring blankly out of the window, and we hardly drew another word from
- him until we were in New Street.
-
- At seven o'clock that evening we were walking, the three of us, down
- Corporation Street to the company's offices.
-
- "It is no use our being at all before our time," said our client. "He
- only comes there to see me, apparently, for the place is deserted up to
- the very hour he names."
-
- "That is suggestive," remarked Holmes.
-
- "By Jove, I told you so!" cried the clerk. "That's he walking ahead of
- us there."
-
- He pointed to a smallish, dark, well-dressed man who was bustling along
- the other side of the road. As we watched him he looked across at a boy
- who was bawling out the latest edition of the evening paper, and,
- running over among the cabs and busses, he bought one from him. Then,
- clutching it in his hand, he vanished through a doorway.
-
- "There he goes!" cried Hall Pycroft. "These are the company's offices
- into which he has gone. Come with me, and I'll fix it up as easily as
- possible."
-
- Following his lead, we ascended five stories, until we found ourselves
- outside a half-opened door, at which our client tapped. A voice within
- bade us enter, and we entered a bare, unfurnished room such as Hall
- Pycroft had described. At the single table sat the man whom we had seen
- in the street, with his evening paper spread out in front of him, and as
- he looked up at us it seemed to me that I had never looked upon a face
- which bore such marks of grief, and of something beyond grief -- of a
- horror such as comes to few men in a lifetime. His brow glistened with
- perspiration, his cheeks were of the dull, dead white of a fish's belly,
- and his eyes were wild and staring. He looked at his clerk as though he
- failed to recognize him, and I could see by the astonishment depicted
- upon our conductor's face that this was by no means the usual appearance
- of his employer.
-
- "You look ill, Mr. Pinner!" he exclaimed.
-
- "Yes, I am not very well," answered the other, making obvious efforts to
- pull himself together and licking his dry lips before he spoke. "Who are
- these gentlemen whom you have brought with you?"
-
- "One is Mr. Harris, of Bermondsey, and the other is Mr. Price, of this
- town," said our clerk glibly. "They are friends of mine and gentlemen of
- experience, but they have been out of a place for some little time, and
- they hoped that perhaps you might find an opening for them in the
- company's employment."
-
- "Very possibly! very possibly!" cried Mr. Pinner with a ghastly smile.
- "Yes, I have no doubt that we shall be able to do something for you.
- What is your particular line, Mr. Harris?"
-
- "I am an accountant," said Holmes.
-
- "Ah, yes, we shall want something of the sort. And you. Mr. Price? "
-
- "A clerk," said I.
-
- "I have every hope that the company may accommodate you. I will let you
- know about it as soon as we come to any conclusion. And now I beg that
- you will go. For God's sake leave me to myself!"
-
- These last words were shot out of him, as though the constraint which he
- was evidently setting upon himself had suddenly and utterly burst
- asunder. Holmes and I glanced at each other, and Hall Pycroft took a
- step towards the table.
-
- "You forget, Mr. Pinner, that I am here by appointment to receive some
- directions from you," said he.
-
- "Certainly, Mr. Pycroft, certainly," the other resumed in a calmer tone.
- "You may wait here a moment and there is no reason why your friends
- should not wait with you. I will be entirely at your service in three
- minutes, if I might trespass upon your patience so far." He rose with a
- very courteous air, and, bowing to us, he passed out through a door at
- the farther end of the room, which he closed behind him.
-
- "What now?" whispered Holmes. "Is he giving us the slip?"
-
- "Impossible," answered Pycroft.
-
- "Why so?"
-
- "That door leads into an inner room."
-
- "There is no exit?"
-
- "None."
-
- "Is it furnished?"
-
- "It was empty yesterday."
-
- "Then what on earth can he be doing? There is something which I don't
- understand in this matter. If ever a man was three parts mad with
- terror, that man's name is Pinner. What can have put the shivers on
- him?"
-
- "He suspects that we are detectives," I suggested.
-
- "That's it," cried Pycroft.
-
- Holmes shook his head. "He did not turn pale. He was pale when we
- entered the room," said he. "It is just possible that --"
-
- His words were interrupted by a sharp rat-tat from the direction of the
- inner door.
-
- "What the deuce is he knocking at his own door for?" cried the clerk.
-
- Again and much louder came the rat-tat-tat. We all gazed expectantly at
- the closed door. Glancing at Holmes, I saw his face turn rigid, and he
- leaned forward in intense excitement. Then suddenly came a low guggling,
- gargling sound, and a brisk drumming upon woodwork. Holmes sprang
- frantically across the room and pushed at the door. It was fastened on
- the inner side. Following his example, we threw ourselves upon it with
- all our weight. One hinge snapped, then the other, and down came the
- door with a crash. Rushing over it, we found ourselves in the inner
- room. It was empty.
-
- But it was only for a moment that we were at fault. At one corner, the
- corner nearest the room which we had left, there was a second door.
- Holmes sprang to it and pulled it open. A coat and waistcoat were lying
- on the floor, and from a hook behind the door, with his own braces round
- his neck, was hanging the managing director of the Franco-Midland
- Hardware Company. His knees were drawn up, his head hung at a dreadful
- angle to his body, and the clatter of his heels against the door made
- the noise which had broken in upon our conversation. In an instant I had
- caught him round the waist, and held him up while Holmes and Pycroft
- untied the elastic bands which had disappeared between the livid creases
- of skin. Then we carried him into the other room, where he lay with a
- clay-coloured face, puffing his purple lips in and out with every breath
- -- a dreadful wreck of all that he had been but five minutes before.
-
- "What do you think of him, Watson?" asked Holmes.
-
- I stooped over him and examined him. His pulse was feeble and
- intermittent, but his breathing grew longer, and there was a little
- shivering of his eyelids, which showed a thin white slit of ball
- beneath.
-
- "It has been touch and go with him," said I, "but he'll live now. Just
- open that window, and hand me the water carafe." I undid his collar,
- poured the cold water over his face, and raised and sank his arms until
- he drew a long, natural breath. "It's only a question of time now," said
- I as I turned away from him.
-
- Holmes stood by the table, with his hands deep in his trousers' pockets
- and his chin upon his breast.
-
- "I suppose we ought to call the police in now," said he. "And yet I
- confess that I'd like to give them a complete case when they come."
-
- "It's a blessed mystery to me," cried Pycroft, scratching his head.
- "Whatever they wanted to bring me all the way up here for, and then --"
-
- "Pooh! All that is clear enough," said Holmes impatiently. "It is this
- last sudden move."
-
- "You understand the rest, then?"
-
- "I think that it is fairly obvious. What do you say, Watson?"
-
- I shrugged my shoulders. "I must confess that I am out of my depths,"
- said I.
-
- "Oh, surely if you consider the events at first they can only point to
- one conclusion."
-
- "What do you make of them?"
-
- "Well, the whole thing hinges upon two points. The first is the making
- of Pycroft write a declaration by which he entered the service of this
- preposterous company. Do you not see how very suggestive that is?"
-
- "I am afraid I miss the point."
-
- "Well, why did they want him to do it? Not as a business matter, for
- these arrangements are usually verbal, and there was no earthly business
- reason why this should be an exception. Don't you see, my young friend,
- that they were very anxious to obtain a specimen of your handwriting,
- and had no other way of doing it?"
-
- "And why?"
-
- "Quite so. Why? When we answer that we have made some progress with our
- little problem. Why? There can be only one adequate reason. Someone
- wanted to learn to imitate your writing and had to procure a specimen of
- it first. And now if we pass on to the second point we find that each
- throws light upon the other. That point is the request made by Pinner
- that you should not resign your place, but should leave the manager of
- this important business in the full expectation that a Mr. Hall Pycroft,
- whom he had never seen, was about to enter the office upon the Monday
- morning."
-
- "My God!" cried our client, "what a blind beetle I have been!"
-
- "Now you see the point about the handwriting. Suppose that someone
- turned up in your place who wrote a completely different hand from that
- in which you had applied for the vacancy, of course the game would have
- been up. But in the interval the rogue had learned to imitate you, and
- his position was therefore secure, as I presume that nobody in the
- office had ever set eyes upon you.
-
- "Not a soul," groaned Hall Pycroft.
-
- "Very good. Of course it was of the utmost importance to prevent you
- from thinking better of it, and also to keep you from coming into
- contact with anyone who might tell you that your double was at work in
- Mawson's office. Therefore they gave you a handsome advance on your
- salary, and ran you off to the Midllands, where they gave you enough
- work to do to prevent your going to London, where you might have burst
- their little game up. That is all plain enough."
-
- "But why should this man pretend to be his own brother?"
-
- "Well, that is pretty clear also. There are evidently only two of them
- in it. The other is impersonating you at the office. This one acted as
- your engager, and then found that he could not find you an employer
- without admitting a third person into his plot. That he was most
- unwilling to do. He changed his appearance as far as he could, and
- trusted that the likeness, which you could not fail to observe, would be
- put down to a family resemblance. But for the happy chance of the gold
- stuffing, your suspicions would probably never have been aroused."
-
- Hall Pycroft shook his clenched hands in the air. "Good Lord!" he cried,
- "while I have been fooled in this way, what has this other Hall Pycroft
- been doing at Mawson's? What should we do, Mr. Holmes? Tell me what to
- do."
-
- "We must wire to Mawson's."
-
- "They shut at twelve on Saturdays."
-
- "Never mind. There may be some door-keeper or attendant --"
-
- "Ah, yes, they keep a permanent guard there on account of the value of
- the securities that they hold. I remember hearing it talked of in the
- City."
-
- "Very good, we shall wire to him and see if all is well, and if a clerk
- of your name is working there. That is clear enough, but what is not so
- clear is why at sight of us one of the rogues should instantly walk out
- of the room and hang himself."
-
- "The paper!" croaked a voice behind us. The man was sitting up, blanched
- and ghastly, with returning reason in his eyes, and hands which rubbed
- nervously at the broad red band which still encircled his throat.
-
- "The paper! Of course!" yelled Holmes in a paroxysm of excitement.
- "Idiot that I was! I thought so much of our visit that the paper never
- entered my head for an instant. To be sure, the secret must lie there."
- He flattened it out upon the table, and a cry of triumph burst from his
- lips. "Look at this, Watson," he cried. "It is a London paper, an early
- edition of the Evening Standard. Here is what we want. Look at the
- headlines: 'Crime in the City. Murder at Mawson & Williams's. Gigantic
- Attempted Robbery. Capture of the Criminal.' Here, Watson, we are all
- equally anxious to hear it, so kindly read it aloud to us."
-
- It appeared from its position in the paper to have been the one event of
- importance in town, and the account of it ran in this way:
-
- "A desperate attempt at robbery, culminating in the death
- of one man and the capture of the criminal, occurred this
- afternoon in the City. For some time back Mawson &
- Williams, the famous financial house, have been the guardians
- of securities which amount in the aggregate to a sum of
- considerably over a million sterling. So conscious was the
- manager of the responsibility which devolved upon him in
- consequence of the great interests at stake that safes of the
- very latest construction have been employed, and an armed
- watchman has been left day and night in the building. It
- appears that last week a new clerk named Hall Pycroft was
- engaged by the firm. This person appears to have been none
- other than Beddington, the famous forger and cracksman,
- who, with his brother, has only recently emerged from a
- five years' spell of penal servitude. By some means, which
- are not yet clear, he succeeded in winning, under a false
- name, this official position in the office, which he utilized
- in order to obtain mouldings of various locks, and a thorough
- knowledge of the position of the strongroom and the safes.
- "It is customary at Mawson's for the clerks to leave at
- midday on Saturday. Sergeant Tuson, of the City police,
- was somewhat surprised, therefore, to see a gentleman with
- a carpet-bag come down the steps at twenty minutes past
- one. His suspicions being aroused, the sergeant followed
- the man, and with the aid of Constable Pollock succeeded,
- after a most desperate resistance, in arresting him. It was at
- once clear that. a daring and gigantic robbery had been
- committed. Nearly a hundred thousand pounds' worth of
- American railway bonds, with a large amount of scrip in
- mines and other companies, was discovered in the bag. On
- examining the premises the body of the unfortunate watchman
- was found doubled up and thrust into the largest of the
- safes, where it would not have been discovered until Monday
- morning had it not been for the prompt action of
- Sergeant Tuson. The man's-skull had been shattered by a
- blow from a poker delivered from behind. There could be
- no doubt that Beddington had obtained entrance by pretending
- that he had left something behind him, and having murdered
- the watchman, rapidly rifled the large safe, and then made
- off with his booty. His brother, who usually works with him,
- has not appeared in this job as far as can at present be
- ascertained, although the police are making energetic
- inquiries as to his whereabouts."
-
-
- "Well, we may save the police some little trouble in that direction,"
- said Holmes, glancing at the haggard figure huddled up by the window.
- "Human nature is a strange mixture, Watson. You see that even a villain
- and murderer can inspire such affection that his brother turns to
- suicide when he learns that his neck is forfeited. However, we have no
- choice as to our action. The doctor and I will remain on guard, Mr.
- Pycroft, if you will have the kindness to step out for the police."
-