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- The Greek Interpreter
-
- During my long and intimate acquaintance with Mr. Sherlock
- Holmes I had never heard him refer to his re}ations, and hardly
- ever to his own early life. This reticence upon his part had
- increased the somewhat inhuman effect which he produced upon
- me, until sometimes I found myself regarding him as an isolated
- phenomenon, a brain without a heart, as deficient in human
- sympathy as he was preeminent in intelligence. His aversion to
- women and his disinclination to form new friendships were both
- typical of his unemotional character, but not more so than his
- complete suppression of every reference to his own people. I had
- come to believe that he was an orphan with no relatives living;
- but one day. to my very great surprise, he began to talk to me
- about his brother.
- It was after tea on a summer evening, and the conversation,
- which had roamed in a desultory, spasmodic fashion from golf
- clubs to the causes of the change in the obliquity of the ecliptic,
- came round at last to the question of atavism and hereditary
- aptitudes. The point under discussion was, how far any singular
- gift in an individual was due to his ancestry and how far to his
- own early training.
- "In your own case," said I, "from all that you have told me,
- it seems obvious that your faculty of observation and your
- peculiar facility for deduction are due to your own systematic
- training."
- "To some extent," he answered thoughtfully. "My ancestors
- were country squires, who appear to have led much the same life
- as is natural to their class. But, none the less, my turn that way
- is in my veins, and may have come with my grandmother, who
- was the sister of Vernet, the French artist. Art in the blood is
- liable to take the strangest forms."
- "But how do you know that it is hereditary?"
- "Because my brother Mycroft possesses it in a larger degree
- than I do."
- This was news to me indeed. If there were another man with
- such singular powers in England, how was it that neither police
- nor public had heard of him? I put the question, with a hint that
- it was my companion's modesty which made him acknowledge
- his brother as his superior. Holmes laughed at my suggestion.
- "My dear Watson," said he, "I cannot agree with those who
- rank modesty among the virtues. To the logician all things
- should be seen exactly as they are, and to underestimate one's
- self is as much a departure from truth as to exaggerate one's own
- powers. When I say, therefore, that Mycroft has better powers of
- observation than I, you may take it that I am speaking the exact
- and literal truth."
- "Is he your junior?"
- "Seven years my senior."
- "How comes it that he is unknown?''
- "Oh, he is very well known in his own circle."
- "Where, then?"
- "Well, in the Diogenes Club, for example."
- I had never heard of the institution, and my face must have
- proclaimed as much, for Sherlock Homes pulled out his watch.
- "The Diogenes Club is the queerest club in London, and
- Mycroft one of the queerest men. He's always there from quarter
- to five to twenty to eight. It's six now, so if you care for a stroll
- this beautiful evening I shall be very happy to introduce you to
- two curiosities."
- Five minutes later we were in the street, walking towards
- Regent's Circus.
- "You wonder," said my companion, "why it is that Mycroft
- does not use his powers for detective work. He is incapable of
- it."
- "But I thought you said --"
- "I said that he was my superior in observation and deduction.
- If the art of the detective began and ended in reasoning from an
- armchair, my brother would be the greatest criminal agent that
- ever lived. But he has no ambition and no energy. He will not
- even go out of his way to verify his own solutions, and would
- rather be considered wrong than take the trouble to prove himself
- right. Again and again I have taken a problem to him, and have
- received an explanation which has afterwards proved to be the
- correct one. And yet he was absolutely incapable of working out
- the practical points which must be gone into before a case could
- be laid before a judge or jury."
- "It is not his profession, then?"
- "By no means. What is to me a means of livelihood is to him
- the merest hobby of a dilettante. He has an extraordinary faculty
- for figures, and audits the books in some of the government
- departments. Mycroft lodges in Pall Mall, and he walks round
- the corner into Whitehall every morning and back every evening.
- From year's end to year's end he takes no other exercise, and is
- seen nowhere else, except only in the Diogenes Club, which is
- just opposite his rooms."
- "I cannot recall the name."
- "Very likely not. There are many men in London, you know,
- who, some from shyness, some from misanthropy, have no wish
- for the company of their fellows. Yet they are not averse to
- comfortable chairs and the latest periodicals. It is for the conve-
- nience of these that the Diogenes Club was started, and it now
- contains the most unsociable and unclubable men in town. No
- member is permitted to take the least notice of any other one.
- Save in the Stranger's Room, no talking is, under any circum-
- stances, allowed. and three offences, if brought to the notice of
- the committee, render the talker liable to expulsion. My brother
- was one of the founders, and I have myself found it a very
- soothing atmosphere."
- We had reached Pall Mall as we talked, and were walking
- down it from the St. James's end. Sherlock Holmes stopped at a
- door some little distance from the Carlton, and, cautioning me
- not to speak, he led the way into the hall. Through the glass
- panelling I caught a glimpse of a large and luxurious room, in
- which a considerable number of men were sitting about and
- reading papers, each in his own little nook. Holmes showed me
- into a small chamber which looked out into Pall Mall, and then,
- leaving me for a minute, he came back with a companion whom
- I knew could only be his brother.
- Mycroft Holmes was a much larger and stouter man than Sher-
- lock. His body was absolutely corpulent, but his face, though
- massive, had preserved something of the sharpness of expression
- which was so remarkable in that of his brother. His eyes, which
- were of a peculiarly light, watery gray, seemed to always retain
- that far-away, introspective look which I had only observed in
- Sherlock's when he was exerting his full powers.
- "I am glad to meet you, sir," said he, putting out a broad, fat
- hand like the flipper of a seal. "I hear of Sherlock everywhere
- since you became his chronicler. By the way, Sherlock, I ex-
- pected to see you round last week to consult me over that Manor
- House case. I thought you might be a little out of your depth."
- "No, I solved it," said my friend, smiling.
- "It was Adams, of course."
- "Yes, it was Adams."
- "I was sure of it from the first." The two sat down together in
- the bow-window of the club. "To anyone who wishes to study
- mankind this is the spot," said Mycroft. "Look at the magnifi-
- cent types! Look at these two men who are coming towards us,
- for example."
- "The billiard-marker and the other?"
- "Precisely. What do you make of the other?"
- The two men had stopped opposite the window. Some chalk
- marks over the waistcoat pocket were the only signs of billiards
- which I could see in one of them. The other was a very small,
- dark fellow, with his hat pushed back and several packages
- under his arm.
- "An old soldier, I perceive," said Sherlock.
- "And very recently discharged," remarked the brother.
- "Served in India, I see."
- "And a non-commissioned officer."
- "Royal Artillery, I fancy,'' said Sherlock.
- "And a widower."
- "But with a child."
- "Children, my dear boy, children."
- "Come," said I. laughing, "this is a little too much."
- "Surely." answered Holmes, "it is not hard to say that a man
- with that bearing. expression of authority, and sun-baked skin. is
- a soldier, is more than a private, and is not long from India."
- "That he has not left the service long is shown by his still
- wearing his ammunition boots, as they are called," observed
- Mycroft.
- "He had not the cavalry stride, yet he wore his hat on one
- side, as is shown by the lighter skin on that side of his brow. His
- weight is against his being a sapper. He is in the artillery."
- "Then, of course, his complete mourning shows that he has
- lost someone very dear. The fact that he is doing his own
- shopping looks as though it were his wife. He has been buying
- things for children, you perceive. There is a rattle, which shows
- that one of them is very young. The wife probably died in
- childbed. The fact that he has a picture-book under his arm
- shows that there is another child to be thought of."
- I began to understand what my friend meant when he said that
- his brother possessed even keener faculties than he did himself.
- He glanced across at me and smiled. Mycroft took snuff from a
- tortoise-shell box and brushed away the wandering grains from
- his coat front with a large, red silk handkerchief.
- "By the way, Sherlock," said he, "I have had something
- quite after your own heart -- a most singular problem -- submltted
- to my judgment. I really had not the energy to follow it up save
- in a very incomplete fashion, but it gave me a basis for some
- pleasing speculations. If you would care to hear the facts --"
- "My dear Mycroft, I should be delighted."
- The brother scribbled a note upon a leaf of his pocket-book,
- and, ringing the bell, he handed it to the waiter.
- "I have asked Mr. Melas to step across," said he. "He lodges
- on the floor above me, and I have some slight acquaintance with
- him, which led him to come to me in his perplexity. Mr. Melas
- is a Greek by extraction, as I understand, and he is a remarkable
- linguist. He earns his living partly as interpreter in the law courts
- and partly by acting as guide to any wealthy Orientals who may
- visit the Northumberland Avenue hotels. I think I will leave him
- to tell his very remarkable experience in his own fashion."
- A few minutes later we were joined by a short, stout man
- whose olive face and coal black hair proclaimed his Southern
- origin, though his speech was that of an educated Englishman.
- He shook hands eagerly with Sherlock Holmes, and his dark
- eyes sparkled with pleasure when he understood that the special-
- ist was anxious to hear his story.
- "I do not believe that the police credit me -- on my word, I do
- not," said he in a wailing voice. "Just because they have never
- heard of it before, they think that such a thing cannot be. But I
- know that I shall never be easy in my mind until I know what
- has become of my poor man with the sticking-plaster upon his
- face."
- "I am all attention," said Sherlock Holmes.
- "This is Wednesday evening," said Mr. Melas. "Well, then,
- it was Monday night -- only two days ago, you understand -- that
- all this happened. I am an interpreter, as perhaps my neighbour
- there has told you. I interpret all languages -- or nearly all -- but
- as I am a Greek by birth and with a Grecian name, it is with that
- particular tongue that I am principally associated. For many
- years I have been the chief Greek interpreter in London, and my
- name is very well known in the hotels.
- "It happens not unfrequently that I am sent for at strange
- hours by foreigners who get into difficulties, or by travellers who
- arrive late and wish my services. I was not surprised, therefore,
- on Monday night when a Mr. Latimer, a very fashionably
- dressed young man, came up to my rooms and asked me to
- accompany him in a cab which was waiting at the door. A Greek
- friend had come to see him upon business, he said, and as he
- could speak nothing but his own tongue, the services of an
- interpreter were indispensable. He gave me to understand that his
- house was some little distance off, in Kensington, and he seemed
- to be in a great hurry, bustling me rapidly into the cab when we
- had descended to the street.
- "I say into the cab, but I soon became doubtful as to whether
- tt was not a carriage in which I found myself. It was certainly
- more roomy than the ordinary four-wheeled disgrace to London,
- and the fittings, though frayed, were of rich quality. Mr. Latimer
- seated himself opposite to me and we started off through Charing
- Cross and up the Shaftesbury Avenue. We had come out upon
- Oxford Street and I had ventured some remark as to this being a
- roundabout way to Kensington, when my words were arrested by
- the extraordinary conduct of my companion.
- "He began by drawing a most formidable-looking bludgeon
- loaded with lead from his pocket, and switching it backward and
- forward several times, as if to test its weight and strength. Then
- he placed it without a word upon the seat beside him. Having
- done this, he drew up the windows on each side, and I found to
- my astonishment that they were covered with paper so as to
- prevent my seeing through them.
- " 'I am sorry to cut off your view, Mr. Melas,' said he. 'The
- fact is that I have no intention that you should see what the place
- is to which we are driving. It might possibly be inconvenient to
- me if you could find your way there again.'
- "As you can imagine, I was utterly taken aback by such an
- address. My companion was a powerful, broad-shouldered young
- fellow, and, apart from the weapon, I should not have had the
- slightest chance in a struggle with him.
- " 'This is very extraordinary conduct, Mr. Latimer,' I stam-
- mered. 'You must be aware that what you are doing is quite
- illegal. '
- " 'It is somewhat of a liberty, no doubt,' said he, 'but we'll
- make it up to you. I must warn you, however, Mr. Melas, that if
- at any time to-night you attempt to raise an alarm or do anything
- which is against my interest, you will find it a very serious thing.
- I beg you to remember that no one knows where you are, and
- that, whether you are in this carriage or in my house, you are
- equally in my power.'
- "His words were quiet, but he had a rasping way of saying
- them, which was very menacing. I sat in silence wondering what
- on earth could be his reason for kidnapping me in this extraordi-
- nary fashion. Whatever it might be, it was perfectly clear that
- there was no possible use in my resisting, and that I could only
- wait to see what might befall.
- "For nearly two hours we drove without my having the least
- clue as to where we were going. Sometimes the rattle of the
- stones told of a paved causeway, and at others our smooth, silent
- course suggested asphalt; but, save by this variation in sound,
- there was nothing at all which could in the remotest way help me
- to form a guess as to where we were. The paper over each
- window was impenetrable to light, and a blue curtain was drawn
- across the glasswork in front. It was a quarter-past seven when
- we left Pall Mall, and my watch showed me that it was ten
- minutes to nine when we at last came to a standstill. My com-
- panion let down the window, and I caught a glimpse of a low,
- arched doorway with a lamp burning above it. As I was hurried
- from the carriage it swung open, and I found myself inside the
- house, with a vague impression of a lawn and trees on each side
- of me as I entered. Whether these were private grounds, how-
- ever, or bona-fide country was more than I could possibly ven-
- ture to say.
- "There was a coloured gas-lamp inside which was turned so
- low that I could see little save that the hall was of some size and
- hung with pictures. In the dim light I could make out that the
- person who had opened the door was a small, mean-looking,
- middle-aged man with rounded shoulders. As he turned towards
- us the glint of the light showed me that he was wearing glasses.
- " 'Is this Mr. Melas, Harold?' said he.
- " 'Yes.'
- " 'Well done, well done! No ill-will, Mr. Melas, I hope, but
- we could not get on without you. If you deal fair with us you'll
- not regret it, but if you try any tricks, God help you!' He spoke
- in a nervous, jerky fashion, and with little giggling laughs in
- between, but somehow he impressed me with fear more than the
- other.
- " 'What do you want with me?' I asked.
- " 'Only to ask a few questions of a Greek gentleman who is
- visiting us, and to let us have the answers. But say no more than
- you are told to say, or --' here came the nervous giggle again --
- 'you had better never have been born.'
- "As he spoke he opened a door and showed the way into a
- room which appeared to be very richly furnished, but again the
- only light was afforded by a single lamp half-turned down. The
- chamber was certainly large, and the way in which my feet sank
- into the carpet as I stepped across it told me of its richness. I
- caught glimpses of velvet chairs, a high white marble mantel-
- piece, and what seemed to be a suit of Japanese armour at one
- side of it. There was a chair just under the lamp, and the elderly
- man motioned that I should sit in it. The younger had left us, but
- he suddenly returned through another door, leading with him a
- gentleman clad in some sort of loose dressing-gown who moved
- slowly towards us. As he came into the circle of dim light which
- enabled me to see him more clearly I was thrilled with horror at
- his appearance. He was deadly pale and terribly emaciated, with
- the protruding, brilliant eyes of a man whose spirit was greater
- than his strength. But what shocked me more than any signs of
- physical weakness was that his face was grotesquely criss-crossed
- with sticking-plaster, and that one large pad of it was fastened
- over his mouth.
- " 'Have you the slate, Harold?' cried the older man, as this
- strange being fell rather than sat down into a chair. 'Are his
- hands loose? Now, then, give him the pencil. You are to ask the
- questions, Mr. Melas, and he will write the answers. Ask him
- first of all whether he is prepared to sign the papers?"
- "The man's eyes flashed fire.
- " 'Never!' he wrote in Greek upon the slate.
- " 'On no conditions?' I asked at the bidding of our tyrant.
- " 'Only if I see her married in my presence by a Greek priest
- whom I know.'
- "The man giggled in his venomous way.
- " 'You know what awaits you, then?'
- " 'I care nothing for myself.'
- "These are samples of the questions and answers which made
- up our strange half-spoken, half-written conversation. Again and
- again I had to ask him whether he would give in and sign the
- documents. Again and again I had the same indignant reply. But
- soon a happy thought came to me. I took to adding on little
- sentences of my own to each question, innocent ones at first, to
- test whether either of our companions knew anything of the
- matter, and then, as I found that they showed no sign I played a
- more dangerous game. Our conversation ran something like this:
- " 'You can do no good by this obstinacy. Who are you?'
- " 'I care not. I am a stranger in London.'
- " 'Your fate will be on your own head. How long have you
- been here?'
- " 'Let it be so. Three weeks.'
- " 'The property can never be yours. What ails you?'
- " 'It shall not go to villains. They are starving me.'
- " 'You shall go free if you sign. What house is this?'
- " 'I will never sign. I do not know.'
- " 'You are not doing her any service. What is your name?'
- " 'Let me hear her say so. Kratides.'
- " 'You shall see her if you sign. Where are you from?'
- " 'Then I shall never see her. Athens.'
- "Another five minutes, Mr. Holmes, and I should have wormed
- out the whole story under their very noses. My very next ques-
- tion might have cleared the matter up, but at that instant the door
- opened and a woman stepped into the room. I could not see her
- clearly enough to know more than that she was tall and graceful,
- with black hair, and clad in some sort of loose white gown.
- " 'Harold,' said she, speaking English with a broken accent.
- 'I could not stay away longer. It is so lonely up there with
- only -- Oh, my God, it is Paul!'
- "These last words were in Greek, and at the same instant the
- man with a convulsive effort tore the plaster from his lips, and
- screaming out 'Sophy! Sophy!' rushed into the woman's arms.
- Their embrace was but for an instant, however, for the younger
- man seized the woman and pushed her out of the room, while the
- elder easily overpowered his emaciated victim and dragged him
- away through the other door. For a moment I was left alone in
- the room, and I sprang to my feet with some vague idea that I
- might in some way get a clue to what this house was in which I
- found myself. Fortunately, however, I took no steps, for looking
- up I saw that the older man was standing in the doorway, with
- his eyes fixed upon me.
- " 'That will do, Mr. Melas,' said he. 'You perceive that we
- have taken you into our confidence over some very private
- business. We should not have troubled you, only that our friend
- who speaks Greek and who began these negotiations has been
- forced to return to the East. It was quite necessary for us to find
- someone to take his place, and we were fortunate in hearing of
- your powers.'
- "I bowed.
- " 'There are five sovereigns here,' said he, walking up to me,
- 'which will, I hope, be a sufficient fee. But remember,' he
- added, tapping me lightly on the chest and giggling, 'if you
- speak to a human soul about this -- one human soul, mind -- well,
- may God have mercy upon your soul!'
- "I cannot tell you the loathing and horror with which this
- insignificant-looking man inspired me. I could see him better
- now as the lamp-light shone upon him. His features were peaky
- and sallow, and his little pointed beard was thready and ill-
- nourished. He pushed his face forward as he spoke and his lips
- and eyelids were continually twitching like a man with St.
- Vitus's dance. I could not help thinking that his strange, catchy
- little laugh was also a symptom of some nervous malady. The
- terror of his face lay in his eyes, however, steel gray, and
- glistening coldly with a malignant, inexorable cruelty in their
- depths.
- " 'We shall know if you speak of this,' said he. 'We have our
- own means of information. Now you will find the carriage
- waiting, and my friend will see you on your way.'
- "I was hurried through the hall and into the vehicle, again
- obtaining that momentary glimpse of trees and a garden. Mr.
- Latimer followed closely at my heels and took his place opposite
- to me without a word. In silence we again drove for an intermi-
- nable distance with the windows raised, until at last, just after
- midnight, the carriage pulled up.
- " 'You will get down here, Mr. Melas,' said my companion.
- 'I am sorry to leave you so far from your house, but there is no
- alternative. Any attempt upon your part to follow the carriage
- can only end in injury to yourself.'
- "He opened the door as he spoke. and I had hardly time to
- spring out when the coachman lashed the horse and the carriage
- rattled away. I looked around me in astonishment. I was on some
- sort of a heathy common mottled over with dark clumps of
- furze-bushes. Far away stretched a line of houses, with a light
- here and there in the upper windows. On the other side I saw the
- red signal-lamps of a railway.
- "The carriage which had brought me was already out of sight.
- I stood gazing round and wondering where on earth I might be,
- when I saw someone coming towards me in the darkness. As he
- came up to me I made out that he was a railway porter.
- " 'Can you tell me what place this is?' I asked.
- " 'Wandsworth Common,' said he.
- " 'Can I get a train into town?'
- " 'If you walk on a mile or so to Clapham Junction,' said he,
- 'you'll just be in time for the last to Victoria.'
- "So that was the end of my adventure, Mr. Holmes. I do not
- know where I was, nor whom I spoke with, nor anything save
- what I have told you. But I know that there is foul play going
- on, and I want to help that unhappy man if I can. I told the
- whole story to Mr. Mycroft Holmes next morning, and subse-
- quently to the police."
- We all sat in silence for some little time after listening to this
- extraordinary narrative. Then Sherlock looked across at his brother.
- "Any steps?" he asked.
- Mycroft picked up the Daily News, which was lying on the
- side-table.
-
- "Anybody supplying any information as to the where-
- abouts of a Greek gentleman named Paul Kratides, from
- Athens, who is unable to speak English, will be rewarded.
- A similar reward paid to anyone giving information about a
- Greek lady whose first name is Sophy. X 2473.
-
- "That was in all the dailies. No answer."
- "How about the Greek legation?"
- "I have inquired. They know nothing."
- "A wire to the head of the Athens police, then?"
- "Sherlock has all the energy of the family," said Mycroft,
- turning to me. "Well, you take the case up by all means and let
- me know if you do any good."
- "Certainly," answered my friend, rising from his chair. "I'll
- let you know, and Mr. Melas also. In the meantime, Mr. Melas,
- I should certainly be on my guard if I were you, for of course
- they must know through these advertisements that you have
- betrayed them."
- As we walked home together, Holmes stopped at a telegraph
- office and sent off several wires.
- "You see, Watson," he remarked, "our evening has been by
- no means wasted. Some of my most interesting cases have come
- to me in this way through Mycroft. The problem which we have
- just listened to, although it can admit of but one explanation, has
- still some distinguishing features."
- "You have hopes of solving it?"
- "Well, knowing as much as we do, it will be singular indeed
- if we fail to discover the rest. You must yourself have formed
- some theory which will explain the facts to which we have
- listened."
- "In a vague way, yes."
- "What was your idea, then?"
- "It seemed to me to be obvious that this Greek girl had been
- carried off by the young Englishman named Harold Latimer."
- "Carried off from where?"
- "Athens, perhaps."
- Sherlock Holmes shook his head. "This young man could not
- talk a word of Greek. The lady could talk English fairly well.
- Inference -- that she had been in England some little time, but he
- had not been in Greece."
- "Well, then, we will presume that she had once come on a
- visit to England, and that this Harold had persuaded her to fly
- with him."
- "That is more probable."
- "Then the brother -- for that, I fancy, must be the relationship --
- comes over from Greece to interfere. He imprudently puts him-
- self into the power of the young man and his older associate.
- They seize him and use violence towards him in order to make
- him sign some papers to make over the girl's fortune of which
- he may be trustee -- to them. This he refuses to do. In order to
- negotiate with him they have to get an interpreter, and they pitch
- upon this Mr. Melas, having used some other one before. The
- girl is not told of the arrival of her brother and finds it out by the
- merest accident."
- "Excellent, Watson!" cried Holmes. "I really fancy that you
- are not far from the truth. You see that we hold all the cards, and
- we have only to fear some sudden act of violence on their part. If
- they give us time we must have them."
- "But how can we find where this house lies?"
- "Well, if our conjecture is correct and the girl's name is or
- was Sophy Kratides, we should have no difficulty in tracing her.
- That must be our main hope, for the brother is, of coursc, a
- complete stranger. It is clear that some time has elapsed since
- this Harold established these relations with the girl -- some weeks
- at any rate -- since the brother in Greece has had time to hear of it
- and come across. If they have been living in the same place
- during this time, it is probable that we shall have some answer to
- Mycroft's advertisement."
- We had reached our house in Baker Street while we had been
- talking. Holmes ascended the stair first, and as he opened the
- door of our room he gave a start of surprise. Looking over his
- shoulder, I was equally astonished. His brother Mycroft was
- sitting smoking in the armchair.
- "Come in, Sherlock! Come in, sir," said he blandly, smiling
- at our surprised faces. "You don't expect such energy from me
- do you, Sherlock? But somehow this case attracts me."
- "How did you get here?"
- "I passed you in a hansom."
- "There has been some new development?"
- "I had an answer to my advertisement."
- "Ah!"
- "Yes, it came within a few minutes of your leaving."
- "And to what effect?"
- Mycroft Holmes took out a sheet of paper.
- "Here it is," said he, "written with a J pen on royal cream
- paper by a middle-aged man with a weak constitution.
-
- "Sir [he saysl:
- "In answer to your advertisement of to-day's date, I beg
- to inform you that I know the young lady in question very
- well. If you should care to call upon me I could give you
- some particulars as to her painful history. She is living at
- present at The Myrtles, Beckenham.
- "Yours faithfully,
- "J. DAVENPORT.
-
- "He writes from Lower Brixton," said Mycroft Holmes. "Do
- you not think that we might drive to him now, Sherlock, and
- learn these particulars?"
- "My dear Mycroft, the brother's life is more valuable than the
- sister's story. I think we should call at Scotland Yard for Inspec-
- tor Gregson and go straight out to Beckenham. We know that a
- man is being done to death, and every hour may be vital."
- "Better pick up Mr. Melas on our way," I suggested. "We
- may need an interpreter."
- "Excellent," said Sherlock Holmes. "Send the boy for a
- four-wheeler, and we shall be off at once." He opened the
- table-drawer as he spoke, and I noticed that he slipped his
- revolver into his pocket. "Yes," said he in answer to my glance,
- "I should say, from what we have heard, that we are dealing
- with a particularly dangerous gang."
- It was almost dark before we found ourselves in Pall Mall, at
- the rooms of Mr. Melas. A gentleman had just called for him,
- and he was gone.
- "Can you tell me where?" asked Mycroft Holmes.
- "I don't know, sir," answered the woman who had opened
- the door; "I only know that he drove away with the gentleman in
- a carriage."
- "Did the gentleman give a name?"
- "No, sir."
- "He wasn't a tall, handsome, dark young man?"
- "Oh, no, sir. He was a little gentleman, with glasses, thin in
- the face, but very pleasant in his ways, for he was laughing all
- the time that he was talking."
- "Come along!" cried Sherlock Holmes abruptly. "This grows
- serious," he observed as we drove to Scotland Yard. "These
- men have got hold of Melas again. He is a man of no physical
- courage, as they are well aware from their experience the other
- night.This villain was able to terrorize him the instant that he
- got into his presence. No doubt they want his professional
- services, but, having used him, they may be inclined to punish
- him for what they will regard as his treachery."
- Our hope was that, by taking train, we might get to Beckenham
- as soon as or sooner than the carriage. On reaching Scotland
- Yard, however, it was more than an hour before we could get
- Inspector Gregson and comply with the legal formalities which
- would enable us to enter the house. It was a quarter to ten before
- we reached London Bridge, and half past before the four of us
- alighted on the Beckenham platform. A drive of half a mile
- brought us to The Myrtles -- a large, dark house standing back
- from the road in its own grounds. Here we dismissed our cab and
- made our way up the drive togeter.
- "The windows are all dark," remarked the inspector. "The
- house seems deserted."
- "Our birds are flown and the nest empty," said Holmes.
- "Why do you say so?"
- "A carriage heavily loaded with luggage has passed out dur-
- ing the last hour."
- The inspector laughed. "I saw the wheel-tracks in the light of
- the gate-lamp, but where does the luggage come in?"
- "You may have observed the same wheel-tracks going the
- other way. But the outward-bound ones were very much
- deeper -- so much so that we can say for a certainty that there
- was a very considerable weiyht on the carriage."
- "You get a trifle beyond me there," said the inspector, shrug-
- ging his shoulders. "It will not be an easy door to force, but we
- will try if we cannot make someone hear us."
- He hammered loudly at the knocker and pulled at the bell, but
- without any success. Holmes had slipped away, but he came
- back in a few minutes.
- "I have a window open," said he.
- "It is a mercy that you are on the side of the force, and not
- against it, Mr. Holmes," remarked the inspector as he noted the
- clever way in which my friend had forced back the catch.
- "Well, I think that under the circumstances we may enter with-
- out an invitation."
- One after the other we made our way into a large apartment,
- which was evidently that in which Mr. Melas had found himself.
- The inspector had lit his lantern, and by its light we could see the
- two doors, the curtain, the lamp, and the suit of Japanese mail as
- he had described them. On the table lay two glasses, an empty
- brandy-bottle, and the remains of a meal.
- "What is that?" asked Holmes suddenly.
- We all stood still and listened. A low moaning sound was
- coming from somewhere over our heads. Holmes rushed to the
- door and out into the hall. The dismal noise came from upstairs.
- He dashed up, the inspector and I at his heels. while his brother
- Mycroft followed as quickly as his great bulk would permit.
- Three doors faced us upon the second floor, and it was from
- the central of these that the sinister sounds were issuing, sinking
- sometimes into a dull mumble and rising again into a shrill
- whine. It was locked, but the key had been left on the outside.
- Holmes flung open the door and rushed in, but he was out again
- in an instant, with his hand to his throat.
- "It's charcoal," he cried. "Give it time. It will clear."
- Peering in, we could see that the only light in the room came
- from a dull blue flame which flickered from a small brass tripod
- in the centre. It threw a livid unnatural circle upon the floor,
- while in the shadows beyond we saw the vague loom of two
- fiyures which crouched against the wall. From thc open door
- there reeked a horrible poisonous exhalation which set us gasp-
- ing and coughing. Holmes rushed to the top of the stairs to draw
- in the fresh air, and then, dashing into the room, he threw up the
- window and hurled the brazen tripod out into the garden.
- "We can enter in a minute," he gasped, darting out again.
- "Where is a candle? I doubt if we could strike a match in that
- atmosphere. Hold the light at the door and we shall get them out,
- Mycroft, now!"
- With a rush we got to the poisoned men and dragged them out
- into the well-lit hall. Both of them were blue-lipped and insensi-
- ble, with swollen, congested faces and protruding eyes. Indeed,
- so distorted were their features that, save for his black beard and
- stout figure, we might have failed to recognize in one of them
- the Greek interpreter who had parted from us only a few hours
- before at the Diogenes Club. His hands and feet were securely
- strapped together, and he bore over one eye the marks of a
- violent blow. The other, who was secured in a similar fashion
- was a tall man in the last stage of emaciation, with several strips
- of sticking-plaster arranged in a grotesque pattern over his face.
- He had ceased to moan as we laid him down, and a glance
- showed me that for him at least our aid had come too late. Mr.
- Melas, however, still lived, and in less than an hour, with the
- aid of ammonia and brandy, I had the satisfaction of seeing him
- open his eyes, and of knowing that my hand had drawn him back
- from that dark valley in which all paths meet.
- It was a simple story which he had to tell, and one which did
- but confirm our own deductions. His visitor, on entering his
- rooms, had drawn a life-preserver from his sleeve, and had so
- impressed him with the fear of instant and inevitable death that
- he had kidnapped him for the second time. Indeed, it was almost
- mesmeric, the effect which this giggling ruffian had produced
- upon the unfortunate linguist, for he could not speak of him save
- with trembling hands and a blanched cheek. He had been taken
- swiftly to Beckenham, and had acted as interpreter in a second
- interview, even more dramatic than the first, in which the two
- Englishmen had menaced their prisoner with instant death if he
- did not comply with their demands. Finally, finding him proof
- against every threat, they had hurled him back into his prison
- and after reproaching Melas with his treachery, which appeared
- from the newspaper advertisement, they had stunned him with a
- blow from a stick, and he remembered nothing more until he
- found us bending over him.
- And this was the singular case of the Grecian Interpreter, the
- explanation of which is still involved in some mystery. We were
- able to find out, by communicating with the gentleman who had
- answered the advertisement, that the unfortunate young lady
- came of a wealthy Grecian family, and that she had been on a
- visit to some friends in England. While there she had met a
- young man named Harold Latimer, who had acquired an ascen-
- dency over her and had eventually persuaded her to fly with him.
- Her friends, shocked at the event, had contented themselves with
- informing her brother at Athens, and had then washed their
- hands of the matter. The brother, on his arrival in England, had
- imprudently placed himself in the power of Latimer and of his
- associate, whose name was Wilson Kemp -- a man of the foulest
- antecedents. These two, finding that through his ignorance of the
- language he was helpless in their hands, had kept him a prisoner,
- and had endeavoured by cruelty and starvation to make him sign
- away his own and his sister's property. They had kept him in the
- house without the girl's knowledge, and the plaster over the
- face had been for the purpose of making recognition difficult in
- case she should ever catch a glimpse of him. Her feminine
- perceptions, however, had instantly seen through the disguise
- when, on the occasion of the interpreter's visit, she had seen him
- for the first time. The poor girl, however, was herself a prisoner,
- for there was no one about the house except the man who acted
- as coachman, and his wife, both of whom were tools of the
- conspirators. Finding that their secret was out, and that their
- prisoner was not to be coerced, the two villains with the girl had
- fled away at a few hours' notice from the furnished house which
- they had hired, having first, as they thought, taken vengeance
- both upon the man who had defied and the one who had betrayed
- them.
- Months afterwards a curious newspaper cutting reached us
- from Buda-Pesth. It told how two Englishmen who had been
- travelling with a woman had met with a tragic end. They had
- each been stabbed, it seems, and the Hungarian police were of
- opinion that they had quarrelled and had inflicted mortal injuries
- upon each other. Holmes, however, is, I fancy, of a different
- way of thinking, and he holds to this day that, if one could
- find the Grecian girl, one might learn how the wrongs of herself
- and her brother came to be avenged.
-