I. The New Friend
F RESH FROM THEIR STUPENDOUS EUROPEAN TOUR, WHERE THEY PERFORMED
BEFORE SEVERAL OF THE CROWNED HEADS OF EUROPE, GARNERING THEIR PLAUDITS
AND PRAISE WITH MAGNIFICENT DRAMATIC PERFORMANCES, COMBINING BOTH COMEDY
AND TRAGEDY, THE STRAND PLAYERS WISH TO MAKE IT KNOWN THAT THEY SHALL
BE APPEARING AT THE ROYAL COURT THEATRE, DRURY LANE, FOR A LIMITED
ENGAGEMENT IN APRIL, AT WHICH THEY WILL PRESENT MY LOOK-ALIKE BROTHER
TOM!, THE LITTLEST VIOLET-SELLER AND THE GREAT OLD ONES COME (THIS LAST
AN HISTORICAL EPIC OF PAGEANTRY AND DELIGHT); EACH AN ENTIRE PLAY IN ONE
ACT! TICKETS ARE AVAILABLE NOW FROM THE BOX OFFICE.
It is the immensity, I believe. The hugeness of things below. The darkness of dreams.
But I am woolgathering. Forgive me. I am not a literary man.
I had been in need of lodgings. That was how I met him. I wanted
someone to share the cost of rooms with me. We were introduced by a
mutual acquaintance, in the chemical laboratories of St. Bart’s. “You
have been in Afghanistan, I perceive,” that was what he said to me, and
my mouth fell open and my eyes opened very wide.
“Astonishing,” I said.
“Not really,” said the stranger in the white lab-coat, who was to
become my friend. “From the way you hold your arm, I see you have been
wounded, and in a particular way. You have a deep tan. You also have a
military bearing, and there are few enough places in the Empire that a
military man can be both tanned and, given the nature of the injury to
your shoulder and the traditions of the Afghan cave-folk, tortured.”
Put like that, of course, it was absurdly simple. But then, it
always was. I had been tanned nut-brown. And I had indeed, as he had
observed, been tortured.
The gods and men of Afghanistan were savages, unwilling to be
ruled from Whitehall or from Berlin or even from Moscow, and unprepared
to see reason. I had been sent into those hills, attached to the-th
Regiment. As long as the fighting remained in the hills and mountains,
we fought on an equal footing. When the skirmishesdescended into the caves and the darkness then we found ourselves, as it were, out of our depth and in over our heads.
I shall not forget the mirrored surface of the underground lake,
nor the thing that emerged from the lake, its eyes opening and closing,
and the singing whispers that accompanied it as it rose, wreathing their
way about it like the buzzing of flies bigger than worlds.
That I survived was a miracle, but survive I did, and I returned
to England with my nerves in shreds and tatters. The place that
leech-like mouth had touched me was tattooed forever, frog-white, into
the skin of my now-withered shoulder. I had once been a crack-shot. Now I
had nothing, save a fear of the world-beneath-the-world akin to panic,
which meant that I would gladly pay sixpence of my army pension for a
Hansom cab rather than a penny to travel underground.
Still, the fogs and darknesses of London comforted me, took me in.
I had lost my first lodgings because I screamed in the night. I had
been in Afghanistan; I was there no longer.
“I scream in the night,” I told him.
“I have been told that I snore,” he said. “Also I keep irregular
hours, and I often use the mantelpiece for target practice. I will need
the sitting room to meet clients. I am selfish, private, and easily
bored. Will this be a problem?”
I smiled, and I shook my head, and extended my hand. We shook on it.
The rooms he had found for us, in Baker Street, were more than
adequate for two bachelors. I bore in mind all my friend had said about
his desire for privacy, and I forbore from asking what it was he did for
a living. Still, there was much to pique my curiosity. Visitors would
arrive at all hours, and when they did I would leave the sitting room
and repair to my bedroom, pondering what they could have in common with
my friend: the pale woman with one eye bone-white, the small man who
looked like a commercial traveler, the portly dandy in his velvet
jacket, and the rest. Some were frequent visitors, many others came only
once, spoke to him, and left, looking troubled or looking satisfied.
He was a mystery to me.
We were partaking of one of our landlady’s magnificent breakfasts
one morning, when my friend rang the bell to summon that good lady.
“There will be a gentleman joining us, in about four minutes,” he said.
“We will need another place at table.”
“Very good,” she said, “I’ll put more sausages under the grill.”
My friend returned to perusing his morning paper. I waited for an
explanation with growing impatience. Finally, I could stand it no
longer. “I don’t understand. How could you know that in four minutes we
would be receiving a visitor? There was no telegram, no message of any
kind.”
He smiled, thinly. “You did not hear the clatter of a brougham
several minutes ago? It slowed as it passed us-obviously as the driver
identified our door, then it sped up and went past, up into the
Marylebone Road. There is a crush of carriages and taxicabs letting off
passengers at the railway station and at the waxworks, and it is in that
crush that anyone wishing to alight without being observed will go. The
walk from there to here is but four minutes…”
He glanced at his pocket watch, and as he did so I heard a tread on the stairs outside.
“Come in, Lestrade,” he called. “The door is ajar, and your sausages are just coming out from under the grill.”
A man I took to be Lestrade opened the door, then closed it
carefully behind him. “I should not,” he said. “But truth to tell, I
have not had a chance to break my fast this morning. And I could
certainly do justice to a few of those sausages.” He was the small man I
had observed on several occasions previously, whose demeanor was that
of a traveler in rubber novelties or patent nostrums.
My friend waited until our landlady had left the room before he
said, “Obviously, I take it this is a matter of national importance.”
“My stars,” said Lestrade, and he paled. “Surely the word cannot
be out already. Tell me it is not.” He began to pile his plate high with
sausages, kipper fillets, kedgeree, and toast, but his hands shook, a
little.
“Of course not,” said my friend. “I know the squeak of your
brougham wheels, though, after all this time: an oscillating G sharp
above high C. And if Inspector Lestrade of Scotland Yard cannot publicly
be seen to come into the parlor of London’s only consulting detective,
yet comes anyway, and without having had his breakfast, then I know that
this is not a routine case. Ergo, it involves those above us and is a
matter of national importance.”
Lestrade dabbed egg yolk from his chin with his napkin. I stared
at him. He did not look like my idea of a police inspector, but then, my
friend looked little enough
like my idea of a consulting detective-whatever that might be.
“Perhaps we should discuss the matter privately,” Lestrade said, glancing at me.
My friend began to smile, impishly, and his head moved on his
shoulders as it did when he was enjoying a private joke. “Nonsense,” he
said. “Two heads are better than one. And what is said to one of us is
said to us both.”
“If I am intruding-” I said, gruffly, but he motioned me to silence.
Lestrade shrugged. “It’s all the same to me,” he said, after a
moment. “If you solve the case then I have my job. If you don’t, then I
have no job. You use your methods, that’s what I say. It can’t make
things any worse.”
“If there’s one thing that a study of history has taught us, it is
that things can always get worse,” said my friend. “When do we go to
Shoreditch?”
Lestrade dropped his fork. “This is too bad!” he exclaimed. “Here
you were, making sport of me, when you know all about the matter! You
should be ashamed-”
“No one has told me anything of the matter. When a police
inspector walks into my room with fresh splashes of mud of that peculiar
mustard-yellow hue on his boots and trouser legs, I can surely be
forgiven for presuming that he has recently walked past the diggings at
Hobbs Lane, in Shoreditch, which is the only place in London that
particular mustard-colored clay seems to be found.”
Inspector Lestrade looked embarrassed. “Now you put it like that,” he said, “it seems so obvious.”
My friend pushed his plate away from him. “Of course it does,” he said, slightly testily.
We rode to the East End in a cab. Inspector Lestrade had walked up
to the Marylebone Road to find his brougham, and left us alone.
“So you are truly a consulting detective?” I said.
“The only one in London, or perhaps, the world,” said my friend.
“I do not take cases. Instead, I consult. Others bring me their
insoluble problems, they describe them, and, sometimes, I solve them.”
“Then those people who come to you-”
“Are, in the main, police officers, or are detectives themselves, yes.”
It was a fine morning, but we were now jolting about the edges of
the rookery of St. Giles, that warren of thieves and cutthroats which
sits on London like a cancer on the face of a pretty flower-seller, and
the only light to enter the cab was dim and faint.
“Are you sure that you wish me along with you?”
In reply my friend stared at me without blinking. “I have a
feeling,” he said. “I have a feeling that we were meant to be together.
That we have fought the good fight, side by side, in the past or in the
future, I do not know. I am a rational man, but I have learned the value
of a good companion, and from the moment I clapped eyes on you, I knew I
trusted you as well as I do myself. Yes. I want you with me.”
I blushed, or said something meaningless. For the first time since Afghanistan, I felt that I had worth in the world.
2. The Room
VICTOR’S VITAE! AN ELECTRICAL FLUID! DO YOUR LIMBS AND NETHER
REGIONS LACK LIFE? DO YOU LOOK BACK ON THE DAYS OF YOUR YOUTH WITH ENVY?
ARE THE PLEASURES OF THE FLESH NOW BURIED AND FORGOT? VICTOR’S VITAE
WILL BRING LIFE WHERE LIFE HAS LONG BEEN LOST: EVEN THE OLDEST WARHORSE
CAN BE A PROUD STALLION ONCE MORE! BRINGING LIFE TO THE DEAD: FROM AN
OLD FAMILY RECIPE AND THE BEST OF MODERN SCIENCE. TO RECEIVE SIGNED
ATTESTATIONS OF THE EFFICACY OF VICTOR’S VITAE WRITE TO THE V. VON F.
COMPANY, 1B CHEAP STREET, LONDON.
It was a cheap rooming house in Shoreditch. There was a policeman
at the front door. Lestrade greeted him by name and made to usher us in,
and I was ready to enter, but my friend squatted on the doorstep, and
pulled a magnifying glass from his coat pocket. He examined the mud on
the wrought iron boot-scraper, prodding at it with his forefinger. Only
when he was satisfied would he let us go inside.
We walked upstairs. The room in which the crime had been committed was obvious: it was flanked by two burly constables.
Lestrade nodded to the men, and they stood aside. We walked in.
I am not, as I said, a writer by profession, and I hesitate to
describe that place, knowing that my words cannot do it justice. Still, I
have begun this narrative, and I fear I must continue. A murder had
been committed in that little bedsit. The body, what was left of it, was
still there, on the floor. I saw it, but, at first, somehow, I did not
see it. What I saw instead was what had sprayed and gushed from the
throat and chest of the victim: in color it ranged from bile-green to
grass-green. It had soaked into the threadbare carpet and spattered the
wallpaper. I imagined it for one moment the work of some hellish artist
who had decided to
create a study in emerald.
After what seemed like a hundred years I looked down at the body,
opened like a rabbit on a butcher’s slab, and tried to make sense of
what I saw. I removed my hat, and my friend did the same.
He knelt and inspected the body, examining the cuts and gashes.
Then he pulled out his magnifying glass, and walked over to the wall,
examining the gouts of drying ichor.
“We’ve already done that,” said Inspector Lestrade.
“Indeed?” said my friend. “What did you make of this, then? I do believe it is a word.”
Lestrade walked to the place my friend was standing, and looked
up. There was a word, written in capitals, in green blood, on the faded
yellow wallpaper, some little way above Lestrade’s head. “R-A-C-H-E…?”
said Lestrade, spelling it out. “Obviously he was going to write
‘Rachel,’ but he was interrupted. So-we must look for a woman…”
My friend said nothing. He walked back to the corpse and picked up
its hands, one after the other. The fingertips were clean of ichor. “I
think we have established that the word was not written by His Royal
Highness-”
“What the Devil makes you say-?”
“My dear Lestrade. Please give me some credit for having a brain.
The corpse is obviously not that of a man-the color of his blood, the
number of limbs, the eyes, the position of the face, all these things
bespeak the blood royal. While I cannot say which royal line, I would
hazard that he is an heir, perhaps…no, second in line to the throne…in
one of the German principalities.”
“That is amazing.” Lestrade hesitated, then he said, “This is
Prince Franz Drago of Bohemia. He was here in Albion as a guest of Her
Majesty Victoria. Here for a holiday and a change of air…”
“For the theaters, the whores, and the gaming tables, you mean.”
“If you say so.” Lestrade looked put out. “Anyway, you’ve given us
a fine lead with this Rachel woman. Although I don’t doubt we would
have found her on our own.”
“Doubtless,” said my friend.
He inspected the room further, commenting acidly several times
that the police, with their boots, had obscured footprints and moved
things that might have been of use to anyone attempting to reconstruct
the events of the previous night.
Still, he seemed interested in a small patch of mud he found behind the door.
Beside the fireplace he found what appeared to be some ash or dirt.
“Did you see this?” he asked Lestrade.
“Her Majesty’s police,” replied Lestrade, “tend not to be excited
by ash in a fireplace. It’s where ash tends to be found.” And he
chuckled at that.
My friend took a pinch of the ash and rubbed it between his
fingers, then sniffed the remains. Finally, he scooped up what was left
of the material and tipped it into a glass vial, which he stoppered and
placed in an inner pocket of his coat.
He stood up. “And the body?”
Lestrade said, “The palace will send their own people.”
My friend nodded at me, and together we walked to the door. My
friend sighed. “Inspector. Your quest for Miss Rachel may prove
fruitless. Among other things, Rache is a German word. It means
“revenge.” Check your dictionary. There are other meanings.”
We reached the bottom of the stair and walked out onto the street.
“You have never seen royalty before this morning, have you?” he asked. I
shook my head. “Well, the sight can be unnerving, if you’re unprepared.
Why my good fellow-you are trembling!”
“Forgive me. I shall be fine in moments.”
“Would it do you good to walk?” he asked, and I assented, certain that if I did not walk then I would begin to scream.
“West, then,” said my friend, pointing to the dark tower of the palace. And we commenced to walk.
“So,” said my friend, after some time. “You have never had any personal encounters with any of the crowned heads of Europe?”
“No,” I said.
“I believe I can confidently state that you shall,” he told me. “And not with a corpse this time. Very soon.”
“My dear fellow, whatever makes you believe-?”
In reply he pointed to a carriage, black-painted, that had pulled
up fifty yards ahead of us. A man in a black top hat and a greatcoat
stood by the door, holding it open, waiting, silently. A coat of arms
familiar to every child in Albion was painted in gold upon the carriage
door.
“There are invitations one does not refuse,” said my friend. He
doffed his own hat to the footman, and I do believe that he was smiling
as he climbed into the boxlike space and relaxed back into the soft,
leathery cushions.
When I attempted to speak with him during the journey to the palace, he
placed his finger over his
lips. Then he closed his eyes and seemed sunk deep in thought. I, for
my part, tried to remember what I knew of German royalty, but, apart
from the Queen’s consort, Prince Albert, being German, I knew little
enough.
I put a hand in my pocket, pulled out a handful of coins-brown and
silver, black and copper-green. I stared at the portrait stamped on
each of them of our Queen, and felt both patriotic pride and stark
dread. I told myself I had once been a military man and a stranger to
fear, and I could remember when this had been the plain truth. For a
moment I remembered a time when I had been a crack-shot-even, I liked to
think, something of a marksman-but my right hand shook as if it were
palsied, and the coins jingled and chinked, and I felt only regret.
3. The Palace
AT LONG LAST DOCTOR HENRY JEKYLL IS PROUD TO ANNOUNCE THE GENERAL
RELEASE OF THE WORLD-RENOWNED “JEKYLL’S POWDERS” FOR POPULAR
CONSUMPTION. NO LONGER THE PROVINCE OF THE PRIVILEGED FEW. RELEASE THE
INNER YOU! FOR INNER AND OUTER CLEANLINESS! TOO MANY PEOPLE, BOTH MEN
AND WOMEN, SUFFER FROM CONSTIPATION OF THE SOUL! RELIEF IS IMMEDIATE AND
CHEAP-WITH JEKYLL’S POWDERS! (AVAILABLE IN VANILLA AND ORIGINAL
MENTHOLATUM FORMULATIONS.)
The Queen’s consort, Prince Albert, was a big man with an
impressive handlebar mustache and a receding hairline, and he was
undeniably and entirely human. He met us in the corridor, nodded to my
friend and to me, did not ask us for our names or offer to shake hands.
“The Queen is most upset,” he said. He had an accent. He
pronounced his Ss as Zs: Mozt. Upzet. “Franz was one of her favorites.
She has so many nephews. But he made her laugh so. You will find the
ones who did this to him.”
“I will do my best,” said my friend.
“I have read your monographs,” said Prince Albert. “It was I who told them that you should be consulted. I hope I did right.”
“As do I,” said my friend.
And then the great door was opened, and we were ushered into the darkness and the presence of the Queen.
She was called Victoria, because she had beaten us in battle,
seven hundred years before, and she was called Gloriana, because she was
glorious, and she was called the Queen, because the human mouth was not
shaped to say her true name. She was huge, huger than I had imagined
possible, and she squatted in the shadows staring down at us, without
moving.
Thizsz muzzst be zsolved. The words came from the shadows.
“Indeed, ma’am,” said my friend.
A limb squirmed and pointed at me. Zstepp forward.
I wanted to walk. My legs would not move.
My friend came to my rescue then. He took me by the elbow and walked me toward Her Majesty.
Isz not to be afraid. Isz to be worthy. Isz to be a companion.
That was what she said to me. Her voice was a very sweet contralto, with
a distant buzz. Then the limb uncoiled and extended, and she touched my
shoulder. There was a moment, but only a moment, of a pain deeper and
more profound than anything I have ever experienced, and then it was
replaced by a pervasive sense of well-being. I could feel the muscles in
my shoulder relax, and, for the first time since Afghanistan, I was
free from pain.
Then my friend walked forward. Victoria spoke to him, yet I could
not hear her words; I wondered if they went, somehow, directly from her
mind to his, if this was the Queen’s Counsel I had read about in the
histories. He replied aloud.
“Certainly, ma’am. I can tell you that there were two other men
with your nephew in that room in Shoreditch, that night. The footprints
were, although obscured, unmistakable.” And then, “Yes. I understand… I
believe so… Yes.”
He was quiet when we left the palace, and said nothing to me as we rode back to Baker Street.
It was dark already. I wondered how long we had spent in the palace.
Fingers of sooty fog twined across the road and the sky.
Upon our return to Baker Street, in the looking-glass of my room, I
observed that the frog-white skin across my shoulder had taken on a
pinkish tinge. I hoped that I was not imagining it, that it was not
merely the moonlight through the window.
4. The Performance
LIVER COMPLAINTS?! BILIOUS ATTACKS?! NEURASTHENIC DISTURBANCES?!
QUINSY?! ARTHRITIS?! THESE ARE JUST A HANDFUL OF THE COMPLAINTS FOR
WHICH A PROFESSIONAL EXSANGUINATION CAN BE THE REMEDY. IN OUR OFFICES WE
HAVE SHEAVES OF TESTIMONIALS WHICH CAN BE INSPECTED BY THE PUBLIC AT
ANY TIME. DO NOT PUT YOUR HEALTH IN THE HANDS OF AMATEURS!! WE HAVE BEEN
DOING THIS FOR A VERY LONG TIME: V. TEPES-PROFESSIONAL EXSANGUINATOR.
(REMEMBER! IT IS PRONOUNCED TZSEPPESH!) ROMANIA, PARIS, LONDON, WHITBY.
YOU’VE TRIED THE REST-NOW TRY THE BEST!!
That my friend was a master
of disguise should have
come as no surprise to me, yet surprise me it did. Over the next ten
days a strange assortment of characters came in through our door in
Baker Street-an elderly Chinese man, a young roue, a fat, red-haired
woman of whose former profession there could be little doubt, and a
venerable old buffer, his foot swollen and bandaged from gout. Each of
them would walk into my friend’s room, and, with a speed that would have
done justice to a music-hall “quick-change artist,” my friend would
walk out.
He would not talk about what he had been doing on these occasions,
preferring to relax, staring off into space, occasionally making
notations on any scrap of paper to hand, notations I found, frankly,
incomprehensible. He seemed entirely preoccupied, so much so that I
found myself worrying about his well-being. And then, late one
afternoon, he came home dressed in his own clothes, with an easy grin
upon his face, and he asked if I was interested in the theater.
“As much as the next man,” I told him.
“Then fetch your opera glasses,” he told me. “We are off to Drury Lane.”
I had expected a light opera, or something of the kind, but
instead I found myself in what must have been the worst theater in Drury
Lane, for all that it had named itself after the royal court-and to be
honest, it was barely in Drury Lane at all, being situated at the
Shaftesbury Avenue end of the road, where the avenue approaches the
rookery of St. Giles. On my friend’s advice I concealed my wallet, and,
following his example, I carried a stout stick.
Once we were seated in the stalls (I had bought a threepenny
orange from one of the lovely young women who sold them to the members
of the audience, and I sucked it as we waited), my friend said, quietly,
“You should only count yourself lucky that you did not need to
accompany me to the gambling dens or the brothels. Or the
madhouses-another place that Prince Franz delighted in visiting, as I
have learned. But there was nowhere he went to more than once. Nowhere
but-”
The orchestra struck up, and the curtain was raised. My friend was silent.
It was a fine enough show in its way: three one-act plays were
performed. Comic songs were sung between the acts. The leading man was
tall, languid, and had a fine singing voice; the leading lady was
elegant, and her voice carried through all the theater; the comedian had
a fine touch for patter songs.
The first play was a broad comedy of mistaken identities: the
leading man played a pair of identical twins who had never met, but had
managed, by a set of comical misadventures, each to find himself engaged
to be married to the same young lady-who, amusingly, thought herself
engaged to only one man. Doors swung open and closed as the actor
changed from identity to identity.
The second play was a heartbreaking tale of an orphan girl who
starved in the snow selling hothouse violets-her grandmother recognized
her at the last, and swore that she was the babe stolen ten years back
by bandits, but it was too late, and the frozen little angel breathed
her last. I must confess I found myself wiping my eyes with my linen
handkerchief more than once.
The performance finished with a rousing historical narrative: the
entire company played the men and women of a village on the shore of the
ocean, seven hundred years before our modern times. They saw shapes
rising from the sea, in the distance. The hero joyously proclaimed to
the villagers that these were the Old Ones whose coming was foretold,
returning to us from R’lyeh, and from dim Carcosa, and from the plains
of Leng, where they had slept, or waited, or passed out the time of
their death. The comedian opined that the other villagers had all been
eating too many pies and drinking too much ale, and they were imagining
the shapes. A portly gentleman playing a priest of the Roman God told
the villagers that the shapes in the sea were monsters and demons, and
must be destroyed.
At the climax, the hero beat the priest to death with his own
crucifer, and prepared to welcome Them as They came. The heroine sang a
haunting aria, whilst, in an astonishing display of magic-lantern
trickery, it seemed as if we saw Their shadows cross the sky at the back
of the stage: the Queen of Albion herself, and the Black One of Egypt
(in shape almost like a man), followed by the Ancient Goat, Parent to a
Thousand, Emperor of all China, and the Czar Unanswerable, and He Who
Presides over the New World, and the White Lady of the Antarctic
Fastness, and the others. And as each shadow crossed the stage, or
appeared to, from out of every throat in the gallery came, unbidden, a
mighty “Huzzah!” until the air itself seemed to vibrate. The moon rose
in the painted sky, and then, at its height, in one final moment of
theatrical magic, it turned from a pallid yellow, as it was in the old
tales,
to the comforting crimson of the moon that shines down upon us all today.
The members of the cast took their bows and their curtain calls to
cheers and laughter, and the curtain fell for the last time, and the
show was done.
“There,” said my friend. “What did you think?”
“Jolly, jolly good,” I told him, my hands sore from applauding.
“Stout fellow,” he said, with a smile. “Let us go backstage.”
We walked outside and into an alley beside the theater, to the
stage door, where a thin woman with a wen on her cheek knitted busily.
My friend showed her a visiting card, and she directed us into the
building and up some steps to a small communal dressing room.
Oil lamps and candles guttered in front of smeared looking
glasses, and men and women were taking off their makeup and costumes
with no regard to the proprieties of gender. I averted my eyes. My
friend seemed unperturbed. “Might I talk to Mr. Vernet?” he asked,
loudly.
A young woman who had played the heroine’s best friend in the
first play, and the saucy innkeeper’s daughter in the last, pointed us
to the end of the room. “Sherry! Sherry Vernet!” she called.
The young man who stood up in response was lean; less
conventionally handsome than he had seemed from the other side of the
footlights. He peered at us quizzically. “I do not believe I have had
the pleasure…?”
“My name is Henry Camberley,” said my friend, drawling his speech somewhat. “You may have heard of me.”
“I must confess that I have not had that privilege,” said Vernet.
My friend presented the actor with an engraved card.
The man looked at the card with unfeigned interest. “A theatrical
promoter? From the New World? My, my. And this is…?” He smiled at me.
“This is a friend of mine, Mister Sebastian. He is not of the profession.”
I muttered something about having enjoyed the performance enormously, and shook hands with the actor.
My friend said, “Have you ever visited the New World?”
“I have not yet had that honor,” admitted Vernet, “although it has always been my dearest wish.”
“Well, my good man,” said my friend, with the easy informality of a
New Worlder. “Maybe you’ll get your wish. That last play. I’ve never
seen anything like it. Did you write it?”
“Alas, no. The playwright is a good friend of mine. Although I
devised the mechanism of the magic-lantern shadow show. You’ll not see
finer on the stage today.”
“Would you give me the playwright’s name? Perhaps I should speak to him directly, this friend of yours.”
Vernet shook his head. “That will not be possible, I am afraid. He
is a professional man, and does not wish his connection with the stage
publicly to be known.”
“I see.” My friend pulled a pipe from his pocket and put it in his
mouth. Then he patted his pockets. “I am sorry,” he began. “I have
forgotten to bring my tobacco pouch.”
“I smoke a strong black shag,” said the actor, “but if you have no objection-”
“None!” said my friend, heartily. “Why, I smoke a strong shag
myself,” and he filled his pipe with the actor’s tobacco, and the two
men puffed away, while my friend described a vision he had for a play
that could tour the cities of the New World, from Manhattan Island all
the way to the furthest tip of the continent in the distant south. The
first act would be the last play we had seen. The rest of the play might
perhaps tell of the dominion of the Old Ones over humanity and its
gods, perhaps telling what might have happened if people had had no
Royal Families to look up to-a world of barbarism and darkness-“But your
mysterious professional man would be the play’s author, and what occurs
would be his alone to decide,” interjected my friend. “Our drama would
be his. But I can guarantee you audiences beyond your imaginings, and a
significant share of the takings at the door. Let us say fifty percent!”
“This is most exciting,” said Vernet. “I hope it will not turn out to have been a pipe-dream!”
“No sir, it shall not!” said my friend, puffing on his own pipe,
chuckling at the man’s joke. “Come to my rooms in Baker Street tomorrow
morning, after breakfast-time, say at ten, in company with your author
friend, and I shall have the contracts drawn up and waiting.”
With that the actor clambered up onto his chair and clapped his
hands for silence. “Ladies and gentlemen of the company, I have an
announcement to make,” he said, his resonant voice filling the room.
“This gentleman is Henry Camberley, the theatrical promoter, and he is
proposing to take us across the Atlantic Ocean, and on to fame and
fortune.”
There were several cheers,
and the comedian said, “Well, it’ll make a change from herrings and pickled-cabbage,” and the company laughed.
And it was to the smiles of all of them that we walked out of the theater and onto the fog-wreathed streets.
“My dear fellow,” I said. “Whatever was-”
“Not another word,” said my friend. “There are many ears in the city.”
And not another word was spoken until we had hailed a cab, and clambered inside, and were rattling up the Charing Cross Road.
And even then, before he said anything, my friend took his pipe
from his mouth, and emptied the half-smoked contents of the bowl into a
small tin. He pressed the lid onto the tin, and placed it in his pocket.
“There,” he said. “That’s the Tall Man found, or I’m a Dutchman.
Now, we just have to hope that the cupidity and the curiosity of the
Limping Doctor proves enough to bring him to us tomorrow morning.”
“The Limping Doctor?”
My friend snorted. “That is what I have been calling him. It was
obvious, from footprints and much else besides, when we saw the prince’s
body, that two men had been in that room that night: a tall man, who,
unless I miss my guess, we have just encountered, and a smaller man with
a limp, who eviscerated the prince with a professional skill that
betrays the medical man.”
“A doctor?”
“Indeed. I hate to say this, but it is my experience that when a
doctor goes to the bad, he is a fouler and darker creature than the
worst cut-throat. There was Huston, the acid-bath man, and Campbell, who
brought the procrustean bed to Ealing…” and he carried on in a similar
vein for the rest of our journey.
The cab pulled up beside the curb. “That’ll be one and tenpence,”
said the cabbie. My friend tossed him a florin, which he caught and
tipped to his ragged tall hat. “Much obliged to you both,” he called
out, as the horse clopped into the fog.
We walked to our front door. As I unlocked it, my friend said, “Odd. Our cabbie just ignored that fellow on the corner.”
“They do that at the end of a shift,” I pointed out.
“Indeed they do,” said my friend.
I dreamed of shadows that night, vast shadows that blotted out the
sun, and I called out to them in my desperation, but they did not
listen.
5. The Skin and the Pit
THIS YEAR, STEP INTO THE SPRING-WITH A SPRING IN YOUR STEP!
JACK’S. BOOTS, SHOES AND BROGUES. SAVE YOUR SOLES! HEELS OUR SPECIALITY.
JACK’S. AND DO NOT FORGET TO VISIT OUR NEW CLOTHES AND FITTINGS
EMPORIUM IN THE EAST END-FEATURING EVENING WEAR OF ALL KINDS, HATS,
NOVELTIES, CANES, SWORDSTICKS C. JACK’S OF PICCADILLY. IT’S ALL IN THE
SPRING!
Inspector Lestrade was the first to arrive.
“You have posted your men in the street?” asked my friend.
“I have,” said Lestrade. “With strict orders to let anyone in who comes, but to arrest anyone trying to leave.”
“And you have handcuffs with you?”
In reply, Lestrade put his hand in his pocket, and jangled two pairs of cuffs, grimly.
“Now sir,” he said. “While we wait, why do you not tell me what we are waiting for?”
My friend pulled his pipe out of his pocket. He did not put it in
his mouth, but placed it on the table in front of him. Then he took the
tin from the night before, and a glass vial I recognized as the one he
had had in the room in Shoreditch.
“There,” he said. “The coffin-nail, as I trust it shall prove, for
our Master Vernet.” He paused. Then he took out his pocket watch, laid
it carefully on the table. “We have several minutes before they arrive.”
He turned to me. “What do you know of the Restorationists?”
“Not a blessed thing,” I told him.
Lestrade coughed. “If you’re talking about what I think you’re
talking about,” he said, “perhaps we should leave it there. Enough’s
enough.”
“Too late for that,” said my friend. “For there are those who do
not believe that the coming of the Old Ones was the fine thing we all
know it to be. Anarchists to a man, they would see the old ways
restored-mankind in control of its own destiny, if you will.”
“I will not hear this sedition spoken,” said Lestrade. “I must warn you-”
“I must warn you not to be such a fathead,” said my friend.
“Because it was the Restorationists that killed Prince Franz Drago. They
murder, they kill, in a vain effort to force our masters to leave us
alone in the darkness. The Prince was killed by a rache-it’s an old term
for a hunting dog, Inspector, as you would know if you had looked in a
dictionary. It also means “revenge.” And the hunter left his signature
on the wallpaper in the murder room, just as an artist might sign a
canvas. But he was
not the one who killed the Prince.”
“The Limping Doctor!” I exclaimed.
“Very good. There was a tall man there that night-I could tell his
height, for the word was written at eye level. He smoked a pipe-the ash
and dottle sat unburnt in the fireplace, and he had tapped out his pipe
with ease on the mantel, something a smaller man would not have done.
The tobacco was an unusual blend of shag. The footprints in the room
had, for the most part, been almost obliterated by your men, but there
were several clear prints behind the door and by the window. Someone had
waited there: a smaller man from his stride, who put his weight on his
right leg. On the path outside I had several clear prints, and the
different colors of clay on the bootscraper gave me more information: a
tall man, who had accompanied the Prince into those rooms, and had,
later, walked out. Waiting for them to arrive was the man who had sliced
up the Prince so impressively…”
Lestrade made an uncomfortable noise that did not quite become a word.
“I have spent many days retracing the movements of His Highness. I
went from gambling hell to brothel to dining den to madhouse looking
for our pipe-smoking man and his friend. I made no progress until I
thought to check the newspapers of Bohemia, searching for a clue to the
Prince’s recent activities there, and in them I learned that an English
Theatrical Troupe had been in Prague last month, and had performed
before Prince Franz Drago…”
“Good Lord,” I said. “So that Sherry Vernet fellow-”
“Is a Restorationist. Exactly.”
I was shaking my head in wonder at my friend’s intelligence and skills of observation, when there was a knock on the door.
“This will be our quarry!” said my friend. “Careful now!”
Lestrade put his hand deep into his pocket, where I had no doubt he kept a pistol. He swallowed, nervously.
My friend called out, “Please, come in!”
The door opened.
It was not Vernet, nor was it a Limping Doctor. It was one of the
young street Arabs who earn a crust running errands-“in the employ of
Messrs. Street and Walker,” as we used to say when I was young. “Please
sirs,” he said. “Is there a Mister Henry Camberley here? I was asked by a
gentleman to deliver a note.”
“I’m he,” said my friend. “And for a sixpence, what can you tell me about the gentleman who gave you the note?”
The young lad, who volunteered that his name was Wiggins, bit the
sixpence before making it vanish, then told us that the cheery cove who
gave him the note was on the tall side, with dark hair, and, he added,
he had been smoking a pipe.
I have the note here, and take the liberty of transcribing it.
My Dear Sir,
I do not address you as Henry Camberley, for it is a name to which
you have no claim. I am surprised that you did not announce yourself
under your own name, for it is a fine one, and one that does you credit.
I have read a number of your papers, when I have been able to obtain
them. Indeed, I corresponded with you quite profitably two years ago
about certain theoretical anomalies in your paper on the Dynamics of an
Asteroid.
I was amused to meet you, yesterday evening. A few tips which
might save you bother in times to come, in the profession you currently
follow. Firstly, a pipe-smoking man might possibly have a brand-new,
unused pipe in his pocket, and no tobacco, but it is exceedingly
unlikely-at least as unlikely as a theatrical promoter with no idea of
the usual customs of recompense on a tour, who is accompanied by a
taciturn ex-army officer (Afghanistan, unless I miss my guess).
Incidentally, while you are correct that the streets of London have
ears, it might also behoove you in future not to take the first cab that
comes along. Cab drivers have ears too, if they choose to use them.
You are certainly correct in one of your suppositions: it was
indeed I who lured the half-blood creature back to the room in
Shoreditch.
If it is any comfort to you, having learned a little of his
recreational predilections, I had told him I had procured for him a
girl, abducted from a convent in Cornwall where she had never seen a
man, and that it would only take his touch, and the sight of his face,
to tip her over into a perfect madness.
Had she existed, he would have feasted on her madness while he
took her, like a man sucking the flesh from a ripe peach leaving nothing
behind but the skin and the pit. I have seen them do this. I have seen
them do far worse. And it is not the price we pay for peace and
prosperity. It is too great a price for that.
The good doctor-who believes as I do, and who did indeed write our
little performance, for he has some crowd-pleasing skills-was waiting
for us, with his knives.
I send this note,
not as a catch-me-if-you-can taunt, for we are gone,
the estimable doctor and I, and you shall not find us, but to tell you
that it was good to feel that, if only for a moment, I had a worthy
adversary. Worthier by far than inhuman creatures from beyond the Pit.
I fear the Strand Players will need to find themselves a new leading man.
I will not sign myself Vernet, and until the hunt is done and the world restored, I beg you to think of me simply as,
Rache.
Inspector Lestrade ran from the room, calling to his men. They
made young Wiggins take them to the place where the man had given him
the note, for all the world as if Vernet the actor would be waiting
there for them, a-smoking of his pipe. From the window we watched them
run, my friend and I, and we shook our heads.
“They will stop and search all the trains leaving London, all the
ships leaving Albion for Europe or the New World,” said my friend,
“looking for a tall man, and his companion, a smaller, thickset medical
man, with a slight limp. They will close the ports. Every way out of the
country will be blocked.”
“Do you think they will catch him, then?”
My friend shook his head. “I may be wrong,” he said, “but I would
wager that he and his friend are even now only a mile or so away, in the
rookery of St. Giles, where the police will not go except by the dozen.
And they will hide up there until the hue and cry have died away. And
then they will be about their business.”
“What makes you say that?”
“Because,” said my friend, “if our positions were reversed, it is what I would do. You should burn the note, by the way.”
I frowned. “But surely it’s evidence,” I said.
“It’s seditionary nonsense,” said my friend.
And I should have burned it. Indeed, I told Lestrade I had burned
it, when he returned, and he congratulated me on my good sense. Lestrade
kept his job, and Prince Albert wrote a note to my friend
congratulating him on his deductions, while regretting that the
perpetrator was still at large.
They have not yet caught Sherry Vernet, or whatever his name
really is, nor was any trace found of his murderous accomplice,
tentatively identified as a former military surgeon named John (or
perhaps James) Watson. Curiously, it was revealed that he had also been
in Afghanistan. I wonder if we ever met.
My shoulder, touched by the Queen, continues to improve, the flesh fills and it heals. Soon I shall be a dead-shot once more.
One night when we were alone, several months ago, I asked my
friend if he remembered the correspondence referred to in the letter
from the man who signed himself Rache. My friend said that he remembered
it well, and that “Sigerson” (for so the actor had called himself then,
claiming to be an Icelander) had been inspired by an equation of my
friend’s to suggest some wild theories furthering the relationship
between mass, energy, and the hypothetical speed of light. “Nonsense, of
course,” said my friend, without smiling. “But inspired and dangerous
nonsense nonetheless.”
The palace eventually sent word that the Queen was pleased with my
friend’s accomplishments in the case, and there the matter has rested.
I doubt my friend will leave it alone, though; it will not be over until one of them has killed the other.
I kept the note. I have said things in this retelling of events
that are not to be said. If I were a sensible man I would burn all these
pages, but then, as my friend taught me, even ashes can give up their
secrets. Instead, I shall place these papers in a strongbox at my bank
with instructions that the box may not be opened until long after anyone
now living is dead. Although, in the light of the recent events in
Russia, I fear that day may be closer than any of us would care to
think.
S-M-Major (Ret’d)
Baker Street,
London, New Albion, 1881
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