THE ADVENTURE OF THE FRIGHTENED BARONET
A Solar Pons story
By August Derleth
(From Regarding Sherlock Holmes: The Adventures of Solar
Pons, Copyright 1945 by August Derleth)
FROM THE CHESS problem in which he had been absorbed, Solar
Pons slowly raised his head, cocked a little, and smiled. His fingers
relinquished their hold upon the knight; he leaned back.
"Yes, yes, as I thought," he murmured, "we
are about to have company."
London was lost in fog, a heavy autumnal curtain shutting
the city away from our lodgings in Praed Street, and at first there was only
the distant hum of diminished traffic that was the pulse of the city, and the
several small noises of water dropping; then I heard the curiously muffled
sound of hoofbeats, traveling a short distance, stopping, then coming forward
again.
"Surely he is looking for Number 7," observed Pons
with satisfaction, for time had been pressing heavily on his hands since the
bizarre adventure of the Octagon House. "To whom else would he address
himself at this hour of the night? Nor is it amiss to surmise that he has come
up from the country not far from London; horse‑drawn carriages are
uncommon indeed within the city. Clearly now," he went on, listening
intently, "he has got down just a few doors away; he has gone up to the
door, flashed his light on the number. No, that is not number seven; yet,
number seven cannot be far away. Hear him! He returns to his carriage‑‑but
he does not get in; no, he is too close to the desired address for that‑he
leads his horse down the street a few doors, and here he is."
I looked toward the night bell, back to Pons' expectant
features, marking his keen eyes, his aquiline nose, his firm, thin‑lipped
mouth, touched still by his smile, and once more at the bell. On the instant it
jangled. Pons stepped to the speaking tube and invited our visitor to come up,
and in a few moments there was a tap on the door giving to our lodgings. I
strode across the room and opened it.
Across the threshold stepped a short, stout, sturdily built
gentleman of approximately sixty years of age, swarthy of skin, heavily
bearded, and still darkhaired; he fixed his small glittering eyes on Pons,
bowed curtly, and handed him an envelope. It was unsealed.
I crowded up to Pons and looked over his shoulder at the
card he took from the envelope. Alexander Taber Rowan, K.C.B. Chiltern Manor.
Pons turned the card over. In a shaky script someone had scrawled thereon:
"For God's sake, come! I can't stand it much longer." I
flashed a glance of inquiry at Pons, and saw that his eyes had lit up with the
excitement of the chase.
"Late of His Majesty's Service, attached to the staff
of the Viceroy of India," said Pons, returning the card to the envelope
and dropping both to the table. He looked across the lamplight to where Sir
Alexander's man stood, fingering his cap.
"I am Kennerly, sir."
"What is it?" asked Pons.
"It's the curse of the stone, Mr. Pons."
His voice was gruff but not discourteous. What he said
apparently conveyed something to Pons, though it meant nothing to me, and I saw
that at the moment at least Pons had no intention of enlightening me. He
nodded.
"You were sent to bring us?"
"If possible."
"Good. We'll be with you in a few moments."
While Pons got into his rainproof, I saw him scrutinizing Kennerly
with marked interest.
"A veteran of India yourself, I see," he said
presently.
"Yes, sir."
"Of great personal service to the Maharajah of
Indore."
"I saved his life, sir."
"Very likely in the encounter in which you lost your
foot."
"Yes, sir."
By this time Pons was ready; he turned to me, his eyes
twinkling at the sight of my obvious efforts to observe the bases for his
deductions and seeing only the telltale smoothness of the shoe which betrayed
the lack of a foot. "Coming, Parker?"
We descended the stairs after leaving a message for Mrs.
Johnson, our landlady, and passed into the thick fog which tent to Pons and
Kennerly a shadowy, almost intangible being. The carriage loomed abruptly out
of the night. We entered it. Kennerly mounted before us; and soon we were
traveling westward through London in the direction of the Chiltern Hills. Our
pace was necessarily slow, but the horse seemed to proceed with an uncanny
instinct and, as far as I could determine, no errors in direction were made.
Pons sat deep in thought, his visored cap low over his face,
and I hesitated to disturb him; yet I rankled within at my own inability to
follow his deductions, and finally I could contain myself no longer.
"Doubtless it is a most elementary matter, but how in
the devil did you know this fellow is a veteran of India?"
"Come, come, Parker‑‑it should be obvious.
For one thing, his military bearing; for another, he is the trusted servant of
the baronet. What more likely than that he was his orderly in service? But,
primarily, he wears a ring he could have got only in India."
'I can follow the observation about the lost foot easily
enough, but what about his service to the Maharajah of Indore?"
"The ring he wears bears the crest of the Maharajah.
Such rings are not for sale. It follows therefore that he must have been given
it by the Maharajah himself. Since such a ring is not given simply as a gift,
for it is too personal, but rather as a mark of esteem, it is not at all a shot
in the dark to assume that our visitor did the Maharajah a personal service of
such vital importance that nothing short of the crested ring would satisfy the
Maharajah's sense of gratitude."
"And the card?" I asked, determined that nothing
should escape me. "What did you make of that?"
"Only that our client is badly frightened, that his
sending for me is done with the knowledge of no one else in the household save
this man, that the matter is one in which he hesitates to seek police
protection, very probably because of the attendant publicity, and that he has
been drinking to keep up his nerve. From what his man has said, I take it that
something has come up to remind him that the Eye of Siva which he acquired some
thirty years ago during a campaign in the hill country of India was, after all,
cursed, and that the fruits of this curse are now being visited upon him."
I took a deep breath and considered. "The script and
what he writes betray some fright," I ventured.
"Capital! Though obvious."
"But the other matters‑‑?"
"He comes to us in preference to the police, and he
comes at an hour which indicates secrecy; since he himself has nothing to fear
from us, clearly he believes his family will disapprove of his sending for us.
He therefore summons us at a time when he can present us to his household in
fact, as a fait accompli. It is, further, not ill‑advised to
assume that there are troubled waters there. Finally, there was the distinct
odor of rum about his card."
----------
It was in the early hours of the morning that we arrived at
Chiltern Manor in the low rolling country immediately adjacent to the hills
which gave the house its name. We had ridden out of the fog not far from the
environs of London, and a waning moon shone down, shedding its pale light upon
the wooded country and fields through which we now rode. The estate lay behind
a high old stone wall, almost totally concealed by a heavy growth of vines, and
surrounded by many trees and bushes. Rowan's man drove through a gate in the
side‑wall and directly around to the carriage sheds, where he left horse
and carriage standing to lead us into the house, which rose up from among
trees, an old stone building not without Victorian magnificence, at this early
morning hour dark and sombre save for a faint glimmer of yellow light from a window
on the second floor.
I could not help observing that we entered the house by a
side entrance, and that Kennerly's movements were marked by a singular care,
thus confirming Pons' surmise that Rowan had sent for us in secret; moreover,
the entrance gave almost at once upon a narrow staircase, which clearly led up
between the wall and a room below, almost a part of the wall as it were, for we
were forced to proceed in single file by the small light of a pocket flash
which Kennerly used to illumine the stairs.
Pons' client waited in his own rooms. The pale light shed by
the single lamp burning there presently disclosed him, an elderly man, deep in
an upholstered chair, and wrapped in a steamer rug, as if for warmth. His chin
rested upon his chest, and his sunken eyes looked at us from over his pince
nez. A thin moustache and beard, both white, in singular contrast to Kennerly's
black growth, and a fringe of white hair seen from under the black skull‑cap
he wore, ornamented his thin, ascetic face, white within the darkness of his
immediate environment.
"Ah, Mr. Pons!" he said in a cultured, well‑modulated
voice. "I had hoped Kennerly could bring you." He glanced
interrogatively at me, and Pons introduced me as his assistant. "I am
afraid my message may have seemed somewhat incoherent to you."
"Not at all," responded Pons. "In fact, it is
perfectly clear that something has happened to make you believe there may after
all be something more than legend to the curse on the Eye of Siva."
A wan smile touched the baronet's bps. "I am reassured.
I made no mistake in sending for you."
----------
"Let us hope that we may be able to justify your
confidence," said Pons quietly. "However, if I remember rightly, the
stone is now in the British Museum."
"It has been there for twenty‑five years."
He shrugged. "But apparently this has made no difference. I will not
attempt to deny that I am badly frightened, Mr. Pons. Approximately two months
ago the first of these mysterious events took place. I thought initially that I
was the subject of a practical joke in the worst possible taste. The occasion
was the Naval Conference; since Chiltern Manor is not too far from London,
friends of mine in the diplomatic service in Britain for the Conference called
on me. At the end of one of those days, I found a card in the tray. It read, Puranas
Mahadeva. I regret that at the moment the significance of this did not
occur to me; I assumed that it had been left by some minor official whom I had
met at Delhi and forgotten.
"That night, Mr. Pons," he went on after short
pause, his eyes glittering strangely now, and his breath coming a little
faster, testifying to his excitement at the memory of the incident he was about
to relate, "that night, as I was preparing to retire, I was summoned from
my work by a tap on my door and I stepped into the hall. No one was there. Now,
sir, since I am as familiar with this house by night as by day, I did not turn
up the light. I stepped out into the hallway, and had begun to walk down
towards the stairs when my attention was attracted to what appeared to be a
spot of illumination low on the floor along the wall; at second glance, I saw
that it was moving steadily before me. And then, sir, I observed that it was
not a light at all‑‑but a kind of spectral image. Mr. Pons, it
was the image of Siva, the Destroyer! Perfect in every detail, a miniature
spectre! I was startled. I was not immediately disturbed; I felt I had
experienced an illusion of some kind, and quickly tamed on the lights. There
was nothing in sight, nothing whatever. I examined the wall, the floor‑‑nothing.
I returned to my rooms somewhat shaken, thinking naturally of that old curse;
an article not long before in the feature section of an American newspaper had
brought all those old painful memories back; and it was then that it struck me
with the force of a thunderclap what those words on the calling card stood for:
Puranas is the title of Hindu scriptures; and Mahadeva is a less‑widely
know name for Siva! I took out the card at once‑‑or perhaps I had
better say, sir, that I took out the one I thought was the card I wanted. Mr.
Pons‑‑there was nothing whatever on it; it was perfectly blank;
there was nothing to show that a single letter of printing had ever been on
it!"
"Ah," murmured Pons delightedly.
"That was the beginning of a series of events which I
am unable to explain save as the malign evidence of the workings of that
ancient curse! The pattern has been repeated endlessly; the tap on the door,
the strange apparition‑‑nor has this been all; I have seen the
spectre with increasing frequency on the top of the estate wall on the north
and in other places where I would not have expected to come upon it. Moreover,
within the past few nights, events have taken a more serious turn; I have awakened
to the sound of voices warning me to prepare for death; I have also heard the
strange whistles the Sepoys used to give; I am ashamed to confess that I have
had recourse to rum to steady my nerves. It is the firm conviction of the
family that I am losing my mind, for no one else has seen any of these
apparitions, and they have held out against me in summoning help from outside,
no doubt for fear of any publicity which might attend having you here. But last
night the mastiff which guards the north gate vanished without a sound; I have
no speculation as to what may have happened to him. And now I am convinced that
at last the curse on the stone has become active again."
"Why?"
"You know the story of the stone, Mr. Pons. How the
priests in that temple opposed the Maharajah‑‑indeed, they made
their temple a base of operations. We destroyed the temple, and the Eye of Siva
was a prize of war; it is true that in the melee attendant upon the destruction
of the temple, one of the guardian priests was slain. The newspapers will have
it that it was this man who put a curse upon the stone, but the fact is that
the only curse connected with it was a general and ancient curse upon anyone
who desecrated the temple; it is really not attached to the stone at all.
However, as you know, the Maharajah died shortly thereafter, three of the
soldiers accompanying me into the temple died within a year, and four months
ago‑‑the raison d'etre for that American newspaper article‑‑Sir
James McLean, who commanded my right wing in that engagement, fell to his death
under mysterious circumstances. These events, looked upon in the light of that
ancient curse, naturally point to but one conclusion‑‑to which I
did not come until after I had begun to witness these manifestations; only then
did the other events fall into their place in the pattern."
"You suggest that the design is to retrieve the Eye of
Siva?"
"Not alone that, but to punish those responsible for
the destruction of that temple." He touched his lips with his tongue,
nervously. "But I feel that you do not put much credence in the curse, Mr.
Pons."
Pons smiled drily. "Let us say rather that I am at the
moment concerned only with the problem of which aspect of the matter is cause,
and which is effect. I take it you own more than one dog."
"Yes, of course."
"You have said you have witnessed the apparition of
Siva on the estate wall. Was its appearance accompanied by any demonstration
from the dogs?"
"None."
"Does this suggest nothing to you?"
"Only that whatever is out there is meant for me alone.
The Hindus have many very strange beliefs, Mr. Pons, and stranger things than
this have happened in India, without any explanation."
"I have some acquaintance with the lore and legends of
India," replied Pons absently. "Have you ever seen the spectre of
Siva in someone else's company?"
"Yes, on one occasion my brother Ransom was with me. On
another, my daughter's fiance, Geoffrey Saring. Neither of them was able to see
anything. Yet the thing was as plain to me as you are, sitting there."
"Your man Kennerly has never seen it?"
"No."
Pons sat for a few moments with his eyes closed, touching
the lobe of his left ear thoughtfully with his thumb and forefinger. Presently
he gazed at the apprehensive Baronet once more. "I wish you would instruct
Kennerly to answer any questions I put to him."
"It shall be done."
"Further, I would like to have you show me
approximately the space in the hallway covered by the apparition at such times
as you have seen it."
Without a word the old man got up. Pulling his steamer rug
around him, he walked a little unsteadily over to the door, threw it open, and
stepped hesitantly into the hall. He turned up the light and pointed to the
base board along the farther wall.
"Beginning there, Mr. Pons‑‑and going for a
distance of twenty to thirty feet‑‑I cannot be sure which, but in
any case it varies."
"At which end?"
"It is usually at this end."
"Who occupies this floor besides yourself?"
"My daughter's rooms are across the hall. Down the hall‑‑Geoffrey
Saring, next to him my brother Ransom, then my sister Megan's room; and then
across, a guest room of some dimensions; Kennerly has got it ready for you and
Dr. Parker."
Pons stood in the hall, hands clasped behind him, his cap
back on his head, gazing thoughtfully along the wall where it joined the floor,
which, for a distance of approximately a foot from the wall, was not covered by
carpet. He stood thus for perhaps three or four minutes; then he turned
abruptly, as if dismissing the hall, and said that except for one thing, there
was nothing further he could do tonight. And that one? inquired the baronet.
"I want to have a talk with Kennerly, if you will send
him to our room."
"Certainly." The baronet hesitated briefly; then a
look of great anxiety crept into his eyes; he put one trembling hand on Pons'
shoulder, and said, "I hope you will be able to explain this strange
mystery, sir. I am close to the edge."
"We shall see," said Pons imperturbably.
We entered our room and found everything laid out for us
with the skill and comprehension possessed only by someone who had served in
the capacity of an orderly for many years. Pons threw himself into a chair
without pausing to remove anything but his rainproof and his cap; he looked
quizzically over at me, but his mouth was grim.
"This is devil's work, Parker."
"You attach no importance to the curse, then?"
"I attach every importance to it, on the contrary; it
is the most important single factor in the matter."
"Indeed! You did not let Sir Alexander think so."
"There is time for that, Parker."
I was about to say more when Pons cautioned me to be silent,
rising from his chair and moving with cat‑like quiet towards the door.
"Kennerly," I whispered.
"Kennerly's slight limp is distinctive in his
walk," replied Pons in an equally low voice. "It is not
Kennerly."
There was a quick, rustling tap on our door. Pons threw it
open.
A young woman stood there, her ash‑blonde hair wild,
one hand almost protectively in the pocket of her dressing saque, the other
holding it close about her neck. Her dark eyes darted from one to the other of
us before she stepped into the room, closed the door, and stood with her back
against it, her mouth working a little, a frown heavy on her brow.
"It is Mr. Solar Pons, isn't it?" she said,
looking at Pons.
"At your service," replied Pons.
"I have seen your picture in the papers often
enough," she said bitterly. "Oh, Mr. Pons‑‑surely you are
not going to make my poor father's madness the subject of scandal? I beg you to
go away, to say nothing...."
"I am not in the habit of announcing myself to the
press, Miss Rowan."
"I'm sorry. But it is a painful thing to witness the
decay of a man like my father‑‑quite apart from his being, after
all, my father."
"You are convinced his mind is going?"
"I wish I were not. But there is no other explanation.
He has seen things neither Uncle Ransom nor Geoffrey saw when he was with them;
it isn't the mere hallucinations alone, but the added fact that they prey upon
his mind and fill him with fear. He has for some years suffered from a heart
weakened by coronary trouble, and now that his mind has given way, the end is
only a matter of time."
"Perhaps I may be able to relieve him," said Pons.
"If only you could!" she said earnestly. "But
I'm afraid it is too late. I feel only that your being here will give him a
false hope which, when it is destroyed, will affect him all the more
adversely."
"I understand that he suggested calling in outside help
and that the members of his household opposed this."
"Yes, I did. So did my brother, who was visiting us at
that time. So did my aunt. Only Geoffrey and uncle Ransom seemed to think it a
good idea, and I could see that my uncle was none too keen, for all that."
"Well, then, I promise you I shall not be here
long."
Thus assured, Miss Rowan left us. Pons glanced at me
curiously.
"Would you say she was sincere, Parker?"
"Undoubtedly."
"So I thought."
"Perhaps, after all..."
Pons smiled. "Did Sir Alexander strike you as a man who
was mentally deranged?"
"Oh, you cannot make such generalizations, Pons. He is
certainly under great mental stress. But many madmen are perfectly normal to
all but the experienced eye; my eye is hardly experienced to such a
degree."
"Let us just ask Kennerly what he thinks," suggested
Pons.
The sound of Kennerly's footsteps paused, he knocked on the
door, and, in response to Pons' invitation came in. Like Miss Rowan, he stood
with his back against the door until bidden to come forward and sit down.
"I was told to answer some questions, sir," he
said in a voice that was courteous without being servile, and toneless without
being colorless.
"Why, Dr. Parker has a question to put to you first of
all, Kennerly." Pons turned to me, and thus prodded, I put the question:
did Kennerly think that Sir Alexander was losing his mind?
Kennerly favored me with a hostile, stony stare. "I do
not think so," he said coldly.
Pons said nothing to this. "Now, then, Kennerly‑‑to
what extent does Ransom Rowan live on his brother's bounty?"
Kennerly was clearly taken aback by the personal nature of
Pone question, but in a moment, reflecting that he had been instructed to
answer any questions Pons asked, he rallied. He spoke cautiously. "Sir
Alexander does give Ransom money from time to time."
"How does he spend it?"
Kennerly looked squarely at Pons. "He gambles."
"Ransom is constantly in need, then. What about Miss
Rowan?"
"She adores her father sir, and he is very fond of her.
But not so fond as to be blinded by her."
"Intimating that he stands in her way occasionally.
How?"
"He has not yet given his consent to her
marriage."
"She hardly needs his consent, does she?"
"Not necessarily. But Miss Winifred is that kind of
girl, she will not do anything against her father's wish."
"He does not trust Mr. Saring?"
"Sir Alexander is a hard man to please."
"And his son?"
"Philip is willful and determined to have his own way.
Sir Alexander is difficult to get along with in many ways, though I have always
managed to do my best for him, and have no reason whatever to complain."
"Philip wishes his own way about what?"
"His inheritance, sir. He has devised some way of
obtaining it before his father's death so that he will not have to pay so much
tax to the Crown."
"And Sir Alexander's sister?"
"Miss Megan is a very strong‑willed woman."
"They do not get along?"
"I think they get along as well as any sister and
brother do, sir."
"You have seen none of these phenomena reported by Sir
Alexander?" inquired Pons then.
"Nothing whatever. But the dog is missing.
"Yes, the dog is missing. Sir Alexander says he did not
make a sound."
"Aye. So he thinks. But he did call once‑‑it
wasn't pretty, sir."
"Yes, it is plain that he was lured off by someone whom
he had no reason to fear, and killed. He cried out when he was slain. That is
what you want to say, is it not, Kennerly?"
"It might be."
"Come, come, Kennerly. We are both working towards the
same end. But enough‑‑you may go."
I could not help observing after he had gone, that Kennerly
was not only reluctant to speak but singularly uncommunicative.
"Say rather he is very loyal," replied Pons.
"He has managed to say enough. Sir Alexander is no martinet, but he is
difficult. On the other hand, his brother Ransom is a wastrel, his son Philip
is none too honorable, his sister has aspects of the termagent. Sir Alexander
is crochety, distrustful, neurotic: so much is plain. Only for Winifred does
Kennerly have the same kind of respect and devotion he has for the old
man."
I observed that Kennerly had said nothing whatever about
Kennerly.
"There was no need to. I had already seen all that I
needed to see about him; and he was well aware of that. Now then," he went
on, "let us just step out into the hall for a moment."
"The light switch is up the hall a way," I said,
remembering its place.
"If it were light I wanted, we could well wait until
after dawn," said Pons cryptically.
Accordingly, we went out into the darkness of the hall;
there we stood for a few moments until our eyes grew accustomed to the darkness.
Then Pons walked up toward Sir Alexander's rooms, got down on his knees, and
began to scrutinize the baseboard of the wall with great preoccupation.
"What in the, world can you hope to see without a
light?" I demanded in a whisper.
"I can see very well," replied Pons imperturbably.
I came down on my knees beside him. "What is it?"
Here and there the wall‑board and the floor showed
obvious color changes which, observed at this proximity, were curious and
startling, for the effect of these strange streaks and marks was as if a faint
illumination were given off into the darkness.
"Elementary, my dear Parker," said Pons, rising
and walking slowly down the hall, only to sink to his knees again to crawl from
one of the doors to another opening off the hall there.
I was nettled, but it was not until we had returned to our
room that I asked Pons what he made of it.
"You know my methods, Parker. The whole problem is as
plain as a pikestaff, and it only remains for us to obtain sufficient evidence
to convince Sir Alexander. I fancy that our presence will bring matters to a
climax rapidly enough."
"You have seen something that has escaped me!" I
cried.
Pons chuckled. "Perhaps you have not pursued the facts
to their obvious conclusion. Or, even more likely, you have started out on a
wrong premise. We shall see in good time. Now let us get a little sleep, for I
daresay we have a busy dav ahead of us."
Our day began before breakfast, when Pons woke me and
suggested that we might walk out upon the gorse and bracken‑grown rolling
country surrounding the estate of Sir Alexander. Clouds loured in the heavens,
but the way was pleasant enough despite the absence of the sun. It was soon
clear, however, that Pons was not idling away time. We slipped out of the house
and left the estate behind us by way of the north gate, from which point Pons
began what initially appeared to be an aimless angling away, but proved
ultimately to be only one of a series of concentric circles which he described
with the utmost casualness, while he sought diligently for broken ground, so
that it soon became obvious to me that he was on the track of the missing dog.
The country away from the north gate was fairly open, apart
from the gorse and bracken which covered it, and a kind of heather with which I
was unfamiliar in these latitudes, and it was not long before our
peregrinations ended at the edge of an abandoned quarry in the foothills.
Gazing down into the dark water which filled a large part of
the quarry, Pons said, "I have no doubt that the mastiff lies down there.
In the absence of any place which might serve as a burial ground for the dog,
and presuming the need to be rid of him as quickly as possible, this is the
likeliest place; we may therefore assume with ample justification that this is
the spot to which the dog was lured and slain. In all likelihood, too, the body
was weighted, so that it will not rise."
We had hardly taken our leave from this spot when we were
suddenly confronted by a burly individual dressed in hunting clothes and
carrying a gun; he stepped out from behind a small gnarled tree down the slope
(having also partly been hidden by a projecting wall of rock), and appeared
before us with a decidedly menacing air, his eyes narrowed, his mouth turned
down so that his face had a surly expression. Nevertheless, his resemblance to
Sir Alexander was so marked, that his identity was no mystery.
"What are you doing here?" he demanded gruffly.
"That is a question I should be more inclined to put to
you than to answer, Mr. Ransom Rowan."
Rowan looked closely at Pons. "Mr. Solar Pons, is it!
So Alec sent for you after all!"
"Against your advice?"
Rowan shrugged and stood off to one side. "No
difference to me what he does," he said curtly.
He eyed us sullenly and with unmistakable apprehension, but
said nothing further to us as we walked past him.
"So that is the gambler," I said when we had
passed out of earshot. "He looks like a man caught in the middle of his
game and uncertain of the way the numbers are coming up."
"Yes, doesn't he?" agreed Pons noncommittally.
At the north gate we had yet another encounter. This time we
came upon a young man on his knees beside the gate, who got up, abashed, and
stood grinning before us‑‑a husky young fellow of close upon thirty
years of age whose blue eyes regarded us with some chagrin. He introduced
himself as Geoffrey Saring.
"Looking for footprints and such," he explained
nonchalantly. "Don't believe myself the dog would simply have walked
off."
"Surely it is a little too long after the event,"
observed Pons.
"Well, perhaps. I didn't think of it until now, after
Winifred told me you were here."
"If you discover anything, you might just let me
know," said Pons drily. "I understand that you were with Sir
Alexander on the occasion of one of his‑‑shall we say, 'visions?'‑‑and
saw nothing."
"Yes, Mr. Pons. A rather painful few moments, I must
admit I hope they will not be repeated. It was one evening about a month ago. I
had just come downstairs to rejoin Winifred, when I heard him shout; I ran back
up immediately. He stood there in the hall pointing to the floor along the wall
and demanded of me whether I saw 'it.' There was nothing there. Apparently,
whatever it was vanished, for he said, "There‑‑the infernal
thing's gone.' Then be turned to me and asked whether I had seen anyone, or anything
in the hall or on the stairs; I had not, and said so. He said someone had
rapped on his door only a few moments before. That was all there was to it. He
seemed gravely upset when I could not see whatever it was he saw."
"Do you remember where Sir Alexander's brother was at
that time?"
"I believe he was in his room, but I do not know. He
had a similar experience‑‑except that he was in Sir Alexander's
room at the time, and Sir Alexander thought he saw something moving along the
estate wall. Ransom didn't see anythiing, either."
Pons' next question was disconcerting. "Have you been
long away from the stage, Mr. Saring?"
Saring laughed pleasantly. "Surely it's not that
obvious, Mr. Pons?"
"Your clothes are by Du Beune, who caters to the
profession. Your hands give no evidence of manual or clerical work. It might be
either the stage or the cinema."
"Bit parts, Mr. Pons. I've been off the stage for about
a year. I met Winifred as a result of my stage work, and since it was, I
believe, the basis for her father's disapproval of me, I abandoned it."
Pons smiled, wished him good hunting in his search for clues
about the dog's disappearance, and went on into the house, only to be met just
beyond the entrance by Miss Winifred Rowan, who gave us a glance of mute
appeal. Behind her, Miss Megan Rowan, Sir Alexander's testy sister, looked upon
us with poorly‑concealed disdain and made it clear and emphatic in her
entire manner that she thought us intruders who had taken advantage of a man
who was mentally sick. Moreover, her replies to Pons' cursory questions left us
in no doubt; she shared her niece's conviction that Sir Alexander was losing
his mind.
Sir Alexander himself, seen in the light of mid‑morning,
was not a heartening spectacle. His face was lined and haggard, not alone with
age and sleeplessness, but with manifest fear. His hands trembled a little, but
this morning the slight odor of rum which had permeated his rooms on the
previous night was absent; this fortification, however, would not have been
amiss. I paid him the closest attention during the conversation Pons and he
carried on, and was struck by the curious way in which he looked over his
shoulder every little while, as if he feared an attack from behind, and by the
troubled manner in which his eyes wandered; so that I did not find it difficult
to understand how his sister and his daughter could believe in his derangement.
After luncheon the sun came out, and Pons again expressed a
desire to walk about the countryside. After all, he pointed out, we were too
seldom away from London, and we ought to take the fullest possible advantage of
a day in the country.
"A day," I cried. "There is no evidence that
we won't be here a week."
"My dear Parker, how you belittle my poor talents! I
fancy another twenty‑four hours or so will see an end of this
business."
"You have clearly seen more than I have," I said.
"On the contrary, everything presented to me has been
presented to you also. But while you, and Sir Alexander as well, have proceeded
along the obvious lines, I have chosen to follow a different course. Either Sir
Alexander is the victim of a mental breakdown, or he is not. You have sought
every evidence to prove that his is a mental case; I had on the contrary only
to look about me to discover every evidence that it is quite the contrary‑‑he
is a victim not of his own mind, but of someone else's."
"You speak as if you knew him."
"The identity of the culprit is so elementary that it
is needless to discuss it. The modus operandi is the moot point. I fancy
we shall soon witness a change of method. We are dealing with a clever,
unscrupulous rogue, who does not lack for a tremendous egotism."
"You speak with such confidence that I am almost
reluctant to point out that Sir Alexander does betray very definite signs of
mental derangement."
"Undoubtedly."
"Are you changing your mind, then?"
"Certainly not. Sir Alexander was meant to betray such
signs."
"Do you doubt the sincerity of Miss Winifred?"
"Not in the slightest. She is honestly concerned, and
honestly convinced that her father's mind is failing. It was meant that she
should be. It was meant that all of them in that house should be."
"What then is the motive for these events?"
"Why, surely it can be one of two: either it is hoped
that Sir Alexander's heart will give out as a result of fright, that he will be
adjudged mentally incompetent and the management of his affairs pass to someone
else."
"His son!"
"I have not had the honor of reading Sir Alexander's
will. You have a disappointingly professional mind, Parker. I would caution you
to observe that there are other ends which may be as immediate as money."
"But in that case‑‑what does the removal of
the mastiff signify?"
"Come, come, Parker‑‑surely it is evident
that the mastiff had to be removed for two reasons; primarily because it was
quite possible that, even though the dog knew the miscreant who was bringing
about the 'vision' Sir Alexander saw on the north wall‑‑recall that
he emphasized last night that he saw the thing especially on the north wall‑‑he
might disturb the family sufficiently to attract attention to him; secondarily,
because the strange absence of the dog could contribute still more to Sir
Alexander's fright. It is all of a piece, and you, who know my methods, ought
properly to have applied them."
"I have mistaken the point of beginning," I said
soberly.
"Yes, the newspaper article was the point of beginning‑‑or
perhaps even the coincidental death of Sir James McLeen four months ago. The
curious events which have frightened Sir Alexander are not the effects of the
curse by any means, nor is the curse their reason for being; no, the curse is
simply being used, no more. Sir James McLeen's death, followed by the lurid
newspaper article, gave rise to the diabolical plot of which Sir Alexander was
picked to be the victim. With any luck, we may be able to forestall the
projected ending of this little melodrama."
Pons would say no more, but directly upon our return to the
house, now shadowed by the late afternoon sun, he went up to Sir Alexander's
rooms. The baronet looked up anxiously at our entrance; he had been playing
chess with Kennerly, who got to his feet and would have left the room, had Pons
not signalled to him to remain.
"I have only two more questions to ask Sir
Alexander," said Pons.
"Yes?" asked the old man.
"On the occasions of your seeing this spectral
miniature of Siva, was it ever still?"
"No, not that I recall. It always seemed to move, to
float away from me."
Pons nodded with satisfaction. "Now then, try to think
back Sir Alexander. Can you remember ever hearing anything whatever on the
occasion of your sight of this spectral image.
The baronet slowly shook his head, his eyes puzzled.
"Nothing? Think, man; it is of the utmost
importance."
Here Kennerly interjected himself. "Begging your
pardon, sir, but you did say that one night‑‑you said‑‑"
"Yes, that's right, Kennerly," said the baronet
with more animation than he had shown at any time previously. "I did once
or twice hear a sound I thought was like‑‑well, like a clock being
wound, only steadily, a kind of whirring sound."
"Capital!" exclaimed Pons. "Well, sir, I
think we may say that we shall soon have this ghost laid for you."
"I am not going mad then? I have actually seen
things?"
"You have seen things you were meant to see, Sir
Alexander. You will hear from me again before you retire tonight."
I was awakened from a doze into which I had fallen in the
room's only easy chair by Pons' hand on my shoulder, and his whispered,
"Come, Parker. The game is afoot." I started awake. Save for a small
lamp beside our bed, the room was in darkness.
"What time is it?"
"Close to midnight. The house has settled down.
Come."
He led the way silently into the hall, and in darkness we
went down to the door of Sir Alexander's room, upon which Pons rapped quietly
and called out in a low voice to identify himself. In a few moments the bolt
was drawn, the door opened cautiously, then swung wide as Sir Alexander recognized
us. Pons and I slipped into the room.
"What is it?" asked the old man uncertainly.
"We are expecting a change of rooms, Sir
Alexander," said Pons composedly. "If I may, I want to borrow your
dressing‑robe, your steamer rug, your skullcap. And that leaded cane I
see over there; I daresay I may have a use for it. Thank you."
Pons offered no explanation; Sir Alexander asked for none.
He took Pons' decision like a military man responding to orders, and within a
few moments we had completed the exchange; Sir Alexander was ensconced in our
room, and we were in his.
"Do you now conceal yourself, Parker, behind that chest
of drawers near the door," said Pons, while he took up Sir Alexander's
position in the old man's chair; in the half‑light, there was a remarkable
resemblance between them, and a casual glimpse would not have detected the
difference.
"What in the devil are we doing here?" I asked.
"Waiting for the ghost of Siva. Unless I am badly
mistaken, I think a major attempt will be made tonight to bring matters to a
head. My talents may be modest, but there is no need of daring them too much‑‑is
that not the way a criminal might reason? Or a scoundrel at least, eh? Now,
then, let us be still."
The midnight hour struck, and the minute hand crept slowly around
towards one. The old house was quiet, and the only sounds to invade the room
were the soft, keening voices of a pair of owls, and the harsh booming of
nightjars coasting down the sky. It was not yet one o'clock when I felt rather
than heard Pons stir, and at once I became more alert, anxious to miss nothing.
Was it a rustle I heard? Was it someone in the hall? In my eagerness I almost
gave the show away by calling to ascertain if Pons had heard, but I caught
myself in time.
A furtive tapping sounded on the door. I looked over at
Pons, who shook his head silently. Once again the tap sounded, a little more
peremptorily this time.
In a hoarse, quavering voice, Pons called out, "Who is
it?"
Then he got up and shuffled over to the door, not, however,
forgetting to carry with him, concealed in the folds of his dressing‑robe,
the leaded cane which he had elected to use as a weapon.
The place where I stood offered me a view of the threshold;
and I turned to face the doorway as Pons threw open the door. I do not know
what I expected to see there, I do not know what Pons anticipated, but the
reality was most unnerving and almost demoralizing; what would have happened to
Sir Alexander if he had been confronted in this fashion by the spectacle that
met our eyes, is difficult to guess. For what stood on the threshold and seemed
to lean into the room, whistling eerily, was nothing less than a great glowing
image of Siva, a terrifying vision filling the doorway. Only for a moment did
it stand there; then it seemed to rise up and tower above Pons, who cringed
before it as no doubt Sir Alexander might have cringed. A solitary threatening
movement caused Pons to fall back; then the thing would have retreated, but
Pons' backward movement was a falling away designed only to permit him to grasp
and swing the leaded cane he carried.
Before the creature in the doorway could dodge, the cane
swung around and crashed down against the side of its head with a horrible
tearing sound, which I realized almost at once was the crushing and ripping of
papier‑mache. The creature lunged for Pons, but at the same time that I
leapt forward in response to Pons' call, the cane landed once more, and this
time reached its objective, for the thing slumped grotesquely and collapsed on
the floor.
"Lights, Parker," said Pons, breathing fast as he
stepped back.
I turned up the lights and saw that from beneath the
cleverly‑wrought likeness of Siva projected a pair of very human legs.
Under the light, the glow had disappeared, and the papier‑mache of the
costume seemed almost drab. But on the instant I understood the secret of that
horrifying glow.
"Phosphorus!" I exclaimed, looking over at Pons,
who was matter‑of‑factly removing Sir Alexander's dressing‑robe
and skull‑cap; the steamer rug had fallen from his shoulders when he had
delivered the first blow.
"Yes, yes, of course," replied Pons impatiently.
"Surely that was patent? You saw it yourself in the hall last night,
though I have no way of knowing how you interpreted it. Now then, come along, before
the others get here."
Already there were sounds of movement in the rooms adjoining
the hall.
"Aren't you stopping to see . . . ?" I said to
Pons' retreating back.
"What need? My dear fellow, it is only too obvious that
it is young Saring. Come along. We have yet to verify one aspect of the
matter."
He darted from the room, down and across the hall, and into
Saring's room, the door of which stood partly open. Here he stood for a moment
in soundless concentration; then he went to the closet and began to examine
Saring's luggage, where he quickly found what he sought‑‑the tiny,
phosphorescent image of Siva, the thin thread which had drawn it along the hall
and the garden wall, and the electric contrivance and reel which served to draw
the spectral miniature along the hall floor and into the room through the
slightly open door, giving the illusion of having disappeared.
When we emerged from the room, Sir Alexander was coming down
the hall, Miss Winifred stood on her threshold, looking with horror across to
her father's room, and Miss Megan had appeared.
"We have caught the scoundrel, Sir Alexander,"
said Pons gravely, and, taking the baronet's arm, he drew him into his rooms
and closed the door behind him, admonishing me to give my attention to Miss Winifred,
who had plainly recognized the clothing and legs projecting from beneath the
elaborate costume worn by Geoffrey Saring in the furtherance of his diabolical
scheme.
What took place behind the closed door of Sir Alexander's
rooms, I did not know; but shortly after Pons emerged from the room, Kennerly
appeared to drive us back to our lodgings in London. Pons said no word until we
were on our way into the city, driving under that same moon, smaller still,
which had spilled its wan light upon the earth only the previous night.
"You are silent, Parker; did Saring's unmasking
surprise you?"
I admitted that it had astonished me.
"You had fixed upon Ransom, of course. Ransom was not
without guilt, but he had nothing to do with it. The matter really turned upon
the character of our client. The most reliable witnesses for him were his
daughter and Kennerly. Kennerly admitted that Sir Alexander was 'difficult,'
but, clearly enough for anyone to see, he intimated that the old man had his
reasons. These were manifest. And obviously his distrust of Geoffrey Saring was
not ill‑founded, however slender may have been its reasons for existing.
"Furthermore, the entire matter rested upon one
fundamental decision: either Sir Alexander saw the things he I described, or he
did not. Everyone was quite willing to believe that he had not seen them, most
particularly since both Ransom and Saring had reluctantly admitted they had
seen nothing. I had no alternative but to act upon the assumption that Sir
Alexander saw precisely what he described. Once I had formed this conviction, I
had only to look for evidence. There was no lack of it. For one thing, the
mysterious calling card was doubtless abstracted and replaced with a blank card
in the interval between its receipt and its re‑examination. For another,
I detected despite some manifest attempt to eradicate it, evidence of
phosphorus along the wall of the hall at the baseboard. Phosphorus had
immediately suggested itself in the course of Sir Alexander's narrative.
Finally, the phosphorus led to Saring's threshold and there stopped. While this
was not conclusive in itself, taken in connection with two other inescapable
factors, it was.
"The first of these quite clearly was the fact that
both Ransom and Saring lied in denying they had seen anything. Both had seen
the image quite well; each had his own reasons for denying sight of it. One
because he was its author, the other because he saw no reason why he should
spoil a game which would benefit him also. The second of these factors was the
motive: this seemed quite manifestly to be an attempt to have Sir Alexander
declared mentally incompetent, and only secondarily to bring about his death.
Now, Ransom would not particularly benefit by having his brother declared
mentally incompetent; he would benefit only by his death. It was he who gambled
on Saring's game. It was Saring who would benefit‑‑an actor without
a stage, a young man without an occupation, a fortunehunter, in short, whose
marriage was being opposed with what must have seemed to him particularly
galling baselessness; for once the old man's mind was suspect, his opposition
to his daughter's marriage would be suspect, too. A diabolical plan, Parker,
but it might have worked. Its mechanics were well wrought, but simple, too.
"For instance, you did not suspect Saring primarily
because his manner was engaging, and because he told us so disarmingly about
the way in which he had been called back upstairs by our client to witness the
spectral image moving down the hall. It did not occur to you that it was quite
within the bounds of possibility for Saring to have tripped his machine, tapped
on Sir Alexander's door as he passed, and hurried downstairs before the baronet
got to the door to open it. The plan was so simple that you would have rejected
it even if I had suggested it. And you were deceived by his by‑play at
the gate, where instead of looking for clues to the dog's disappearance, he was
examining the ground lest he had left anything for me to discover."
"Yet he was one of the most firm in suggesting that Sir
Alexander call you in," I objected.
"His scheme called for as much self‑confidence as
my investigations." He laughed. "We have had a good day of it,
Parker. An interesting matter but one which might well have been fatal.
Fortunately for Sir Alexander's frightened determination, it was not. What a
pity young Saring did not keep his special talents for the stage!"