Read The Exploits of Sherlock Holmes Online
Authors: Adrian Conan Doyle,John Dickson Carr
recognized and lastly a man in brown country tweeds with a pale, sunken face framed in mutton-
chop whiskers. As we drew near, they turned towards us, and I could not repress an exclamation
of horror at the spectacle that their movement disclosed to our eyes.
At the foot of the cedar tree lay the body of an elderly man. His arms were outstretched,
the fingers gripping the grass and his beard thrust up at so grotesque an angle that his
features were hidden from view. The bone gleamed in bis gaping throat while the ground about
bis head was stained into one great crimson halo. The doctor stepped forward hurriedly.
"This is a shocking affair, Mr. Sherlock Holmes," he cried nervously. "My wife hastened to
the station as soon as she received your wire. I trust that she was in time to meet Miss Ferrers?"
"Thank you, yes. Alas, that I could not myself have got here in time."
"It seems that you expected the tragedy, sir," observed the policeman suspiciously.
"I did, constable. Hence my presence."
"Well, I'd like to know . . ." Holmes tapped him on the arm and, leading him to one side,
spoke a few words. When they rejoined us, there was a trace of relief in the man's worried
face. "It shall be as you wish, sir," he said, "and you can rely on Mr. Tonston repeating his
statement to you."
The man in tweeds turned his sunken face and pale grey eyes in our direction. "I don't
see why I should," he said tartly. "You're the law, aren't you, Constable Kibble, and you've
taken my statement already. I have nothing to add. You would be better employed in sending in
your report of Mr. Ferrers' suicide."
"Suicide?" interposed Holmes sharply.
"Aye, what else? He's been glooming for weeks past, as all the household can testify, and
now he's cut his throat from ear to ear."
"H'm." Holmes dropped on his knees beside the body. "And this is the weapon, of course. A
horn-handled clasp-knife with a retractable blade. Italian, I perceive."
"How do you know that?"
"It has the mark of a Milanese bladesmith. But what is this? Dear me, What a curious
object."
He rose to his feet and closely examined the thing which he had picked up from the
grass. It was a short-barrelled rifle, cut off immediately behind the trigger by a hinged
stock, so that the whole weapon folded into two parts. "It was lying by his head," observed the
constable. "Seems that he was expecting trouble and took it with him for protection."
Holmes shook his head. "It has not been loaded," he said, "for you will observe that the
grease is undisturbed in the breech. But what have we here? Perhaps, Watson, you would lend
me your pencil and handkerchief."
"It's only the hole in the stock for the cleaning rod," rapped Mr
.
Tonston.
"I am aware of that. Tut, this is most curious."
"What then? You stuck the handkerchief wrapped round the pencil into the hole and now
you've withdrawn it. There's nothing on the handkerchief, and yet you find it curious. What the
devil did you expect?"
"Dust."
"Dust?"
"Precisely. Something has been hidden in the hole and hence the fact that the walls are clean.
Normally there is always dust in the stock-holes of guns. But I should be glad to hear a few
facts from you, Mr. Tonston, as I understand that you were the first to raise the alarm. It will
save time if I hear them from your own lips instead of reading through your statement."
"Well, there's little enough to tell," said he. "An hour ago, I strolled out for a breath of air
and caught sight of Mr. Ferrers standing under this tree. When I hailed him, he looked
round and then, turning away, seemed to put his hand up to his throat. I saw him stagger
and fall. When I ran up, he was lying as you see him now, with his throat gaping and the
knife on the grass beside him. There was nothing I could do save send the manservant for Dr.
Nordham and the constable. That's all."
"Most illuminating. You were with Mr. Ferrers in Sicily, were you not?"
"I was."
"Well, gentlemen, I shall detain you no longer if you wish to return to the house. Watson,
perhaps you would care to remain with me. And you too, Constable."
As the doctor and Tonston vanished through the parterres, Holmes was galvanized into
activity. For a while, he circled the grass about the dead man on his hands and knees, like
some lean, eager foxhound casting for its scent. Once he stooped and peered at the ground very
closely, then rising to his feet, he whipped his lens from his pocket and proceeded to a
searching examination of the trunk of the cedar. Suddenly he stiffened and at his gesture the
constable and I hastened to his side. Holmes pointed with his finger as he handed the
glass to the police-officer. "Examine the edge of that knot," he said quietly. "What do you
see?"
"Looks to me like a hair, sir," replied Constable Kibble, gazing through the lens. "No, it's not
a hair. It's a brown thread."
"Quite so. Perhaps you would kindly remove it and place it in this envelope. Now
Watson, give me a hand up." Holmes scrambled into the fork of the tree and, supporting
himself by the branches, peered about him, "Ha, what have we here!" he chuckled. "A fresh
scrape on the trunk, traces of mud in the fork and another small thread from some coarse
brownish material clinging to the bark where a man might lean his back. Quite a treasure-trove.
I am about to jump down and I want you both to watch the exact place where I land. So!" He
stepped to one side. "Now, what do you see?"
"Two small indentations."
"Precisely. The marks of my heels. Look wider."
"By Jingo!" cried the constable. "There are four, not two! They are identical."
"Save that the others are not quite so deep."
"The man was lighter!" I ejaculated.
"Bravo, Watson. Well, I think that we have seen all that we need."
The officer fixed Holmes with his earnest eyes. "Look here, sir," he said. "I'm clean out of
my depth. What's all this mean?"
"Probably your sergeant's stripes, Constable Kibble. And now, let us join the others."
When we reached the house, the police-officer showed us into a long, sparsely furnished
room with a groined roof. Doctor Nordham, who was writing at a table in the window, looked
up at our entrance. "Well, Mr. Holmes?"
"You are preparing your report, I perceive," my friend remarked. "May I suggest that you
pay particular regard that you do not convey a false impression?"
Dr. Nordham gazed stonily at Holmes. "I fail to understand you," said he. "Can you not be
more explicit?"
"Very well. What are your views on the death of Mr. Josua Ferrers of Abbotstanding?"
"Tut, sir, there is no question of views. We have both visual and medical evidence that Josua
Ferrers committed suicide by cutting his own throat."
"A remarkable man, this Mr. Ferres," Holmes observed, "who, not content with
committing suicide by cutting his jugular vein, must continue to sever the rest of his neck
with an ordinary clasp-knife until, in the words of Mr. Tonston here, he had cut his throat
literally from ear to ear. I have always felt that, were I to commit murder, I should avoid
errors of that kind."
My friend's words were followed by a moment of tense silence. Then Dr. Nordham rose
abruptly to his feet, while Tonston, who had been leaning against the wall with his arms
folded, lifted his eyes to Holmes's face.
"Murder is an ugly word, Mr. Sherlock Holmes," he said quietly.
"And an ugly deed. Though not, perhaps, to the
Mala Vita."
"What nonsense is this!"
"Tut, I was relying upon your knowledge of Sicily to fill in any small details that I may
have overlooked. However, as you dismiss as nonsense the name of this terrible secret society,
it will doubtless interest you to learn a few of the facts."
"Have a care, Mr. Holmes."
"To you, Dr. Nordham, and to Constable Kibble, there will appear to be gaps in my brief
account." My friend continued. "But as these can be filled in later, I will address myself to
you, Watson, as you were present during Miss Ferrers narrative.
"It was obvious from the first that her father was hiding from some peril of so relentless a
nature that even in the depth of this deserted country-side he went in fear of his life. As the man
had come from Sicily, an island notorious for the power and vindictiveness of its secret societies,
the most likely explanation was that either he had offended some such organization or as a
member he had transgressed some vital rule. As he made no attempt to invoke the police, I
inclined to the latter supposition and this became a certainty with the first appearance of the
Dark Angels. You will recall that they were nine in number, Watson, and that the print,
inscribed with the words 'six and three,' was nailed to a tree in the avenue on December 29th.
"The next visitation took place on February 11th, exactly six weeks and three days from
December 29th, but this time the angels, six in number, were nailed to the front door.
"On March 24th came the third and last appearance, exactly six weeks after the second.
The dreaded herald of death, again nine in number, but now without inscription, lay on the
very platter of the master of Abbotstanding.
"As I listened to Miss Ferrers' voice and calculated the dates rapidly in mind, I was
dismayed by the discovery that the final nine of the Dark Angels, assuming them to represent
the same period of time as the first, brought the date to May 7th. Today!
"I knew then that I was too late. But, if I could not save her father, I might avenge him
and, with that object, I attacked the problem from a different angle.
"The face at the window was typical, of course, of perhaps the most barbarous trait in the
vengeance of secret societies, the desire to strike horror not only into the victim himself but
into his family. But the man had been careful to cover his features with his hands, despite the
fact that he was looking not at Josua Ferrers but at his daughter, thereby suggesting to my
mind that he feared recognition by Miss Ferrers as much as by her father.
"Next, it seemed to me that the cold, deadly approach of
the fatal prints from tree to door,
from door to breakfast-table, inferred an intimate knowledge of Josua Ferrers'
circumscribed habits, possibly an unchallenged right to enter the house and thereby place
the card on the table without the necessity for forced windows and smashed locks.
"From the first, certain features in Miss Ferrers' singular narrative stirred some vague
chord in my memory, but it was not until your remark, Watson, about a foot in the open
grave that a flood of light burst suddenly into my consciousness."
As Sherlock Holmes paused for a moment to draw something from his cape pocket, I
glanced at the others. Though the old room was rapidly deepening into dusk, a sullen red
light from the last rays of the sun glimmering through the window illumined the absorbed
expressions of Dr. Nordham and the constable. Tonston stood in the shadows, his arms still
folded across his chest and his pale, glittering eyes fixed immovably upon Holmes.
"It was to certain passages in this book, a fore-runner of Heckenthorn's
Secret Societies,
that
my memory was recalled by. Dr. Watson's words." My friend continued. "Here is what the
author has to say on a certain secret society which was first introduced into Sicily some three
centuries ago. 'This formidable organization,' he writes, aptly named the
Mala Vita,
communicates with its members through a variety of signs including Angels, Demons and the
Winged Lion. The candidate for membership, if successful in his trials of initiation which
frequently include that of murder, takes oath of fealty with one foot in an open grave.
Punishment for infraction of the society's rules is relentless and, where death is the price,
three separate warnings are given of the approaching doom, the second following six weeks and
three days after the first, and the third six weeks after the second. Following the final warning, a
further period of six weeks and three days are allowed to pass before the blow falls. Any
member failing to carry out the punitive orders of the society becomes himself liable to the
same punishment.' There follows a list of rules of the
Mala Vita,
together with the penalties
for breaking them.
"That Josua Ferrers was a member of this dread society there can now be little doubt,"
Holmes added solemnly, as he closed the book. "What was his offense, we shall probably
never know, and yet one may hazard a pretty shrewd guess. Article 16 is surely among the
Mala Vita's
most singular rules, for it states simply that the penalty for any member who
discovers the identity of the Grand Master is death. I would remind you, Watson, that
Ferrers laid emphatic instructions on his daughter that her answer to all enquiries must be
that she knew nothing of his affairs, adding only that the name of the maker was in the
butt of the gun. Not a gun, mark you, but
the
gun, which clearly indicated that the