Dear Sir
,
I am writing to inform you that one of my operators has indisputable evidence that your son, W. J. Harper, a medical student at St Thomas's Hospital, poisoned two girls named Alice Marsh and Emma Shrivell on the 12th inst., and that I am willing to give you the said evidence (so that you can suppress it) for the sum of £1,500 sterling, or sell it to the police for the same amount â¦
Even before I read the rest I knew that there would be the threat to âruin you and your family forever', and a command in this case to answer the letter through the columns of the
Daily Chronicle
, with the message â
W. H. M
.â
Will pay you for your services
.â
Dr H
.' The conclusion of the letter revealed a familiar name, the blackmailer of Dr Neill and the Metropole Hotel.
If you do not answer at once, I am going to give the evidence to the Coroner
.
Yours respectfully
,
W.H. Murray
Holmes offered the cigar case again. This time, the inspector helped himself to a corona.
âYou say you have your blackmailer, Lestrade? Under lock and key?'
The colour rose a little in our visitor's cheek.
âNot as such, Mr Holmes. I believe we know who he is, though. An arrest at this moment might be imprudent.'
âAh,' said Holmes, as if this explained it all, âand who might it be?'
Lestrade looked like a man on the verge of some grand pronouncement.
âThe son of the man to whom this letter is addressed, gentlemen. Mr Walter Harper, the medical student.'
Holmes affected simple bewilderment.
âThen young Walter Harper accuses himself of the murder of these two girls?'
âOnly to his father, Mr Holmes. We can't see he is the murderer. He may be or he may be not. However, we believe he knew both girls and that he got one of them into trouble, or nearly so, while she was at Mutton's down in Brighton.'
âBut why accuse himself?'
âBecause he believed that his father, knowing something of the rumours about his son, would never take this letter to the police. He would pay, rather than see his son disgraced by scandal and his career ended before it had begun. Our information is that young Harper never wanted to be a medical student but was compelled by his father's wishes. If the young rogue is half what we think, his allowance was spent long ago. He is in debt to the money-lenders, and he must have seen one way to clear himself. By blackmailing the only person that would never give him away, having first tried to blackmail a good many others.'
âAnd the murders?' asked Holmes hopefully.
âAs to that, Mr Holmes, how was it the blackmailer and his gang knew so soon that Ellen Donworth had been poisoned? How did they know Matilda Clover would be poisoned before it happened? Take all that together with the accusations in this letter and Mr Walter Harper may have to face something stronger than blackmail before he's finished.'
When the time came for the inspector to leave, Holmes stood up and shook his hand.
âWell, my dear Lestrade, I congratulate you. You have proved yourself the best man in this case and the best man has won. I can only apologize if my own humble efforts, such as they have been, have in any way interfered with your investigations.'
Lestrade glowed a little with satisfaction.
âVery noble of you to take it like that, Mr Holmes. Very generous, I'm sure.'
âOne thing, if I may ask. How tall is Mr Harper?'
Lestrade stared at him.
âTall?'
âHigh, if you prefer.'
âWhat has that â¦'
âBelieve me it has.'
âVery well, then. About five feet and nine inches, I should guess.'
âBuild?'
âHe played scrum-half for the hospital rugby, I'm told.'
âClean shaven? How barbered?'
âMedium brown hair. Short military moustache.'
âDoes he wear a bowler hat?'
âHe was indoors!' Lestrade said impatiently. âWhat might all this amount to?'
âA portrait of your murderer,' Holmes said amiably. âMere idle curiosity on my part.'
Idle curiosity or not, I could not help feeling that the inspector was a good deal more uneasy when he left us than when he had arrived.
As soon as the door was closed, I said to Holmes
sotto voce
, âDid you not see the address of young Harper's lodgings in the letter?'
âOf course I saw it! It is the house where your client Dr Neill lodges on his visits to London.'
âNo wonder that Neill thought the blackmailer was someone close to him.'
âNo wonder at all,' he said.
âAnd was not the scrum-half with the brown hair and moustache the man that Mrs Phillips saw at the door with Matilda Clover the night she died?'
âTo be sure.'
He leant forward and stirred the dying fire with the poker.
âThen Lestrade has got his man!' I exclaimed.
He looked up at me.
âI never doubted that, my dear fellow. He has got his man. Have we got ours?'
He was back to his old mood again. I gave him a few minutes of brooding over the embers, then asked casually, âI suppose, Holmes, that you may find it convenient in the next day or two to pay me the money you owe.'
He looked startled.
âMoney? What money?'
âThe wager,' I said quietly. âOn our way to Lambeth Cemetery the other day, I wagered you that after the letter to the coroner, accusing an unnamed medical student of the Stamford Street murders, the next letter would be an attempt to blackmail a wealthy student or his family. So it has proved to be.'
âBy Jove!' he said softly. âSo you didâand so it has. However, just help me with one thing first, there's a good fellow.'
âWhat sort of thing?'
âWith your assistance, Watson, I should like to see the inside of Walter Harper's rooms. I do not much mind whether he is acquitted or hanged but I think it desirable that one or other of these events should take place before much longer. Then we will settle the wager.'
XIII
Two days later, poison in Lambeth threatened the entire borough. Maisie, maid-of-all-work to Mrs Emily Sleaper, answered the knocker in Lambeth Palace Road. The door stood in a respectable set of houses. The day was Monday, the time 9.30
A
.
M
. The wide length of the road lay empty, the trees down either pavement were bare in the approach of spring. On Mrs Sleaper's doorstep stood a stout man of medium height in a bowler hat and moustache, a watch-chain looped ponderously across the waistcoat of his well-worn suit.
âJeavons,' he said with the least tilt of the bowler, âArea Inspector, South London Gas Company. Mrs Sleaper home?'
âNo, sir,' said Maisie, blushing a little under her white mob-cap.
âWho might be in charge, then?'
In deference to his air of authority, Maisie almost performed a half-curtsey.
âThere's only me, sir.'
He glanced at her and his mouth tightened.
âAny smell of gas in the house?'
âNo, sir. Don't think so, sir.'
âDon't think so, sir? Meaning what, precisely?'
âMeaning I haven't been through every room yet,' she said petulantly, âand Mrs Sleaper's gentlemen are all gone out this time of day, so I can't ask them.'
âAny naked lights or flame?'
âKitchen fire, I suppose.'
âPut it out immediately.'
âI can't do that! She'd skin me!'
His brows tightened.
âYoung woman, you have heard of the Lambeth poisoner, I daresay.'
âOh, yes.' There was a slight but delicious shiver. âI heard of him, all right.'
âWhat you haven't heard of is his letter to the gas company yesterday, promising to poison all occupants of houses in this area with household gas, by over-pressurizing the main. In other words, even with taps turned off, the gas leaks at loose pipe-joints, too soft for you to hear. Day or night. You don't smell it and you get drowsy. You fall deeper into your last long sleep. All done in ten minutes.'
âOh, God!'
âAct sensible,' Inspector Jeavons advised, âMr Crabbe, my mechanic, will be here any minute, working his way down the road. Your joints need tightening, miss, that's all. If you smell anything peculiar meantime, come straight out.'
He closed the door, leaving the terrified maid to douse the kitchen fire. In the stillness of the road, a baker's barrow passed, pulled by the roundsman between its shafts. A milk-cart stopped. The man called âMilk down below!' and whipped up his horse. Then the front door of Mrs Sleaper's house flew open and Maisie almost tumbled down the steps.
âGas! Gas! Mr Jeavons! There's gas in the house!'
His self-assurance calmed her a little, as he shouted to his mechanic.
âMr Crabbe, attend to these joints next, if you please.'
Mr Crabbe resembled a turtle more closely than his marine namesake. A large man with fine chest and paunch, bandy-legged from weight, rheumy eyes behind thick glasses, a hopelessly drooping black moustache, and a tattered cap. He had the stoop of one whose life since boyhood has been spent down manholes and in conduits. His tools hung in a greasy satchel over the shoulder of his overalls. His voice had the slight but chronic hoarseness of the inveterate whisky drinker.
âHave the goodness to show me, dear,' he said to Maisie, who scowled at his familiarity. âJust point out the whereabouts of the pipes.'
She led the way to the front door, taking care to enter only a few feet.
âDon't strike a light, and you'll be all right,' he said roguishly, making to pull loose one of the ribbons behind her apron, as she twisted away from him. He undid his satchel and selected an adjustable wrench, humming to himself, âI can't get away to marry you today ⦠My wife won't let me.'
âDon't you smell it?' she insisted.
âI smell it, my sweetheart. Just wait here.'
A black rubber mask from his satchel covered his nose and mouth, making him a grotesque and frightening clown from Venetian carnival. He went round the ground floor rooms and she heard the grip of the wrench on the piping.
Now he was on the stairs, climbing lightly. Two rooms opened off each upper level, the tenant identified by a printed
carte de visite
slotted into a small brass holder on each door. These apartments were duplicated indefinitely in this neighbourhood of the great hospitals. Entering the first, after a respectful tap on the door, Mr Crabbe found it unoccupied. A well-worn carpet lay before a black-leaded grate, gas-mantels at either side. A mirror hung over the greater width of the mantelpiece. The furniture was spartan and black-varnished.
A wardrobe stood in the adjoining bedroom and two tiers of desk-drawers in the sitting-room. Mr Crabbe drew open the desk-drawers one by one. With a hoarse cough and a sniff he unmasked and rummaged. Then, whistling to himself, âHere's the very note ⦠and this is what he wrote â¦' he drew out a pad of ivory-cream writing paper. Holding it firmly, he tore off the top sheet and burst into full-throated chorus, âThere was I, waiting at the church â¦' He stopped and listened. A black marble Parthenon clock on the mantel ticked away the silence. He sang a little more, as he checked the other rooms. The spanner was heard tightening joints, then he came cantering down the stairs.
âSafe enough now, miss,' he said cheerfully. The pinch that he aimed was rather half-hearted, giving her ample time to turn her back to the wall.
âYou sure it's safe?'
âTight as Noah's Ark. He can turn up the pressure as much as he likes. The joints in this house won't give, gas won't leak in here. Sound as a pound.'
But what if this man was the Lambeth murderer and had loosened the joints instead? She dodged him once more.
âYou're not a gentleman!' she shouted after him angrily, âI've a good mind â¦'
Mr Crabbe swung rakishly down the road. His voice carried back to her.
âYou be thankful, my girl, that you ain't a-singing “Too-ra-li-too-ra-li-too-ra-lay-ay!” with the âeavenly choir!'
He turned into Lambeth Road and paused in the dark under a low bridge, its iron ringing at the thunder of Waterloo trains. With no one in sight, he opened his satchel and slipped his cap in. Unhitching the shoulder-bands of his overalls, he stepped out, folded them small and added them to the cap. Glasses and moustache followed. At the Waterloo cab rank, Mr Jeavons was waiting, his foot on the running-board to detain a hansom.
âThough I say it myself, Watson,' the Gas Man chuckled, âthat was one of the neatest and quite the jolliest of all my impersonations to date. You have the bag of peeled garlic and tar that I lodged within the kitchen door?'
I assured him I had. As for what he might have found in Walter Harper's rooms, he would only insist that I must wait and see what I would see on our arrival in Baker Street.
Holmes took the blank sheet of cream paper straight to his worktable. With infinite care, a delicate sprinkling of graphite revealed the indentations of a message written on the sheet above. Rather, it revealed some of them.
I am writing to inform ⦠operators ⦠indisputable evidence
⦠son, W. J. Harp ⦠St Thomas's Hospital â¦
âThe young devil!' I exclaimed. âThen he
was
trying to extort money from his own father!'
Holmes stared at the paper and stroked his chin.
âSo it would seem.'
âBut he dared not use his own writing, which his father would recognize. So there are at least two of them in this. Surely this is our blackmail gang!'
He drew from his pocket an envelope, addressed to âDr Thomas Neill, 103 Lambeth Palace Road SE.' I stared at it.
âHolmes! You have searched my client's room! You have removed his papers!'