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K R I S T E N' S C O L L E C T I O N
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Dr. Watson's Wanton Wimbleton
by David Shaw (david@f-e-mail.com)
***
England's greatest detective is in the Balkans and
sexual blackmail is afoot in centre court. Can the good
Doctor save Miss Maude Oakes from a fate worse than
being beaten by an American challenger or will it be a
love all? (MMF, reluc)
***
It's often said that doctors make the worst patients
and I was feeling fretful enough to prove the point.
Still, it was a day that would cause any Londoner to
chafe at having to remain indoors: high summer and a
cloudless sky outside as the sun warmed the
cobblestones of Baker Street and smiled through the
opened windows of number 221B. The chemical retorts
stacked on the acid stained workbench glistened, dust
motes danced over the piles of books lying in untidy
heaps and only the unused fireplace seemed mournful.
Candidly though, the fireplace was not the only thing
in the room which seemed to be of no present utility to
anyone. That description might well have been applied
to me, John H. Watson, MD, late of the Medical
Department of the Indian Army. For I was temporarily
crippled by a sharp attack of gout in the toes of my
left foot, an attack of such severity that I was
compelled to spend most of my time sitting in my
armchair by the empty fireplace with the afflicted foot
resting on a footstool. Not only were my toes paining
me, but the affected nerves also extended to my old
Afghan bullet wound, summoning up frequent sharp
twinges as unwelcome reminders of past service on the
North West Frontier.
It ill becomes an old campaigner to complain about
minor afflictions but such was my mood that I would
have gladly welcomed the chance of a few minutes
conversation with that brash young author, Mr Kipling,
so that I might have told him what I thought of all the
tosh he writes about the Great Game. In my humble
opinion, if the Russians or anybody else want to rule
Afghanistan, we Britons should offer them every
encouragement to try to do so. That blighted territory
has caused nothing but trouble for anybody foolish
enough to meddle in its barbaric affairs and always
will do.
But since there was neither Mr Kipling nor anybody else
present to talk to, I perforce attempted once again to
find something interesting to read in the books Mrs
Hudson had placed by my side. It was not an occupation
which could divert my restlessness for long. Unusually
for one of my normally placid temperament I now had
some inkling of the oppressive boredom which settled on
Holmes when there was no case of interest to apply his
mind to. For me, a brisk walk in the fresh air and a
half pint of best bitter afterwards in "The Cask and
Greyhound" would have settled my nerves admirably. Yet
even those small pleasures were presently denied me.
Perhaps, though, the matter of most concern was the
absence of the world's greatest detective. For Sherlock
Holmes was carrying out one of the most important
investigations of his career, and doing so far away
from his usual haunts. He had been gone from London for
over five days and I believed him by now to be
somewhere in Transylvania.
"I have no wish at all to be dispatched on this
mission, Watson," he had told me from amidst a cloud of
his favorite shag tobacco on the eve of his departure
to Dover. "But the request came not only from the Prime
Minister and the Foreign Secretary: there was also an
appeal from an even more majestic level, one which no
loyal Englishman could deny. Indeed, never before can I
remember such concern in the highest of circles, not
even when the plans for the Bruce-Partington
submersible vessel went astray. So I'm bound for the
Balkans, and no discussion is to be entered into."
"But, Holmes, what could happen in those primitive
areas to affect British interests?" I'd asked of him in
surprise.
"Why, Watson, anyone who takes the trouble to read the
daily newsprints knows that the Austro-Hungarian Empire
is a ship of state with many in its crew ripe for
mutiny. Now we have certain word that the Black Hand
Gang of Serbia is planning to strike a blow which will
be deemed a casus beli for a general uprising against
the Imperial authorities. I agree that in times past
that would have been a matter of little interest to
London, but we live in a changing world. One of the
most important capitals in Europe has passed into the
control of a vainglorious peacock with a thirst for
military adventures. Let a spark strike in the Balkans
today and it might set off the whole of Europe like a
gigantic powder magazine. That is a tragedy that any
man must do whatever is in his power to prevent. So now
I fear I must make my departure for the boat train."
I'd struggled to my feet to shake his hand and bid him
God speed. "I only wish that I might come with you,
Holmes, but with this accursed foot I would be more
hindrance than help."
"Come, Watson, cheer up. Even if you were able to
chronicle this case it's an absolute surety it could
never be published, not for as long as the Austro-
Hungarian and British Empires endure. And I fear you
would find the foothills of the Carpathanian Mountains
but a poor substitute for our usual lush hunting
grounds in the home counties. No, it's best you stay
and hold the fort against my return, stout fellow that
you are. Farewell."
Well, if I was still holding the fort, it was as a
forlorn and crippled garrison. As Holmes had done so
many times before me, I wished that something would
happen which would occupy my mind. And how soon and how
fully was that idle wish to be granted!
"Doctor, excuse me, but there's a young lady on the
doorstep who wishes to speak to Mr Holmes."
I looked up to see Mrs Hudson's honest face at the
doorway. It seemed odd that she should have troubled to
ascend the staircase for such a pointless announcement.
"Then she is unfortunate in her timing, as well you
know, Mrs Hudson. Mr Holmes is abroad and not expected
back for some time. Whatever the lady's difficulties,
she must seek her help for them in some other quarter."
Mrs Hudson was as little affected by my blast of
irritation as an oak tree by a gentle breeze: "Yes,
Doctor, but this is not quite an ordinary young lady.
Her name is Miss Oakes."
I felt my brows crease in puzzlement at her words. Was
I supposed to be acquainted with this female?
"Miss Maude Oakes," Mrs Hudson repeated with a touch of
asperity and suddenly I realized whom she was referring
to.
"You mean the tennis player? The All England champion?"
"Yes sir, that Miss Oakes. The girl who won at
Wimbledon last year and will again tomorrow, when she
beats that American upstart, Daisy Cavanah."
Mrs Hudson's already sharp voice became even sharper
with disapproval.
"Can you imagine that, Doctor, some Yankee coming over
here and thinking they can beat the English at their
own game? And yet that may well happen if Miss Maude
has to go out onto the court in the same condition
she's in now. In no fit state to represent her country,
poor dear, I can see that much for myself."
I had no idea that Mrs Hudson had such an interest in
any sport, but it was indeed possible that she might
approve very strongly of Miss Oakes. Certainly
everybody in the country knew about the young female
champion, even those not normally interested in tennis.
For Maude Oakes was in the way of being England's
sweetheart and I was astonished at my own slowness in
not noting her name as soon as I heard it. I well
remembered once seeing her play and it was a treasured
memory. A tall strapping Amazon of a girl with a figure
which made men catch their breath as she ran across a
court, the hem of her skirt brushing against the grass
so swiftly it sometimes seemed more like flying than
fleetness of foot.
Yet it was not only her athletic and sporting prowess
had made her a favorite of the press, but also her
beauty, and it seemed there was always some excuse for
her photograph to be published in the papers once more,
almost always with her tennis cap perched jauntily on
top of her tresses of blonde hair.
Again, I reflected that Maude Oakes seemed the most
unlikely of visitors to be expected at Sherlock Holmes'
lodgings. Whatever had brought her here there was
probably little enough that I could do to help her.
Still, she was more than welcome to enter, for the
sight of her would light up my morning as surely as the
sun was brightening up everybody else's day. And
presumably a few minutes conversation could be of no
great matter to Miss Oakes, whatever the urgency of her
business.
With the aid of my stick I had managed to struggle to
my feet when Mrs Hudson showed the young lady in. There
are some people who can dominate their setting just by
being there, like a diamond in a piece of jewellery.
They have a physical presence and a personality which
seems to be cut from a more glittering cloth than the
more prosaic material the rest of us have to wear
during our earthly existence. Miss Oakes was one such:
she was taller than me, broad shouldered, deep bosomed,
yet with a waistline which would have done credit to a
danseuse; her blonde hair and vivid blue eyes were made
for a Viking's delight and her complexion had the
freshness of newly dewed rose petals. Above all else
though, my first impression of her was of a radiant
energy and a grace of movement worthy of display on the
stage of Covent Garden.
Quite frankly, once she was touching my hand in
greeting, I was regretting my decision to admit her.
For I suddenly realized how old and infirm I must seem
when compared to this young and golden embodiment of
youthful Britannia.
"Doctor Watson, it is good of you to see me. I'm in
desperate need of sound advice. In fact it was an
assistant manager of the Savoy Hotel whom suggested
that I come here, though he himself knows not the half
of my troubles."
Indeed, she looked to be near despair, and my heart
beat in sympathy, as it must in the breast of any
decent man when appealed to by a person of the feminine
persuasion.
"Miss Oakes, we could hardly turn away a young lady of
your accomplishments away from our doorstep. But it is
my sad duty to tell you that Mr Holmes is abroad and
unable to help you for the present."
She nodded: "So I was informed when I arrived. But
perhaps my journey has not been wasted. Frankly, the
matter which brings me here is so delicate that I would
actually prefer to reveal it to a medical man in the
first instance. Please, may I talk freely to you?"
"Of course, Miss Oakes, of course."
The lady politely refused Mrs Hudson's offer of a dish
of tea. Once we were alone and seated she produced a
letter from her reticule.
"Before I show this to you, Doctor, I must first
explain that during the All England Tennis
Championships I have been staying at the Savoy Hotel.
As you know I have been fortunate enough to win my way
through to the finals, which will be played tomorrow
morning at eleven thirty. Yesterday I returned to the
Savoy from Wimbledon with all my playing gear in the
cab with me. Somehow, between the time my cases were
unloaded, and the porter bringing them to my room, my
racket was stolen."
"Stolen? At the Savoy!"
"Yes, it seems quite incredible and at first the
management believed some dreadful mistake had been made
as they made the most desperate efforts to find out
where the racket could have gone to.
"You must understand, Doctor, how much that racket
means to me. It was made for me when I first began
playing tennis by Mr Owen Mullard, at that time the
senior proprietor of Mullard and Sons of Restoration
Row, the greatest racketer there ever was and now,
regrettably, deceased. Every game since then I have
played with my Millard in my hand, and I know it as
well as a violinist would know his Stradivarius. I also
know that I can never hope to play at my top form
without my own racket. Which means I shall probably
lose against Daisy Cavanah."
I was aghast at the very mention of such a possibility.
"A Yankee winning at Wimbledon! Come, come, Miss Oakes,
surely the loss of even the most treasured of rackets
cannot undermine your morale to the extent that you
could believe such a thing possible. Why, her Majesty
herself is believed to be taking an interest in the
outcome of the Championships."
Miss Oakes shook her head sadly: "I fear that I shall
indeed be defeated. All conflicts on the center court
are eventually decided as much upon spirit as on skill,
and everybody involved in the game knows how much value
I place on my Mullard. When she hears that it has been
taken from me Daisy Cavanah's spirits must be elevated
in the same degree that mine have been lowered."
So obvious was her distress that I almost reached out
to squeeze her hand in compassion. Fortunately I was
able to stop myself from committing such a terrible
faux pas with an unmarried lady.
"You say your racket has been stolen from you, Miss
Oakes. Are you absolutely sure that this is so? Might
it not have been misplaced or taken away in error?"
"No, Doctor. For a letter addressed to me was delivered
to the Savoy desk this morning by a pageboy who handed
in over with my empty racket case and immediately left.
Before I show it to you, I beg your assurance that you
will keep its contents completely confidential. Even
the mere fact of my having received it would cause a
terrible scandal."
"How could that possibly be?" I asked.
"Read it and you will find out for yourself, for surely
you will never have seen a more infamous document, not
in any of the nefarious criminal cases you have
chronicled as Mr Sherlock Holmes’ companion!"
Surprised by the openly displayed intensity of her
emotions, I picked up the letter. I was written on a
single sheet of fine quality but unheaded writing paper
with a well shaped nib and neatly blotted:
'My Dear Miss Oakes,
Or may I take the liberty of calling you Maude? For I
hope we shall be much better acquainted by and by. I
would indeed wish us to be friends, and as a friend it
is my pleasure to return to you your racket case,
proving that I have possession of your Mullard, which,
I am happy to assure you, is unharmed.
Naturally, as a patriotic Englishman, it is my dearest
wish that your racket should also be returned to you
forthwith so you may win the All England Championship.
However, being also a man, and perhaps your greatest
admirer, I claim the privilege of returning your
property to you personally. Be on platform number six
at Euston station at three o'clock this afternoon. You
will be approached and show a playing card, the Ace of
Hearts. Without any hesitation you will follow the
person who shows you the card and obey any instructions
he or she gives you. By a roundabout route you will be
brought to me and your racket handed back to you.
However, before the transaction is complete, I shall
claim my reward. As a keen photographer I have long
desired to capture your image, preferably holding your
racket aloft. But what would make the photograph
perfect would be for you to pose for me wearing nothing
but you're playing boots and your tennis cap. That
would indeed be a picture worth the taking.
If you genuinely desire to have your racket returned,
and if you are willing to grant me the favor I have
asked for, be at Euston station at three o'clock.
Should you be unwise enough to involve the police in
this matter, be aware that the agent who meets you at
the station will be completely unable to help the force
to identify or locate me. Furthermore, any such action
will result in the immediate destruction of your
precious racket,
Your most obedient servant,
An Ardent Admirer'
My hand shook with outrage as I read this madman's
letter. Indeed, I was so angry that I could find no
words at first to express my feelings, but could only
express them in lashing at the footstool with my stick,
nearly hitting my own foot as I did so. I suppose it
was something of a comical performance, but rarely in
my life had I felt so angry as I spluttered and struck
out in ineffectual rage at the furniture.
"Blaggardly, Caddish! An affront to civilized society!
Despicable!"
As I sank back into my chair there came an urgent
knocking on the door: "Doctor! Doctor! Are you
alright?" Mrs Hudson was clearly worried that I might
have suffered from some kind of seizure.
With considerable effort I managed to calm my outraged
sensibilities to some degree.
"I'm well enough, thank you." I called out to reassure
my anxious landlady. "Nothing for you to worry about,
Mrs Hudson."
I waited until I had heard the worthy landlady's
footsteps go back down the staircase before I could
trust myself to speak.
"You are quite right, Miss Oakes. I have never, never,
in all my years of dealing with the criminal classes,
come across anything so flagrantly in denial of all
standards of human decency. Equally certainly, your
name must never be linked with this madman's ravings. I
suggest you burn this letter immediately."
Miss Oakes pursed her lips, as if in doubt about my
advice.
"Might it not be better to keep it in case it contains
some clue as to the origin? You see, Doctor, I have had
time to think on my journey here and I wonder if this
is perhaps some kind of a trick designed to unsettle me
even more than the loss of my racket. It may be that
whoever penned this . . . communication is not in fact
a madman but a student of psychology intent on
completely destroying the last shreds of my
concentration before tomorrow's match."
"By Jove, you could be right," I admitted. "But it
would take a mind of complete depravity to conceive
such a plan. Were you committed to playing a French
opponent the situation might possibly be as you
postulate."
"But surely no American would ever stoop so low?"
"Hmmm... No, I doubt it, Miss Oakes. Certainly they
have their baser moments, but with the Americans it's
almost always money which brings out the worst in them,
and that can hardly apply here. Not even the most
avaricious Yankee sharp can ever hope to make any money
out of respectable sporting activities, least of all in
such a genteel pursuit as female tennis. No, I believe
this letter to come from the source it indicates, some
foul creature so utterly besotted by his bestial
desires that he imagines you might possibly consent to
do as he bids you to."
Miss Oakes stared at me with a directness and a force
in those vivid blue eyes which quite disconcerted me:
"And yet I must consider the alternatives. Imagine the
prospect of a Wimbledon Trophy being taken ashore at
New York and borne in triumph through the streets. It
would be like a Roman Triumph! Why, I might as well be
dragged along Broadway in a cage as if I were a
captured barbarian princess being taken as a prize to
Caesar."
"Come, come, Miss Oakes, you exaggerate, surely? After
all, you would not be there but here, in your own
country."
"Yes, here in a country in which all my previous
successes would have been turned to ashes in my mouth.
A country in which I would hereafter be pitied at best
and regarded as almost a traitoress by others. No, I
will not submit to that fate without a desperate
struggle, no matter what sacrifices I may be called
upon to make."
I tried to lead her back to the path of sanity.
"Miss Oakes, a moment's quiet thought must indicate to
you that any idea of actually following the
instructions in this foul letter would lead you to a
position in which you could be totally compromised.
Such a rash course of action might mean being forcibly
deprived of a treasure worth far more to a decent girl
than any sporting trophy."
Those curiously bright eyes seemed even bluer than the
summer sky outside as they continued to gaze upon me:
"You are referring to my virginity, Doctor Watson?"
Never in all my years of medical practice had any young
gal spoken to me with such directness. Certainly, never
before had I found myself discussing such delicate
matters with a blush on my own cheek and none on my
patient's fair features. Yet Miss Oakes seemed quite
unperturbed as she laid out the position with a
directness which would have taken a female bargee
aback.
"Do not regard me as a wanton, Doctor, I beg you. For I
have no intention of tamely submitting to this devil's
bargain. Nor will I involve the official police in such
a delicate matter. I am resolved to deal with it
myself. I am as strong as many a man and can move
faster than most. And in this matter I have every right
and justification to do whatever I must to achieve the
return of my property. I intend to go to Euston station
and go wherever I am directed to. But I shall carry a
concealed weapon upon my person and I hope to be able
to use it to force this reprobate into handing back my
Mullard and then allowing me to depart without let or
hindrance."
"My dear Miss Oakes! This is the spirit that won the
Empire!"
Even my old heart beat faster with uncontrollable
admiration as I gazed at this perfect example of
English womanhood, this divine mixture of physical
perfection and ardent spirit. No wonder we bred the
finest stock in the world with such dams.
Indeed, dear reader, could anybody blame me if for once
I regretted my everyday humdrum existence and wished
for some magical spirit to appear bringing me gifts of
grand titles and a great estate. For, in a moment of
madness, I could not help but think of Adeline Horsey
de Horsey, one of the most beautiful women of her
generation, a girl who could speak fluently in five
languages and had written an operatic score at the age
of fifteen. How impossible it had seemed to all of
society that, in the prime of her life, Adeline should
have chosen to marry that brainless, womanizing buffoon
the Earl of Cardigan.
Yet it had happened. Somehow a girl of her shining
talents had managed to fall in love with an old dog
over sixty years old, a rancid ancient libertine
carrying the sacrificed souls of the Light Brigade
forever on his conscience, not to mention the miseries
of many seduced and abandoned young girls. If such a
thoroughly undeserving man of mature years had
succeeded in wooing a younger girl of great abilities,
might not another older gentleman of greater moral
worth also dare to dream?
Well, of course he couldn't. Even as a peer of the
realm Cardigan had had to wait until his first wife had
died before he could propose marriage to Adeline. And
in his seventies the Earl had still been one of the
finest riders to hounds in England, retaining the
figure and bearing of a Light Dragoon into old age,
whereas I could hardly drag my overweight and gout
ridden frame out of my chair. 'Doctor, cure thyself' I
thought in a spat of bitter regret for time past. The
game was no longer afoot for James Watson.
It was the voice of Miss Oakes which brought me back to
my senses.
"So, you see, Doctor, perhaps you can assist me even
without Mr Holmes’ presence. Surely you must retain
some trophies from the many cases you have been
involved in together? Is there in your possession such
a thing as a small pistol which I might be able to
conceal upon me?"
Sadly, I had to shake my head. I knew of no such item
being on the premises. It was true that there were many
remarkable souvenirs stowed away in various nooks and
crannies of 221B Baker Street but none of them of the
kind that Miss Oakes was seeking. For one fleeting
second I considered giving her a vial of vitriol to use
if necessary, but it was a thought which passed away in
a shudder of horror as I recalled the dissolved remains
of Baron Gruner's face after that hellcat Kitty Winter
had taken her revenge upon him with a glassful of acid.
No, no human being with any hope of salvation could
suggest or encourage the use of vitriol on any living
creature, no matter what the circumstances.
Then, when I was on the very point of confessing my
inability to help my fair guest in any way, inspiration
not only tapped me on the shoulder but fairly shouted
in my ear that I was a confounded fool not to have
realized before what I must do. I hammered on the floor
with my stick and called out in such force as to bring
Mrs Hudson up the stairs in a flash and to cause to
stare in astonishment at me.
"Mrs Hudson! Mrs Hudson! I want you to send for Wiggins
immediately. You know where he is to be found
nowadays?"
"Wiggins, Doctor? Of course I do, at his place of
business in Coneysale Road, not five minutes away by
cab."
"Then I desire you to go into the street, hail the
first hansom you can find and go to Coneysale Road
immediately. My compliments to Wiggins and I have the
most urgent need of his immediate attendance here. No
matter what else he may be doing, this matter if of
more importance. You understand, Mrs Hudson, of prior
importance."
She curtsied to show her understanding and eagerness to
act as my Mercury: "I'll get my bonnet and be on my way
in two shakes of a lamb's tail, Doctor."
Miss Oakes's brows were still furrowed with curiosity
as Mrs Hudson retreated down the staircase again.
"Doctor, pray tell me, who is this Wiggins?"
"Why, Miss Oakes, when I first met him he was nothing
more than a dirty little Street Arab. That was long
ago, when I first came here to share these lodgings
with Holmes. But even then my friend had already
organized the gang of urchins he called the Baker
Street Irregulars. Wiggins was their leader and I first
met him and the other Irregulars when Holmes called
them in to help him search the Thames for Mordecai
Smith's steam yacht, the Aurora."
My memories vaulted back to that dark night, the swirl
of foam under the Aurora's stern, the pounding of the
engine of the police launch as Holmes raged at the
vessel's delay in overtaking our prey, the swirling
sparks dancing away in the wind betwixt the white
funnel smoke and the river's black water. In the end
we'd driven the Aurora ashore on Plumstead Marshes with
a murderous native dwarf lying dead upon the deck and a
one legged madman making a futile effort to escape by
leaping overboard, only to get his wooden leg
hopelessly stuck in the deep mud. But what we didn't
know then was that Jonathan Small had already had the
last laugh in the affair, nor that we'd left a trail of
Indian gems worth half a million pounds behind us on
the bottom of the Thames to mark the course of the five
mile chase.
"Wiggins, Doctor. You were telling me about this
Wiggins," Miss Oakes reminded me.
"Oh, I'm sorry... an old man's dreams, I'm afraid. Yes,
Wiggins was the leader of the Irregulars then, by
virtue of his energy and cleverness and has since gone
on to lift himself up in the world by his bootstraps,
as the saying is. Which is very good work indeed for a
boy who owned no boots or shoes to begin with. Holmes
provided money for him to learn to read and write and
then to set himself up in his own business, at which he
has proved remarkably successful. Indeed, he is still
only eighteen or nineteen, I believe, and yet his
agency employs some dozen people now."
"Really, that does sound remarkable, Doctor," Miss
Oakes agreed. "But what is his business and why do you
wish to summon him here so urgently?"
I smiled at my own stupidity: "Of course, I should have
said. As it happens, Wiggins has traded very
successfully on the public attention he has received
from my accounts of Holmes’ cases. He announced to the
world that anyone clever enough to help the great
Sherlock Holmes must be worthy of hire as a private
investigator in his own right, and a very plausible
argument it has proven. The Wiggins Investigation
Agency has gone from strength to strength since its
founding."
"Indeed. But surely it could not have continued to be a
success if this Mr Wiggins had not been good at his
work?" Miss Oakes asked shrewdly.
"That is so. Even as a child Wiggins had great
abilities and he certainly did learn much in assisting
Holmes in many cases. Indeed, one of the first thing he
did on his own account was to form another band of
irregulars to work for him as he himself had led
Holmes' own band of urchins. With the great man out of
the country, I can think of no better course of action
than to seek Wiggins' advice as the most immediate and
satisfactory substitute."
I paused and then realized how difficult a position I
had placed my guest in.
"Of course, Miss Oakes, no doubt you would wish to
leave now. It would be intensely embarrassing for you
to be present whilst another male reads the contents of
this evil letter."
Again those eyes, aimed at me as unwaveringly as Afghan
musket barrels: "No, Doctor, with your permission I
will stay. This matter is too important for me to worry
overmuch about such niceties."
"Very well, Miss Oakes."
Over the years I have chronicled Holmes' cases some
remarkable examples of untypical female behavior had
come my way. Mrs Maria Gibson, for example, who had
blown out her own brains after using them to arrange a
suicide which would see her rival in love hung for
murdering Mrs Maria Gibson: Mrs Burnett, who had been
prepared to live for years in the dreadful household of
the Tiger of San Pedro in order to have her widow's
revenge, and, on a lighter note, perhaps, the
unforgettable Hatty Doran, who had run away from her
own wedding reception as Lady St. Simon and had turned
up again the following day, bright and cheerful, as the
lawfully married Mrs Hay Moulton.
It would hardly be fair to classify Miss Oakes as
belonging in such wayward company and yet, with every
gram of scrupulous fairness towards her, I could not
help but feel that she seemed oddly complacent over the
prospect of Wiggins reading this obscene proposal in
her presence. It even seemed as if she might be finding
some hint of perverse pleasure at the thought.
I struggled to free myself of such unworthy suspicions,
and glad I was to hear the crack of a cab driver's whip
and the clatter of hooves through the opened window.
Miss Oakes glanced in that direction, half rising from
the sofa: "May I..."
"Of course."
She rose, walked to the window and looked down into
Baker Street. "Why, is that Mr Wiggins, Doctor? The
handsome well set up young man with a fair moustache?
It must be he because Mrs Hudson is also getting out of
the cab. She must indeed have hurried to Coneysale road
because her complexion still seems most flushed and
agitated."
"That sounds like Wiggins," I agreed, and was proved
correct in scarcely a moment as somebody moved quickly
up the staircase and knocked sharply on the door. At my
invitation the door opened and Wiggins strode in.
It had been some time since our last meeting and once
again I was astonished at his capacity for continuing
self improvement. Wiggins' style of dress had matured
from an everyday shop clerk grey to a fawn suit with
matching waistcoat and a ruffled choker set off with a
diamond headed tie pin, every inch and every seam of
his attire perfectly cut and suitable for display at
the most fashionable addresses in London. As for the
wearer of this excellently tailored apparel, he seemed
to have grown taller and developed an even more
powerful physique in the arms and chest, presumably
through much exercise with Indian clubs or similar
bodily strengthening exercises.
It was hard to believe that this swaggering man of
style had once been the same little boy who had trailed
mud from the gutter across Mrs Hudson's carpets with
his bare feet. It was even harder to believe that the
same woman was now holding the door open for him and
quite unnecessarily laying a hand on his arm to
encourage him to enter.
That seemed like rather strange behavior on the part of
our normally very formally behaved landlady, especially
as she was still red faced and apparently short of
breath. It seemed odd that she had not been able to
regain her composure whilst riding in the cab, and even
odder was the look on her face as she gazed up at
Wiggins' features, apparently enthralled by them for
some reason. This seemed strange, as was the obvious
reluctance with which she finally released our
visitor's sleeve.
"Thank you, Mrs Hudson."
It was like ordering a water spaniel to let go of a
shot duck. For a few moments I thought Mrs Hudson would
never take her leave. Using the keen deductive
capabilities I had learned from Holmes I concluded that
the good lady was suffering from an attack of acute
embarrassment, for one button on the front of her shirt
had somehow fallen off and another had been put back
through the wrong button hole, causing a great crease
in the white material already stretched so tightly
across her matronly shape. Perhaps Wiggins had drawn
her attention to this matter in the privacy of the cab
on their way over. That might well explain her flushed
cheeks and deep breathing.
"Don't worry, Mrs Hudson," Wiggins said. "I'll be down
by and by to see to your parrot."
"Her parrot?" I asked, in surprise.
"Why yes, Mrs Hudson's parrot seems down in the beak,
or so I've heard," he answered in jest. "But I've told
Mrs Hudson that I'll stop by later and show her where
it needs some deep scratching. That'll soon get it
squawking loud enough for all the house to hear."
He winked at Mrs Hudson, her face darkened into a
beetroot red in color and she scuttled back down the
staircase with one hand clamped around her mouth. If
not for the other matters pressing on me I would have
followed our worthy landlady and inquired if something
was unduly exciting her constitution. As it was I
turned back into the room and found Wiggins bending low
over Miss Oakes's hand as he raised it to his lips.
A damned foreigner's trick I thought, and one that no
decent Englishman should be employing, even one who had
so many deficiencies in his upbringing to make good.
Though it seemed that Maude had no objection to
Wiggins' cavalier style of introducing himself. Her
head was half lowered but her look was as sharp and
direct upon him as it had been upon me -- though then
her eyelids had not fluttered as they were now doing.
Indeed, I might even have thought that Miss Oakes was
flirting with the young man, though that was impossible
of course, as she was of a far superior social class.
Even so, I was surprised how little Cockney accent
remained in Wiggins' speech.
"This is indeed an honor, Miss Oakes, to make your
acquaintance. When Mrs Hudson said that Miss Maude
Oakes was here and in need of help I came as quickly as
I could."
Maude's lips seemed to be drawing into a smile she
couldn't suppress: "But you had enough time to discuss
Mrs Hudson's parrot with her on the way back?"
"Oh, yes, I sometimes stop by of an evening at Mrs
Hudson's and ask her if she wants a helping hand with
her bird of paradise."
Maude flushed and clapped her hand to her mouth in
exactly the same way as Mrs Hudson had done. Wiggins
seemed to have this strange effect on both women of
inducing near fits with a few commonplace words. Why
this should be I couldn't fathom. But he continued
speaking as if he'd noticed nothing unusual.
"Of course it's something of a trade secret, what I do,
Miss Oakes. But if you was to be standing outside her
door and listening when I'm rustling the feathers
inside, well, you'd be amazed at some of the noises
that parrot makes. You might think it was almost
human."
Maude now appeared to be having great difficulty in
repressing a gust of laughter, even though Wiggins'
words seemed a poor jest to me and a waste of time in
pointless conversation. Sometimes I can't understand
the younger generation at all.
"Never mind about parrots, Wiggins," I said sharply.
"Let me explain why I've sent for you."
In a few brisk words I gave Wiggins the same details
that Miss Oakes had given me about the loss of her
racket and the absolute necessity of recovering it
before the Wimbledon Finals match. Then, reluctantly,
but at Miss Oakes's nod of approval, I gave him the
letter to read.
I would have expected the lady to have averted her
attention from Wiggins as he perused the foul warrant
for her humiliation, but no. Although she kept her head
lowered she continued to glance up at him in a
coquettish style, as though to judge his reaction to
the suggestion that she be forced to pose au naturel in
front of a photographic apparatus. For a moment of time
his eyes did lift to hers. But then Wiggins was nodding
his head in understanding and talking in a brisk and
business like way.
"Well, Doctor, if what it says here is true, then
there's no use in nabbing this go-between at Euston,
for he or she will not be able to tell us where to find
the miscreant who wrote this letter. Which means that
the only alternative is to follow Miss Oakes to
wherever she's taken and then to rescue her and her
racket."
"Yes," I agreed. "That's the matter, in a nutshell. Can
it be done?"
"Hmmm, perhaps." Wiggins paced up and down,
occasionally glancing at Maude as he did so. "I've a
good team, upwards of twenty if I turn them all out.
The deuce of it is that Euston has so many ways in and
out, especially for the knowing, and there's always
such a press of people around. So maybe we should try
something else as well, for I've had this problem
before, and solved it pretty neatly."
"In what way?" I asked.
"Why it was a case of a young lady who feared she was
going to abducted and forced into a violation of her
honor by an older man who'd become besotted with her. I
put two of my girls with her twenty four hours a day,
as bodyguards you might say, but things went beyond
anything they were expecting when they were surrounded
by a gang of thugs with drawn pistols. Into a covered
wagon they were bundled, still at pistol point and
taken to a house in Brixham. They locked my girls up in
separate rooms, no windows, bars on the doors, and
thought no more about them while the girl they were
supposed to be guarding was plied with champagne and
lying promises by the lecherous old devil who'd
arranged the kidnapping."
"My goodness, can such things really happen?" Maude
asked him.
"Oh, certainly, Miss Oakes," Wiggins confirmed. "Why, I
could tell you stories... but never mind. So, as I was
saying, my two girls, Angel and Christina, there they
were, in different rooms, each with a pistol tucked in
her garter and nothing to be done with them. But I
hadn't spent so much time with Mr Holmes without
learning something and my gals had another trick up
their skirts, so to speak."
Wiggins saw the disapproving look on my face and seemed
suitably embarrassed: "Sorry, Doctor, just my little
joke, you understand. But, Doctor, you'll remember the
time that Mr Holmes needed to find out where that
cunning vixen Irene Adler had hidden something he badly
wanted to find? You remember how he got himself
smuggled into her house and what you were asked to do
afterwards?"
"Of course," I said. "Holmes arranged for me to throw a
plumber's smoke rocket through an open window. Then he
began shouting fire as the smoke spread and Miss Adler
ran to retrieve the most valuable item in the house
from its hiding place -- and the most valuable item in
her possession was the compromising picture of herself
with the Crown Prince of . . . well, no matter which
Prince it was."
"Exactly, Doctor, exactly," Wiggins said. "I never
forgot that little trick, so I arranged to have a
secret pocket sewn in each of my girl’s bustles with a
smoke rocket in each one. There was a fireplace in each
room and the girls both knew what to do as soon as they
were left alone. They lit their rockets, dropped them
in the fireplaces, stuffed the fireplaces with carpets
to keep from suffocating from the smoke and waited for
the fire brigade to arrive to put out the chimney
fires. As soon as they heard the fire wagon bells
ringing and fists banging on the front door they began
firing off their pistols, screaming and blowing police
whistles. Of course the firemen cut the doors down with
their axes to find out what was afoot, with the police
not far behind, and everything was soon settled in fine
style."
"Good gracious, how clever, Mr Wiggins," Miss Oakes
said admiringly. "Are you suggesting that I should also
carry a pistol and one of these pocket rockets?"
"Why, I'm sure I'd be happy to give you a pocket rocket
whenever you like, Miss Oakes." Wiggins said gravely
and again I noticed a quiver in my fair guest's frame
as she struggled to contain her emotions. No doubt she
was, like Mrs Hudson, embarrassed by her circumstances.
"But perhaps I can give you better than that to take
along with you."
"What do you mean, exactly, Wiggins?" I asked.
"I'm thinking aloud, Doctor," Wiggins answered me, his
brows knitted in concentration. "It's like I've said
before, I'm worried that this person who's to collect
Miss Maude might somehow give us the slip at a busy
place like Euston station. I'm wondering if I should
send Angel and Christine along with Miss Maude to the
station as an extra precaution. She can say to whoever
meets her that she's prepared to let her photograph be
taken but she wants the girls to come along as
chaperones, as you might say."
Miss Oakes leaned forward in keen interest at hearing
Wiggins' suggestion: "Oh, that does sound like a good
idea. But the letter says I must go alone. Do you think
I'll still be approached if I have two other girls with
me?"
Wiggins rubbed his chin: "That's what I don't know,
Miss Maude, but if I was a lackey charged with such a
task I think I would not stand high in my employer's
estimation if I found you waiting as agreed and didn't
bring you back simply because of two other girls being
with you. After all, they couldn't be the peelers,
could they, because there's no such thing as female
police officers, thank the Lord."
He grinned at both of us at such an impossible idea and
then became serious again.
"Look, Miss Maude, if this cove who sent you the letter
only wants a photo then he won't mind two more females
being there. And if he's got worse planned for you,
then the more the merrier, hey? No point in dwelling on
such details but think of it this way. You send a
servant out to buy a loaf of bread and he comes back
with the loaf and two free ones as well. Well, wouldn't
that servant think he'd done well and deserved praise
for bringing in the extra rations? I judge that's how
your collector will think and he'll let the girls come
with you rather than go back to his master empty
handed."
Miss Oakes nodded eagerly to show her understanding
while I pondered over Wiggins’ words.
"But what instructions will you give your girls,
Wiggins?"
"Well, Doctor, in the first place, to help us follow
the party. There's tricks they can use. A piece of
colored chalk hidden in the toe of a shoe lets you put
marks on the ground to leave a trail. Very useful long
skirts are for concealing that. And the girls have a
notepad of green paper hanging inside their skirts with
a slit in the sides to reach through, and a pencil
hanging there as well, so they can write an address on
the paper once they've heard it. They've learned to do
that with their hands inside their skirts though it's
taken them a deal of time to get the knack of it."
"For what purpose?
"Why, say they're being taken away in a cab with some
of my irregulars tagging behind. Once they've heard the
address they can write it down without being seen,
crumple up the paper and then generally find a way of
dropping it out of the cab. My lads notice that scrap
of green paper, being it's such an unusual color, they
read the address and then it doesn't matter if they
lose the cab in the traffic, for they know where it's
going."
"That's clever, Wiggins, clever," I admitted. "But what
if the worse should occur and Miss Maude and your young
ladies should be spirited away and lost touch with
completely?"
Wiggins spread his hands apart as if making a good
natured concession of a temporary check.
"Then perhaps the smoke rocket trick will work again,
Doctor. And if all else fails Christina and Angel will
have their pistols ready and loaded as final
arguments."
"In their garter belts Mr Wiggins?" Maude asked.
He grinned: "In a manner of speaking, Miss Maude. I
told you about the slits in their skirts so they can
reach inside them to write a note in secret. Well, the
girls each have a holster sewn onto their corsets, and
they can reach in through the same slits in their
skirts and produce a loaded gun in a flash. That's a
trick which usually takes the villains by surprise."
"But would they be prepared to use the firearms if
necessary?" I asked. "After all, they are only
females."
"Bless you, doctor," Wiggins said cheerfully, "Angel
and Chrissy were brought up in the docks around
Wapping. They'd blow up Parliament for me if I promised
them a guinea apiece and a bottle of gin to share
afterwards. Were you to look at their bonnets closely
you'd find each of the little demons has got a cut
throat razor blade sewn into the brim. Some sailors who
pressed the chase too closely on that pair have gone
back aboard with more stitches in their faces than in
their sails."
"Good gracious," Miss Watson responded. "They seem like
useful companions to have. But what about me? Can I
also take a pistol with me?"
Wiggins chuckled and held up a warning finger: "Ah, it
takes a while how to deal comfortably with a loaded
pistol, Miss Maude. Accidents can happen very easily.
The last thing we'd want is for you to be having a
sudden explosion going off in your underclothing."
This time I was almost sure that Miss Oakes was on the
verge of hysteria as she bent forward with her
shoulders shaking. Yet when I offered my assistance she
waved me away and tapped at her throat as if clearing
it from a coughing attack.
"No, Miss Maude," Wiggins continued. "Pistols are
fearfully dangerous things to be carried around unless
you've been trained to them. But if you were to have an
empty gun you couldn't do yourself any harm with that,
and any blaggard you point it at won't know it's empty.
Of course you'd have to come back to my office for the
girls to fit you up with a holster."
"A holster? Sewn onto my corsets?"
"Oh, I think we might have one in your size already.
One of our special sets of ladies' undergarments I
mean. The girls will find you somewhere you can use as
a fitting room. And they can tell you some of the
tricks of their line of work before we go out this
afternoon."
This was all happening far too hastily for my peace of
mind.
"Wait a moment, Wiggins" I said. "I don't like this at
all. To put Miss Oakes in danger merely because of a
stolen tennis racket still seems to me to be the height
of foolishness. Miss Maude, I beg of you, please
reconsider the whole matter and simply reconcile
yourself to playing with a new racket."
She shook her head and then stood up as straight backed
with pride as a British Grenadier under fire: "No,
Doctor, I thank you for your concern and for your help
but I am determined to go ahead with this venture. I'm
sure I can do no better than place myself in Mr
Wiggins' capable hands."
"And very welcome you'll be in them, I'm sure, Miss
Maude," Wiggins answered heartily. I thought for a
second I saw him wink at her as he spoke but I must
have been mistaken. He would never have dared to be so
familiar with a well bred client.
"Very well," I conceded. "If that is your decision,
Miss Maude, I can only applaud your courage and wish
you God speed. Wiggins, is there anything I can do to
help?"
"Why, no, Doctor, I don't think so, not at the moment.
But if you were to stay here I'd know where to send for
you if required."
"Very well. The best of luck to both of you."
I felt desperately ill used by circumstances as the
pair of them left. Both young, strong determined, ready
for anything. And all I was fit for was to doze beside
the fireside like a rheumatic old blood hound. Curse
this gout!
Yet there is one odd circumstance about that meeting I
still have to recount. For as he was leaving Wiggins
suddenly noticed my top hat on the stand and turned
back to me.
"Doctor, could I ask a favor and beg for the loan of
your stethoscope."
"Good Lord, what do you want that for?" I asked.
"It's for a purpose I can't explain now. But I'll see
you get it back very soon."
"Very well, go ahead and take it."
Wiggins picked up my hat and removed the stethoscope
from its usual carrying place inside the crown.
"Thank you, Doctor."
The door closed and I sat alone by the fireplace again,
waiting to hear the sound of Wiggins' hail for a cab
coming through the opened window. Oddly, though, after
about five minutes I still hadn't heard his voice and I
wondered if their departure had been delayed for some
reason. I rose, hobbled to the door and opened it. And
down below I heard some odd high pitched cries, almost
human in tone.
'Not that confounded parrot?' I thought to myself.
'Wiggins is surely not wasting his time with Mrs
Hudson's parrot when matters are so urgent?'
Yet there were certainly some strange noises coming
from below, sounding almost like a woman in distress. I
went down the staircase a few steps and leaned over to
look down into the hall. And there I saw a most
unexpected sight. Miss Oakes was standing by Mrs
Hudson's door listening to the squawking sounds coming
from the other side of the door -- not only listening,
but with the stethoscope horns in her ears and the
other end of the tube pressed flat against the door.
Clearly she could thus overhear in great detail what
was occurring in the room and she seemed totally
preoccupied in her eavesdropping. In fact her face was
flushed scarlet, her lips were wide open and her eyes
seemed to be on the verge of bulging out of her head.
I could make nothing of this. If Maude was so
interested in whatever Wiggins was doing with Mrs
Hudson's parrot, surely she could have entered the room
with him? And what was Wiggins thinking of to leave his
client waiting in the hall while he played the part of
an amateur vet with a moody macaw? That was no way to
run a business.
Above all, though, I could make no sense of Maude's
behavior. What on earth could Wiggins be doing inside
Mrs Hudson's room that could have such an affect on the
young lady? And then my astonishment became complete as
I saw Miss Oakes kneel down with the stethoscope still
at her ears and then place her eye against the keyhole
of the door.
Well, here was a mystery that Holmes himself might have
trouble in solving. It would certainly be a very
difficult situation if Mrs Hudson opened the door to
find Maude seemingly intent on spying into her
quarters. And all because of a parrot! Which had now
started calling out in a way which sounded like some
fragment of human speech screeched out over and over
again: two words, in fact. I couldn't quite catch the
first one but the second sounded like "Me". "Duck me"
or "Buck me", or some similar piece of nonsense that
the bird must have picked up somewhere.
Amazing creatures, parrots, to imitate a woman's voice
so well, though not worthy of the attention that Maude
was giving to this specimen. Her whole posture was of
total fixation on the sounds coming through the
stethoscope and on whatever she was glimpsing through
the keyhole. Truth to tell, I thought rather badly of
Wiggins for letting Maude have the use of instrument.
It was, after all, a medical device and therefore meant
to be used by doctors, not women.
I could only conclude that there must be some good
reason for the girl's behavior, odd as it presently
appeared. After all, how many times had I seen Sherlock
Holmes behave in an entirely inexplicable manner, only
to discover afterwards that he'd had excellent reasons
for doing so? This must be another such mystery which I
would ask Wiggins to explain to me when next we met.
I therefore returned quietly to my room and pondered
over the strange twist of fate which had come my way
that morning. Strange, indeed, and yet all I could do
to was to brood the afternoon away in my armchair
whilst the game was afoot. If only Holmes was here!
Yet perhaps he was, in spirit at least, because I
presently found myself feeling like Holmes himself at
the prospect of a new case unfolding. Ennui replaced by
energy, weariness by well being, a racing of the blood
akin to an old soldier's response to a regimental band
marching past. Where the prospect of action had Holmes
pacing the rooms like a caged tiger I was affected to a
much lesser but altogether beneficial degree, to the
extent that my attack of gout faded away as quickly as
it had come. I can offer no medical reason for this
transformation but I was certain it was the excitement
of the case and the thrill of the chase which was the
stimulus for my sudden recovery. At any event, by the
early afternoon I was walking around the rooms of 221B
with complete ease.
The question was, what use should I make of this newly
granted freedom? I had implied to Wiggins that I would
remain at Baker Street for the afternoon, but
circumstances alter cases. My circumstances had
changed, I was able to walk again and it seemed
intolerable to remain cooped up whilst the case was
unfolding. Neither did there seem much point in going
around to Wiggins' office merely to wait there for
news.
No, I would go to Euston Station, I would be on
platform six at three o'clock and serve as another pair
of eyes. Whoever Mr 'Ardent Admirer' was he could have
no idea that Miss Oakes had come to Sherlock Holmes'
consulting rooms and even if he did it was very
unlikely that he or his servants would know me by
sight. So I could be just another passenger on the
platform. Wiggins' people would also be watching and
they probably wouldn't know me either, nor I them, but
it was no matter. If I saw anything that Wiggins should
know about I could quickly get word to Coneysale Road.
No, there was no reason why I no attend at the
miscreant's planned rendezvous and watch matters
unfold. No harm could come from that, provided I
remained at a discreet distance.
Whether or not I should try to follow Maude and her
companions if they were led away was a different
matter. As eager as I was to do so I might get in the
way of Wiggins' watchers and distract them from the job
in hand. No matter how I turned the matter over in my
mind I found that I could not change my decision on
that score. The tracking must be left to the
professionals, leaving me behind with my fingers
crossed in hope of their success. The beginning and
ending of my involvement in the hunt would be at
Euston, and only there.
Well, so be it. No chance for Watson to play the role
of a knight in shining armor rescuing the fair damsel
in distress. Regrettable, though at least I would have
something to tell Holmes about when he returned. Little
enough, no doubt, compared to his exploits amongst the
bandits of the Balkans, but each of us must live our
lives as they are doled out to us, whether in full or
sparse ration.
The clock at Euston station still lacked a few minutes
to three o'clock as I made my way down platform six in
an unusually warm and humid atmosphere. The strong
sunlight remained undimmed by any passing clouds and
the acres of glass panels overhead were acting
something in the manner of a greenhouse. Those closest
to this trapped heat were the pigeons sitting on the
maze of sooty girders underneath the station roof, most
of them preferring to doze rather than taking wing to
forage for food scraps.
Far below their perches a great mass of mankind was
behaving very differently, either bustling around in
great energy or waiting impatiently for their scheduled
conveyance. Indeed, any curious bird might have
wondered what had made a normally busy concourse even
busier. But it would taken a very perspicacious pigeon
indeed to notice that so many family groups of Homo
Sapiens had left their dwellings today, or that the
reason for this might have been deduced from the small
buckets and spades some of the younger members of the
species were clutching.
On the other hand the railway company porters,
perspicacious or not, knew very well that this was the
height of the holiday season, and that every Briton and
his family were making their annual pilgrimage to the
seaside. Many tips were being offered and accepted for
the prompt movement of bags and baggage as Londoners
followed the rest of the nation on their march to the
beaches. There the children would build their sand
castles and the adults would paddle in the salt water,
their yearly tribute to the element which provides our
passage to that one quarter of the world's population
fortunate enough to live under the civilizing influence
of the British Empire.
And, of course, to reach the sea, a Londoner first has
to catch a train. Which was why I was finding it easy
to move along the platform without drawing attention to
myself. Not only was it crowded, but it was crowded
with Paters and Maters and their offspring clustered
together in chattering groups, the parents struggling
to keep their children and luggage from getting mixed
up with the adjoining families. I therefore chose the
tactic of slowly circling each group and thus remaining
behind cover as I kept my eyes skinned for Miss Oakes.
I did not wish her to see me if possible because such a
change in arrangements might startle and confuse her. A
tactic which I carried out with success, though not at
all in the way I had anticipated.
A man walking past me briskly suddenly checked his
steps like a wherry hitting a king wave, his head
swinging over as sharply as a gybed stun'sl. And when I
followed his gaze I was rather stunned myself. Three
girls were standing in a small group on their own, no
men, no porters, no baggage. All three of them were
wearing pure white linen dresses embroidered with pink
silk ribbons: on their heads were wide brimmed white
hats, also beribboned and additionally decorated with
pink flowers. In their hands the girls idly swung
matching white and pink folded parasols. The whole
effect would have been utterly charming even if the
girls had not been what they were.
It was the one on the left I looked at first, and drew
in my breath in appreciation, for she was tall and
graceful with a figure that Reuben himself could have
drawn inspiration from, full yet fine lined, and a joy
to behold. Behind her proud head was a neat bun of
blonde hair, her pleasant features carried a broad
smile and even at my distance from the group I could
sense her joy in the constant self awareness of her
youth and beauty. Indeed, it was that unbounding
essence of life in her which even an artist of genius
could have only hinted at. My eyes moved across to her
companion and my jaw, I'm sure, fell open in shock. For
both of the girls was alike as two peas in a pod, alike
in form and in face, even alike in the dab of freckles
across both pert noses.
Twins! Twin sisters! And how odd that they should look
so fashionable without being members of the upper
classes. Which I was sure they were not, because such a
matching pair of beauties would have certainly have
featured in the pages of the society papers had their
family any claim at all to public attention. I sought
to see the features of the third white clad girl in the
hope of gaining a clue as to their identity. For the
moment, I freely admit, I had almost forgotten about
Miss Oakes, as I tried to catch a glimpse of the face
hidden behind the twins' hats.
Suddenly the tallest of the figures raised her head to
look up at the platform clock, my view was unblocked
and I was struck such a paralyzing blow of shock as
must have befallen Lot's wife as she looked back at the
destruction of Sodom. My search for Maude Oakes was
over and I almost fell backwards onto a providentially
empty bench seat, where I could both mop my brow and
also hid my face behind the handkerchief as I tried to
come to terms with the unexpected circumstances I had
fallen into.
From Wiggins' descriptions of his girls I had imagined
two gaunt, tangled hair drabs with shifty eyes wearing
cast off clothing. Of course a moment's reflection
would have led me to realize that the more attractive
his agents, the better the chances of them being taken
away with Maude. But even so, that the young detective
could have produced twin sisters dressed in the height
of fashion and looking like Duke's daughters was beyond
my comprehension. And why the devil was Maude dressed
in the same way as... hmm... yes, Angel and Chrissie?
Why had the calico print brown dress she had worn at
Baker Street been replaced with the same fashionable
dresses as the sisters?
Well, one more quick glance was enough to answer that
question. Because Angel and Chrissie were tall and good
looking and blonde, and in those virginal white and
pink dresses they could have charmed the Lord Chief
Justice of England off his bench with the wink of a
sparkling eye. But with Maude with them, in the same
rig, it was as if all the golden Maidens of the Rhine
had come to life together and to London for their
spring outfits. As a trap to catch a libertine, a man
who lusted after strapping young women like Maude, it
was a trap with the best bait imaginable displayed
inside its iron jaws. Perhaps the only thing which
would appeal more to the depraved lusts of 'The Ardent
Admirer' than Maude herself would be the opportunity to
commit gross outrages on a pair of twin sisters held at
his pleasure. If his messenger knew anything at all
about his master's tastes he would know that much, and
happily, thrice happily, take all the girls with him,
as we hoped he would do.
'Wiggins... Wiggins!' I muttered under my breath and
into my handkerchief.
I was expressing sentiments of both shock at the young
detective’s brilliant insight into the criminal mind
and his equally brilliant planning to capture the
criminal himself. Even the great Holmes would need to
take care in future, lest the Master find himself
overtaken by the Pupil.
Therefore, it was with the highest degree of
expectation that I continued to survey the scene,
though keeping my face lowered against the small chance
of Maude noticing me. Certainly she began looking
around her with great intensity as the minute hand on
the clock dragged itself around for the final circuit
before marking three. But she never noticed me, and I
saw no sign of anybody approaching except for three
porters with a hand cart piled high with luggage.
So high in fact that as one of them pushed the cart
along the other two walked on either side and held on
to the top layer of wicker baskets to prevent them from
toppling off the cart. This was a very bothersome
interruption at such a moment, but there was further
annoyance yet as a small shunting locomotive in the
green and gold colors of the London and North Eastern
Railway came steaming down the side of the platform.
Behind it was a single passenger coach, and a guard's
van behind that, nothing else. On the destination board
were the words: 'FOR PRIVATE USE ONLY'.
I snarled under my breath as I saw that the train
driver was clearly intending to come to a halt at the
very spot where the three girls were standing. Perhaps,
I thought, he was under the impression that they were
something to do with whoever had hired the private
train. What a foul piece of luck, for such an
unexpected turn of events might well frighten off the
messenger we were waiting for. And, unbelievably, at
the same moment as the passenger car stopped by the
girls, the porters halted the luggage cart in front of
them, cutting them off from my sight. I wondered what
had made the confounded idiots stop there, of all
places, and cursed all three of them as they all walked
around to the far side of the cart. Perhaps the wheel
on that side was working loose.
Yes, I confess it, I was not as quick as Holmes would
have been in understanding what was happening. But I
appeal to your own sense of reason, dear reader. A
hired train and a gang of desperadoes disguised as
railway porters -- who would have expected such
resources from a mere filthy minded blackmailer?
Certainly not I. Yet when I saw the tip of a parasol
held aloft above the baskets on the cart and waved
vigorously for a second or so it was enough to shake
the scales from my eyes. For I was sure it was an alarm
signal. Nor was it the only signal being given because
the guard was already waving his green flag at the
locomotive and blowing his whistle to grant it
permission to depart within mere seconds of its
arrival.
I jumped up from the bench and rushed forward as the
train's wheels began to turn. One glance behind the
cart was enough to confirm my suspicions. Nobody was
there, nobody at all and the coach door already
closing. I was dumbfounded at what had happened, at how
Wiggins' close laid surveillance plans had gone all
a'gley so quickly. There was nobody in his organization
who was in place to take a hand, nobody but myself. As
the guard's van rolled past me I stepped onto the rear
platform, to be confronted by an indignant railway
official in full dress blackcloth uniform, gold braided
hat and white side whiskers.
"Now then, sir, what game do you think you're a'playing
at? I can have you taken up by the police for setting
foot on this on this here van without permission."
"Guard, my name is Watson, Doctor John Watson. I'm the
friend and confidant of Mr Sherlock Holmes, the well
known consulting detective."
He surveyed me from boots to hat. A stout man with red
cheeks behind his white whiskers and careful eyes
finally matched by an equally careful nodding of his
head.
"Why so, I believe you might be, sir. You certainly
look like the pictures of Doctor Watson I've seen in
the papers. Would you happen to have a card on you?"
I opened my card case and gave him one of my cards. He
read it slowly, then looked up at me: "What brings you
aboard my train then, Doctor?"
I found it difficult to reply, bearing in mind the need
for absolute discretion about the case. Then I realized
there was no need to admit any specific interest in the
girls.
"Because I fear something may be amiss here, Guard. Did
you not see three porters get into the coach just now
with the three ladies who were waiting on the platform?
How can that be?"
The guard smiled and shook his head: "Very smart of you
to spot it, Doctor Watson, but I was warned in advance
about those porters. They're not real porters at all,
of course, just some young bloods who wanted to play a
joke on their girls. The station master himself warned
me about it while we were writing up my running
orders."
"Indeed?" I queried. "Has Euston Station now become a
music hall for the staging of pantomime shows?"
The Guard's smile was unshaken: "Why, Doctor, when
you're dealing with people who can afford to run their
own trains it often happens that you get some odd
requests. I had a terrible time once with the Marquis
of Gransby. He saw some mushrooms in a meadow from his
train and nothing would do for it but that I must stop
the train while he sent his cook out to pick them for
breakfast. Stopped on a main line, mark you, with the
Hasting Flyer coming up behind us at sixty miles an
hour. He would have had me sacked if I'd refused, so I
had to spin him a yarn that all the mushrooms in the
area around were known to be deadly poisonous. Compared
to that caper, this little prank with the young ladies
is just water off a duck's back to me."
"I see. And who was it who ordered this train?"
The Guard shook his head: "I'm sorry, Doctor, I don't
know. I didn't ask and the Station Master didn't tell
me, even assuming he knew himself. Now, what's to be
done with you? We've passed the station limits by now
and we're not due for another stop until we reach our
destination. I'm sure it was very public spirited of
you to inquire about the ladies' welfare but if I stop
at any of the stations enroute to drop you off we'll
cause a lot of disruption to the company's running
schedules. Better perhaps that you make the round trip
with us and I'll return you to Euston nice and quietly
with nobody the wiser. We're not going far at all."
The van was rolling from side to side as it went over a
whole series of points, high cliffs of bluegray brick
were closely abutting on either side of the small train
and rows of houses perched above the cutting walls
looked like pigeon lofts.
"Come inside, Doctor, it'll get draughty out here as we
pick up speed."
The Guard ushered me through the door which gave
admittance to the interior of his van, then stepped
inside himself up to a writing stand. He consulted his
pocket watch, dipped a pen in the inkwell on the stand
and carefully made an entry into an opened journal set
on the stand. I was irresistibly reminded of a ship's
captain writing up his logbook on the bridge of a large
steamer.
"What is our destination, then?" I asked him.
"Halton Manor, Doctor. Not above fifteen miles away. It
used to be a gunpowder factory but it was closed up
some years ago. Now there's just the old buildings and
the branch line into the siding where they used to load
the powder onto the trains. I only hope the points
haven't rusted up, for I'm sure this is the first time
any mainline traffic has been in there since the
factory was shut."
"So what possible reason could anybody have for wanting
to travel to such a place?"
The Guard shrugged: "I don't know, Doctor, but if the
company hires out a train, it's only real concern is
that the fee is paid. Where the customer wants to go to
is up to him. Why, do you wish me to make some sort of
investigation? I'd need some real proof of wrong doing,
or it could cost me my job if I upset some high ranking
peer who has paid a pile of golden sovereigns to hire
this train."
I reflected on his words and tried to decide what to do
for the best. On one hand I was very unhappy about the
way things were shaping. "Ardent Admirer' was proving
an artful dodger indeed. Of course it had always been a
possibility that Maude could have been taken away from
a railway station on a train, but following her onto a
normal train would have been easy. This unexpected use
of a private train smacked all too much of cleverness
and considerable resources for my taste. On the other
hand unless the journey was completed without
interference there would be no chance for Maude to
retrieve her racket.
"What's your name, Guard?"
"Protheroe, Doctor, James Protheroe."
"Well, Mr Protheroe, would it be possible to drop me
off discreetly at this place, this Halton Manor,
without the occupants of the coach seeing me?"
"Certainly, I think that would be possible, Doctor." I
noticed a sudden gleam of excitement appear in his
eyes. "And would you be wanting me to pass any kind of
a message onto Mr Holmes afterwards? I've always been a
great admirer of his, you understand."
Once again I marvelled at the almost overwhelming
amount of interest the British public always showed in
the affairs of Sherlock Holmes. But who could blame
them? Certainly, not I, having devoted so much of my
life to recording the great man's achievements because
of my own fascination at his manifold accomplishments.
"Unfortunately, Mister Holmes is abroad at the moment
on a most confidential mission," I explained. "But you
may certainly send a telegram to some associates of
mine the moment you return to Euston. Tell me, which is
the closest station to Halton Manor and how far away is
it?"
Protheroe stepped up to a finely detailed map on the
van's bulkhead highlighting a web of metropolitan rail
lines and placed his thumb up against it. "The nearest
station to Halton Manor, Doctor? That would be Hathaway
station, two miles closer to London on the down line."
"The down line?" I stood next to him to see where his
thumb rested.
"All the lines with trains driving away from London on
them are called down lines, all lines into London are
up lines," Protheroe explained. "So after we run
through Hathaway station, Halton Manor is two miles
further on."
I examined the map. "This road, the Gravesend Road, it
runs past Halton Manor and Hathaway?"
"Yes, Doctor."
"And trains run regularly today Euston to Hathaway?"
"Every thirty minutes, regular as clockwork, Doctor."
"And a party who wished to could bring bicycles with
them on the train to Hathaway? In the Guard's van?"
"Certainly. For threepence extra each, of course."
"So the quickest way to Halton Manor from Euston is to
take a train to Hathaway Station and then cycle the two
miles further along the Gravesend Road?"
"That would be right, Doctor. Unless you was to travel
on one of Professor Herr Von Zeppelin's airships." Mr
Protheroe smiled at his own joke.
"Thank you, I'll write out the telegram now then, with
your leave."
I was as quick as I could be in writing out the wire to
be sent to Wiggins' office, alerting the young
detective to the changed circumstances. I was sure that
some of his watchers must have seen me board the train,
and even if I wasn't known to any of them personally my
description must have alerted their employer as to the
identity of the civilian seen stepping onto the Guard's
van. Thereafter Wiggins would certainly have remustered
his forces at his offices, ready to respond as soon as
possible to any message from me.
That was on the positive side of things. On the
negative side, no help could possibly arrive for at
least two hours, and, even worse, I had seen no reason
to bring my old service revolver with me on a mere
sight seeing trip. Oh well, in life as in medicine, one
problem at a time. The problem at that moment was to
form my letters legibly as I stood at the van's writing
stand bracing myself against the swaying floor of the
vehicle. It was difficult to judge its speed with only
four small windows to look out of but I was sure we
must have been travelling at quite fifty miles an hour.
I blotted the telegram, put in the Guard's pen back in
the inkwell and gave him the paper and a sovereign for
transmission costs: "As quickly as possible with this
to the cable office please, Mr Protheroe, on your
return to Euston."
"Of course, Doctor Watson." His eyes were more careful
than ever. "But look here, Doctor, if you're really
convinced there's some wrong doing going on, perhaps
you should tell me about it. After all, a man of your
reputation and contacts isn't just an ordinary member
of the public. I could order the driver to stop at
Hathaway and then summon a member of the railway
constabularly. If you feel that such action is
necessary."
I reflected on his suggestion and then again. For two
pins I would have done as Protheroe suggested. The only
reasons I didn't was because I knew how much Maude
wanted a chance to recover her racket and, far more
importantly to my mind, the scandal which would surely
sully her reputation if this matter were ever became
public knowledge.
"No, thankee, Mr Protheroe. I need to follow this scent
but it's not yet time to shout tallyho. What happens
when we get to Halton Manor?"
"The siding is on a slight downgrade there, so we'll
fly shunt. Half a mile away I'll put a touch of brakes
on the van, the fireman will climb down and uncouple
the coach from the engine, the engine will pull ahead
and set the fireman down to throw over the points into
Halton Manor and remove the derailer. He'll give me the
all clear hand signal and coach and van will roll into
the siding with my hands on the brake handle to control
the speed. I'll bring us to a stand beside the old
factory loading platform, apply the brakes on the coach
and scotch the wheels, uncouple the van and then the
engine will come in behind us, pick up the van and take
it back to Euston after I've reset and padlocked the
main line points for the straight again."
"I see..."
Well, to be truthful, I thought I had a general idea of
what the Guard was talking about.
"So if I wanted to get off without anybody in the coach
seeing me, what would you suggest?"
Mr Protheroe tugged at his mutton chop whiskers as he
considered. "Well, Doctor, as I remember that siding,
the platform comes to a dead stop at the mainline end.
Were you to step over it you'd fall straight down for
about five feet, like stepping off the top of a wall.
When I stop the coach in the middle of the platform the
further end of my van will just about be in line with
that end of the platform. All you need do is to step
down from the van and crouch yourself down to be out of
sight from the coach and anybody crossing the
platform."
"That sounds well enough."
"To start with, Doctor, to start with," the Guard
continued, doubt in his voice. "But I don't know what
may happen after that, not knowing what the parties in
the coach intend to do, nor which direction they may
move off in."
"Never mind about me, Mr Protheroe. I've had a fair
amount of experience in such matters. No one will see
me until I choose to display my presence."
"Very well, Doctor, if you say so. In any case we must
be getting close to Halton Manor now. Better perhaps
that you wait in here until I call you."
He went out onto the back platform of the van and left
me to squint through one of the windows at a passing
parade of back gardens in one of the respectable
suburbs of north London. Twice we rattled over a bridge
and the road underneath each of them, then through a
station, groups of waiting people on the platform
lifting their heads up from their opened newspapers to
glance at this unscheduled bird of passage with its
single coach and privileged passengers. Where they were
standing in the open, the still high and bright sun
cast their own foreshortened shadows at the watchers'
feet. It also lit up the station sign -- "HATHAWAY
(TWICKENHAM)". So not far to the siding now.
I suddenly felt extremely thirsty and noticed a small
stove at one corner of the van with a kettle standing
on it. The stove was unlit, but there was water in the
kettle, and a tin mug hanging off a hook. I was sure
that Mr Protheroe would have no objections to sparing
me a mug of water, and so I helped myself. As I began
drinking I felt a shuddering underfoot and heard some
unearthly squealing noises as the guard began to
tighten the van's brakes.
At first their application seemed to have little effect
in reducing our velocity, and then the short train gave
a kind of twitch and began to slow much more rapidly. I
squinted through one of the windows but could see
nothing of the locomotive from it because it was on the
right of the van and the track was curving to the left.
A hasty movement across the van to the opposite window
afforded me a clearer view and I was able to see that
the small locomotive had already uncoupled from the
passenger car and was now drawing ahead with the
fireman clearly visible as he stood on the side steps
of the coal tender. Then the track straightened out and
I lost sight of the locomotive. The van brakes were
still creaking away like an overloaded haywain's axles
and we were now moving at no more than a fast horse
trot. I suddenly recalled Mr Protheroe's remarks about
the possibility of the points no longer being workable
because of their infrequent use: would we, in that
event, find ourselves running into the stopped
locomotive?
Still, no doubt the railwaymen were used to dealing
with such situations and were prepared for any
eventuality. So I reassured myself until we rolled
through another curve in the line and I saw the
locomotive halted in an halo of smoke about two hundred
yards ahead, with the fireman twenty yards or so closer
to the approaching passenger car. One of his arms was
held out straight from his shoulder and I hoped that
this was an indication that everything was as it should
be.
And so indeed it proved to be as the passenger car and
guard's van changed direction on the points and rolled
away from the main line at what was now a brisk walking
pace. The whole manoeuvre seemed to me to be admirably
timed and executed. I glanced out of the rear door of
the van and saw Mr Protheroe leaning to his right as he
looked down the line to the approaching platform.
Standing before him was the round horizontal wheel
which controlled the brake shoes. Evidently choosing
his moment, he gave the wheel another quarter turn, the
brakes began to squeal again and I smelt the aroma of
scorching wood in the air. His head turned inwards and
he observed my presence at the door.
"Only a hundred yards to go, Doctor, then you may
descend," he said. "Nice and carefully, please, for
these ballast stones are treacherous stuff to walk on
if you're not used to them."
I nodded and gripped my walking stick as if I already
had need of it. Protheroe seemed intent on judging the
distance ahead. He slackened off the brake wheel a
little to let van and car drift a few yards further on,
then reapplied the wheel quickly, as hard on as he
could turn it in a sudden burst of energy. The two
coupled vehicles came to a complete halt as the last of
their momentum was absorbed into the brakes, and the
end of a railway platform was directly abutting the
rear platform of the guards van when it finally came to
a stand.
"Neat work, Mr Protheroe."
"Thankee, Doctor. Now I'll walk forward to secure the
car. In the meantime you can get off whenever you're
ready."
"Excellent, excellent. And you'll be as prompt as
possible with that wire. Mr Protheroe?"
"No need to worry about that, Doctor," he reassured me.
"It'll get sent as soon as it can be."
Which I was sure was so. Mr Protheroe was a
responsible man with a responsible job and could be
trusted, of that I was certain. Now for my own task. As
the guard set off down the train I descended on the
other side, crouching as low as I could as I stepped
off the van and into the shelter of the platform. Then
I risked a quick look over the top of the platform at
the passenger car. There was no sign of the people
within it, no opened door nor window. It seemed likely
that those inside preferred to remain discretely out of
sight until the railway employees had left. So what was
I to do? I examined the area that I now found myself in
with a further series of cautious glances.
There was no building on the platform itself. In fact
it was only a few steps wide, with the rusting remains
of two cranes somewhat in the center and an access ramp
in the very middle. Clearly, the procedure had been to
bring two horses onto the platform to walk up and down
it, thus drawing on the crane pulleys so they could
lift barrels of gunpowder out of carts drawn up
alongside the platform. The loaders would then rotate
the cranes over the waiting railway cars, guide the
horses backwards to sway the barrels down, and then
repeat the process ad infinitum. There was a small
bluestone building close to the unloading area,
obviously once a clerk's office, though now long
abandoned, with water stains in the rotting window
frames. It seemed to be of no interest to me, or to
anybody else.
This was a complete mystery to me. I had expected that
the girls would have been picked up by a cab or a
carriage to be conveyed to some private house, but
there was no sign of such a thing. Perhaps it would
appear as soon as the locomotive had departed. But
where would it be hidden in the meantime? On the far
side of the track was only an expanse of clinkers and
rough ground between the rusting steel lines and the
high wall which marked the limits of the old mill's
grounds. Behind the weighman's office was a different
story altogether though. There was a place which could
have held a dozen carriages whilst keeping them
completely out of sight.
The outer perimeter of this feature was marked by an
inclined grassy slope about ten feet high which formed
part of a circle of some hundred feet in radius, with
one visible opening opposite the loading platform. Seen
on the Sussex Downs a casual observer might well have
taken it for one of the ancient barrows left by our
Anglo-Saxon forefathers. But in this setting, and in
this place, it told a different story to an ex-army
doctor. Those raised earthworks marked a temporary
storage magazine for the barrels of gunpowder waiting
shipment, designed to protect the area around it from
any accidental explosion, with the top deliberately
left unroofed so that no tiles or beams could be blown
aloft to fall into the suburban streets in the event of
a detonation. Yes, that was certainly what it was and
if there was a conveyance hidden hereabouts, that was
were it would likely be hidden.
I felt the blood quicken in my veins at the thought.
Could a coach really be waiting within the old
magazine? A glance at the entrance was enough to show
that it was ungated and of sufficient width -- as it
had had to be, of course, to afford access to the mill
wagons. So, yes, the transport the gang in the carriage
were waiting for must indeed be hidden inside the
magazine. I remembered Wiggins' words about how his
girls had sometimes been able to leave clues as to
where a hansom was bound for. Such an achievement was
beyond me but if only I could get close enough to the
vehicle I might be able to furnish an accurate enough
description of it for Wiggins to locate it. After all,
it was unlikely to be going far, and with a dozen hard
pedalling cyclists available, once Wiggins and his
party arrived, there must be a good chance of finding
it again...
Well, a desperate chance perhaps, but this was a
desperate affair. And if I could once get around the
back of the magazine it should be easy enough to
scramble up the sloping ramparts and peer over the edge
of them, whilst secure in the knowledge that no one in
the passenger car could see me. Which was all very
well, but there was at least fifty yards of open space
between the platform and the nearest part of the
magazine wall where I would be hidden from sight of the
carriage. How was I to cross that open space without
being seen from the carriage windows?
A screech from behind almost caused me to jump up in
surprise. For a second I thought I was back in Cawnpore
with a male elephant in musk trampling down the
regimental tents, broken tethering chains dragging in
the dust behind it. In this case though it was another
beast of burden making the noise, one made of iron and
well under control. The locomotive had entered the
siding behind us, giving a warning whistle blast as it
approached the van.
The fireman was riding at the very front, on the
opposite side of the engine to me, his eyes fixed on
the rear of the van and concentrating on judging the
distance still to go as he gave hand signals to the
driver. What immediately caught my attention was the
reason that the fireman was on the opposite side -- it
was because the wind was blowing from that side and the
smoke from the locomotive's chimney was rolling along
in reasonably thick clouds in more or less the
direction I wished to go.
Here was a stroke of luck meant to be taken advantage
of. As I braced my age stiffened knees for their best
efforts the locomotive slowed down until the wheels
were barely turning and then the fireman jumped nimbly
to the ground, reaching in with a jemmy bar to position
the coupling ring. As steel clanked upon steel his eyes
lifted up a fraction to see my respectably dressed
figure crouching down behind the platform. The whites
of the eyes in the man's coal dust grimed face expanded
with surprise in a way which might have been comical
under other circumstances.
Alas though, if I am to remain completely truthful in
this account, I must admit that I presented an equally
bizarre spectacle for I could think of nothing better
to do that to raise my fingers to my lips, as if
adjuring the man to silence in some childish game of
hide and seek. With the smoke now serving admirably to
cover my movements I left the scene and trotted as
quickly as possible past the clerk's office and on to
the magazine. No doubt I left an animated conversation
going on behind me between driver and fireman, and the
prospect of an even more animated one when they began
to speak to Mr Protheroe.
Certainly, though, had I had the time and opportunity,
I would have been glad to provide generous gratuities
to all the crew members for their efforts because the
amount of smoke from such a small engine was quite
impressive. A gently rolling cloud thick enough to make
it unlikely that anybody in the passenger car could see
me within it. Unfortunately, it was too thick for a few
seconds too long, but not long enough.
The sequence of events seemed to conspire against me on
all counts. In the first instance I clung too closely
to the smoke to realise I was heading almost directly
for the magazine entrance. Next, the smoke from the
locomotive suddenly dwindled to almost nothing for some
reason. Thirdly, and much worst, I saw that the doors
on the passenger car had now opened and an en-masse
disembarkation appeared to be occurring.
In my suddenly exposed situation I realised that I must
be spotted from the platform with seconds unless I
could take cover, and the only place of concealment
available was to scuttle through the magazine entrance
into the sheltering walls. A matter of Scylla and
Charybdis, for if Ardent Admirer and his coachman were
indeed waiting inside the magazine, I would be rushing
straight into their arms. But to stay out in the open
would be equally disastrous.
So, I hobbled between the open gates at my best speed,
struggling at the same moment to draw my pocket knife
from my coat and open it. It was my intention, if I did
find a waiting vehicle inside, to attempt to slash
through the traces and to startle the horses into
bolting. By such means I might hold up the attempted
abduction of the girls until Wiggins and the rest of
the rescue party hove into sight.
Imagine then, my astonishment at entering the confines
of the walls and finding myself standing at one end of
a tennis court laid out with neat white lines on the
freshly mowed grass, a net stretched across the middle,
and an umpire's high chair standing at one side. My
utter astonishment indeed, for there was something else
about the scene in front of me which made it as strange
a sight as I have ever witnessed. Which is not a
statement to be taken lightly from someone who has seen
a street beggar turned into a respectable businessman
with a wipe of a sponge, the living and the dead
sharing the same coffin and a university professor
swarming up the ivory covered walls of his own house
with the facility of an ape.
Yet it is true. For there were some twenty people
standing and sitting in groups along the left hand side
of the court, and none of them moved a muscle as I
appeared. Not one head turned in my direction, not a
figure stirred, not one man or woman. Each of the well
dressed figures seemed to be in the grip of some drug
which had frozen them as effectively as the wax models
in Madame Toussad's.
A spasmodic clutch at my empty inner jacket pocket only
reminded me once more of my stupidity in not bringing
along the trusty Webley & Scott. All I had was my
pocket knife and as fine a collection of shivers as had
danced up and down my spine since I'd heard the howl of
the Hound on the moors. However there was nothing for
it but to step boldly forward and investigate, just as
Holmes would have done had he been there.
Although, I suppose, with his sharper insight, he would
have instantly deduced what only became obvious to me
when I was almost within arm's length of the nearest
spectator: the reason they were all standing as still
as dummies was because they were dummies. Exactly the
kind of life-sized mannequins you can see in the
windows of dressmakers and tailors, now removed from
their usual display settings. So they could attend a
tennis match?
I was at a complete loss to explain the situation. Then
I noticed that behind the figures a canvas screen had
been erected to a height of about eight feet along the
entire length of the court. On the canvas was painted a
view of yew trees and rolling parkland, and in the
middle distance, a fine Georgian mansion with a round
dome set atop the roof of one wing.
It was exactly like the kind of backdrop painted on
curtains at theatres to set a scene, which it did very
well. An observer could stand on the other side of the
court, on uncut rank grass and flowering weeds, with
his back to the brick wall of the magazine, yet look
across and easily imagine that he was by the side of a
private tennis court set on some great country estate,
watching a party of weekend guests waiting for a game
which about to commence.
"My God!" I said aloud. "Maude!"
In an instant I realised what was intended by the evil
mind which had lured the fairest maid of English tennis
to this hidden place. Not only would she have to pose
before his lecherous eyes, but in a way which would
suggest that she had done so willingly before an
audience at some weekend retreat of the social elite.
Thus the blackmail effect of any photographs would be
even more effective, and not only on Maude herself.
What if that mansion and the scenery in the background
had been drawn from real life?
What damaging upheavals might not flow from the passing
around of such photographs? God in heaven, could this
be plot by a bunch of evil foreigners to unsettle the
British nation by dragging the name of some noble and
well connected family through the mire? If so, Maude
and Wiggins and myself had completely failed to
comprehend the magnitude of this case. No mere
bagatelle of lustful villainy here, but a deep and
dangerous plot drawn up by unscrupulous minds with
great resources of money and base cunning. Even
Moriaty, that Napoleon of crime, would never have
stooped so low, nor conceived a plan of such
unmitigated filthiness.
Before I could consider the situation any further I
heard the sound of voices at the entrance to the
magazine and I realised that I was within seconds of
being discovered. There was nowhere I could run to,
even if I'd been capable of running. Nowhere to hide
either -- unless...
I stumbled towards the nearest tableau of motionless
figures and joined it, in the middle, standing slightly
back and between a lady wearing a feather trimmed hat
and a gentleman attired in a sporting blazer of vivid
stripes. I mean, of course, that I was standing beside
two display figures who where wearing such clothing.
Standing and trembling and yet trying to appear as
motionless as the wax figurines ranged on either side
of me. It was a desperate subterfuge, probably as
equally hopeless as it was likely to be embarrassing
when I was discovered. Yet what else could I do but try
to remain undiscovered as part of that lifeless crowd
until I found some way of rescuing Maude?
Imagine then my feelings at being in this position and
hearing footsteps passing behind me. Several sets of
feet and Maude's voice: "What are these people doing
here? What's happening?
Another female voice answered, clear and yet defaced by
a gutter Cockney accent: "They're only shop dummies,
Miss Maude. There's some trickery going on here."
That must be either Angel or Chrissie, I realised. And
then I remembered what Wiggins had said about how they
were carrying concealed pistols on their persons.
Surely one of them would soon get a chance to draw her
firearm and put a swift stop to this vile business?
Somebody walked past me, almost brushing my clothing as
he walked out onto the court. A man, a young man,
wearing tennis clothes, a white shirt and flannels,
and, incredibly, a papier mache party mask, moulded and
painted to resemble the brutal features of a Japanese
samurai warrior. Presumably the only possible reason
for donning such a mask was to conceal the wearer's
identity. This supposition was confirmed by another man
who followed the first, also dressed in tennis whites
and masked, this one crafted to resemble an African
tribal chief.
The man in the Samurai mask was carrying a tripod, the
African a large wooden box which he set down, opened
and took out from within a modern and expensive camera.
As the photographic apparatus was lifted out of its
carrying box I clearly heard a feminine cry of alarm
from nearby.
Hearing this, I gritted my teeth and waited for one of
the girls to get the drop on the men, as I once heard a
gentleman from Texas describe it. Yet instead of
stillness caused by a threatening gun muzzle there was
more bustle and action to my left.
Three more of the masked abductors appeared, carrying
between them the umpire's chair, which they set down on
the court near to the net. Again, each of the masks was
a caricature, and each different. A Prussian officer, a
pirate with an eye patch, a white faced clown. With the
Samurai and the African erecting the camera, that made
five of the young curs that I could see. How many more
were there? And why were Wiggins' much vaunted female
agents not drawing their weapons?
That was a question which was answered almost as soon
as I saw the three girls walking out together onto the
court. For following them were two more masked men. At
the angle I first saw them it was impossible to make
out the features painted on their masks. What I could
see were the unsheathed swords each man had in his
hand. Long thin blades, rapier blades, scarcely visible
save for the sunlight glittering along their lengths,
with the tips darting around behind the girls,
sometimes jabbing into their linen dresses to elicit a
cry of pain from the victim and a bound in the air like
a startled deer. Clustered together, the captive
females were driven forward by their tormentors as if
they were nothing but cattle being herded into a market
pen. Little wonder that neither Angel or Chrissie had
attempted to draw their firearms under such
circumstances, when the response would certainly be
immediate and serious injury, if not worse.
Curse it, how was it possible for our plans to go so
far awry?
Because, as I now realised, the plans had been made on
faulty assumptions. Wiggins had thought there was but
one man to deal with: a rich one, probably, and
inflamed by lust, but merely one evildoer and a few
servants. So three capable girls well prepared for the
task could have been well expected to turn the tables
on such a poltroon. If any of us could have foreseen
the extent of this plot... well, certainly I wouldn't
have found myself unarmed and standing like a dummy
amongst other dummies, helpless to interfere in this
monstrous plot. For even announcing my presence might
be enough to startle one of the rapier wielding thugs
into wounding Maude or one of the sisters. My God, the
female tennis champion of England crippled by a sword
thrust! It didn't bear thinking about.
Desperately I hoped that Wiggins would arrive soon, by
some miracle which I knew in my heart to be impossible.
But in the meantime the girls were standing close the
umpire's chair, still huddled together like sheep
surrounded by marauding wolves. Now I could see the
visages on the masquerade masks worn by the guards with
the drawn blades.
The slanting eyes and the long moustaches of a Chinese
Imperial Mandarin on one painted face, the warpaint of
a Red Indian on the other. As the camera was set
carefully upon its tripod the Prussian, the Pirate and
the Clown moved forward with set purpose. Two of them
seized the arms of one of the sisters, twisted them,
forced her to step up against the side of the high
chair: the other one, the Clown, produced two short
lengths of cord from his pockets and used them to tie
the girl's wrists at waist height to two of the chair
legs. It was something she was unable to resist, not
only with each of her arms being held but with a rapier
point pricking her posterior as a further warning
against any useless resistance.
Once the knots had been tied the other one of Wiggins'
girls was treated in the same manner, so that the
sisters were standing face to face and looking at each
other through the framework of the chair, their heads
below the level of the umpire's seat. Naturally, I
wondered at the reason for these actions, although I
was sure that they boded no good. Nor did I see any
reason to change that opinion as Maude was secured to
the rear of the chair in the same manner. The Samurai
and the African moved the position of the camera a
little, so it seemed to be pointed directly at one of
the sisters, then the Samurai lifted up the black cloth
at the back of the photographic device and placed his
head underneath it.
Immediately, the Prussian put his hands on the blonde
girl's waist in a thoroughly intimate and disgusting
manner. One of his hands moved lower, against her very
hip, then disappeared from sight. Astonished, I
realised that the Prussian had either known or had
quickly discovered that supposedly secret slit in the
skirt which enabled the wearer to reach for the pistol
hidden within.
But it was neither Angel nor Chrissie's hand which
withdrew the shiny weapon and held it up for
inspection. No, it was held in the Prussian's fingers
and he seemed to wave the weapon in a kind of mock
triumphal manner before presenting it to one of his
fellow villains. Following which action, he pushed his
hand back into the slit again and apparently began a
grossly offensive search of discovery under the girl's
skirt.
A search which called forth the most heart rending
cries of distress from his forlorn victim and a violent
series of struggles, counteracted by the Prussian
pressing himself against her in the lewdest manner,
squeezing the girl between his strong body and the
support bar between the chair legs. Eventually she
could make no movement which would not further inflame
his amorous desires. Sensing this. she stood still,
until he put his other hand up to the front of her body
and laid it on one of her bosoms. Yet even the struggle
against that wanton outrage eventually subsided as her
strength waned.
It was at that point she was apparently urged to face
the camera so that the scene might be clearly recorded
in every disgusting detail. And, I noticed, at an angle
which much have also included in the background several
of the dummy figures. I also noticed in every detail
how flushed was Miss Oakes’ s face, and how wide her
eyes were as she stared at the rough handling of her
companion.
With my honed deductive abilities, I realised that her
appearance seemed almost identical with the behaviour
she had displayed when listening at Mrs Hudson's door.
A very strange observation indeed, and the only
connecting link between the two occasions was that the
molested girl was beginning to make sounds somewhat
similar to those of Mrs Hudson's sick parrot. An odd
coincidence. But I had no time to ponder it further as
one of the molesters raised his head, his attention
fixed for the space of a few heart beats on a few puffy
clouds drifting past on the horizon.
In a flash of insight I realised how important it might
be for the gang that conditions should remain as they
were. In the strong sunlight the pictures should be
near perfect reproductions. Doubtless that was one
reason why this place was chosen, in the open air but
completely isolated from view. Nor could the pretence
of the painted background have been sustained within
the bounds of a room. What a damned piece of work this
was, and no way of stopping it on my own...
There was movement around the chair, masked figures
moving around it, closing in again. This time the
Pirate had his hand inside the girl's skirt while both
the Red Indian and the Clown toyed with her bosoms.
Another short and useless struggle on her part, and
then the Pompeian tableau was held in animation for a
second or so as another plate was exposed and then
removed from the camera. In the meantime the Prussian
had walked past Miss Oakes, slapping her posterior as
he did so, her jaw dropping with shock at such
insolence. Then he stepped up behind the other sister
and disarmed her, the Mandarin standing close by to
take the pistol. And, as everybody there now expected
would happen, his hand went back inside the captive
maiden's skirt to perform actions which should have no
place at all outside the matrimonial bed in the dark of
night.
The cries of Wiggins' helpless employees sounded loudly
in my ears as both of them capitulated into a futile
slow dance of despair against the hands which molested
them from all sides. As the camera was moved around the
chair the Prussian appeared to give some orders. Angel
and Chrissie's hats were removed and their tightly
bunned hair unpinned in what seemed to be an oddly
gentle way. Then, as the Mandarin and the Clown laid
their wanton hands on the girl, the Prussian turned her
head towards the nearest sister and kissed her through
the mouthpiece of the mask.
Perhaps by then she was too bemused to know what was
happening because she seemed to be responding to his
kiss as if it were from a genuine lover instead of a
loathsome lecher. Indeed, when he left her and the
Mandarin pressed for the same display of affection she
offered it with the same apparent eagerness, even with
his hand still taking insufferable liberties inside her
clothing.
Oh well, as good looking as they were, the sisters were
in truth only hired guttersnipes and nothing better
than abject surrender to brute force was to be expected
from them. Miss Oakes, of course, was horrified at
being forced to witness a scene rapidly descending into
unbelievable depths of iniquity. For by now the thug
wearing the African mask had left the camera man to
continue his work unaided to join the molesters in
their wicked pursuits. Three around Angel, three around
Chrissie, stroking the girls underneath and outside
their clothing, kissing them, running their fingers
through the long tresses of blonde hair, nibbling on
their ears and whispering a running stream of foulness
into their ears.
Naturally, the effect was to bring on convulsions in
the poor trapped females. Their bodies quivered as if
in the final throes of malaria, they called out to
their maker for relief, twisted and jerked against
their restraints and finally slumped against the cross
bars of the chair as the kidnappers laughed at the
effects they had achieved. I only hoped that whatever
damage they had caused to the girls would not be of a
permanent nature. And then the Prussian stood behind
Maude and removed her hat. As if this was a signal they
had been waiting upon the rest of his followers
abandoned Chrissie and Angel and began to press around
their final victim like hyenas waiting their chance.
"Love all, Miss Watson," I heard the Prussian jeer.
Maude's face was brick red, her lips wide apart as she
struggled for breath, her eyes almost rolling back in
her head as the insolent young swine scratched her
underneath one earlobe. His hand ran down her neck,
underneath her arm, onto the magnificent swellings at
the front of her dress and lingered there, gently
squeezing Maude's body like a Caesar showing his
mastery over a conquered Queen. I remembered her
prophetic words about becoming a Roman triumph in an
iron cage if she lost the final: well, she had not yet
lost the final but it was clear she was in clear and
present danger of losing all her other virtues.
The Prussian abandoned her upper torso, left those
contours to other hands, and did for Maude as he had
for the sisters, removing a pistol from its intimate
hiding place. And having removed it his hand went back
from whence it had came as all the other kidnappers
crowded around him to caress whatever part of Maude's
tethered body each of them could reach. Her head swayed
from side to side as long drawn out cries issued from
her mouth, and still the villains plied their
wickedness on her. I took a half step towards the
scene, then stopped, realising the futility of trying
to do anything under the present circumstances. Indeed,
and ashamed I am to confess it, but my body was
reacting to the sight of Maude's distress in a way
which would have revealed to even the most casual
observer that I was not a waxwork dummy but a being of
flesh and blood -- male flesh and blood.
As a doctor I had on occasion been queried by young
gentleman whom had been bothered by the same problem of
involuntary arousal when overly excited by proximity to
female bodies. I had always firmly advised them that
such bodily functions were simply a mere physiological
whim which could be firmly dealt with by suitable
mental discipline. However, as the gang continued their
outrages upon Maude I confess that nothing I could do
seemed to have any effect on my virility -- nor on my
trembling legs and sweating brow.
Yes, I closed my eyes but all that achieved was to make
the sounds I was hearing even more stimulating to that
part of a man which seems eternally bound to the old
Adam and original sin. And when Miss Oakes eventually
gave out a series of shuddering cries of total despair
my eyelids sprang open of their own accord: I saw her
leaning against the chair, her features akin to that of
a bather swept over a waterfall and now floating in
some peaceful pool, astonished to find herself still
alive.
Of course the villains were far from finished with her.
But first they turned their attention to Angel and
Chrissie again. Though this time it was to their
clothing. The buttons on the backs of their dresses
were undone, the gaps pulled open to reveal the laces
on their corsets, the laces in turn unknotted and
loosened. Then one of the sisters had her wrists freed,
though her arms were still held tightly by the Clown
and the Indian as the top of her dress was pulled down
over her white -- and much freckled -- shoulders and
then down her arms.
Finally there was nothing but a pile of white linen
around the girl's ankles which was in turn was quickly
covered by a discarded camisole. Clad only in her
bloomers and a loosened waist corset, the girl was
dragged around to the front of the umpire's chair,
where the Mandarin used the point of a rapier to prod
her into climbing the ladder at the front. I noticed
that a large pillow had been placed on the high chair,
and on this the apprehensive girl sat, her feet at the
same level as the shoulders of the watchers on the
ground. Instantly the Pirate and the Clown swarmed up
the side bars, each using their free hands to pluck at
the waistband of her bloomers, the Prussian ascending
several of the chair steps to help the pair of rogues
in removing this last vestige of decent covering.
Another few seconds passed and the maiden on top of the
chair was being made to hold herself still again as her
portrait was recorded with not a stitch on her but the
short corset, a garment which covered her only from the
hips up to the loosened top. The rapscallions in the
masks crowded around the chair like spectators at a
gallows awaiting a public hanging.
The Prussian moved up the ladder until his head was
between the girl's thighs, where he lifted up the mask
so that his face was uncovered but still hidden from
view. The mask he then pushed so far back over his head
that it was pointing straight up in the air. After
which he pressed his head in as far as he could into
the space before him as he appeared to kiss her private
parts. I gasped in surprise, but nearly as much as the
girl.
It's true of course that such perverse variations on
the normal relationships between male and female are
well known in the East; indeed, there are temples in
India which openly display carvings depicting even more
unnatural depravities, difficult as this may be for any
civilised mind to accept. But that I should ever see
such actions being performed in public in a London
suburb was beyond my comprehension. Neither could I
understand why the man behind the upside down face of
the Prussian was taking so long in simply placing a
kiss on a woman's body, no matter how intimate the
place he was choosing to assault with his lips.
Perhaps, I conjectured, he was biting her and causing
her pain, for she soon seemed to be in some distress.
She was unable to sit still, she seemed distracted, her
hands went down to his head, then lifted up and --
apparently unaware or uncaring of the other watching
males -- she plucked her bosoms out of the top of the
corset, nipping the tips of them between her fingers as
if attempting to find some relief from her distress.
The camera was tilted up and she was apparently ordered
to stay still for several seconds with her hands
clutching at her own soft flesh, an order she seemed to
find as difficult to obey as a command to stop
shivering whilst sitting on an ice floe. Then, as soon
as the picture was taken her heels began drumming on
the back of the Prussian in a kind of devil's dance. A
dance that came to an end in a squeal from her throat
as if she was a rabbit caught by a ferret as her body
arched like a drawn bow string just before the arrow is
loosed. Indeed, the girl seemed to release some kind of
pent up energy within herself at the highest point of
her squeal and, save for the head still between her
opened legs, might have slipped forward out of the
chair in a half faint.
I can hardly say the horror I felt at being forced to
watch such indignities being performed on a helpless
female. Yet there was some dark spell cast by this evil
which still held my own body in its thrall, a sorcery I
could not break, an excitement which had the blood
pounding inside my head as the Prussian replaced his
mask, stepped down from the chair and pointed to Maude
as the next girl to be displayed aloft as a captured
trophy. Indeed, as Maude was taken towards the chair I
had terrible visions of my heightened blood pressure
breaking a vein in my nose and letting a betraying
streak of red fall across my face.
In quick succession three things happened, events for
which I wasn't prepared. The first was that Angela or
Chrissie, whichever it was who had been on the chair,
stepped off the ladder at the bottom with a look of
wild arousal still on her face and smiled at the
Pirate, the Indian and the Clown as they closed around
her with outstretched hands. The second thing was that
Miss Oakes’s features seemed to hint at very much the
same state of barely human passion as she was led
forward by the Mandarin.
Her clothing had not yet been interfered with, a state
of affairs quickly altered as those of the gang amusing
themselves with the newly descended girl abandoned her
charms to encircle Maude. Only the Prussian stood aside
with his arms folded as the other gang members stripped
off Miss Oakes’s garments with no great apparent hurry
and some care. Surrounded by such an overwhelming
presence, both they and she knew that resistance could
achieve nothing.
The knot of men appeared to move closer to the chair,
then parted a little as the Prussian approached.
Clearly he was the leader of this pack of fiends. But
such was my agitation at the scene I glimpsed at that
moment that all other thoughts were as nothing. For
between the figures I saw that Maude was bent forward
with her head thrust between two rungs of the chair's
ladder and powerful hands pushing down on her back
prevented any attempt to raise herself from that
position.
The result was that the fairest sports lady in the
Kingdom was bent forward from the waist, helpless to
move, her hands gripping the side of the chair, the
empty holster hanging from the bottom of her waist
corset, now rucked so far up that the holster was
almost underneath her waist. And not only was her
entire lower body completely uncovered, one of her
magnificent bosoms had tumbled out of its bodice cup to
be looked upon and thoroughly fondled. I saw another
brazen hand move in to release the matching pillow of
silk skin from the confines of Maude's corset, I saw
her quiver and rise on tiptoe as other hands slapped
against the curves of her bared buttocks.
Then the men closed around her again, blocking my view
of what was happening, and again I took an involuntary
step, before I came to my senses and stopped again --
and then realised I hadn't stepped towards Maude but
sideways. Not with some wild hope of rescuing her, but
only to reach a better vantage point where I could see
more clearly what was being done to her and what was
about to be done. And, again, it was the Prussian who
was giving the orders as Maude's heart rending cries
were swept aside by his strong voice
One his acolytes, the Mandarin, stepped around the
chair with a rapier in his hand and slashed through the
bonds holding the other sister in place. She lifted up
her hands in front of her, pulled off the severed loops
of cord and looked at the man with the weapon. I
couldn't see her expression but at a wave of the blade
she went before him to stand at one side of Maude,
facing across her back as her sister was summoned to
meet her face to face.
The men moved back a little as the recently released
girl leaned forward over Maude so her sister could put
her arms around her and undo the laces of her corset.
Once the garment was loose the girl wearing it had
bosoms gently lifted out over the top by her sister's
hands, an act clearly well approved of by the audience.
In the meanwhile the African and the Samuri were
changing the camera plates as quickly as they could.
Again I heard Maude call out as her head was pulled
back from the ladder, she was ordered to stand up and
then turn around to confront her tormentors in her
disrobed and disordered condition. With her hands
hanging from her sides she made no attempt to cover
herself, her eyes wide and rolling around her as if
wondering in what direction and from which masked
figure the next outrage against her person was to come
from.
Yet there were vices here which neither of us could
have guessed at, for the Prussian spoke and Angel and
Chrissie obeyed, no doubt convinced that they could not
refuse even the vilest request put upon them. For both
of them laid a hand on one of Maude's breasts and toyed
with them in exactly the same way as the males had
done.
I saw her magnificent figure lift itself on tiptoe in
shock, truly like the very embodiment of a classical
Goddess of Antiquity, and prepared myself to lift my
stick and charge at the Prussian with the intention of
dashing the leader's brains out. Until one of the
blonde girls laughed and I also saw that Maude had put
her arms around both of the sisters to return their
caresses in kind. Now it was my turn to feel as if I'd
been turned to stone, and frozen in position I remained
as this extraordinary tryst continued. But even as the
three girls were passionately pressing themselves
against each other, even as they exchanged hot blooded
kisses, the gang moved again to change the scene.
Angel and Chrissie were pushed aside and then Maude was
lifted bodily from the grass, the Pirate and Mandarin
with their arms underneath her back as she lay on them
as if in a hammock, the nape of her neck pressed up
against a rung on the ladder to keep her head raised
high. The Clown and the Red Indian were also helping to
support her weight, their palms underneath her bottom,
the backs of her outstretched legs resting on each
man's shoulders with the sides of her knees pressing
against their necks. In such a position there could be
no pretence of Miss Oakes retaining any shred of
modesty. And certainly none to an onlooker standing
only a few paces in front of her, as the Prussian was.
He laughed, pointed a finger at each hand at one of the
sisters and crooked them in summons. Without a word
being spoken the girls hurried to his side as if they
were the slaves of some Eastern potentate. If he gave
an order then I didn't hear it -- perhaps none was
needed, for one of the sisters knelt to undo his shoe
laces and the other to unbutton his shirt. Neither
showed anything but cheerful eagerness in performing
their task.
Even he was stripped by the two beautiful girls the
Prussian's gaze hardly ever strayed away from Maude's
body as it continued to be held up for his inspection
and delectation. Until his shirt and trousers were
removed and thrown over the tennis net and then he
glanced down. Down at the golden hair of the sister
whom had knelt at his feet again to carry out an act of
passion which no animal would perform. And when I saw
the other hand maiden also kneeling down, to offer her
opened mouth alongside that of her sister... not in
India, not even in France had I believed such depravity
to be capable of expression. And to do it in the open
air, in full view of the other men.
What must be passing through Maude's mind at this
spectacle I dared not imagine. Yet she was certainly
not comatose with shock, as I expected, for she was
wriggling and squirming on top of the arms and hands
holding her. At first I thought this was because of the
horror of the scene being enacted in front of her, and
then I saw that the men with their hands under her
buttocks were taking turns at touching the poor
innocent girl in the most intimate place of all with
their thumbs. No wonder she was gurgling deep in her
throat and wriggling as violently as a broken backed
snake. Where, oh where was Wiggins and his party
rescuers?
A big blue horsefly began circling my head, then
settled on my nose. One of the sisters engorged herself
on the Prussian's organ, I twitched, and the other
sister stood up and knelt down again, this time with
her head between Maude's finely muscled thighs. A head
which moved forward, apparently to perform the same
service as the Prussian had performed for the girl on
the ladder. Maude squealed, her arms were around the
waists of the men supporting her back and her legs
quivered against the necks of the clown and the Red
Indian: quivered and shook as if she'd been struck by
lightning.
The fly began walking up my nose in a million tiny
footsteps, the Prussian pulled up the girl from her
position of service to his organ and stepped up to
Maude with the other girl also standing up. Together
the three of them stood in a group, looking down at
Maude, the sisters hands clamped together, one in front
of the other on the length of the Prussian's manhood as
if he somehow needed some final encouragement before
committing the ultimate outrage.
The fly crawled into a corner of my eye, I gripped my
walking stick, the Prussian seized Maude's waist to
cries of encouragement from his accomplices, the
sisters performed their final act of betrayal against
their fellow female by helping him to sheathe his sword
in Maude's sheath and the Prussian bellowed in triumph
as he ravaged the tennis champion of all England.
Still no sign of rescue, and too late now anyway to
save poor Miss Oakes’s virtue. It was gone, plucked
from her in the most shameful and disgusting manner
conceivable. Inwardly, my trapped emotions seemed to be
breaking loose with the uncontrollable force of a
double charge of gunpowder within a gun barrel, my
vision blurred, the horsefly touched one of my
eyelashes, then flew away, Maude shrieked, my head
seemed to be floating away from my body and I suddenly
saw blades of grass very close to my face.
In fact I must have fainted. By and by my eyes opened,
on a scene which I could not believe. The Prussian was
seated on top of the umpire's chair, and Maude was on
the ladder -- or, to be accurate, she was holding a
ladder rung in one hand and both her outstretched feet
were resting on the side supports. Sitting below her,
between her opened legs, was a naked male with neither
his face or mask visible to me as they were hidden
behind Maude's loins.
I could well see where both of his hands were though.
Kneeling in front of the hidden male was one of the
sisters, using her mouth to satisfy the ruffian's
beastly desires. Underneath her opened thighs was the
crushed mask of the Pirate and straddled on top of him
was the last girl, her hands gripping her sister's
shoulders as she fornicated wildly with the Pirate.
Other members of the gang were idly watching all this -
- except for the Mandarin, who walked towards me with a
small black bottle and a rag in his hand.
"Good match isn't it, Doctor? I think the best of three
is the technical term. Pity you can't stay around to
watch the double faults when we change ends."
He poured some fluid from the bottle onto the rag.
"What..." Even though I was still lying down and it was
a useless gesture, I gripped my walking stick.
"Don't worry, Doctor Watson, it's only chloroform to
put you back to sleep. But a word of advice before you
nod off. Your face is clearly visible amongst the crowd
in some of the plates we've already exposed. Not that
we want to threaten you but if you were to continue
this investigation in any way -- well, it could be very
embarrassing for Doctor Watson as well as for Miss
Oakes if those photographs were passed around. And, by
jove, isn't our champion galloping along in fine
style?"
I looked again at the disgusting scene on the chair and
saw the pattern of muscles straining along the backs of
Maude's legs as she twitched up and down like a kitten
being teased with a spool of wool. This, I thought, was
as complete a debasement of an innocent girl as ever
been accomplished since Caligula reigned. Before any
further coherent thought could be formed the rag was
placed over my nose and mouth. No more did I know until
another hour or more had passed and Wiggins was waking
me up.
Of the masked men, of the girls, of Maude Watson, there
was no sign. No dummies, no net, no chair. Even the
clothes with the background scenery had gone, although
the railway carriage still waited at the magazine
loading platform. Waited, but empty and deserted. No
sign of the passengers anywhere and Wiggins shocked to
his very core when I gave him the barest inkling of how
disastrously mislaid his plans had proved to be. Yet he
was nowhere as grieved as I was.
I took a cab straight back to Baker Street at ruinous
expense, immediately went to bed and then found I
couldn't sleep because of feelings of self disgust and
crushing failure that have no place in this simple
story. Let me simply record that in the small hours of
the morning I was forced to administer a strong
sleeping draught to myself and woke up at three o'clock
the following afternoon when Sherlock Holmes walked
into my bedroom and cast down a newspaper on my
coverlet.
"Holmes! You're back."
"Watson, your powers of observation never cease to
amaze me. Yes, my work in the Balkans is finished and
the case of the Emperor's footsteps is closed."
I tried to wake myself up: "The case of the Emperor's
footsteps? Are you talking about the Emperor of
Austria?"
Holmes laughed and struck a match for his pipe: "No,
Watson, nor yet the Kaiser's footsteps, or the Czar's.
The Emperor that I followed down the shores of the
Danube died two thousand years ago. Yet when I arrived
back here at the crack of dawn from the boat train and
begged an early breakfast from Mrs Hudson I learnt that
you yourself seemed to have had a most interesting case
dropped into your lap in my absence. Mrs Hudson didn't
know what had brought Miss Oakes here but she knew it
must be something important, especially when you
summoned Wiggins with such despatch."
"Oh."
Once again the black bile of complete failure rose up
in my gorge as the sweet oblivion of sleep dissipated.
"I found our good landlady's information somewhat
interesting, Watson. My usual way with a case is to
start at the beginning and work through to the end. But
here I seemed to have two ends of a case and no middle.
I knew that Miss Oakes had consulted you, and I could
surmise that it had something to do with today's tennis
final. So, before applying my mind to the mysterious
middle part I decided to go to Wimbledon to see how
Miss Oakes fared in her match."
I turned my face to the wall: "Then you must have had a
wasted journey, Holmes," I said bitterly. "A walkover
for Miss Cavangh because Miss Oakes was too indisposed
to appear."
"On the contrary, Watson, Miss Oakes was not only
present, she played the game of her life. A magnificent
performance that absolutely blasted the American girl
off the court. Your friend is now a national heroine."
"What, Holmes! What! Is that true or are you making fun
of me?"
Holmes seemed startled, a most unusual response from
him of all people: "I never make jokes, my dear friend,
as well you know." He picked up the paper and passed it
to me. "Here, read it for yourself in the late news
column."
"But, but... Holmes, did you notice her racket? Maude's
racket
"Miss Oakes's racket? I took no special account of it."
He closed his eyes in thought for a moment. "Leather
covered handle, white stitching, a great deal of wear
and tear, the handmarks on the handle matching Miss
Oakes's grip exactly. All I can therefore tell you is
that her racket was one which has long been in the
lady's possession and which she evidently uses a very
great deal. Indeed, I suspect that it is the only
racket that she has ever played with. Oh, and I noticed
that the maker's name was Mullard. Mullard and sons,
to be precise."
"You took no special note of her racket yet you
remember it in such great detail?" I protested.
The great detective shrugged: "I've told you many
times, Watson, we both see. The difference is that you
only see but I see and notice. Never mind, tell me why
this matter of the lady's racket seems so important to
you -- and why did you call in Wiggins?"
Totally bewildered, I explained what had happened,
knowing full it was a story which reflected little
credit on myself. As for what had happened in the old
magazine store, it would have been almost impossible to
repeat the details to any normal listener. Holmes,
however, was not normal. Indeed, there were many times
when I had felt that he was simply some kind of a
superb reasoning machine concealed behind a mere facade
of flesh and blood. In that spirit I enlightened him as
to the details of the case without the embarrassment
which I would have felt in laying the information
before anyone else.
When I'd finished he put his meerschaum pipe on the
mantelpiece to cool down and left the bedroom without a
word, returning a few minutes later with one of his
innumerable files. He opened and spread out a mass of
photographs and drawings, each one displaying a view of
one of the stately homes of England.
"There, Watson, there." He passed me one of the
drawings. "Does that look familiar to you?"
Indeed it did -- it was a view I would never forget:
"That's the mansion I saw on the scenery clothes,with
the same observatory dome," I said. "What is that
place? To whom does it belong?"
"That is Leavenworth Hall, the ancestral home of Lord
Leavenworth, Watson. The most politically influential
peer in the realm and the man who holds the reins of
power in the internal affairs of the Liberal Party."
"My God!" I stared at him, thunderstruck. "So this is
indeed all part of some nefarious foreign plot,
Holmes!"
The great man shook his head, a faint smile on his
lips: "No, Watson, hardly that. You see, I happen to
know that young Wiggins has ambitions of standing for a
seat in the House of Commons in the next election.
Standing, furthermore, in the Liberal interest, which
means that he must first be selected by that party to
contest a seat."
"Wiggins!"
"Of course, Watson. Wiggins. He has contacts
everywhere. Contacts enough to know that I had
purchased boat train tickets and would thus be out of
the country, and contacts enough to have Miss Oakes's
racket stolen. No doubt he also arranged for the lady
to be directed here from her hotel, knowing that in my
absence you would almost certainly seek out his
services."
Holmes shook his head ruefully: "I fear I may have
created something of a Frankenstein in that young man.
Still, there always was a spark of genius about him."
"But, but... Holmes, are you saying that Wiggins
allowed Maude and those girls to be abducted?"
"My dear Watson, Wiggins was the abductor. He and his
gang. No doubt he was the one wearing the Prussian
mask. And, by the way, the two sisters you describe
almost certainly weren't abducted. They knew exactly
what was going to happen and merely served as Judas
goats to help lead Miss Oakes into the trap."
I could hardly credit my ears: "Why would Wiggins do
such a thing?"
Holmes smiled: "Exactly for the reason you surmised,
Watson. For blackmail. Either Lord Leavenworth helps
Wiggins to be pre-selected for a seat he has a good
chance of winning or some very unsavoury pictures are
likely to appear, photographs which appear to have been
taken on the grounds of Leavenworth Hall."
"This is nonsense, pure nonsense, Holmes," I protested.
"Whatever Lord Leavenworth might be induced to do and
whatever his influence, it is impossible for me to
believe that a reputable political party would offer to
adopt somebody like Wiggins as one of its parliamentary
candidates. He's a vulgar little upstart, a
hobbledehoy, a man of no family whatsoever. Nobody has
ever even heard of him. And, anyway, he's only a boy.
The whole idea is absurd to the nth degree."
Holmes smiled, as if seeing a chemical reaction behave
exactly as he had expected it to do so: "Once again, I
urge you to read the latest news column in that
newspaper."
Extremely puzzled by his words, I picked up the
newspaper, read the column, and nearly suffered a
stroke as I read it aloud: "After the match Miss Oakes
announced her betrothal to Mr Harold Wiggins!"
"A nice touch, hey, Watson? Wiggins is a nobody no
longer, instead he's affianced to one of the most
beautiful and best known girls in the land. Under those
circumstances and with Lord Leavenworth's ardent
support, I'm sure he'll have no problem in being
selected -- nor in winning a seat."
"But he's blackmailing her into marrying him, Holmes,
blackmailing her with those photographs. It must be
stopped."
"Hmmm..." Holmes stood up, removed his pipe from the
mantelpiece and took out his tobacco pouch. "Well,
Watson, it's true that whenever I've made a mistake in
handling a case, it's almost always been because of my
inability to understand the feminine psyche. Yet I was
standing next to Miss Oakes when she made her nuptial
announcement to a crowd of reporters and a gentleman
from the Times. If she was not greatly excited and
blissfully happy about the matter then she must be a
far better actress even than she is an athlete. No, I
don't believe she is being blackmailed at all."
"You were standing next to her? How was that possible."
"Wiggins invited me to be there. And to stand as best
man for him at his wedding, so if his intended bride
does change her mind I'll be in an excellent position
to know about it. But I don't think she will."
"Best man? You've agreed to be his best man?" I was
totally bewildered.
"His mother is dead, he never knew his father, I was
the first adult to give him any kind of helping hand
and he has followed in my footsteps. It's not
unreasonable to regard myself as standing in loco
parentis to the young man." Holmes struck a match,
applied it to the pipe and spoke rather indistinctly
around the mouthpiece as he drew on it. "Besides,
Watson, in our latter years we may be very glad to
claim acquaintanceship with a member of cabinet --
perhaps even Prime Minister Wiggins himself."
I was bewildered: "But after what I've told you,
there's no question of allowing the marriage to
proceed. Maude is being forced into going to the alter
with the young thug."
"And, I repeat, I have seen no evidence of Miss Oakes
being forced into doing anything. Wiggins certainly
abducted her, her certainly ravished her, and he most
certainly gave some experiences she would never
otherwise have been exposed to -- if you'll pardon the
phrase, Watson. Perhaps by the customs of our society
she should have become distraught as a result -- yet
the only female suffering from any degree of distress
appears to be Miss Cavangh.
As far as I can tell Miss Oakes appears to have
thoroughly enjoyed the whole business and to have
acquired a special pleasure from Wiggins' company --
his very close company, shall we say? If she wishes to
continue to enjoy that company within the bonds of holy
matrimony, than that is a matter purely between her and
Wiggins. In matters of this kind there are urges which
outsiders meddle in at their peril.”
"Urges? What kind of urges, Holmes?"
"Elementary, my dear Watson, elementary."
THE END
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Please keep this story, and all erotic stories out of
the hands of children. They should be outside playing
in the sunshine, not thinking about adult situations.
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Kristen's collection - Directory 34