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The figure moved so swiftly the eye could hardly follow, and soft-footedly. I heard only Holmes's boots pounding on the wooden stairs. Then there came a cry from within the study. Sir Humphrey shouted something in a foreign language, his tone that of abject terror, his words broken off in a gurgling scream. The elephant gun went off with a thunderous roar.
I left Miss Thurston and hurried up after Holmes. By the time I reached the study door, which was blown apart from the inside as if a cannonball had gone through it, Holmes was inside.
He rushed out again, his eyes wild, his face bloodless, and he saw Miss Abigail Thurston coming up behind me.
"For the love of G.o.d, Watson! Don't let her in!"
"Father!" she screamed. "Oh, you must let me pa.s.s!"
For all she struggled, I held her fast.
"Watson! Do not let her through no matter what happens! It is just... too horrible!"
I think that was the only time I ever saw Sherlock Holmes truly shocked, at a loss for words.
I forced Miss Thurston back down the stairs despite her vehement protests, holding onto her until the police arrived, which they did shortly, summoned by the neighbors who had heard the screams and the shot. Only after she had been conveyed away in a police wagon, accompanied by a patrolman, was I able to examine the body of Sir Humphrey Thurston, who was indeed murdered, as I had feared.
Though still seated in his chair, he had been mutilated hideously, almost beyond recognition.
His throat was cut from ear to ear. That was enough to have killed him. But the flesh had been almost entirely torn away from his face, and a strange series of symbols, like the ones I had seen in the letters, had been carved in the bare bone of his forehead. The crown of his skull had been smashed in by some blunt instrument, and-it revolted me to discover-most of his brain was gone.
The final detail was the worst, for it had been deliberately designed to mock us. The still smoking elephant gun lay across his lap, and, carefully placed so that it would be reflected in the mirrored surface of the polished gun barrel, reflected in the mirrored surface of the polished gun barrel, was a small jade idol with emerald eyes, a stylized figure of a bat-winged dog. was a small jade idol with emerald eyes, a stylized figure of a bat-winged dog.
"Yes, Holmes," I said, "it is entirely too horrible."
Dr Watson stopped telling the story, and I, the nineteen-year-old American college student, could only gape at him open-mouthed, like some imbecile, trying not to reach the attractively obvious conclusion that the good doctor's mind had gone soft after so many years. It was a terrible thing, just to entertain such a notion. I almost wept.
I would have remained there forever, frozen where I sat, wordless, had not Dr. Watson gone on.
"It was a case which I could not record, which Holmes ordered ordered me to suppress on pain of the dissolution of our friends.h.i.+p. It just didn't work out." me to suppress on pain of the dissolution of our friends.h.i.+p. It just didn't work out."
"Wh-what do you mean, didn't work out?"
"I mean exactly that. The affair concluded too quickly and ended in abject failure. We accomplished nothing. He would have no more of the matter, the specifics, as he acidly phrased it, being left to the 'official imagination,' which, sure enough, concluded the murder to be the work of a madman or madmen, perhaps directed by a sinister Oriental cult, a new Thuggee. But even the police could not account for the powerful stench of decay decay which lingered in the explorer's study even long after the body had been removed, as if something long dead had invaded, done its worst, and departed as inexplicably as it had come. which lingered in the explorer's study even long after the body had been removed, as if something long dead had invaded, done its worst, and departed as inexplicably as it had come.
"Enormous pressure was brought to bear to prevent any accurate reportage in the newspapers, to prevent panic. I think those instructions came from the very highest level. Sir Humphrey's obituary, ironically, listed the cause of his demise as an Asiatic fever. I signed the death certificate to that effect.
"My own conclusions were profoundly disturbing. The mystery could not be resolved. What we-even Miss Thurston-had witnessed were not merely unlikely, but impossible impossible.
"'I reject reject the impossible,' said Holmes vehemently, 'as a matter of policy. Such things the impossible,' said Holmes vehemently, 'as a matter of policy. Such things cannot be-' cannot be-'
"'You and I and the girl saw, Holmes. They are.' are.'
"'No, Watson! No! The irrational has no place no place in detective work. We must confine ourselves to the tangible and physical, carefully building upon meticulous reason, or else the whole edifice of my life's work crumbles into dust. Against the supernatural, I am helpless, my methods of no use. My methods in detective work. We must confine ourselves to the tangible and physical, carefully building upon meticulous reason, or else the whole edifice of my life's work crumbles into dust. Against the supernatural, I am helpless, my methods of no use. My methods have have been useful in the past, don't you think? And so they shall be in the future, but we must remain within certain bounds, and so preserve them.'" been useful in the past, don't you think? And so they shall be in the future, but we must remain within certain bounds, and so preserve them.'"
Again I, the college boy, was left speechless.
"Holmes made me swear an oath-and I swore it-never to write up this case-and I never wrote it-"
Had he, in a sense at least, broken his oath by telling me? I dared not ask. Was there some urgency now, of which had lately become aware?
"I wanted to tell someone," was all he said. "I thought I should."
King Midas. a.s.s's ears. Who will believe the wind in the reeds?
I merely know that a week after I returned to school in America I received a telegram saying that Dr. Watson had died peacefully of heart failure, sitting in that very chair by the fire. A week later a parcel arrived with a note from one of my aunts, expressing some bewilderment that he had wanted me to have the contents.
It was the idol of the bat-winged dog.
The Shocking Affair of the Dutch Steams.h.i.+p Friesland
by Mary Robinette Kowal
Mary Robinette Kowal is the author of several short stories, including "Evil Robot Monkey," which is a current finalist for the Hugo Award. Her short fiction has appeared in Asimov's Asimov's, Strange Horizons Strange Horizons, Cosmos Cosmos, and Escape Pod Escape Pod, and in the anthologies Twenty Epics Twenty Epics, The Solaris Book of New Science Fiction Vol. 2 The Solaris Book of New Science Fiction Vol. 2, and Gardner Dozois's The Year's Best Science Fiction The Year's Best Science Fiction. Her first novel, Shades of Milk and Honey Shades of Milk and Honey, is forthcoming from Tor Books. Kowal was also the 2008 winner of the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer, and when not writing she works as a professional puppeteer.
Men are notoriously reluctant to get married, and when you look at the history of weddings, who can blame them? After all, weddings are pretty dangerous places. The marriage of Claudius and Gertrude in Hamlet Hamlet ends in what can only be termed tragedy. Good night, sweet prince. In fact, good night just about everybody. In ends in what can only be termed tragedy. Good night, sweet prince. In fact, good night just about everybody. In Monty Python and the Holy Grail Monty Python and the Holy Grail, a misinformed Sir Lancelot rampages through a wedding party, slaying many, including the best man. And these are small potatoes compared to truly disastrous affairs such as the Saint Bartholomew's Day Ma.s.sacre of 1572, in which a controversial Catholic-Protestant marriage touched off a wave of violence that eventually claimed as many as thirty-thousand lives. Is it any wonder that men stay away? It's simple prudence, really. In Conan Doyle's story "The Adventure of the Norwood Builder," Watson mentions in pa.s.sing the "shocking affair of the Dutch steams.h.i.+p Friesland, Friesland, which so nearly cost us both our lives." Our next story imagines what this evocatively t.i.tled case might have entailed-it involves a naive young woman, a royal couple, a gla.s.sblower, and the darker side of Italian politics. And oh yes, also a wedding. which so nearly cost us both our lives." Our next story imagines what this evocatively t.i.tled case might have entailed-it involves a naive young woman, a royal couple, a gla.s.sblower, and the darker side of Italian politics. And oh yes, also a wedding.
I was born Rosa Carlotta Silvana Grisanti, but in the mid-Eighties, I legally changed my name to Eve. As you have guessed in your letter, after the shocking affair of the Dutch steams.h.i.+p Friesland Friesland, my dear friends Dr. Watson and Mr. Sherlock Holmes suggested that my safest course of action would be to distance myself from my family.
But I get ahead of my story; I have not Dr. Watson's gift for explaining Mr. Holmes's methods, and I fear your wish that I relay the particulars of this strange case may be met with inadequate measures.
On the twelfth of October, 1887, I was being taken by the steams.h.i.+p Friesland Friesland from our home on the Venetian isle of Murano to Africa; there to meet my betrothed, Hans Boerwinkle, a man several years my senior with whom my father had very recently made arrangements. Living as we do now, in the nineteen-twenties, it is difficult to remember what a sheltered life we girls led forty years ago, but at the time it seemed natural that my brother, Orazio Rinaldo Paride Grisanti, escorted me as chaperone. With us also was my lady's maid, Anita. from our home on the Venetian isle of Murano to Africa; there to meet my betrothed, Hans Boerwinkle, a man several years my senior with whom my father had very recently made arrangements. Living as we do now, in the nineteen-twenties, it is difficult to remember what a sheltered life we girls led forty years ago, but at the time it seemed natural that my brother, Orazio Rinaldo Paride Grisanti, escorted me as chaperone. With us also was my lady's maid, Anita.
In addition to my trousseau, we had several boxes packed with the finest Murano crystal as part of my dowry. My father had blown gla.s.s without cessation after my betrothal was announced. I remember Zia Giulia asking, "What is the hurry?" At the time, I was only anxious to be an adult, which was all that marriage meant to me.
I can still recall my excitement at dinner the first evening as glittering ladies and gentlemen, in full evening dress, caught me in a dazzle of delight. Orazio and I were seated at a table with two British gentlemen and a couple from Hungary; at the captain's table sat Signore Agostino Depretis, the premier of Italy, with his new bride, Signora Michela Depretis. As I antic.i.p.ated my own wedding and honeymoon, I envied the young woman and the way all eyes sought her.
But I should not dwell on my youthful fancies. The two British gentlemen, as you might have surmised, introduced themselves as Mr. Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson.
Mr. Holmes delighted me by having an excellent command of Italian, and asked us endless questions about gla.s.sblowing. While we bantered, Signore and Signora Comazzolo, a rival gla.s.sblower family, who also sailed on the Friesland, Friesland, sent a bottle of expensive champagne to the bridal couple. sent a bottle of expensive champagne to the bridal couple.
My brother's eyes narrowed, then laying his hand upon my arm, he said in Italian, "Would you send them a gift as well, though it means parting with a small item from your dowry?"
"Papa will send me more." I smiled at him. "I shall write a note myself."
Orazio gestured to Anita and gave her hurried instructions. In moments she returned with a small box containing a matched pair of opalescent champagne flutes ornamented by delicate tracings of crystal. I quickly penned the note that you have in your possession.
A foolish note, from a foolish girl, but-how was I to know what was to follow? Before the ink was dry, my brother s.n.a.t.c.hed the note and fairly sprinted across the dining room. Bowing at the captain's table, he presented the box of flutes to Premiere Depretis and his bride. She laughed prettily, and kissed him on both cheeks to thank him.
I do not boast when I say the artistry of these flutes was without peer. My father was a brilliant gla.s.sblower; no other studio knew the secret of his opalescent gla.s.s, and of its s.h.i.+fting colours that bent light into translucent rainbows.
Nothing would do then but for the bridal couple to open the champagne and toast the a.s.sembly with these confections of gla.s.s. The champagne's bubbles danced as merrily as if they were celebrating with us.
Premiere Depretis said, "Ladies and gentlemen, with this lovely Murano gla.s.s I propose a toast to my fellow countrymen and to my beautiful wife. Long life and health to us all."
They drank their champagne and kissed each other with love in their eyes while we looked on, applauding wildly. Signore Comazzolo, perhaps jealous that our flutes had upstaged his champagne, called out. "How is the champagne, Premiere?"
Premiere Depretis bowed to him before burying his nose in his gla.s.s to inhale the bouquet of the champagne. "An elegant nose with nuances of honey, gingerbread, parsley and slight hints of garlic." He sipped the champagne again, savouring it. "Minerality, pears and a bright acidity. Delightful."
We applauded again, perhaps even more wildly than before. I sat, breathless with delight, darting glances at the bridal couple over each course. The first course was oysters and my brother ordered a bottle of champagne so that we could celebrate "in the same style as our Premiere and Signora Depretis."
During the second course, Signora Depretis excused herself and I looked up as she stood. Her face was pale, and she held her hand to her abdomen as if her stomach hurt. Premiere Depretis escorted her from the dining room, his own face tight.
"What is the matter, do you think?" I asked Orazio.
He shrugged. "Perhaps the oysters."
During the rest of my meal, I imagined stomach pains until, feeling nauseous, I excused myself during the fourth course.
The next day, neither Depretis came to dinner.
The third day, my lady's maid, Anita, announced that two men waited in my parlour "Where is my brother?" I asked.
She shook her head, smiling apologetically, "I do not know, Signorina."
I hesitated to step into the parlour unchaperoned, so I motioned Anita to accompany me. You must imagine my relief to find my dinner companions, Dr. Watson and Mr. Holmes, awaiting me.
Here, I must pause to give you a word picture of Mr. Holmes. He towered above me, indeed, even among most men his lean figure loomed like a hawk. His dark s.h.a.ggy brows pulled down in an expression of fixed concentration from the moment I stepped into the parlour and his eyes gleamed with a fire of excitement.
"How are you, Signorina Grisanti?" he asked in flawless Italian.
Dr. Watson hung back and watched our conversation with the eager interest of a newspaper reporter, in the scene but not part of it.
"I am well, thank you, Signore Holmes." I wondered for a moment if I might ask him for news of Premiere and Signora Depretis.
"The Depretises are dead." Mr. Holmes said, bluntly.
I gasped, both at the news and at how easily he read my thoughts. "The oysters?"
"Their nuptial toast was poisoned." Mr. Holmes gave me a long searching look. "Do you know where your brother is?"
"No." My attention was barely upon him, so horrified was I by the thought of that happy couple murdered. a.s.sa.s.sinated.
"Well then, we shall chat with you while we wait for him, if you do not mind?"
I shook my head.
He folded himself into one of the cabin's chairs. Dr. Watson sat in a chair to the side, holding so still that in my memory he is almost invisible. Mr. Holmes leaned forward to put his elbows on his knees. "Tell me about your approaching nuptials."
I blushed and stammered but proceeded to tell him about my recent betrothal to Mr. Boerwinkle and his business arrangements with Papa. About how I was moving to Africa but Papa could not accompany me because he was busy with the upcoming elections helping with the campaign for the Left. I told him about my dress; in other words, I acted every inch the vain, silly girl that I was.
In the midst of my recitation, Mr. Holmes hesitated and then asked. "May we look at your dowry?"
"Of course." I beckoned Anita and she helped the gentlemen unpack the crates of crystal. I hovered, anxious and useless, as they lay the sparkling gla.s.s and crystal about the cabin with infinite care. Mr. Holmes stopped to admire an opalescent vase, which my father had made to serve as a centrepiece for our table.
He glanced at the matched rows of clear stemware and back at the vase. "Did you have only the flutes and the vase in this style of gla.s.s?"
"Yes." I stepped forward to admire the piece. "No other gla.s.smaker knows how to produce the opalescence and even my father rarely makes it."
"Has he produced opalescent stemware, such as the champagne flutes, before?"
I tilted my head and thought. "Not that I know of, but I am not often in the shop."
Mr. Holmes lifted the vase to his nose and, to my bewilderment, sniffed it. "Hmm. No help there. Help me put everything back, would you, Dr. Watson?"
I was thankful that Dr. Watson looked as baffled as I felt, but he said nothing and simply helped Mr. Holmes repack everything except the vase. Mr. Holmes turned to me and said, "I am sorry for the inconvenience, Signorina Grisanti. Do let me know when your brother returns." He bowed over my hand and he and Dr. Watson took their leave.
I stared at the door after them and then picked up the vase and sniffed it. I smelled nothing.
Some hours later Orazio sauntered into the room. "Well, little Rosa, how do you like your first ocean voyage?"
"I am frightened. Dr. Watson and Signore Holmes said-"
He crossed the room in one stride and grabbed my wrists. "What did you tell them?"
"Nothing!" I twisted in his painful grasp. "I had nothing to say. I do not understand what is happening. Orazio, they said the champagne was poisoned."
He dropped my wrists and stepped back, smiling. "Did they now?"
"How can you smile when the Depretises have been murdered?"
He laughed. "Why, my dear sister, do you think we are on this boat?"