The prospect of an interview with Lord Roberts would not have excited greater wonder and pleasure in a raw subaltern than was now reflected upon the face of Mr. Kent.
   "I shall indeed be proud," he murmured.
   "Then I will ask Sir James to step this way. He is at present in the carriage outside the door. Meanwhile, Colonel Emsworth, we may perhaps assemble in your study, where I could give the necessary explanations."
   And here it is that I miss my Watson. By cunning questions and ejaculations of wonder he could elevate my simple art, which is but systematized common sense, into a prodigy. When I tell my own story I have no such aid. And yet I will give my process of thought even as I gave it to my small audience, which included Godfrey's mother in the study of Colonel Emsworth.
   "That process," said I, "starts upon the supposition that when you have eliminated all which is impossible, then whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth. It may well be that several explanations remain, in which case one tries test after test until one or other of them has a convincing amount of support. We will now apply this principle to the case in point. As it was first presented to me, there were three possible explanations of the seclusion or incarceration of this gentleman in an outhouse of his father's mansion. There was the explanation that he was in hiding for a crime, or that he was mad and that they wished to avoid an asylum, or that he had some disease which caused his segregation. I could think of no other adequate solutions. These, then, had to be sifted and balanced against each other.
   "The criminal solution would not bear inspection. No unsolved crime had been reported from that district. I was sure of that. If it were some crime not yet discovered, then clearly it would be to the interest of the family to get rid of the delinquent and send him abroad rather than keep him concealed at home. I could see no explanation for such a line of conduct.
   "Insanity was more plausible. The presence of the second person in the outhouse suggested a keeper. The fact that he locked the door when he came out strengthened the supposition and gave the idea of constraint. On the other hand, this constraint could not be severe or the young man could not have got loose and come down to have a look at his friend. You will remember, Mr. Dodd, that I felt round for points, asking you, for example, about the paper which Mr. Kent was reading. Had it been the Lancet or the British Medical Journal it would have helped me. It is not illegal, however, to keep a lunatic upon private premises so long as there is a qualified person in attendance and that the authorities have been duly notified. Why, then, all this desperate desire for secrecy? Once again I could not get the theory to fit the facts.
   "There remained the third possibility, into which, rare and unlikely as it was, everything seemed to fit. Leprosy is not uncommon in South Africa. By some extraordinary chance this youth might have contracted it. His people would be placed in a very dreadful position, since they would desire to save him from segregation. Great secrecy would be needed to prevent rumors from getting about and subsequent interference by the authorities. A devoted medical man, if sufficiently paid, would easily be found to take charge of the sufferer. There would be no reason why the latter should not be allowed freedom after dark. Bleaching of the skin is a common result of the disease. The case was a strong one – so strong that I determined to act as if it were actually proved. When on arriving here I noticed that Ralph, who carries out the meals, had gloves which are impregnated with disinfectants, my last doubts were removed. A single word showed you, sir, that your secret was discovered, and if I wrote rather than said it, it was to prove to you that my discretion was to be trusted."
   I was finishing this little analysis of the case when the door was opened and the austere figure of the great dermatologist was ushered in. But for once his sphinx-like features had relaxed and there was a warm humanity in his eyes. He strode up to Colonel Emsworth and shook him by the hand.
   "It is often my lot to bring ill-tidings and seldom good," said he. "This occasion is the more welcome. It is not leprosy."
   "What?"
   "A well-marked case of pseudo-leprosy or ichthyosis, a scalelike affection of the skin, unsightly, obstinate, but possibly curable, and certainly noninfective. Yes, Mr. Holmes, the coincidence is a remarkable one. But is it coincidence? Are there not subtle forces at work of which we know little? Are we assured that the apprehension from which this young man has no doubt suffered terribly since his exposure to its contagion may not produce a physical effect which simulates that which it fears? At any rate, I pledge my professional reputation – But the lady has fainted! I think that Mr. Kent had better be with her until she recovers from this joyous shock."

The Adventure of the Mazarin Stone

   It was pleasant to Dr. Watson to find himself once more in the untidy room of the first floor in Baker Street which had been the starting-point of so many remarkable adventures. He looked round him at the scientific charts upon the wall, the acid-charred bench of chemicals, the violin-case leaning in the corner, the coal-scuttle, which contained of old the pipes and tobacco. Finally, his eyes came round to the fresh and smiling face of Billy, the young but very wise and tactful page, who had helped a little to fill up the gap of loneliness and isolation which surrounded the saturnine figure of the great detective.
   "It all seems very unchanged, Billy. You don't change, either. I hope the same can be said of him?"
   Billy glanced with some solicitude at the closed door of the bedroom.
   "I think he's in bed and asleep," he said.
   It was seven in the evening of a lovely summer's day, but Dr. Watson was sufficiently familiar with the irregularity of his old friend's hours to feel no surprise at the idea.
   "That means a case, I suppose?"
   "Yes, sir, he is very hard at it just now. I'm frightened for his health. He gets paler and thinner, and he eats nothing. 'When will you be pleased to dine, Mr. Holmes?' Mrs. Hudson asked. 'Seven-thirty, the day after tomorrow,' said he. You know his way when he is keen on a case."
   "Yes, Billy, I know."
   "He's following someone. Yesterday he was out as a workman looking for a job. Today he was an old woman. Fairly took me in, he did, and I ought to know his ways by now." Billy pointed with a grin to a very baggy parasol which leaned against the sofa. "That's part of the old woman's outfit," he said.
   "But what is it all about, Billy?"
   Billy sank his voice, as one who discusses great secrets of State. "I don't mind telling you, sir, but it should go no farther. It's this case of the Crown diamond."
   "What – the hundred-thousand-pound burglary?"
   "Yes, sir. They must get it back, sir. Why, we had the Prime Minister and the Home Secretary both sitting on that very sofa. Mr. Holmes was very nice to them. He soon put them at their ease and promised he would do all he could. Then there is Lord Cantlemere —"
   "Ah!"
   "Yes, sir, you know what that means. He's a stiff'un, sir, if I may say so. I can get along with the Prime Minister, and I've nothing against the Home Secretary, who seemed a civil, obliging sort of man, but I can't stand his Lordship. Neither can Mr. Holmes, sir. You see, he don't believe in Mr. Holmes and he was against employing him. He'd rather he failed."
   "And Mr. Holmes knows it?"
   "Mr. Holmes always knows whatever there is to know."
   "Well, we'll hope he won't fail and that Lord Cantlemere will be confounded. But I say, Billy, what is that curtain for across the window?"
   "Mr. Holmes had it put up there three days ago. We've got something funny behind it."
   Billy advanced and drew away the drapery which screened the alcove of the bow window.
   Dr. Watson could not restrain a cry of amazement. There was a facsimile of his old friend, dressing-gown and all, the face turned three-quarters towards the window and downward, as though reading an invisible book, while the body was sunk deep in an armchair. Billy detached the head and held it in the air.
   "We put it at different angles, so that it may seem more lifelike. I wouldn't dare touch it if the blind were not down. But when it's up you can see this from across the way."
   "We used something of the sort once before."
   "Before my time," said Billy. He drew the window curtains apart and looked out into the street. "There are folk who watch us from over yonder. I can see a fellow now at the window. Have a look for yourself."
   Watson had taken a step forward when the bedroom door opened, and the long, thin form of Holmes emerged, his face pale and drawn, but his step and bearing as active as ever. With a single spring he was at the window, and had drawn the blind once more.
   "That will do, Billy," said he. "You were in danger of your life then, my boy, and I can't do without you just yet. Well, Watson, it is good to see you in your old quarters once again. You come at a critical moment."
   "So I gather."
   "You can go, Billy. That boy is a problem, Watson. How far am I justified in allowing him to be in danger?"
   "Danger of what, Holmes?"
   "Of sudden death. I'm expecting something this evening."
   "Expecting what?"
   "To be murdered, Watson."
   "No, no, you are joking, Holmes!"
   "Even my limited sense of humor could evolve a better joke than that. But we may be comfortable in the meantime, may we not? Is alcohol permitted? The gasogene and cigars are in the old place. Let me see you once more in the customary armchair. You have not, I hope, learned to despise my pipe and my lamentable tobacco? It has to take the place of food these days."
   "But why not eat?"
   "Because the faculties become refined when you starve them. Why, surely, as a doctor, my dear Watson, you must admit that what your digestion gains in the way of blood supply is so much lost to the brain. I am a brain, Watson. The rest of me is a mere appendix. Therefore, it is the brain I must consider."
   "But this danger, Holmes?"
   "Ah, yes, in case it should come off, it would perhaps be as well that you should burden your memory with the name and address of the murderer. You can give it to Scotland Yard, with my love and a parting blessing. Sylvius is the name – Count Negretto Sylvius. Write it down, man, write it down! 136 Moorside Gardens, N. W. Got it?"
   Watson's honest face was twitching with anxiety. He knew only too well the immense risks taken by Holmes and was well aware that what he said was more likely to be understatement than exaggeration. Watson was always the man of action, and he rose to the occasion.
   "Count me in, Holmes. I have nothing to do for a day or two."
   "Your morals don't improve, Watson. You have added fibbing to your other vices. You bear every sign of the busy medical man, with calls on him every hour."
   "Not such important ones. But can't you have this fellow arrested?"
   "Yes, Watson, I could. That's what worries him so."
   "But why don't you?"
   "Because I don't know where the diamond is."
   "Ah! Billy told me – the missing Crown jewel!"
   "Yes, the great yellow Mazarin stone. I've cast my net and I have my fish. But I have not got the stone. What is the use of taking them? We can make the world a better place by laying them by the heels. But that is not what I am out for. It's the stone I want."
   "And is this Count Sylvius one of your fish?"
   "Yes, and he's a shark. He bites. The other is Sam Merton the boxer. Not a bad fellow, Sam, but the Count has used him. Sam's not a shark. He is a great big silly bullheaded gudgeon. But he is flopping about in my net all the same."
   "Where is this Count Sylvius?"
   "I've been at his very elbow all the morning. You've seen me as an old lady, Watson. I was never more convincing. He actually picked up my parasol for me once. 'By your leave, Madame,' said he – half-ltalian, you know, and with the Southern graces of manner when in the mood, but a devil incarnate in the other mood. Life is full of whimsical happenings, Watson."
   "It might have been tragedy."
   "Well, perhaps it might. I followed him to old Straubenzee's workshop in the Minories. Straubenzee made the air-gun – a very pretty bit of work, as I understand, and I rather fancy it is in the opposite window at the present moment. Have you seen the dummy? Of course, Billy showed it to you. Well, it may get a bullet through its beautiful head at any moment. Ah, Billy, what is it?"
   The boy had reappeared in the room with a card upon a tray. Holmes glanced at it with raised eyebrows and an amused smile.
   "The man himself. I had hardly expected this. Grasp the nettle, Watson! A man of nerve. Possibly you have heard of his reputation as a shooter of big game. It would indeed be a triumphant ending to his excellent sporting record if he added me to his bag. This is a proof that he feels my toe very close behind his heel."
   "Send for the police."
   "I probably shall. But not just yet. Would you glance carefully out of the window, Watson, and see if anyone is hanging about in the street?"
   Watson looked warily round the edge of the curtain.
   "Yes, there is one rough fellow near the door."
   "That will be Sam Merton – the faithful but rather fatuous Sam. Where is this gentleman, Billy?"
   "In the waiting-room, sir."
   "Show him up when I ring."
   "Yes,sir."
   "If I am not in the room, show him in all the same."
   "Yes, sir."
   Watson waited until the door was closed, and then he turned earnestly to his companion.
   "Look here, Holmes, this is simply impossible. This is a desperate man, who sticks at nothing. He may have come to murder you."
   "I should not be surprised."
   "I insist upon staying with you."
   "You would be horribly in the way."
   "In his way?"
   "No, my dear fellow – in my way."
   "Well, I can't possibly leave you."
   "Yes, you can, Watson. And you will, for you have never failed to play the game. I am sure you will play it to the end. This man has come for his own purpose, but he may stay for mine."
   Holmes took out his notebook and scribbled a few lines. "Take a cab to Scotland Yard and give this to Youghal of the C. I. D. Come back with the police. The fellow's arrest will follow."
   "I'll do that with joy.
   "Before you return I may have just time enough to find out where the stone is." He touched the bell. "I think we will go out through the bedroom. This second exit is exceedingly useful. I rather want to see my shark without his seeing me, and I have, as you will remember, my own way of doing it."
   It was, therefore, an empty room into which Billy, a minute later, ushered Count Sylvius. The famous game-shot, sportsman, and man-about-town was a big, swarthy fellow, with a formidable dark mustache shading a cruel, thin-lipped mouth, and surmounted by a long, curved nose like the beak of an eagle. He was well dressed, but his brilliant necktie, shining pin, and glittering rings were flamboyant in their effect. As the door closed behind him he looked round him with fierce, startled eyes, like one who suspects a trap at every turn. Then he gave a violent start as he saw the impassive head and the collar of the dressing-gown which projected above the armchair in the window. At first his expression was one of pure amazement. Then the light of a horrible hope gleamed in his dark, murderous eyes. He took one more glance round to see that there were no witnesses, and then, on tiptoe, his thick stick half raised, he approached the silent figure. He was crouching for his final spring and blow when a cool, sardonic voice greeted him from the open bedroom door:
   "Don't break it, Count! Don't break it!"
   The assassin staggered back, amazement in his convulsed face. For an instant he half raised his loaded cane once more, as if he would turn his violence from the effigy to the original; but there was something in that steady gray eye and mocking smile which caused his hand to sink to his side.
   "It's a pretty little thing," said Holmes, advancing towards the image. "Tavernier, the French modeler, made it. He is as good at waxworks as your friend Straubenzee is at air-guns."
   "Air-guns, sir! What do you mean?"
   "Put your hat and stick on the side-table. Thank you! Pray take a seat. Would you care to put your revolver out also? Oh, very good, if you prefer to sit upon it. Your visit is really most opportune, for I wanted badly to have a few minutes' chat with you. "
   The Count scowled, with heavy, threatening eyebrows.
   "I, too, wished to have some words with you, Holmes. That is why I am here. I won't deny that I intended to assault you just now."
   Holmes swung his leg on the edge of the table.
   "I rather gathered that you had some idea of the sort in your head," said he. "But why these personal attentions?"
   "Because you have gone out of your way to annoy me. Because you have put your creatures upon my track."
   "My creatures! I assure you no!"
   "Nonsense! I have had them followed. Two can play at that game, Holmes."
   "It is a small point, Count Sylvius, but perhaps you would kindly give me my prefix when you address me. You can understand that, with my routine of work, I should find myself on familiar terms with half the rogues' gallery, and you will agree that exceptions are invidious."
   "Well, Mr. Holmes, then."
   "Excellent! But I assure you you are mistaken about my alleged agents."
   Count Sylvius laughed contemptuously.
   "Other people can observe as well as you. Yesterday there was an old sporting man. Today it was an elderly woman. They held me in view all day."
   "Really, sir, you compliment me. Old Baron Dowson said the night before he was hanged that in my case what the law had gained the stage had lost. And now you give my little impersonations your kindly praise?"
   "It was you – you yourself?"
   Holmes shrugged his shoulders. "You can see in the corner the parasol which you so politely handed to me in the Minories before you began to suspect."
   "If I had known, you might never —"
   "Have seen this humble home again. I was well aware of it. We all have neglected opportunities to deplore. As it happens, you did not know, so here we are!"
   The Count's knotted brows gathered more heavily over his menacing eyes. "What you say only makes the matter worse. It was not your agents but your play-acting, busybody self! You admit that you have dogged me. Why?"
   "Come now, Count. You used to shoot lions in Algeria."
   "Well?"
   "But why?"
   "Why? The sport – the excitement – the danger!"
   "And, no doubt, to free the country from a pest?"
   "Exactly!"
   "My reasons in a nutshell!"
   The Count sprang to his feet, and his hand involuntarily moved back to his hip-pocket.
   "Sit down, sir, sit down! There was another, more practical, reason. I want that yellow diamond!"
   Count Sylvius lay back in his chair with an evil smile.
   "Upon my word!" said he.
   "You knew that I was after you for that. The real reason why you are here tonight is to find out how much I know about the matter and how far my removal is absolutely essential. Well, I should say that, from your point of view, it is absolutely essential, for I know all about it, save only one thing, which you are about to tell me."
   "Oh, indeed! And pray, what is this missing fact?"
   "Where the Crown diamond now is."
   The Count looked sharply at his companion. "Oh, you want to know that, do you? How the devil should I be able to tell you where it is?"
   "You can, and you will."
   "Indeed!"
   "You can't bluff me, Count Sylvius." Holmes's eyes, as he gazed at him, contracted and lightened until they were like two menacing points of steel. "You are absolute plate-glass. I see to the very back of your mind."
   "Then, of course, you see where the diamond is!"
   Holmes clapped his hands with amusement, and then pointed a derisive finger. "Then you do know. You have admitted it!"
   "I admit nothing."
   "Now, Count, if you will be reasonable we can do business. If not, you will get hurt."
   Count Sylvius threw up his eyes to the ceiling. "And you talk about bluff!" said he.
   Holmes looked at him thoughtfully like a master chess-player who meditates his crowning move. Then he threw open the table drawer and drew out a squat notebook.
   "Do you know what I keep in this book?"
   "No, sir, I do not!"
   "You!"
   "Me!"
   "Yes, sir, you! You are all here – every action of your vile and dangerous life."
   "Damn you, Holmes!" cried the Count with blazing eyes. "There are limits to my patience!"
   "It's all here, Count. The real facts as to the death of old Mrs. Harold, who left you the Blymer estate, which you so rapidly gambled away."
   "You are dreaming!"
   "And the complete life history of Miss Minnie Warrender."
   "Tut! You will make nothing of that!"
   "Plenty more here, Count. Here is the robbery in the train deluxe to the Riviera on February 13, 1892. Here is the forged check in the same year on the Credit Lyonnais."
   "No, you're wrong there."
   "Then I am right on the others! Now, Count, you are a card-player. When the other fellow has all the trumps, it saves time to throw down your hand."
   "What has all this talk to do with the jewel of which you spoke?"
   "Gently, Count. Restrain that eager mind! Let me get to the points in my own humdrum fashion. I have all this against you; but, above all, I have a clear case against both you and your fighting bully in the case of the Crown diamond."
   "Indeed!"
   "I have the cabman who took you to Whitehall and the cabman who brought you away. I have the commissionaire who saw you near the case. I have Ikey Sanders, who refused to cut it up for you. Ikey has peached, and the game is up."
   The veins stood out on the Count's forehead. His dark, hairy hands were clenched in a convulsion of restrained emotion. He tried to speak, but the words would not shape themselves.
   "That's the hand I play from," said Holmes. "I put it all upon the table. But one card is missing. It's the king of diamonds. I don't know where the stone is."
   "You never shall know."
   "No? Now, be reasonable, Count. Consider the situation. You are going to be locked up for twenty years. So is Sam Merton. What good are you going to get out of your diamond? None in the world. But if you hand it over – well, I'll compound a felony. We don't want you or Sam. We want the stone. Give that up, and so far as I am concerned you can go free so long as you behave yourself in the future. If you make another slip well, it will be the last. But this time my commission is to get the stone, not you."
   "But if I refuse?"
   "Why, then – alas! – it must be you and not the stone."
   Billy had appeared in answer to a ring.
   "I think, Count, that it would be as well to have your friend Sam at this conference. After all, his interests should be represented. Billy, you will see a large and ugly gentleman outside the front door. Ask him to come up."
   "If he won't come, sir?"
   "No violence, Billy. Don't be rough with him. If you tell him that Count Sylvius wants him he will certainly come."
   "What are you going to do now?" asked the Count as Billy disappeared.
   "My friend Watson was with me just now. I told him that I had a shark and a gudgeon in my net; now I am drawing the net and up they come together."
   The Count had risen from his chair, and his hand was behind his back. Holmes held something half protruding from the pocket of his dressing-gown.
   "You won't die in your bed, Holmes."
   "I have often had the same idea. Does it matter very much? After all, Count, your own exit is more likely to be perpendicular than horizontal. But these anticipations of the future are morbid. Why not give ourselves up to the unrestrained enjoyment of the present?"
   A sudden wild-beast light sprang up in the dark, menacing eyes of the master criminal. Holmes's figure seemed to grow taller as he grew tense and ready.
   "It is no use your fingering your revolver, my friend," he said in a quiet voice. "You know perfectly well that you dare not use it, even if I gave you time to draw it. Nasty, noisy things, revolvers, Count. Better stick to air-guns. Ah! I think I hear the fairy footstep of your estimable partner. Good day, Mr. Merton. Rather dull in the street, is it not?"
   The prizefighter, a heavily built young man with a stupid, obstinate, slab-sided face, stood awkwardly at the door, looking about him with a puzzled expression. Holmes's debonair manner was a new experience, and though he vaguely felt that it was hostile, he did not know how to counter it. He turned to his more astute comrade for help.
   "What's the game now, Count? What's this fellow want? What's up?" His voice was deep and raucous.
   The Count shrugged his shoulders, and it was Holmes who answered.
   "If I may put it in a nutshell, Mr. Merton, I should say it was all up."
   The boxer still addressed his remarks to his associate.
   "Is this cove trying to be funny, or what? I'm not in the funny mood myself."
   "No, I expect not," said Holmes. "I think I can promise you that you will feel even less humorous as the evening advances. Now, look here, Count Sylvius. I'm a busy man and I can't waste time. I'm going into that bedroom. Pray make yourselves quite at home in my absence. You can explain to your friend how the matter lies without the restraint of my presence. I shall try over the Hoffman 'Barcarole' upon my violin. In five minutes I shall return for your final answer. You quite grasp the alternative, do you not? Shall we take you, or shall we have the stone?"
   Holmes withdrew, picking up his violin from the corner as he passed. A few moments later the long-drawn, wailing notes of that most haunting of tunes came faintly through the closed door of the bedroom.
   "What is it, then?" asked Merton anxiously as his companion turned to him. "Does he know about the stone?"
   "He knows a damned sight too much about it. I'm not sure that he doesn't know all about it."
   "Good Lord!" The boxer's sallow face turned a shade whiter.
   "Ikey Sanders has split on us."
   "He has, has he? I'll do him down a thick 'un for that if I swing for it."
   "That won't help us much. We've got to make up our minds what to do."
   "Half a mo'," said the boxer, looking suspiciously at the bedroom door. "He's a leery cove that wants watching. I suppose he's not listening?"
   "How can he be listening with that music going?"
   "That's right. Maybe somebody's behind a curtain. Too many curtains in this room." As he looked round he suddenly saw for the first time the effigy in the window, and stood staring and pointing, too amazed for words.
   "Tut! it's only a dummy," said the Count.
   "A fake, is it? Well, strike me! Madame Tussaud ain't in it. It's the living spit of him, gown and all. But them curtains Count!"
   "Oh, confound the curtains! We are wasting our time, and there is none too much. He can lag us over this stone."
   "The deuce he can!"
   "But he'll let us slip if we only tell him where the swag is."
   "What! Give it up? Give up a hundred thousand quid?"
   "It's one or the other."
   Merton scratched his short-cropped pate.
   "He's alone in there. Let's do him in. If his light were out we should have nothing to fear."
   The Count shook his head.
   "He is armed and ready. If we shot him we could hardly get away in a place like this. Besides, it's likely enough that the police know whatever evidence he has got. Hallo! What was that?"
   There was a vague sound which seemed to come from the window. Both men sprang round, but all was quiet. Save for the one strange figure seated in the chair, the room was certainly empty.
   "Something in the street," said Merton. "Now look here, guv'nor, you've got the brains. Surely you can think a way out of it. If slugging is no use then it's up to you."
   "I've fooled better men than he," the Count answered. "The stone is here in my secret pocket. I take no chances leaving it about. It can be out of England tonight and cut into four pieces in Amsterdam before Sunday. He knows nothing of Van Seddar."
   "I thought Van Seddar was going next week."
   "He was. But now he must get off by the next boat. One or other of us must slip round with the stone to Lime Street and tell him."
   "But the false bottom ain't ready."
   "Well, he must take it as it is and chance it. There's not a moment to lose." Again, with the sense of danger which becomes an instinct with the sportsman, he paused and looked hard at the window. Yes, it was surely from the street that the faint sound had come.
   "As to Holmes," he continued, "we can fool him easily enough. You see, the damned fool won't arrest us if he can get the stone. Well, we'll promise him the stone. We'll put him on the wrong track about it, and before he finds that it is the wrong track it will be in Holland and we out of the country."
   "That sounds good to me!" cried Sam Merton with a grin.
   "You go on and tell the Dutchman to get a move on him. I'll see this sucker and fill him up with a bogus confession. I'll tell him that the stone is in Liverpool. Confound that whining music; it gets on my nerves! By the time he finds it isn't in Liverpool it will be in quarters and we on the blue water. Come back here, out of a line with that keyhole. Here is the stone."
   "I wonder you dare carry it."
   "Where could I have it safer? If we could take it out of Whitehall someone else could surely take it out of my lodgings."
   "Let's have a look at it."
   Count Sylvius cast a somewhat unflattering glance at his associate and disregarded the unwashed hand which was extended towards him.
   "What – d'ye think I'm going to snatch it off you? See here, mister, I'm getting a bit tired of your ways."
   "Well, well, no offense, Sam. We can't afford to quarrel. Come over to the window if you want to see the beauty properly. Now hold it to the light! Here!"
   "Thank you!"
   With a single spring Holmes had leaped from the dummy's chair and had grasped the precious jewel. He held it now in one hand, while his other pointed a revolver at the Count's head. The two villains staggered back in utter amazement. Before they had recovered Holmes had pressed the electric bell.
   "No violence, gentlemen – no violence, I beg of you! Consider the furniture! It must be very clear to you that your position is an impossible one. The police are waiting below."
   The Count's bewilderment overmastered his rage and fear.
   "But how the deuce —?" he gasped.
   "Your surprise is very natural. You are not aware that a second door from my bedroom leads behind that curtain. I fancied that you must have heard me when I displaced the figure, but luck was on my side. It gave me a chance of listening to your racy conversation which would have been painfully constrained had you been aware of my presence."
   The Count gave a gesture of resignation.
   "We give you best, Holmes. I believe you are the devil himself."
   "Not far from him, at any rate," Holmes answered with a polite smile.
   Sam Merton's slow intellect had only gradually appreciated the situation. Now, as the sound of heavy steps came from the stairs outside, he broke silence at last.
   "A fair cop!" said he. "But, I say, what about that bloomin' fiddle! I hear it yet."
   "Tut, tut!" Holmes answered. "You are perfectly right. Let it play! These modern gramophones are a remarkable invention."
   There was an inrush of police, the handcuffs clicked and the criminals were led to the waiting cab. Watson lingered with Holmes, congratulating him upon this fresh leaf added to his laurels. Once more their conversation was interrupted by the imperturbable Billy with his card-tray.
   "Lord Cantlemere sir."
   "Show him up, Billy. This is the eminent peer who represents the very highest interests," said Holmes. "He is an excellent and loyal person, but rather of the old regime. Shall we make him unbend? Dare we venture upon a slight liberty? He knows, we may conjecture, nothing of what has occurred."
   The door opened to admit a thin, austere figure with a hatchet face and drooping mid-Victorian whiskers of a glossy blackness which hardly corresponded with the rounded shoulders and feeble gait. Holmes advanced affably, and shook an unresponsive hand.
   "How do you do, Lord Cantlemere? It is chilly for the time of year, but rather warm indoors. May I take your overcoat?"
   "No, I thank you; I will not take it off."
   Holmes laid his hand insistently upon the sleeve.
   "Pray allow me! My friend Dr. Watson would assure you that these changes of temperature are most insidious."
   His Lordship shook himself free with some impatience.
   "I am quite comfortable, sir. I have no need to stay. I have simply looked in to know how your self-appointed task was progressing."
   "It is difficult – very difficult."
   "I feared that you would find it so."
   There was a distinct sneer in the old courtier's words and manner.
   "Every man finds his limitations, Mr. Holmes, but at least it cures us of the weakness of self-satisfaction."
   "Yes, sir, I have been much perplexed."
   "No doubt."
   "Especially upon one point. Possibly you could help me upon
   "You apply for my advice rather late in the day. I thought that you had your own all-sufficient methods. Still, I am ready to help you."
   "You see, Lord Cantlemere, we can no doubt frame a case against the actual thieves."
   "When you have caught them."
   "Exactly. But the question is – how shall we proceed against the receiver?"
   "Is this not rather premature?"
   "It is as well to have our plans ready. Now, what would you regard as final evidence against the receiver?"
   "The actual possession of the stone."
   "You would arrest him upon that?"
   "Most undoubtedly."
   Holmes seldom laughed, but he got as near it as his old friend Watson could remember.
   "In that case, my dear sir, I shall be under the painful necessity of advising your arrest."
   Lord Cantlemere was very angry. Some of the ancient fires flickered up into his sallow cheeks.
   "You take a great liberty, Mr. Holmes. In fifty years of official life I cannot recall such a case. I am a busy man, sir engaged upon important affairs, and I have no time or taste for foolish jokes. I may tell you frankly, sir, that I have never been a believer in your powers, and that I have always been of the opinion that the matter was far safer in the hands of the regular police force. Your conduct confirms all my conclusions. I have the honor, sir, to wish you good-evening."
   Holmes had swiftly changed his position and was between the peer and the door.
   "One moment, sir," said he. "To actually go off with the Mazarin stone would be a more serious offense than to be found in temporary possession of it."
   "Sir, this is intolerable! Let me pass."
   "Put your hand in the right-hand pocket of your overcoat."
   "What do you mean, sir?"
   "Come – come, do what I ask."
   An instant later the amazed peer was standing, blinking and stammering, with the great yellow stone on his shaking palm.
   "What! What! How is this, Mr. Holmes?"
   "Too bad, Lord Cantlemere, too bad!" cried Holmes. "My old friend here will tell you that I have an impish habit of practical joking. Also that I can never resist a dramatic situation. I took the liberty – the very great liberty, I admit – of putting the stone into your pocket at the beginning of our interview."
   The old peer stared from the stone to the smiling face before him.
   "Sir, I am bewildered. But – yes – it is indeed the Mazarin stone. We are greatly your debtors, Mr. Holmes. Your sense of humor may, as you admit, be somewhat perverted, and its exhibition remarkably untimely, but at least I withdraw any reflection I have made upon your amazing professional powers. But how —"
   "The case is but half finished; the details can wait. No doubt, Lord Cantlemere, your pleasure in telling of this successful result in the exalted circle to which you return will be some small atonement for my practical joke. Billy, you will show his Lordship out, and tell Mrs. Hudson that I should be glad if she would send up dinner for two as soon as possible."

The Adventure of the Three Gables

   I don't think that any of my adventures with Mr. Sherlock Holmes opened quite so abruptly, or so dramatically,
   that which I associate with The Three Gables. I had not seen Holmes for some days and had no idea of the new channel into which his activities had been directed. He was in a chatty mood that morning, however, and had just settled me into the well-worn low armchair on one side of the fire, while he had curled down with his pipe in his mouth upon the opposite chair, when our visitor arrived. If I had said that a mad bull had arrived it would give a clearer impression of what occurred.
   The door had flown open and a huge negro had burst into the room. He would have been a comic figure if he had not been terrific, for he was dressed in a very loud gray check suit with a flowing salmon-colored tie. His broad face and flattened nose were thrust forward, as his sullen dark eyes, with a smouldering gleam of malice in them, turned from one of us to the other.
   "Which of you gen'l'men is Masser Holmes?" he asked.
   Holmes raised his pipe with a languid smile.
   "Oh! it's you, is it?" said our visitor, coming with an unpleasant, stealthy step round the angle of the table. "See here, Masser Holmes, you keep your hands out of other folks' business. Leave folks to manage their own affairs. Got that, Masser Holmes?"
   "Keep on talking," said Holmes. "It's fine."
   "Oh! it's fine, is it?" growled the savage. "It won't be so damn fine if I have to trim you up a bit. I've handled your kind before now, and they didn't look fine when I was through with them. Look at that, Masser Holmes!"
   He swung a huge knotted lump of a fist under my friend's nose. Holmes examined it closely with an air of great interest.
   "Were you born so?" he asked. "Or did it come by degrees?"
   It may have been the icy coolness of my friend, or it may have been the slight clatter which I made as I picked up the poker. In any case, our visitor's manner became less flamboyant.
   "Well, I've given you fair warnin'," said he. "I've a friend that's interested out Harrow way – you know what I'm meaning – and he don't intend to have no buttin' in by you. Got that? You ain't the law, and I ain't the law either, and if you come in I'll be on hand also. Don't you forget it."
   "I've wanted to meet you for some time," said Holmes. "I won't ask you to sit down, for I don't like the smell of you, but aren't you Steve Dixie, the bruiser?"
   "That's my name, Masser Holmes, and you'll get put through it for sure if you give me any lip."
   "It is certainly the last thing you need," said Holmes, staring at our visitor's hideous mouth. "But it was the killing of young Perkins outside the Holborn – Bar What! you're not going?"
   The negro had sprung back, and his face was leaden. "I won't listen to no such talk," said he. "What have I to do with this 'ere Perkins, Masser Holmes? I was trainin' at the Bull Ring in Birmingham when this boy done gone get into trouble."
   "Yes, you'll tell the magistrate about it, Steve," said Holmes. "I've been watching you and Barney Stockdale —"
   "So help me the Lord! Masser Holmes —"
   "That's enough. Get out of it. I'll pick you up when I want you."
   "Good-mornin', Masser Holmes. I hope there ain't no hard feelin's about this 'ere visit?"
   "There will be unless you tell me who sent you."
   "Why, there ain't no secret about that, Masser Holmes. It was that same gen'l'man that you have just done gone mention."
   "And who set him on to it?"
   "S'elp me. I don't know, Masser Holmes. He just say, 'Steve, you go see Mr. Holmes, and tell him his life ain't safe if he go down Harrow way.' That's the whole truth." Without waiting for any further questioning, our visitor bolted out of the room almost as precipitately as he had entered. Holmes knocked out the ashes of his pipe with a quiet chuckle.
   "I am glad you were not forced to break his woolly head, Watson. I observed your manoeuvres with the poker. But he is really rather a harmless fellow, a great muscular, foolish, blustering baby, and easily cowed, as you have seen. He is one of the Spencer John gang and has taken part in some dirty work of late which I may clear up when I have time. His immediate principal, Barney, is a more astute person. They specialize in assaults, intimidation, and the like. What I want to know is, who is at the back of them on this particular occasion?"
   "But why do they want to intimidate you?"
   "It is this Harrow Weald case. It decides me to look into the matter, for if it is worth anyone's while to take so much trouble, there must be something in it."
   "But what is it?"
   "I was going to tell you when we had this comic interlude. Here is Mrs. Maberley's note. If you care to come with me we will wire her and go out at once."
   DEAR MR. SHERLOCK HOLMES note 1:
   I have had a succession of strange incidents occur to me in connection with this house, and I should much value your advice. You would find me at home any time tomorrow. The house is within a short walk of the Weald Station. I believe that my late husband, Mortimer Maberley, was one of your early clients.
   Yours faithfully, MARY MABERLEY.
   The address was "The Three Gables, Harrow Weald."
   "So that's that!" said Holmes. "And now, if you can spare the time, Watson, we will get upon our way."
   A short railway journey, and a shorter drive, brought us to the house, a brick and timber villa, standing in its own acre of undeveloped grassland. Three small projections above. the upper windows made a feeble attempt to justify its name. Behind was a grove of melancholy, half-grown pines, and the whole aspect of the place was poor and depressing. None the less, we found the house to be well furnished, and the lady who received us was a most engaging elderly person, who bore every mark of refinement and culture.
   "I remember your husband well, madam," said Holmes, "though it is some years since he used my services in some trifling matter."
   "Probably you would be more familiar with the name of my son Douglas."
   Holmes looked at her with great interest.
   "Dear me! Are you the mother of Douglas Maberley? I knew him slightly. But of course all London knew him. What a magnificent creature he was! Where is he now?"
   "Dead, Mr. Holmes, dead! He was attache at Rome, and he died there of pneumonia last month."
   "I am sorry. One could not connect death with such a man. I have never known anyone so vitally alive. He lived intensely – every fibre of him!"
   "Too intensely, Mr. Holmes. That was the ruin of him. You remember him as he was – debonair and splendid. You did not see the moody, morose, brooding creature into which he developed. His heart was broken. In a single month I seemed to see my gallant boy turn into a worn-out cynical man."
   "A love affair – a woman?"
   "Or a fiend. Well, it was not to talk of my poor lad that I asked you to come, Mr. Holmes."
   "Dr. Watson and I are at your service."
   "There have been some very strange happenings. I have been in this house more than a year now, and as I wished to lead a retired life I have seen little of my neighbors. Three days ago I had a call from a man who said that he was a house agent. He said that this house would exactly suit a client of his, and that if I would part with it money would be no object. It seemed to me very strange as there are several empty houses on the market which appear to be equally eligible, but naturally I was interested in what he said. I therefore named a price which was five hundred pounds more than I gave. He at once closed with the offer, but added that his client desired to buy the furniture as well and would I put a price upon it. Some of this furniture is from my old home, and it is, as you see, very good, so that I named a good round sum. To this also he at once agreed. I had always wanted to travel, and the bargain was so good a one that it really seemed that I should be my own mistress for the rest of my life.