Authors: Anthony Horowitz
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Traditional, #General, #Traditional British
ANTHONY HOROWITZ
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First published in Great Britain in 2014
by Orion Books,
an imprint of The Orion Publishing Group Ltd
Orion House, 5 Upper Saint Martin’s Lane
London wc2h 9ea
An Hachette Livre UK Company
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Copyright © Anthony Horowitz 2014
The moral right of Anthony Horowitz to be identified as the
author of this work has been asserted in accordance with
the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act of 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be
reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted
in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical,
photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior
permission of both the copyright owner and the
above publisher of this book.
All the characters in this book are fictitious, and any
resemblance to actual persons, living or dead,
is purely coincidental.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is
available from the British Library.
isbn (Hardback) 978 1 4091 0947 1
isbn (Export Trade Paperback) 978 1 4091 0948 8
isbn (Ebook) 978 1 4091 0949 5
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From
The Times
of London
24th April 1891
HIGHGATE BODY FOUND
Police have no explanation for a peculiarly brutal murder
that has come to light close by Merton Lane in the normally
pleasant and quiet vicinity of Highgate. The deceased, a man
in his twenties, had been shot in the head but of particular
interest to the police was the fact that his hands had been tied
prior to the killing. Inspector G. Lestrade, who is in charge
of the enquiry, inclines to the belief that this dreadful act
took the form of an execution and may be related to recent
unrest in the streets of London. He has identified the victim
as Jonathan Pilgrim, an American who had been staying at
a private club in Mayfair and who may have been visiting
the metropolis for reasons of business. Scotland Yard has
been in contact with the American legation but so far no
address has been found for the dead man and it may be some
weeks before any relatives come forward. The investigation
continues.
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ONE
The Reichenbach Falls
Does anyone really believe what happened at the Reichenbach
Fal s? A great many accounts have been written but it seems to
me that all of them have left something to be desired – which
is to say, the truth. Take the
Journal de Genève
and Reuters, for example. I read them from start to finish, not an easy
task for they’re both written in that painfully dry manner of
most European publications, as if they’re reporting the news
because they have to, not because it’s something they want you
to know. And what exactly did they tell me? That Sherlock
Holmes and his foremost adversary, Professor James Moriarty,
of whose existence the public were only now learning, had
met and that both of them died. Wel , it might as wel have
been an automobile accident for all the excitement those two
author ities managed to put into their prose. Even the headlines
were dull.
But what really puzzles me is the narrative of Dr John
Watson. He describes the entire affair in
Strand Magazine
,
starting with the knock on the door of his consulting room
on the evening of April 24th 1891 and continuing with his
journey to Switzerland. I yield to no one in my admiration for
the chronicler of the adventures, exploits, memoirs, casebooks
and so on of the great detective. As I sit at my Remington
Number Two improved model typewriter (an American
invention, of course) and begin this great labour, I know that
I am likely to fall short of the standards of accuracy and
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entertainment that he maintained to the end. But I have to
ask myself – how could he have got it so wrong? How could
he have failed to notice inconsistencies that would have struck
even the most obtuse police commissioner as glaringly obvi-
ous? Robert Pinkerton used to say that a lie was like a dead
coyote. The longer you leave it, the more it smells. He’d have
been the first to say that everything about the Reichenbach
Fal s stank.
You must forgive me if I seem a touch overemphatic but
my story –
this
story – begins with Reichenbach and what
follows will make no sense without a close examination of the
facts. And who am I? So that you may know whose company
you keep, let me tell you that my name is Frederick Chase,
that I am a senior investigator with the Pinkerton Detective
Agency in New York and that I was in Europe for the first –
and quite possibly the last – time in my life. My appearance?
Well, it’s never easy for any man to describe himself but I
will be honest and say that I could not call myself handsome.
My hair was black, my eyes an indifferent shade of brown. I
was slender and though only in my forties, I was already too
put-upon by the chal enges life had thrown my way. I was
unmarried and sometimes I worried that it showed in my
wardrobe, which was perhaps a little too wel worn. If there
were a dozen men in the room I would be the last to speak.
That was my nature.
I was at Reichenbach five days after the confrontation that
the world has come to know as ‘The Final Problem’. Well,
there was nothing final about it, as we now know, and I guess
that just leaves us with the problem.
So. Let’s take it from the start.
Sherlock Holmes, the greatest consulting detective who ever
lived, flees England in fear of his life. Dr Watson, who knows
the man better than anyone and who would never hear a word
said against him, is forced to admit that at this time Holmes
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is at less than his best, utterly worn out by the predicament in
which he finds himself and which he cannot control. Can we
blame him? He has been attacked no fewer than three times
in the space of just one morning. He has come within an inch
of being crushed by a two-horse van that rushes past him on
Welbeck Street; he has almost been hit by a brick that falls
or is thrown from a roof on Vere Street – and, right outside
Watson’s front door, he finds himself attacked by some good
fellow who’s been waiting with a bludgeon. Does he have any
choice but to flee?
Well, yes. There are so many other choices available to him
that I have to wonder what exactly was in Mr Holmes’s mind.
Not, of course, that he’s particularly forthcoming in the stories,
all of which I’ve read (without ever once guessing the solution,
for what it’s worth). To begin with, what makes him think he
will be safer on the Continent than he will be closer to home?
London itself is a densely knit, teeming city, which he knows
intimately and, as he once confided, he has many rooms (‘five
small refuges’, Watson says) scattered around the place, which
are known only to him.
He could disguise himself. In fact he
does
disguise himself.
Only the next day, after Watson has arrived at Victoria Station,
he notices an aged Italian priest in discussion with a porter
and even goes so far as to offer him his assistance. Later, the
priest enters his carriage and the two of them sit together
face to face for several minutes before Watson recognises his
friend. Holmes’s disguises were so brilliant that he could have
spent the next three years as a Catholic priest without anyone
being the wiser. He could have entered an Italian monastery.
Padre Sherlock
… that would have thrown his enemies. They
might even have let him pursue some of his other interests –
beekeeping, for example – on the side.
Instead, Holmes goes haring off on a journey that seems to
have nothing that resembles an itinerary and he asks Watson
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to accompany him. Why? The most incompetent criminal
will surely work out that where one goes, the other will quite
probably follow. And let’s not forget that we are talking here
about a criminal like no other, the master of his profession, a
man who is equally feared and admired by Holmes himself. I
don’t believe for a minute that he could possibly have under-
estimated Moriarty. Common sense tells me that he must have
been playing another game.
Sherlock Holmes travels to Canterbury, Newhaven, Brussels
and Strasbourg, followed every step of the way. At Strasbourg,
he receives a telegram from the London police informing him
that all the members of Moriarty’s gang have been captured.
This is, as it turns out, quite false. One key player has slipped
through the net – although I use the term ill-advisedly as the
big fat fish that is Colonel Sebastian Moran has never been
anywhere near it.
Colonel Moran, the finest sharpshooter in Europe, was wel
known to Pinkerton’s, by the way. Indeed, by the end of his
career, he was known to every law enforcement agency on the
planet. He had been famous once for bringing down eleven
tigers in a single week in Rajasthan, a feat that astonished
his fellow hunters as much as it outraged the members of the
Royal Geographical Society. Holmes called him the second
most dangerous man in London – all the more so in that he
was motivated entirely by money. The murder of Mrs Abigail
Stewart, for example, an eminently respectable widow shot
through the head as she played bridge in Lauder, was com-
mitted only so that he could pay off his gambling debts at the
Bagatelle Card Club. It is strange to reflect that as Holmes sat
reading the telegram, Moran was less than a hundred yards
away, sipping herbal tea on a hotel terrace. Well, the two of
them would meet soon enough.
From Strasbourg, Holmes continues to Geneva and
spends a week exploring the snow-capped hills and pretty
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villages of the Rhône Valley. Watson describes this interlude
as ‘charming’, which is not the word I would have used in
the circumstances but I suppose we can only admire the way
these two men, such close friends, can relax in each other’s
company even at such a time as this. Holmes is still in fear of
his life, and there is another incident. Following a path close
to the steel-grey water of the Daubensee, he is almost hit by
a boulder that comes rolling down from the mountain above.