The Adventure of the Pharaoh's Curse (The Assassination of Sherlock Holmes Book 1)

BOOK: The Adventure of the Pharaoh's Curse (The Assassination of Sherlock Holmes Book 1)
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The
ADVENTURE
of the

PHARAOH’S CURSE

 

§

 

Book ONE:

The ASSASSINATION of

SHERLOCK HOLMES

 

§

 

CRAIG JANACEK

 

Copyright © 2015 by Craig Janacek

All Rights Reserved

 

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

 

Grateful acknowledgment to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930)

for the use of the Sherlock Holmes characters.

Books by Craig Janacek

 

THE OXFORD DECEPTION

 

THE ANGER OF ACHILLES PETERSON

 

THE MIDWINTER MYSTERIES OF SHERLOCK HOLMES

THE ADVENTURE OF THE MANUFACTURED MIRACLE

THE ADVENTURE OF THE FIRST STAR

THE ADVENTURE OF THE SPANISH SOVEREIGN

(THE GRAND GIFT OF SHERLOCK)

 

THE ASSASSINATION OF SHERLOCK HOLMES

THE ADVENTURE OF THE PHARAOH’S CURSE

THE PROBLEM OF THREADNEEDLE STREET

THE FALLING CURTAIN*

 

THE DR. WATSON TRILOGY

THE ISLE OF DEVILS

THE GATE OF GOLD*

THE RUINS OF SUMMER*

 

*Coming soon on Kindle

 

To Owen

 

I met a traveller from an antique land

Who said: "Two vast and trunkless legs of stone

Stand in the desert. Near them on the sand,

Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown

And wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command

Tell that its sculptor well those passions read

Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,

The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed.

And on the pedestal these words appear:

`My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings:

Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair!'

Nothing beside remains. Round the decay

Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare,

The lone and level sands stretch far away".

 

‘Ozymandias’

Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822)

 

Literary Agent’s Foreword

 

For someone whose life has touched the hearts of so many people throughout the last one hundred and twenty-eight years, Sherlock Holmes’ career ended not with a bang, but a whimper. 

For a brief time, the reading public was convinced that Holmes did meet his glorious, albeit tragic, end in 1891, when he was thought to have nobly sacrificed himself at Reichenbach Falls in order to ensure the destruction of the malevolent Professor Moriarty. However, upon his sensational return from the Great Hiatus in 1894, Holmes threw himself back into a series of cases, some of which showcased the heights of his power, while others were much more commonplace.  These uneven investigations continued until 1903, when Holmes suddenly retired to an estate on the South Downs. After that date, only two more cases have appeared in the official records, one of which detailed a trivial matter that occurred in 1907 near his villa, while the other took place on the eve of The Great War in 1914.  We know from Dr. Watson’s own pen that the mystery of the simian-like Professor Presbury was ‘one of the very last cases handled by Holmes before his retirement from practice.’  But the Canon is curiously silent about the true closing case of Holmes’ official career as the world’s first consulting detective. Did some undisclosed horrible tragedy drive him into premature retirement, or did he deem that some great unrecorded feat of detection was finally sufficient to serve as the capstone to an unprecedented, and to this day unrivaled, career?

It was to reconcile this puzzling debate that I went searching for an account of that lost case which made Holmes resolve that it was time to finally hang up his deerstalker’s cap.  Unfortunately, what I discovered was not that tale. But perhaps these papers contain something equally singular and important in the closure of a career, and even of a life?

I will not bore you with a prolonged narrative of my search. Suffice it to say that it was long and dusty. However, it began with an inspiration that I like to think was worthy of Holmes himself. Much effort has been made by many fine scholars to locate the actual site of Holmes’ retirement villa. The sprinkling of clues in the Canon have been followed with scrupulous care, and strong suspects, such as Birling Manor Farm, between the Seven Sisters and Eastbourne and near Went Hill, have been identified. While this hunt is a worthwhile pursuit on its own merits, it is unlikely to reveal any manuscripts of note. Holmes very rarely bothered to record any literary account of his own cases, and the few instances that have been preserved appear to lack Dr. Watson’s characteristic vigor.  And certainly Watson would not have been likely to send any completed texts to Holmes, not after enduring years of disparagement from his friend about Watson’s overly romantic style of writing.

Therefore, if I wished to locate some other entombed tin box, for the one kept at Cox & Co. surely appears to have been heavily damaged by a bomb  that fell during the Blitz, I must instead turn my eyes to other locales that might hide potential treasure troves. To that end, the question was not ‘Where was the site of Sherlock Holmes’ retirement?’ but rather, ‘Where was the final domicile of his great biographer, Dr. John H. Watson?’

That was the problem that I ultimately solved in order to present these tales to you now. I do not, at the moment, wish to disclose the exact location, in hopes that from some unexplored corner further manuscripts may one day appear. What I unearthed was quite damaged by over a hundred years of damp and rot. Painstaking restoration work was required to bring the pages into a readable condition. In the translation to digital form, a conscious decision was made to adopt American spellings of such words as ‘colour’ and ‘theatre.’ If this seems contrary to the spirit of its original author, the fault is entirely mine. Furthermore, while the papers appear to tell a unified narrative, for reasons known only to Dr. Watson, he decided to separate them into three tales, the individual bundles tied up with decaying red tape. While each tale is enjoyable on its own, they are perhaps enhanced when read as part of the complete story. The story of the way a career ended, not with a whimper, but a bang.

 

§

THE ADVENTURE OF
THE PHARAOH’S CURSE

 

On referring to my notes, I see that it was a mild morning on the last day of October in 1909 when Inspector Lestrade appeared upon my doorstep. The boisterous equinoctial gales of fall had past, leaving the trees in the yard behind my home stripped bare and puddles in the fallow garden. After many years where I imagined that my wounds had fully healed, with the advance of time and the change in the weather, I felt again their once familiar ache. At the time, I was busy in my study with the writing up an adventure from my extensive archive of cases investigated by Sherlock Holmes over the years of our mutual association. Little did I know at the time that the facts of that particular undertaking paled in comparison to the most remarkable and dramatic events that were about to unfold.

I was experimenting with a new technique, which I had adopted after reading about the practice by Mr. Jefferson of Virginia. I was using one of his polygraph machines to simultaneously create a duplicate of the adventure I was documenting. I had sadly learned over the years that banks such as Cox & Co. can be robbed, that residences can catch on fire, and that hounds can on occasion feast upon pages of foolscap. Some manuscripts had already passed out of my possession into the hands of private individuals, but I had firmly determined that those future cases which were not yet ready for publication would be best preserved in duplicate form.

Needless to say, I was quite surprised to look up from this work and find his face peering at me from the other side of my desk. He was dapperly dressed, but the years had not been kind to Lestrade, whose sallow-faced, furtive features in the best of times can only have been described as either bulldoggish or ferret-like, and now appeared most similar to a wrinkled leather sack. Still, while he was not without faults, he was a good man in his own way, and reminded me of some of the fine old days. My wife must have seen him in and bade him wait for a natural pause to my activity, so as to not interrupt the train of my thoughts.

My mustached lips curled upwards at the once-familiar sight of the Scotland Yarder. “Well, well, Inspector, it is a pleasure to see you again. It has been, what, eight years?”

“Indeed, Doctor,” he nodded sadly, his eyes dark. I noted that he wore a light brown dustcoat and leather leggings rather than his official uniform, which I deduced represented his travelling outfit. “I don’t get down to Southsea much, I am afraid.”

“Yes, well I find that it suits me. While the bustle of London’s five millions may be intoxicating to a man of eight and twenty, the charms of the largest city on earth can begin to wear thin when the years start to mount. And as long as I have a Bradshaw’s close to hand, I can always rely upon the remarkable British train system to have me at Waterloo Station in but a shade over two hours, should the London season promise a new exhibition of Expressionists at a Bond Street Gallery, or a singer of great repute at Covent Garden.”

As I spoke Lestrade looked about my study, examining the rows of books upon my shelves. “You’ve done quite well for yourself, Doctor.”

“Yes, well…”

“Don’t get me wrong, Doctor. I daresay you deserve it. You have been instrumental over the years in helping Mr. Holmes bring to justice some right dangerous individuals, who would be a general menace to the peaceful British public if left free to roam the streets.”

“My role has always been a minor one.”

“Perhaps, but who took a bullet for him off the Edgeware Road? Who subdued Colonel Moran when he was about to strange Holmes? Who carried Holmes away from the poisonous clouds of the Cornish Horror? And who dragged him from the burning wreck of the
Friesland
, eh? In any case, I don’t even mention the folks whose suffering you’ve alleviated and whose lives you’ve saved in the course of your original vocation.”

“So what can I do for you, Inspector? Is someone ill?”

“No, Doctor. I am fortunately not here in your professional capacity. But I do need your help. There have been some strange occurrences at the…”

I laughed. “My help? I think not. It is Holmes that you require.”

He signed heavily. “As you might know, Doctor, Mr. Holmes has refused several most princely offers from some of the greatest names in Europe to take up cases again, and on every occasion he has refused. Needless to say, any attempts from the C.I.D. have been rapidly rebuffed. He has made it clear that his retirement is definite and permanent.”

“And you believe that I may be able to induce him to alter his stance?” I laughed. “Holmes has never heeded my opinion before. Why should he change now?”

“He will listen to this story, Doctor, for it is both fantastic and tragic. And I daresay that the tragedy part hits close to home this time.”

I frowned. “I do not know to what you refer, Inspector. However, if your case is such a strong one, then I cannot fathom why you would need my presence?”

“I’ve learned a thing or two from watching Mr. Holmes over the years, Doctor. You are the only one to whom he ever listened,” he said with tenacious persistence.

“I am afraid that I cannot…”

“It is but three hours to Eastbourne,” he interrupted, his tone pleading. “From there we can hire a coach to finish the last few miles to Fulworth.”

The look upon his face was so defeated that I could not but feel for the man. His condescending attitude over the years had rankled at times, but we had once coursed the moors of Devon together. My heart was not as hard as that of Holmes. “Very well, Inspector. I will do what I can.”

And so it happened that I found myself, after six years of quietude, once more flying along in the corner of a first-class carriage,
en route
to see Holmes, and ultimately to witness the onset of another adventure, one perhaps more thrilling than any we had experienced before.

§

Of course, I first rushed downstairs to explain the matter to my understanding wife. I then rapidly perused my overnight bag, ensuring that it was adequately stocked with all of the necessary accoutrements. My recollection of the journey is a pleasant one, for the weather was fine, the train swift, and my companion a reminder of exciting days past. During the ride, I repeatedly attempted to elucidate from Lestrade some details of the case that was so difficult and important that it required drawing Holmes away from his soothing retreat. However, the Inspector only shook his head and replied that it was too sad a tale to have to tell twice, and that he preferred to wait until we were in the presence of Holmes. I shrugged at this unusual reticence from the normally-loquacious Lestrade, but was well used to such treatment at the hands of Holmes, who often withheld facts until they could be presented for the most dramatic effect. Unable to hardly draw another word from Lestrade, I therefore settled myself down in the corner of the carriage, drew my hat down over my eyes, and sank into the deepest of thoughts.

As I have previously documented, Holmes retired to the South Downs in 1904, shortly after the grotesque case of Professor Presbury and his wolf-hound Roy. Although he was but five and fifty years of age, attacks of rheumatism, likely brought on by years of complete and utter disregard for his health, had taken their toll. Furthermore, to his nimble mind, the criminal world had grown commonplace and sterile, lacking all traces of audacity and romance. There was little doubt that he was able to retire comfortably. While it was true that he never varied his fees, save when he chose to remit them entirely, that is not to say that he never raised the base level as the years passed and one century slipped into another. As Holmes’ fame spread, his paying clients increasingly came from the cream of London’s society and the great royal houses of Europe. I therefore have it on good confidence that Holmes comfortably draws an income of over nine hundred pounds a year, with his primary expenditure the maintenance of his bee-keeping apparatus.

Although he had considered both the valleys of Surrey and the moors of the Cornish peninsula, Holmes eventually settled upon the Downs for reasons he has so-far neglected to share. I thought that perhaps it was because the tranquil beauty of the place was a perfect counterpart to his intrinsic grim humor. His estate was magnificently situated so as to command a view of the Channel, and what was once a small farm had principally been allowed to turn fallow. Only one small clearing near his villa was maintained in order to serve as the lair of his arthropod companions. Excepting myself, I was unaware that Holmes had any particular friends who might call upon him. Here amid his books, he lived what I thought must be a lonely life, but it seemed to suit Holmes’ simple wants and eccentric needs.

Much to our surprise, Holmes was not at home when Lestrade and I arrived. We were met by his old housekeeper Martha, who looked exceptionally flustered at the appearance of unexpected guests. My explanation of pressing matters which precluded the sending of a telegraph announcement fell upon deaf ears.

“I am sorry, sirs, but he is out walking,” said the housekeeper tersely. “Do you wish to wait?” She motioned diffidently to the sofa in the sitting room. “Mr. Holmes doesn’t much encourage visitors.”

While I myself had stopped in many times before, I still could hardly reconcile the tidy status of Holmes’ current accommodations with his Bohemian habits from the days that we shared a flat in Baker Street. Every item was neatly in its place, with nary a reeking chemical experiment or bullet hole in sight. I recognized some scientific charts which, along with some books, appeared to be the only objects that had travelled with him from 221B. Although Holmes would have denied it, I always suspected that Holmes had a considerable artistic side to his nature, and this tendency had finally manifested itself with a line of well-chosen modern water-colors and some very choice etchings that were hung neatly on the walls.

Fortunately, Lestrade and I had not a long delay to our mission, for I soon heard rustling on the soft gravel walk which could only come from the distinctive loping gait belonging to my friend. Before he could even come into view, the high, somewhat strident tones of his precise voice called out, “I was wondering who you would bring for support, Lestrade. My first hypothesis was the Home Secretary, and I half suspected you might try to enlist the Premier himself.”

“How did you know it was me, Mr. Holmes?” Lestrade asked.

Holmes’ eager, clear-cut face appeared from around the corner, but the paleness to which I had grown accustomed over our long acquaintance in the fogs of Baker Street had vanished under a healthy glow of the countryside. He threw his loose-limbed figure into the chair opposite us and let out a dry chuckle that was as near a thing to a laugh as ever passed his lips. “When I spot in my pathway a boot-print with the left foot twisted inwards, and suddenly smell the distinctive 4711
Eau de Cologne
, surely it can only mean that the celebrated Inspector Lestrade has honored me with another visit, however futile his errand. I must admit, however, that this dragooning of Watson is a novel tactic of which I much approve. It has been far too long since his previous week-end visit.” He turned to me. “My dear Watson, I am delighted to find you on my step.”

“It is good to see you too, Holmes,” said I, shaking him warmly by the hand.

“And, Lestrade, by my calculations, it has been three months, one week, and five days since you last attempted to coax me back to London with some seemingly ‘impossible’ case. You might think that after a span of six years that you would have learned that my answer has not varied. Fortunately, you always seem to manage to solve them in the end, even if it takes you far longer than it really should. For example, you handled the Porter Murder with less than your usual, that’s to say, you handled it fairly well. I suppose congratulations are in order.”

“It was Tooley.”

“Of course it was Tooley, Holmes said acerbically. “That much was plain from a simple reading of the agony columns of the
Daily Telegraph
.”

“And where have you been, Holmes?” I asked, hoping to spare the poor Inspector any further brunt of Holmes’ ill-concealed scorn.

“If you must know, Watson, I was engaged on my daily excursion. It is a delightful day, so I strolled out to enjoy the superb air. The sea air, the sunshine, what else does a man require? We walked along the cliff path which, as you know leads, via a steep descent, down to the beach. But as the tide was in, we did not descend, and simply skirted the cliffs.”

“‘We?’” I inquired, hopefully. “Were you accompanying someone on this walk?”

Holmes snorted. “Merely a figure of speech, Watson. But look around you,” he gestured to the windows which opened out onto the view of the fields and the brilliant blue sky. “Why should I ever leave the salubrious airs and soothing life of my little Sussex home for the choking fumes and deep gloom of London?” He shook his head. “No, I have no desire to immerse myself back into the bustle of these feverish days.”

“But, Mr. Holmes, only you can bring light to this darkness!” Lestrade interjected.

Holmes sighed. “Really, Lestrade. I think you have been reading too much of Watson’s embellished tales. For the most part, the London criminal has been a dull fellow ever since the death of the unlamented Professor Moriarty. Yes, after my return from abroad we handled several cases not without interest, but for the most part, there was nothing that had not been done before. But I suppose you will not leave until I have at least heard you out and pointed you in the right direction to solve your trivial matter, eh?”

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