London, October 1, 1889
DUQUESNE’S RESTAURANT
1:55 p.m. Tuesday
“SO AM I TO UNDERSTAND THAT YOU HAVE TAKEN A fifteen-year-old girl for a client?” Dr. John H. Watson asked as he watched his teatime companion demolish each dish of eggs, pies, chops, crab bisque, sandwiches, and tea cakes as rapidly as the white-coated waiters of Duquesne’s could bring them to the table.
“Not precisely,” Holmes replied. “I merely did young Miss Roth a good turn. She reminds me a little of Evelina. In fact, she wrote to request the cipher of that clock of theirs. You know the one.”
“Did you give it to her?”
“Why not? It’s their clock. And I have always been of the opinion someone needs to watch Lord Bancroft, even if it is his youngest daughter. She is the last of his children at home, other than her ailing sister. I’d rather Miss Roth knew that she could come to me for assistance.”
And with that, the detective began piling his plate full once more. There was a shocking lack of vegetables involved, but Watson had to concede that getting something inside the Great Detective was better than the chemical substitutes that had been swirling through Holmes’s bloodstream until a few weeks ago.
Alternating bouts of overwork and idleness had led Watson’s old roommate back into the arms of recreational stimulants. The absence of his niece—Holmes behaved himself whenever he assumed his quasi-parental role—had only worsened the problem. The man didn’t require a companion, he needed a leash, and perhaps a wrangler. Fortunately, Watson had learned to provide both without Holmes—for all his vaunted powers of cerebration—figuring it out.
“Shall I order more tea?” he asked brightly.
Holmes tossed his napkin aside and surveyed the wreckage of the tea cakes in a way that called to mind Wellington at Waterloo—satisfaction edged in sorrow at the loss of life. “Perhaps a French coffee. Something strong and bitter to temper the sweetness.”
The man had to have ironclad digestion equal to one of Brunel’s engines. Watson signaled a waiter and placed the order. Holmes picked at the cheese plate.
“Haven’t you eaten enough?” Watson asked.
“There is always room for a good cheddar,” he said around a toothpick.
“I’m beginning to think you are about to go into hibernation. Where in God’s name do you put it all?”
“It is a question of will.”
“Keep it up and it will become a question of dyspepsia.” But Watson managed a piece of Edam all the same.
“I’m glad you’re settling back into Baker Street,” Holmes said, turning his attention to the view outside the window. The restaurant was on the upper level and gave a partial view of Westminster Abbey and the Houses of Parliament beyond. The trees mercifully hid the wound in the Clock Tower.
“I am pleased to be back,” Watson replied, but stopped there.
Things were the same as before, but different. He should have been happy to resume his role as Holmes’s caretaker and scribe—and occasional gunman—but the circumstances of his return weighed heavily on him. He had left Baker Street to marry, but he had returned because Mary had died, leaving his own house echoing with recriminations. What good is a doctor who cannot cure his own wife? What good was a husband who hadn’t even given her the blessings of a family? Some men wouldn’t question such things, but he did. Mary had given him her heart, and he could not help feeling that he had failed.
“You look pensive, my dear Watson.” Holmes closed his eyes and sniffed at the steam rising from his coffee cup. “You need to exercise your mental faculties. I had two excellent cases last June, just waiting for your pen. Do you recall that affair in Boscombe Valley? And the beggar with the twisted lip?”
“Is work always your prescription for the blue devils?”
“It is the absence of mental exercise that will trouble me,” Holmes decreed.
“So you assume I suffer from an absence of material to beat my brain upon?”
Holmes opened one eye, which glittered with sarcastic mischief. “Perhaps not so much as that. Brain beating has never been your forte.”
Watson bridled. He knew he shouldn’t, that he was sure to lose, but he simply couldn’t help himself. “You speak as if a medical doctor never uses his powers of deduction.”
“I do not deny it in the least, my dear fellow. Nevertheless, my observations must range beyond the quantity and quality of what arrives in a patient’s bedpan.”
The doctor choked on his coffee. “Really, Holmes!”
“Tut, don’t be squeamish. I never am. Observe there.”
Holmes flicked a finger toward the window. “See that man with the embossed portfolio under his arm?”
Irritated, Watson turned. “No doubt you will tell me his blood type and place in the Order of Precedence by the exact shade of his hat lint, I will fall down in awe and admiration, and the overweening self-love that springs from your intellectual superiority will be assuaged. And preferably, it will appear in print so that the world might applaud.”
Holmes gave a mild snort. “Ah, Watson, you know me too well. However, it is not hat lint today, but the ribbon pinned on his lapel that interests me.”
“It is red. What does that signify?”
Holmes leaned in, lowering his voice. Their table was in the alcove of the window and away from the other diners, but caution was prudent. “The Scarlet King. The man is a government official, and a highly placed one, judging by the cut of his suit. Only someone who can afford a Bond Street tailor will wear such as that. I’ve seen these ribbons popping up recently and made inquiries. My brother, Mycroft, tells me they’re a mark of allegiance to a member of the Steam Council. This one is red, ergo Scarlet.”
“Why is that significant?” Watson wanted to know. “Merchants have always painted their doors with the color of whatever steam baron is their patron. The gaslight globes are colored depending upon the utility company that supplies them. Is this any different?”
“It appears that the steam barons are forming political cabals. Steam barons in Parliament—and therefore with the ability to create law—would be allowing the fox free access to the chickens.”
“Can the queen or prime minister do anything to stop it?”
Holmes gave one of his lightning smiles, there and gone again in a blink. “I have it on very good authority that Keating Utility holds mortgages on every one of the prime minister’s properties. There will be no help from him.”
Watson pushed away his coffee cup, no longer interested in food. “And the queen?”
“The Steam Council has a long history, dating back to the 1770s and the colonial rebellion. At first, they were no more than a club of like-minded industrialists. Then they grew ambitious. The first time they proved a real threat was just after the Great Exhibition in 1851. I think seeing their inventions in the Crystal Palace went to their heads, but Prince Albert sorted them out quickly enough that time. The council was sufficiently repressed that it has taken over thirty years to rebuild its influence. Unfortunately, Queen Victoria is not in such a strong position now.”
Since the 1850s were before his time, Watson took the history lesson as given—but he wasn’t so sure about Holmes’s last remark. “Why can’t she simply declare them null and void?”
“My dear doctor, they own three-quarters of the aristocracy, lock, stock, and wine cellar. Most, if not all, of the barons have developed secret armies of their own.”
“What?” Watson exclaimed in astonishment.
“And furthermore, she has no means to make her objections stick. She is a woman of advancing years, losing her children one by one. Once she is gone, where is the forceful personality who will ensure the council stays meek and mild? Where is the next generation’s Albert?”
Gloom descended on the table like one of the thick Thames fogs. Watson made a helpless gesture. “So where is this all to end?”
Holmes raised an eyebrow. “You would raise a hand to help our beleaguered queen?”
“Of course. What truehearted Englishman would not?”
“Your loyalty, as always, is beyond reproach. So, thank God, is your marksmanship.”
Statements like that gave Watson a very bad feeling.
“Oh, look,” said Holmes blandly. “Here comes my brother.”
The timing was a little too pat. Holmes had been expecting this. Mycroft, who was every bit as tall as Sherlock but rather wider, strolled up to the table with an indolent swagger. He made a perfect picture of bureaucratic elegance in gray flannel tails, a top hat, and pristine white linens.
“I would like to point out, Sherlock, that you’re at my table,” Mycroft said with a slight fidget. “I reserve this table from two o’clock on. You know my habits are precise.”
“A Mr. Holmes reserves this table,” Sherlock replied, with a smugness only a younger brother in the right can muster. “I merely took advantage of the fact that you were being imprecise. There are other seats to be had.”
“But this is the one I sit at.”
“You could join us,” Holmes suggested.
“I dine alone.”
The brothers were intolerable once they got started. “Look here, Holmes,” Watson broke in. Both Holmeses looked his way. Watson sighed. “We were done eating in any event.”
“That is hardly the point,” said Sherlock, rising from the contested spot. “And I was waiting for Mycroft to appear.”
“Why?” his brother asked suspiciously.
“To advise you that I am taking Watson with me to Dartmoor.”
The doctor pushed away from the table, rising to his feet. “You are?” This was the first he’d heard of it.
“I’ll explain everything to him in due course, but I thought you should know.”
Mycroft raised an eyebrow. “I suppose medical expertise would come in useful, but the decision about the team wasn’t yours to make.”
“My piece of the game,” Sherlock said firmly, “my rules. Come along, Watson, let us leave my misanthropic sibling to his repast.”
“Sherlock,” Mycroft replied, irritation leaking into his tone. “We need to have a conversation about this.”
“In due course, brother mine. Perhaps when it is all over with.” With that, he swept from the restaurant, stopping only long enough to inform the maître d’hôtel that Mr. Mycroft Holmes would be covering their bill.
“I do hate being the youngest,” he purred. “My brother never lets me pay.”
Being a good servant, the maître d’ only bowed.
Watson hurried after Holmes into the fading afternoon. The detective aimed his steps toward the riverbank, where the golden gaslights were already shedding their glow. It was gloomy and growing cold, with a mist already forming over the water.
“I did not follow a word of that exchange,” Watson grumbled. “Dartmoor? What, pray tell, is in Dartmoor?”
“A great many wild ponies, from what I hear,” said Holmes. He swung his walking stick with a jaunty air. The chaos of the street eddied around them, but he seemed oblivious to it. “The game is a-hoof, Watson.”
“We have a case?”
“Indeed. Let me paint for you three facts. One, word has been put about that a dangerous criminal has escaped from the Dartmoor prison, thus giving the excuse for soldiers to roam the countryside without arousing the curiosity of the local population. But it is not a common prisoner they seek. Second, the local baronet, Sir Charles, well known for his philanthropy, was the one to find the escaped convict roaming the moor. A smart and capable old gentleman, loyal to our queen, he had the good sense to raise the alarm with the right people. Third, he has just been found dead. Word has it that he was murdered.”
“There is hardly a case there,” said Watson. “My guess is that Sir Charles died because he helped the convict.”
“In all probability, you are standing closer to the truth than you know—but as always, facing the wrong way.”
“You already know who did it? Where is the entertainment in that?”
Holmes didn’t answer, but flagged down a cab. Once they had climbed inside, he resumed. “I need your literary talents, Watson. I need you to spin something out of these events.”
“I always do.”
“No, I need your invention beforehand.” Holmes fiddled with his walking stick impatiently. “Fiction is your purview. Concoct a reason that I will require my niece to join us. Something supernatural that only her talents can unravel.”
Watson knew little of magic, but he liked Evelina. Nevertheless, his conscience pricked him. “Isn’t that a bit tawdry, Holmes? A man has died. Why use his death as cover for our own purposes?”
“I would not be stretching truth too far if I said more may die unless we can free my niece.”
“Why? How can she prevent death?”
Holmes gave him a dark look. “Humor me.”
Watson made a gesture of surrender. “Very well, then. A family curse perhaps? A banshee?”
“This is Dartmoor, not Scotland.”
“A ghost?”
“Rather dull, don’t you think?”
“I don’t know,” Watson said, growing annoyed. “What do they have there besides ponies? Little shaggy horses don’t make terribly convincing monsters. The Dread Pony of Dartmoor, whickering death to carrots across the—”
“No, it doesn’t quite work, but you’ve got the idea. There are rumors of a savage dog roaming the place. Perhaps you can work with that.”
“Tell me the truth. Is this all a plot to get Evelina free?”
The detective made a face. “I require utter secrecy.”
“Always.”
“This morning I received word from a Miss Emily Barnes, a confidante of the renowned medium Madam Thalassa. Her group is assembling to assist in the dismantling of a laboratory notorious for experimenting on live human subjects without their consent.”
“Wait a moment.” Watson reached across the cab and grabbed his friend’s arm, pulling him close so they would not be overheard. “You’re speaking of Her Majesty’s Laboratories? No one knows where that is.” As soon as he said it, everything fell into place.
Holmes’s gray eyes were hard as flint. “One of their charges escaped. I could regale you with word of their atrocities, but let us say for now that Nellie Reynolds is giving the performance of her lifetime.”
His shock sharper than the cold river wind, Watson let go of Holmes and reeled back against the seat cushions. His wits scrambled to right themselves. Surely this was treason—and yet Holmes’s loyalties were never in question. And then Watson did his mental sums. Sir Charles? “Don’t the Baskervilles live somewhere in Dartmoor?”
Holmes nodded slowly. “A dreadful coincidence, is it not? The murder victim was Sir Charles Baskerville. He found Nellie Reynolds wandering the moors and contacted Madam Thalassa. His adopted son, Edmond, is the one directly involved with a rebellion against the Steam Council. I have been acquainted with Edmond Baskerville for some years.”
Watson’s mouth went dry. “What are you proposing?”
“That we catch a killer, of course, and you make a story about the adventure.”
“And what are we really doing?”
“You are the medical doctor. Is there not an oath to do no harm? Might that promise extend to stopping those who break that oath?”
Watson bowed his head. What Holmes was proposing was insanely dangerous. But then so was the moral damage of ignoring an abomination like the laboratory on the moor. And he was a widower now. He was free to take risks because there was no one waiting at home—just a lot of empty echoes reminding him that he had failed kind and pretty Mary Morstan when the fever took her. “There is an oath. We all swear to uphold it.”
Holmes crossed his long legs. “Then we are going to free my niece and unleash the one thing on the Steam Council that they fear.”
“What is that, Holmes?” Watson feared that he already knew the answer.
“Magic. We are going to free the magic users and burn Her Majesty’s Laboratories to the heath.”
“Magic? You, Holmes?”
“Rebellions are won with logic, but also with passion.”
Rebellion! Cold terror trickled through Watson’s gut. “Won’t that be the next best thing to a declaration of war?”
Holmes gave a smile that was gone in an instant. “I’m afraid that horse has already left the stable—or that pony the moor. No one has admitted it yet, but the war has already begun. And this is the piece of it you and I have agreed to take on.”
Watson folded his arms. He’d seen war already, and he hadn’t much liked it. “I’m glad we had a good luncheon first.”