Death on a Pale Horse - By Donald Thomas Page 0,141

the Prince Imperial.

“But of course. That is the only small thing?”

“No. Five thousand pounds. It is a small amount for a prince to give.”

“You wish me to give you five thousand pounds?”

“Certainly not! I wish it to be paid into a bank account in Johannesburg, to the credit of Miss Seraphina Heyden, lately released under a free pardon from Praetoria State Prison, having been declared innocent of the murder of Andreis Reuter. It is to go to her and to her child.”

I had the impression that Plon Plon cared less about the money than the thought of paying it to a jailbird.

“And that is all?”

“No, sir.”

Mycroft Holmes, who had arrayed himself for the occasion as Knight Commander of the British Empire, complete with sword and sash, tried to glare his sibling into silence.

“What then?”

“I should like a cheque for one thousand pounds to be paid to the Army Temperance Society for the service they have rendered you. Your property was conveyed safely to you by being packed in four boxes bearing their name and the address of the Military Chaplaincy at Aldershot Garrison.”

Had the prince any idea that the contents of his war-chest had been conveyed to this society while his own royal coffer contained only evangelical tracts? I think perhaps not. Beyond doubt, however, he was relieved to have come to the end of Sherlock Holmes’s demands.

Alas for Plon Plon’s imperial ambitions, they are public knowledge. General Georges Boulanger’s time as a political maverick and champion of the house of Bonaparte was passing. The fickle electorate of republican France drifted away from their allegiance. Boulanger might well have clung on until the tide of opinion changed once more. But his beloved mistress, Marguerite, Comtesse de Bonnemains, fell mortally ill with consumption. Politics and power meant nothing to him then. A few weeks after her death, the general drew up his final testament and shot himself beside her grave in Brussels. In the same year, the ageing Plon Plon also died, and with him the hopes of imperial France.

It was an awkward time in the partnership I had formed with Sherlock Holmes. I had undertaken to consider the purchase of old Mr. Farquhar’s medical practice in Paddington. From time to time, I spent a week or two there as his locum. If I followed this up by purchasing a practice, my work as a physician would surely take up the greater part of my time. Of course I assured Sherlock Holmes that Paddington is hardly more than ten minutes’ walk from Baker Street. I could not promise that I should always be available. As it was, I was merely committed to a further stint of a few weeks as Mr. Farquhar’s locum tenens. Yet I was uneasy. Idle hands may do the devil’s work. I thought of Sherlock Holmes without an investigation to absorb him after the adventure we had just been through—and that infernal cocaine syringe in its morocco case.

How often had I heard those words? “My mind rebels at stagnation. Give me problems! Give me work! Give me the most abstruse cryptogram or the most intricate analysis and I am in my own proper atmosphere.” The alternative I knew only too well. The jacket removed and the shirt-sleeve unbuttoned. The sinewy forearm and wrist dotted with the puncture-marks of the needle.

Such were my thoughts as I made a pretence of reading The Times while drinking my coffee. I had noticed that there was a letter for him this morning, and now he was reading it. He looked up from reading it and chuckled.

“What a small world we live in, Watson!”

Without another word, he handed me a cutting from the Journal for Psychical Research, volume six, pages 116-117. It reprinted a letter forwarded to the editor:

British Institute, 26 Rue de Vienne, Brussels

In the morning of 29 March, after being wakened at the usual hour, I went to sleep again and dreamt the following.

I was staying with a friend by the seaside. The house overlooked the sea. It was a bright clear day. I was close to the wall watching two vessels on the sea. Neither vessel as they neared each other seemed to make room for the other. To my horror, one dashed into the other, cutting her in half. I saw the boiler of the injured vessel burst, throwing up fragments and thick black smoke. I saw passengers hurled into the water, making frantic attempts to save themselves. I noticed hats and other things floating on the water. Suddenly two bodies were washed up at my feet. I woke and it was exactly 8.30 a.m. I could not shake off the feeling of horror I experienced. The same afternoon, news came from Ostend of a terrible catastrophe in the Channel, the Princess Henriette and the Comtesse de Flandre had come into collision that same morning. One had cut the other in half just as I had seen it in my dream. I knew no one on board—but the lady with whom I was staying in my dream had three relatives on board. One was drowned and the other two saved.

Isabella Young.

There was a note enclosed with this.

I beg to confirm that Miss I. G. Young related her dream to me about the collision before we had heard anything of it. The news came that afternoon.

Meliora G. Jenkins, Superintendent,

British Institute, Brussels.

I looked at Sherlock Holmes, uncertain whether or not the whole thing was a joke to him. He beamed at me.

“We have a client! Such a client! Here is a matter far more to my taste than any criminal brotherhood or the baubles of Plon Plon. Here is a challenge to the ingenuity of the scientific mind! I shall write back after breakfast, offering this most intriguing mystery my immediate attention and soliciting the favour of an interview.”

Truth is stranger than any fiction. So the spectre of the narcotic syringe faded. The earth turned on its axis once more. With any luck, there was more than enough intrigue in this case to occupy him until my return from a month as locum tenens in Paddington.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The National Army Museum, London; The Radcliffe Science Library, Oxford; Vita Paladino, Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center, Boston University; Carol Thomas, editorial; Linda Shakespeare, photo credit.

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this ebook onscreen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 2013 by Donald Thomas

Interior design by Maria Fernandez

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Table of Contents

Historical Note

PART I

The Documents in the Case

PART II

The Narrative of John H. Watson, M.D.

PART III

Death on a Pale Horse

Acknowledgements

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