'Not what I'd hoped for, no sir. However, after tossing the rest of the joint with no less disappointing returns, as I made my way back through the basement to the casement window wherein I had gained my entrance, I spied a door standing ajar. A mudroom or root cellar, which had escaped my attention on the way in. But wit' me eyes now more accustomed to the darkness, I noticed a shoe inside that door. A boot, to be exact, standing motionless. I could see a pants leg as well, to which said boot was clearly attached. I stood there, still as Nelson's statue, and studied this tableau for a full ten minutes. It was a hobnailed boot, steel around the toe, clean as a baby's bonnet. A very serious boot this was. A boot not to be trifled with. One swift kick to the midsection and your insides are as completely rearranged as a newlywed's furniture. During those ten minutes, that boot never moved. I tossed a penny into that room that in the stillness of that basement sounded like a naval gun salute. Not a twitch. This emboldened me no end. I took the initiative. I opened the door.'
'One of the gray hoods,' said Doyle.
'That it was, sir. Seated on a stool, in the dark, face covered, hands on its knees thusly—'
'It didn't react?'
'To the extent, sir, that my thought at this point was I had
stumbled upon the spoils of some mysterious theft from Madame Tussaud's Chamber of Horrors. This figure before me did absolutely nothing to suggest to my senses that I was sharing this room with a living human being.'
'What did you do?'
'I lit a candle from me pocket in order to carry out a more thorough examination. I cautiously reached out and touched the man's hand. A quick jab, like that. Nothing. I dripped hot candle wax on him. When that failed to win a response, I took out my pigsticker and gave him a nick. Never moved a muscle. But even though that skin was gray and cold as fish on a plate, something in my little brain kept telling me the man was not dead, not in the way of my understanding. Caught a chill, I did. The hair on the back of me neck stood up and said 'ello, and I've been in the presence of the recently departed more than a few times without so much as a never-you-mind. This lay entirely outside of my experience.'
'Did you feel for a pulse or heartbeat?'
'I confess the thought of touching that squiff again was a bit too rich for my blood. I did what I thought the next best thing. I took off the hood.'
'The blue thread—'
'Yes, sir, he did have a line of the blue thread, here, binding the lips, a rough job it was, too, and recent by the look of it—'
'And the eyes?'
'The eyes were closed, but the lids were not sewn shut—'
'Was he breathing?'
'Let him finish, Doyle,' said Sparks.
'I don't know, sir, I didn't really have the luxury to check out that aspect of the situation, you see, 'cause when I got my first good peep at his airs and graces, I realized I knew this fella—'
'You knew him?'
'Yes, sir. Lansdown Dilks, a strong-armer from Wapping, a past master, he was, we all knew him in the life, a very bad character, too. That is until they pinched him cold, breakin' the neck of a shopkeeper in Brixton—'
'He was imprisoned?'
'Imprisoned, convicted of murder most foul, and packed off to prison three years ago. So you can imagine my surprise
to find the old boy in a Mayfair root cellar with his lips upholstered like a windup soldier waitin' for a twist on the key in its back—'
'What did you do?'
'I heard the front door open upstairs. And at the sound of it, Lansdown's eyes opened.'
'His eyes opened?'
'You heard me correct, sir.'
'Did he ... recognize you?'
'That's difficult to say, sir, 'cause I blew out the candle and was out the door, through that window, and halfway down the alley outside before the room got dark. And if I had it to do over, I'd do the same again. Lansdown Dilks was unpleasant enough in his previous incarnation to warrant the strict avoidance of his company; I figure the odds were hard against this new state havin' effected any positive turn in his disposition.'
Doyle couldn't articulate a response. The wind shifted. Clouds were gathering off to the west. It seemed suddenly ten degrees colder. The ship's timers groaned as they crested a wave.
'Whose house was this?' Doyle finally asked.
Sparks and Larry exchanged a guarded look that Doyle intercepted and to which he took immediate exception.
'Good Christ, man!' he said preemptively. 'If I'm the one they're after, I've a right to know. In for a penny, in for a pound—'
'It's for your own protection, Doyle—' protested Sparks.
'A bloody lot of good that's done me! I'm a witness to murder, two murders—three, including Petrovitch—I can't return to my own home, my whole life's undone! And I have the pleasure of looking confidently forward to a life of abject terror until they butcher me like market beef!'
''Easy on, Doctor—'
'I'm either with you, Jack, on the inside of what you know from this moment on, or to hell with you and this whole business—you can put in to shore right now, drop me off, and I'll take my chances!'
Despite his inbred horror of making a scene, Doyle secretly enjoyed the cleansing effect of his outburst. It seemed to unlock a door inside Sparks, although it still remained for the
door to be opened. Doyle took out his revolver and pointed it at the ship's hull.
'You've got ten seconds to make up your mind before I blow a hole in this damn boat, and you'll be lucky if any of us make it to shore,' he said coolly, cocking back the hammer. 'I'm quite serious.'
Larry made a casual reach into his pocket.
'No, Larry,' said Sparks, without looking at him.
Larry removed his hand. They waited.
'Time's up, Jack,' Doyle said, raising the gun, ready to fire.
'The house belongs to Brigadier General Marcus McCauley Drummond. Royal Fusiliers, retired. Put the gun away, Doctor.'
'I'm not familiar with the name,' said Doyle, easing his finger off the trigger but not relaxing the hammer.
'General Drummond's service record was distinguished primarily by its lack of distinction,' said Sparks, in a clipped tone free of asperity. 'His officer's commission was purchased with family money, whereby his inexplicable rise to top rank comes clear: The Drummonds are one of the nation's most prominent munitions manufacturers, our foremost suppliers of bullet and mortar shot. They own plants in Blackpool and Manchester as well as three German companies producing heavy artillery. General Drummond was not a particularly avid consumer of his own inventory; during his twenty years of service no troop under his command ever fired a shot in anger.
'Upon the death of his father six years ago, the General cashiered out and assumed control of the family concern. The aggressiveness that was in such scant supply during his years in service to the Crown found its voice in commerce: Sales and profits have tripled. Last year Drummond married his eldest daughter into the Krupp family of Munich, his most formidable competitor on the Continent. The result is a potential monopoly. The General is now poised to dominate the international as well as domestic market. He is currently negotiating to purchase the company that manufactures the very service revolver you are holding in your hand. Is there anything else you wish to know?'
Doyle released the hammer and lowered the gun.
'What drew your attention to Drummond in the first place?'
'Orders,' said Sparks, managing in a single word to invoke eight hundred years of monarchy, thereby rendering further inquiry in that direction tantamount to sedition.
Doyle was not immune to the potency of such a suggestion. He replaced his gun in the bag and sat down.