not comprehend the words before me, partly due to shock, but more because it simply made no sense. I felt as if my brain were moving through tar. My hands laid the paper down on top of the débris of teacups and eggshells and then folded themselves into my lap. I am not certain how long it was before I heard Mycroft speak sharply over my shoulder.

'Miss Russell, what is the matter? Shall I send for more tear I unfolded one hand and laid a finger across the newsprint, and when he had read it he lowered himself into a sturdy chair. I looked over at him and saw Holmes' glittering, intense eyes sunk into a fleshy, pale face, and knew he was thinking as furiously and as fruitlessly as I.

'That is most provocative,' he said at last. 'We were barely in time, were we not?'

'In time for what?' Holmes came into the room fastening his cuffs, his voice edged. Mycroft handed him the paper, and a sibilant whistle escaped him as he read it.

When Watson entered, Holmes turned to him. 'It seems, my old friend, that we owe a considerable and deeply felt thanks to Russell.'

Watson read about his near escape and collapsed into the chair Holmes pushed into the back of his knees.

'A whisky for the man, Mycroft,' but the big man was already at the cabinet pouring. Watson held it unsee ingly. Suddenly he stood up, reaching for his black bag.

'I must go home.'

'You must do nothing of the sort,' retorted Holmes, and took the bag from his hand.

'But the landlady, my papers.' His voice drifted off.

'The article states that no one was hurt,' Holmes said reasonably. 'Your papers will wait, and you can contact the neighbours and the police later. Right now you will go to bed. You have been up all night and you have had a bad shock. Finish your drink.' Watson, through long habit of obedience to the voice of his friend, tipped the liquor down his throat and stood looking dazed. Mycroft took his elbow and led him off to the bed that Holmes had occupied for such a short while the night before.

Holmes lit his pipe, and its slight sough joined the mutter of the traffic below and the indistinct voices from the bedroom down the hall. We were silent, although I fancy the sound of our thinking was almost audible. Holmes frowned at a point on the wall, I fiddled with a piece of string I had found in my pocket and frowned, and Mycroft, when he appeared, sat in the chair between us at the fire, and frowned.

My fingers turned the string into a cat's cradle and made various intricate shapes until I dropped a connexion and held only a tangle of string. I broke the silence.

'Very well, gentlemen, I admit I am baffled. Can either of you tell me why, if Watson was followed here, Dickson would persist in setting the bomb? Surely he couldn't have cared about the house itself, or Watson's papers?'

'It is indeed a pretty problem, is it not, Mycroft?'

'It changes the picture considerably, does it not, Sherlock?'

'Dickson was not operating alone — '

'And he was not in charge of the operation — '

'Or if he was, his subordinates were extremely ineffective,' Holmes added.

'Because he was not informed that his target had left an hour before — '

'But was that deliberate or an oversight?'

'I suppose a group of criminals can overlook essential organisational — '

'For pity's sake, Mycroft, it's not the government.'

'True, a certain degree of competence is required for survival as a criminal.'

'Odd, though; I should not have thought Dickson likely to be clumsy.'

'Oh, not suicide, surely? After a series of revenge killings?'

'None of us are dead,' Holmes reminded him.

'Yet,' I muttered, but they ignored me.

'Yes, that is provocative, is it not? Let us keep that in mind.'

'If he was employed — ' Holmes began.

'I suppose Lestrade will examine his bank accounts?' Mycroft asked doubtfully.

' — and it was not just a whim among some of my old acquaintances — '

'Unlikely.'

' — to band together to obliterate me and everyone close to me — '

'I suppose I should have been next,' Mycroft mused.

' — then it does make me wonder, rather, about Dick-son's death.'

'Accident and suicide are unlikely. Could a bomber's boss bomb a bomber?'

'Pull yourself together, Mycroft,' Holmes ordered sternly.

'It is a valid question,' his brother protested.

'It is,' Holmes relented. 'Can some of your people look at it, before the Yard?'

'Perhaps not before, but certainly simultaneously.'

'Though there will not be much evidence left, if it was tampered with.'

'And why? Dissatisfaction with the man's inefficiency?'

'Or wishing to save a final payment?'

'Makes it difficult to hire help in the future,' Mycroft noted practically.

'And I shouldn't have thought money was a problem, here.'

'Miss Russell's bomb is of the highest quality,' agreed Mycroft.

'It is most irritating that Dickson is no longer available,' Holmes grumbled.

'Which may be why he was removed.'

'But he did not manage to kill us,' Holmes protested.

'Anger at his failure, and determination to use alternate methods?'

'That's encouraging,' I tried, 'no more bombs,' but Holmes ploughed on.

'You're probably right. Still, I should have liked to speak with him.'

'I blame myself. I ought to have put a man to watch immediately, but — '

'You had no reason to assume he would arrive so quickly.'

'No, not after his gap of — '

' — a full day,' supplied Holmes blandly.

' — a full day,' said Mycroft, not looking at me.

'If only I had been able to reach Russell's place earlier — '

I had had enough of this verbal tennis match, so I walked out onto the court and sliced through the net.

'You did not reach 'Russell's place' because Sunday's attempt to blow you into many untidy bits left you unconscious until dusk on Monday.' Holmes looked at me, Mycroft Holmes looked at his brother, and I looked at the string in my hands complacently, like Madame Defarge at her knitting.

'I did not say I was unconscious,' Holmes said accusingly.

'No, and you tried to make me think the bomb went off Monday night. You forget, however, that I have had some experience of the progressive appearance of cuts and bruises, and the wounds on that back of yours were a good forty-eight hours old when I first saw them, not twenty-four. On Monday I was in my rooms until three o'clock, and you did not get into touch with me. Mrs. Thomas laid a fire, presumably at her customary time. Therefore you were still non compos mentis until at least five o'clock. At eight o'clock, however, when I returned, I found Mr. Thomas unnecessarily repairing a light fixture in the hallway outside my door, and as you now tell me he is in your employ, it becomes evident that at some point between five and eight you telephoned him and ordered him to watch my rooms until I returned. And probably after that, as well, knowing you.

'On Tuesday I expect that you would have had Mr. Thomas keep me from my rooms, had you not been determined to make your way up yourself, despite a concussed brain and a raw back. I assume that you intended to arrive somewhat earlier than you did, and Mr. Thomas went off his guard, as he had been told that his services would after that time no longer be required. What held you up, that you did not arrive until six-thirty?'

'Six twenty-two. A positively diabolical series of happenstances. Lestrade was late for our meeting, the matron hid my clothes, the tramp was brought in, and I had to seize the opportunity to arrange a sleight-of-body with the hospital staff, and then when I arrived at the cottage it was swarming with police and I had to wait for

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