calls ‘the eternal stigmata of divinity.’ Damian was raised without a father, he was injured in the trenches, and the scars on his head might be considered Christ-like. The man in
“Damian explains his art by saying that he became sane by embracing madness, finding beauty in obscenity. The book is both mad and obscene.
“Finally, there is the child's name. He and Yolanda named her Estelle, or star.
“Possibly. On the other hand, Estelle was also the name of my mother. Our mother.”
I turned to stare at him. “Really? I never knew that. Would Damian have known?”
“One should have to ask Sherlock.”
And asking Sherlock would mean opening up this entire can of worms and setting it in front of him with a fork. Neither of us wished to do that without some kind of actual evidence.
We had crossed the Serpentine, where the good cheer of the crowd at the tea house made a mockery of what we were saying.
“What of evidence to the contrary?”
He was not about to admit that my damning list of links between Damian and the book was in any way evidence, certainly not for any court of law. Nonetheless, damning it was.
“First and foremost, it's nonsense. Intellectual trash. I can't think Damian's mind works that way.”
“Unless,” Mycroft said, playing devil's advocate, “the nonsensical nature of the writing is a deliberate choice, aimed at catching the imagination of a certain audience.”
“It's not just intellectual snobbery speaking when I say that it's deeply troubling, and frightening, to think that Holmes' son could produce such a thing.”
“So say the families of any of the world's spectacular murderers.”
“All right, what about this: Holmes has considered the possibility that Damian killed Yolanda, and rejected it.” Mycroft was silent, which constituted an agreement that this was a heavy weight on the side of innocence. “There is also the clothing Yolanda was wearing-an ugly frock, and shoes and silk stockings far too large for her. They were purchased by Millicent Dunworthy, under orders from someone, but there is no indication that she was making the purchase for Damian. In any case, he would have known the size of his wife's feet and the length of her legs.”
“Unless the clothing was intended to deflect suspicion, as well as raise a challenge to his father's intellect.”
There was no arguing with that.
He added, “There is also the possibility that Damian's involvement is secondary. That he plays a peripheral role in… whatever this is we are looking at.”
Nor with that.
“The author of that book,” I answered at last, “whoever he might be, is either a dangerous charlatan, or an even more dangerous psychopath.”
Mycroft said nothing: He was going to make me speak my thoughts to the end.
I went on. “In either case, he would strike one as both plausible and engaging.”
No response, which was the same as agreement. I took a deep breath.
“The question is, could Holmes be duped by such a person?”
“Any man may be duped, if he wishes to believe.”
This time, even a stranger would have heard the pain in his voice. I shook my head, more in denial than in disagreement.
“Yes,” he insisted. “Even my brother. The key to deceit is to find the weak point in one's target.”
“I've only spent a couple of hours in Damian's company, but I have to say, if he is the author of that book, I should look to madness, not duplicity. However-” I had to clear my throat before I could give voice to the end point of this line of thought. “The author of that book is almost certainly responsible for…”
“Where is the child Estelle?” Mycroft said, his voice soft.
Again, I shook my head; this time the gesture was one of despair.
Mycroft drifted to a halt, leaning on his stick to stare unseeing at Kensington Palace. “The one faint ray of light in all this is that, assuming it is tied to the influence of the full moon, we have twenty-three days until the next one. Surely we can lay hands on the young man, given three weeks.”
He is Holmes' son, I thought but did not say aloud. I did not need to, not to Holmes' brother.
Holmes' brother was now, I noticed, staring at me.
“What is it?” I asked.
“Have you eaten today?”
“Yes. I think so. I don't remember.”
“I thought not. You have that stretched look I have seen you wear, when you have not eaten. Surely we can remedy that, at the least.”
And so saying he raised a hand and conjured a taxi.
The brothers Holmes have an irritating habit of being right, and so it proved now with Mycroft and food. Not that a meal rendered the world rosy, but an unstarved brain permitted my near-panic to take a small step away, that I might assemble my thoughts and come up with a plan.
Perhaps my attachment to Holmes made me too ready to condemn the son he had so eagerly clasped to his breast. My suspicions of Damian, though justified, were compounded by my burden of emotions, namely the residual resentments that I had lived with since the 1919 revelation that Holmes had a life from which I was precluded. It was unlikely that I should have a child: That Holmes had one already opened a separation between us.
But it was not merely the bitter edge of envy that set me in opposition to Damian Adler. Holmes had adopted Damian's cause with a wholesale enthusiasm I would not have expected. Under less dire circumstances, I might almost be entertained by the chance to prove Holmes fallible; on the other hand, both experience and loyalty demanded that I throw myself over to Holmes' stance and labour to prove his son's innocence. But Damian's fate rendered the first option repugnant, and Yolanda's death made the second impossible: Were I to join in declaring Damian's innocence, the dead would have no voice.
Scotland Yard, it appeared, were positioned on one side; Holmes and Damian occupied the other: The equation needed a balancing point, a mind committed to cold facts, a heart given only to impartiality.
It was left to me to pursue the middle course of truth: me, and Mycroft.
Holmes had always freely bowed to his brother's superiority when it came to pure observational ability, declaring that his brother's ability to store and retrieve facts was matched by no living man. Mycroft had never come near to Holmes as an investigator, being severely limited by his disinclination to stir beyond his small circuit of rooms, club, and office. However, what I needed now was not an investigator, but a pure retrieval mechanism. It could save me days of tedium amongst the back-issues.
If the moon was at all significant, its meaning might have begun to manifest before the Cerne Abbas possible- suicide in June. When Mycroft was seated in his chair again, glass to hand and fragrant cigar in its ash-tray, I asked him.
“What,” he said, “other murders around the time of full moons? There were none-none worthy of note.”
“Not necessarily murders, but events. For example, Holmes mentioned a dead ram in Cumbria, although it was only another letter by an outraged gentleman-farmer to The Times.”
His light grey eyes fixed on me, slowly losing their habitual vagueness. After a minute, he sat back, laced his fingers across his waistcoat, and let his eyelids drift half closed. I picked up my pen and the block of paper.
“March the twenty-first,” he began, “was a Friday. London saw a death on the Thursday night, a sixty-nine- year-old woman in Stepney run down by a lorry. The lorry driver stopped and was detained, then released because the woman was nearly blind and deaf. On the following day, a man was found dead in an alley off the Old Bethnal Green Road, no signs of foul play, being drunk and it being a wet night. No bodies on the Saturday, although a house in Finsbury that was used as an informal Hindu temple had a rude word scratched on its door.”