Another cheer goes up.
“As to the location, she was found …”
“In St. Neots,” says Sherlock under his breath, “at Grimwood Hall.”
“… on our southern coast.”
The boy nearly drops.
“A perfect place to keep her, mind,” continues Lestrade, “where a sea-going getaway would be simple. But our knowledge of the workings of the criminal brain had caused us to suspect the region beforehand, and we already had elements of the Force in that area. The time between our gaining knowledge of her whereabouts and our arrival on the scene was barely more than an hour. A special locomotive has never moved so quickly!”
“Can you tell us where on the coast?” shouts Hobbs.
“The continuing pursuit of the villains prohibits that, sir. All shall be revealed when we have them in chains.” Lestrade fixes another smile on Sherlock down in the crowd.
But Holmes has stopped watching. His shoulders droop as he moves out through the reporters. Irene follows.
“Sherlock, I’m …”
He picks up his pace and leaves her behind. A tear streaks down her cheek as he walks away from her.
“About my acquaintance with Victoria … I …” she says to herself.
He has failed; failed miserably. There can be no doubt. Lestrade has once again put the bullet into
He wonders for a moment if the police are lying about where they found her. But it wouldn’t matter if they were.
Old Muddle had merely said he
Perhaps he saw a ghost in that haunted house … because he had just observed Victoria Rathbone in London. She was standing there in full public view, in the flesh, right beside her own father and a gloating Inspector Lestrade.
PART TWO
ROBBERY
Feeling ashamed and weak, Sherlock wants to go home. All his plans seem pie-in-the-sky now, far too adult for a boy his age. A detective? Sherlock Holmes? What he really needs, as Penny Hunt said, is his family. But where is home now? Is it the apothecary shop from which he has been away without permission for nearly two days? Will Sigerson Bell take him back? His dear mother is dead, his little sister too, his much older brother employed and distant, and his father … could Sherlock go south to the Crystal Palace and talk to Wilberforce Holmes? He needs his wisdom and love. But it is difficult for his father to even look at him now. Wilber will always be reminded of the death of his wife when he sees his son. Sherlock doesn’t want to put his father through that. The boy knows he has done all of this to himself: this is where his selfish pursuit of glory, his pride, has taken him.
He holds back his tears as he trudges toward Denmark Street. He can’t see Irene, he’s wary of Malefactor and his gang … he is all alone.
Or is he?
The apothecary has been like a father to him before. Perhaps, if he is contrite, the old man will accept his apology. Baring his soul, telling Bell exactly what happened would be difficult, but maybe it is what he has to do. He approaches the latticed bow windows of the little shop with his mind made up.
There’s an awful sound coming from the laboratory at the back when he arrives. But it isn’t one of those terrible explosions he has often heard, the result of Bell’s inventive and reckless mixing and heating of chemicals, that have variously: shaken the building, left slime on the walls, shattered glass, and singed the septuagenarian’s bushy white eyebrows clean off. Neither is it a gunshot, which the boy has occasionally heard in the shop too…. The alchemist sometimes empties his firearms indoors, picking off various ribs or even the eye sockets of his hanging skeletons.
No, it is music … or so Bell thinks.
He is sitting in his favorite basket chair holding his old Stradivarius violin in that awkward, gypsy-styled manner of his: low on a knee. His face is red, sweat pours down his substantial dome onto his forehead, and he is humming at the top of his lungs. Every now and then he stops playing and conducts, flailing his bow through the air. It isn’t that the music is being played so badly: Bell is as strangely gifted a violinist as he is at many other eccentric pursuits. But his sense of invention on the instrument, which goads him into experimenting with all sorts of pieces, new and old, results in admixtures of music at least as bizarre as his dangerous chemical concoctions. It is an alchemy of sounds, resulting in a jarring alloy.
Sherlock doesn’t mind. This is his mother’s favorite instrument.
Sigerson Bell doesn’t hear the boy enter, so when he looks up and sees him, he is so startled that he flings the bow across the room.
“Excuse me, Master Holmes,” he apologizes, scurrying, bent-over in his question-mark shape, to retrieve the implement from the porcelain sink where it has landed.
Then he stops in his tracks.
“YOU!” he says loudly, pivoting with stunning quickness and pointing a crooked finger at the boy, “You are two days late for your work! Where have you been?”
He has never sounded so angry. Has the ancient apothecary run out of patience after all? Is the apprentice about to be sent back to the streets? While Sherlock was away, he had barely given a thought to the fact that he hadn’t told his old friend where he’d gone and that he’d missed school. All he had considered were his own goals.
“My deepest apologies, sir,” says the boy. And he means it.
Sigerson Bell has a heart as soft as a marshmallow. It is especially squishy when it comes to Sherlock Holmes. He admires the boy’s brains and integrity, though he worries about his inwardness and the sadness he doesn’t seem able to shake.
“Solipsistic, that’s you,” says the apothecary, clearing his high-pitched voice. “Look up that word in Dr. Johnson’s dictionary some day, my boy.
“Mr. Bell, I will understand if you –”
“Well, well,” declares the old man, “no need to wallow in past disappointments, get right down into the mud, the … cow dung of regrets … are you well, young man?”
“I have something to tell you.”
Bell smiles in spite of himself. He motions for Sherlock to take a stool at the long lab table and sits on one by his side. He is “all ears” at this moment, bending one of his elephantine lugs in the boy’s direction.
Sherlock tells him almost everything. He includes the way he feels: how, against his better judgment, he tried