examining others suspiciously.
“Sherlock Holmes, I perceive.”
There was a time when Sherlock was almost pleased to see Malefactor. They have a strange sort of connection, similar pasts: both were destined for more than fate gave them. But Sherlock hates him now. The young criminal befriended Irene through him and has taken to deceiving her, pretending that he will allow her to reform him. And this summer, Sherlock is sure, Malefactor tried to kill him. He will never trust the rogue again.
Holmes doesn’t feel particularly threatened as he lies there on the footpath: they are in public, in daylight, and he knows the young boss won’t unleash his thugs where the full force of their brutality can be observed. All the same, when he gets to his feet, he will be careful not to turn his back.
“Anything I should know?” asks the criminal.
“Go away, rat.”
Grimsby accidentally kicks Holmes in the ribs.
“You aren’t in a position to say such things, Jew-boy. Anything I should know?”
There is nothing he wants to tell Malefactor. They have nothing in common now. Sherlock is a crusader for justice, the other a thief; they are natural enemies and shall be forever. That’s why Malefactor wants him dead.
“You are onto a case, I can see by the look in your eye,” smiles the master crook, examining his fingernails, not even glancing down at his opponent. “I am guessing … the Rathbone kidnapping.”
Sherlock says nothing. If Malefactor truly guessed his cause by a look, that means that Irene hasn’t spoken to him yet.
“It is perfect for you. It would gain you the fame you seek, in the cause of …
Grimsby giggles.
“Stay away from it. I am warning you. We do not need more detectives about. Let them wallow in their incompetence. This little career you are considering is a fantasy.”
Sherlock isn’t listening. He’s thinking of Sigerson Bell and his oriental art of Bellitsu.
The boy makes a quick move, rolling to his side, forcing Grimsby downward by driving his shoulder into the other’s calf and seizing the outside of his leg with his arm. In an instant, the young tough is on the ground, groaning, Sherlock looming above him.
There are indeed too many passersby here for the other two to respond with noticeable violence. Sherlock backs up, his eyes on his opponents.
“The child is learning,” says Malefactor.
Sherlock nods.
“I did not try to kill you, you know. Believe me. I am still interested in your progress. I hold out hope that you will come over to our side some day, where the realists are. Your methods are sinister enough. Let me offer some advice as a show of friendship. If you indeed ill-advisedly pursue the Rathbone situation, do so quietly; do it like a thief in the night. Never seek notoriety!”
But Sherlock is running now, up Montague Street toward King’s Cross, his rival’s raised voice fading in the distance. He doesn’t care a fig for Malefactor’s advice anymore. He is sure that that nasty piece of work will try to eliminate him again the instant he gets the chance.
It was his father who first taught him to be scientific, never rash, never a guesser. And that’s what he has been trying to be over the last few months. But this watermark clue is just too enticing. The only approach now is a bold one. He won’t be deterred or slowed down, not by Malefactor, not even by common sense. He is heading north to St. Neots … where he has no idea what he will find.
He spots the huge railway station a long way off, on the north side of Euston Road, an imposing building made of yellow-brown bricks. The clock on its tower tells him that London’s busiest hours are nearing: the crowds are growing. That is good, because it will allow him to lose himself in the flow of people and steal onto a train – there isn’t a farthing in his pocket. He rushes inside through one of the big archways. The noise here, contained and echoing in the great hall, is making it difficult for travelers to even hear themselves speak. He observes the many Bobbies walking in the throngs under the arched ceiling, watching for miscreants.
Just past the front doors he finds a map on a wall, showing the route of The Great Northern. Following its black line up the illustration, he almost cries out when he sees where it goes: just west of Cambridge, right through the little town of St. Neots.
It leaves from Platform 8, the 4:10 to York. He glances at the clock.
He sprints toward the ticket inspector at the gate, who is dressed in a navy-blue uniform, pillbox cap tipped lazily back on his head. That’s whom the boy
The inspector raises the palm of his hand toward Sherlock.
“This gate is closed, lad. The 4:10 is on ‘er run.”
The locomotive’s shrill whistle makes the boy jump.
“But …”
“Best be on your way.”
Sherlock looks past him and sees that the train is beginning to move.
“I asked you to move, lad. What are you lookin’ at?”
The man’s eyes are following Sherlock’s.
“Not a thing, sir.”
As the boy walks away, the official’s gaze follows him with interest. Holmes slips into the crowd.
“Hurry, Constance!” an old, rail-thin gentleman in a chimney-pot hat exclaims beside him in the din. He’s begging his poor wife to get moving. “The train departs in a quarter hour.” She is as plump and prickly as a porcupine, and almost as smelly. She natters at him, huffing and puffing as she waddles forth in layers of heavy clothing, sweating profusely in the cool station.
“Might I be of assistance?” says a porter in an impeccable uniform, who has spotted them from a distance. He is pushing a wooden wheelchair.
“Ah! Yes, my good man. We are bound to Peterborough, on the 4:25, Platform 1. The slow train it is, but our pace of life. These steam horses are fast enough at any speed!”
“Well, just sets yourself down ‘ere in this wheeled chair, madam, and we shall fly to the gate on time.”
The old lady drops with a sigh into the wheelchair. It shudders, and instantly they are off.
It is