Vonda N. McIntyre
Holmes laughed like a Bedlam escapee.
Considerably startled by his outburst, I lowered my Times,
where I had been engrossed in an article about a new geometrical pattern
discovered in the fields of Surrey. I had not yet decided whether to bring it
to Holmes’s attention.
“What amuses you so, Holmes?”
No interesting case had challenged Holmes of late, and I
wondered, fearfully, if boredom had led him to take up, once again, the habit
of cocaine.
Holmes’ laughter died, and an expression of thoughtful
distress replaced the levity. His eyes revealed none of the languorous
excitement of the drug.
“I am amused by the delusions of our species, Watson,”
Holmes said. “Amusing on the surface, but, on reflection, distressing.”
I waited for his explanation.
“Can you not discern the reason for my amusement, Watson —
and my distress? I should think it perfectly obvious.”
I considered. Should he encounter an article written
particularly for its humorous content, he would pass straight over it, finding
it as useless to him as the orbits of the planets. The description of some
brutal crime surely would not amuse him. A trace of Moriarty would raise him to
anger or plunge him into despair.
“Ah,” I said, certain I had divined the truth. “You have
read an account of a crime, I beg your pardon, the resolution of a
crime, and you have seen the failings in the analysis. But,” I pointed out,
somewhat disturbed by my friend’s indifference to the deeper ramifications,
“that would indicate the arrest of an innocent victim, Holmes. Surely you
should have some other reaction than laughter.”
“Surely I should,” Holmes said, “if that were the
explanation. It is not.” He shook the paper. “Here is a comment by Conan Doyle
on Houdini’s recent performance.”
“Quite impressive it was, too,” I said. “Thrilling, I would
say. Did Sir Arthur find the performance compelling?”
“Conan Doyle,” Holmes said with saturnine animosity,
“attributes Houdini’s achievements to — ” Holmes sneered — ”‘mediumistic powers’.”
“His achievements do strain credulity,” I said mildly.
“Pah!” Holmes said. “That is the point, Watson, the
entire and complete point! Would you pay good money to see him fail
to escape from a sealed coffin?”
“I suppose that I would not,” I admitted.
“Were Houdini to tell you his methods, you would reply, ‘But
that is so simple! Anyone could achieve the same effect — using your methods!’“
As Holmes often heard the same remark after explaining his
methods, I began to understand his outburst.
“I would say nothing of the sort,” I said mildly. “I should
say, instead, that he had brought the technique of stage magicianship to as
near an exact science as it ever will be brought in this world.”
Holmes recognized my comment with a brief smile, for I had
often said as much to him about his practice of detection.
“But it is true, Watson,” Holmes said, serious once more. “Anyone
could achieve the same effect — were they willing to dedicate their
lives to developing the methods, to studying the methods, to perfecting the
methods! Then it is ‘so simple’.”
When Holmes deigned to lead an amazed observer through his
deductive reasoning, the observer’s reaction was invariably the same: His
methods were “perfectly obvious”; anyone, including the observer, could
duplicate them with ease.
“Conan Doyle claims friendship with Houdini,” Holmes said in
disgust, “and yet he insults his friend. He dismisses Houdini’s hard work and
ingenuity. Despite Houdini’s denials, Conan Doyle attributes Houdini’s success
to the supernatural. As if Houdini himself had very little to do with it! What
a great fool, this Conan Doyle.”
“Easy on,” I said. “Sir Arthur is an intelligent man, a
brave man. An inspired man! His imagination is every bit as exalted as that of
Wells! His Professor Challenger stories compare favorably to War of the
Worlds — !”
“I never read fiction,” Holmes said. “A failing for which
you berate me continually. If I did read fiction, I would not doubly waste my
time with the scientific romances you find so compelling. Nor am I interested
in the mad fantasies of a spiritualist.” Holmes scowled through a dense cloud
of pipe smoke. “The man photographs fairies in his garden.”
“You are too much the materialist, Holmes,” I said. “With my
own eyes I saw amazing things, unbelievable things, in Afghanistan — ”
“Ancient sleight of hand. Snake charming. The rope trick!” He
laughed again, though without the hysterical overtones of his previous
outburst. “Ah, Watson, I envy you your innocence.”
I was about to object to his implications when he stayed my
comment by holding up one hand.
“Mrs. Hudson — ”
“ — with our tea,” I said. “Hardly deserves the word
‘deduction,’ as her footsteps are plainly audible, and it is, after all,
tea-time — ”
“ — to announce a client.”
Mrs. Hudson, our landlady, knocked and opened the door. “Gentleman
to see you, Mr Holmes,” she said. “Shall I set an extra cup?”
The figure of a man loomed behind her in the shadows.
“Thank you, Mrs. Hudson,” Holmes said. “That would be most
kind.”
Mrs. Hudson placed a calling card on the tray by the
doorway. Holmes rose to his feet, but did not trouble to read the card. As our
visitor entered I rose as well, and made to greet him, but Holmes spoke first.
“I observe, Dr Conan Doyle,” Holmes said coolly, “that you
were called abruptly into the fields, and have spent the morning investigating
the mystery of the damaged crops. Investigating without success, I might add. Has
a new field theorem appeared?”
Conan Doyle laughed heartily, his voice booming from his
powerful chest.
“So you’ve introduced me already, John!” he said to me. “You
were looking out the window when my carriage arrived, I’ve no doubt.” He smiled
at Holmes. “Not such a clever deduction, Mr Holmes.” He wrinkled his noble brow
and said to me, “But how did you know I’ve just come to town, and how did you
know of my involvement with the field theorems?”
“I’m afraid I had no idea you were our visitor, Sir Arthur,”
I said. “I did not even know we had a visitor until Holmes surmised your
approach.”
Sir Arthur chuckled. “I understand,” he said. “Bad manners,
revealing the tricks of the trade. Even those as simple as prior knowledge.”
Holmes concealed his annoyance; I doubt anyone who knew him
less well than I would have noticed it. He gazed steadily at Sir Arthur. We
seldom had visitors taller than Holmes, but Sir Arthur Conan Doyle exceeds six
feet by four inches. Unlike my friend Holmes, who remained slender, indeed
gaunt, even during his occasional periods of slothful depression, Sir Arthur
dominated the room with his hearty presence.
“How did you know about our visitor, Holmes?” I
asked, trying to salvage the introductions.
“I heard Sir Arthur’s carriage arrive,” he said
dismissively, “as you would have done had you been paying attention.”
Though somewhat put off by his attitude, I continued. “And
Sir Arthur’s outing? His identity?”
“My face is hardly unknown,” Sir Arthur said. “Why, my
likeness was in the Times only last week, accompanying a review-”
“I never read the literary section of the Times,”
Holmes said. “As Watson will attest.” He pointed the stem of his pipe at Sir
Arthur’s pants cuffs. “You are a fastidious man, Sir Arthur. You dress well,
and carefully. Your shave this morning was leisurely and complete. Your
moustache is freshly trimmed. Had you planned your excursion, you would surely
have worn suitable clothing. Therefore, your presence was required on short
notice. You have wiped the mud of the fields from your boots, but you have left
a smear on the polish. You have confronted a puzzle that has distracted you
from your customary appearance, which I can easily see — anyone could easily
see! — is impeccable. As to the nature of the puzzle, unripe seed-heads of Triticum
aestivum have attached themselves to your trousers cuffs. I am in no doubt
that you investigated the vandalism plaguing fields in Surrey.”
“Amazing,” Conan Doyle whispered, his ruddy face paling. “Absolutely
amazing.”
I could see that Holmes was both pleased by Conan Doyle’s
reaction, and surprised that Sir Arthur did not laugh again and announce that
his methods were simplicity itself.
Holmes finished his recitation. “That you have failed to
solve the mystery is self-evident — else why come to me?”
Sir Arthur staggered. Leaping forward to support him, I
helped him to a chair. I was astonished to perceive any weakness in a man of
his constitution. He was quite in shock. Fortunately, Mrs. Hudson chose that
moment to arrive with the tea. A good hot cup, fortified with brandy from the
sideboard, revived Sir Arthur considerably.
“I do apologize,” he said. “I’ve spent the morning in the
presence of strangeness beyond any I’ve ever before witnessed. As you divined,
Mr Holmes, the experience has distracted me. To perceive your supernatural
talents so soon thereafter — !”
He took a deep draught of his tea. I refilled his cup,
including rather more brandy. Sir Arthur sipped his tea, and let warm, pungent
steam rise around his face. His colour improved.
“‘Supernatural’?” Holmes mused. “Well-honed, certainly. Extraordinary,
even. But not in the least supernatural.”
Sir Arthur replied. “If John did not tell you who I am, and
you did not recognize my face, then you could only have discovered my name by —
reading my mind!”
“I read your name,” Holmes said dryly, “from the head of
your walking-stick, where it is quite clearly engraved.”
oOo
Since the end of spring, the newspapers had been full
of articles about mysterious damage to growing crops. Wheat stalks were crushed
in great circles intersected by lines and angles, as if a cyclone had touched
down to give mere humans a lesson in celestial geometry. Though the phenomena
were often accompanied by strange lights in the sky, the weather was invariably
fair. If the lights were lightning, it was lightning unaccompanied by thunder! No
wind or rain occurred to cause any damage, much less damage in perfect
geometrical form.
Many suggestions had been put forth as to the cause of the
unexplained diagrams, from hailstorms to electromagnetic disturbances, but
blame had not yet been fixed. The patterns were the mystery of the year; the
press, in a misinterpretation of modern physics in general and the theory of
Maxwell in particular, had taken to calling the devices “field theorems”
Holmes had clipped and filed the articles, and painstakingly
redrawn the figures. He suspected that if the patterns were the consequence of
a natural force, some common element could be derived from a comparison of the
designs.
One morning, I had come into the sitting-room to find him
surrounded by crumpled paper. The acrid bite of smoke thickened the air, and the
Persian slipper in which Holmes kept his shag lay overturned on the mantel
among the last few scattered shreds of tobacco.
“I have it, Watson!” Holmes had waved a drawing, annotated
in his hand. “I believe this to be the basic pattern, from which all other
field theorems are derived!”
His brother, Mycroft, speedily dismantled his proof, and
took him to task for failing to complete several lemmas associated with the
problem. Holmes, chagrined to have made such an elementary (to Holmes), and
uncharacteristic, mistake, appeared to lose interest in the field theorems. But
it was clear from his comments to Sir Arthur that they had never completely
vanished from his attention.
oOo
After packing quickly, Holmes and I accompanied Sir
Arthur to the station, where we boarded the train to Undershaw, his estate in
Hindhead, Surrey.
“Tell me, Sir Arthur,” Holmes said, as our train moved
swiftly across the green and gold late-summer countryside, “how came you to be
involved in this investigation?”
I wondered if Holmes were put out. The mystery had begun in
early summer. Here it was nearly harvest-time before anyone called for the
world’s only consulting detective.
“It is my tenants who have been most troubled by the
phenomena,” said Sir Arthur, recovered from his earlier shock. “Fascinating as
the field theorems may be, they do damage the crops. And I feel responsible for
what has happened. I cannot have my tenants lose their livelihoods because of
my actions.”
“So you feel the vandalism is directed at you,” said I. Sir Arthur
had involved himself in several criminal cases, generally on the side of a
suspect he felt to be innocent. His efforts differed from those of Holmes in
that Holmes never ended his cases with ill-advised legal wrangles. No doubt one
of Sir Arthur’s less grateful supplicants was venting his rage against some
imagined slight.
“Vandalism?” Sir Arthur said. “No, this is far more
important, more complex, than vandalism. It’s obvious that someone is trying to
contact me from the other side.”
“The other side?” I asked. “Of Surrey? Surely it would be
easier to use the post.”
Sir Arthur leaned toward me, serious and intense. “Not the
other side of the country. The other side of... life and death.”
Holmes barked with laughter. I sighed quietly. Intelligent
and accomplished as my friend is, he occasionally overlooks proprieties. Holmes
will always choose truth over politeness.
“You believe,” Holmes said to Sir Arthur, “that a seance
brought about these field theorems? The crushed crops are the country
equivalent of ectoplasm and levitating silver trumpets?”
The scorn in Holmes’s voice was plain, but Sir Arthur
replied calmly. He has, of course, faced disbelief innumerable times since his
conversion to spiritualism.
“Exactly so,” he said, his eyes shining with hope. “Our
loved ones on the other side desire to communicate with us. What better way to
attract our attention than to offer us knowledge beyond our reach? Knowledge
that cannot be confined within an ordinary seance cabinet? We might commune
with the genius of Newton!”
“I did not realize,” Holmes said, “that your family has a
connection to that of Sir Isaac Newton.”
“I did not intend to claim such a connection,” Sir Arthur
said, drawing himself stiffly upright. Holmes could make light of his spiritual
beliefs, of his perceptions, but an insult to the familial dignity fell beyond
the pale.
“Of course not!” I said hurriedly. “No one could imagine
that you did.”
I hoped that, for once, Holmes would not comment on the
contradiction inherent in my statement.
Holmes gazed with hooded eyes at Sir Arthur, and held his
silence.
“It’s well known that entities from diverse places and times
— not only relatives — communicate from the other side,” I said. “How
extraordinary it would be, were Isaac Newton to return, after nearly two
centuries of pure thought!”
“‘Extraordinary’,” Holmes muttered, “would hardly be the
word for it.” He fastened his gaze upon Sir Arthur. “Dr Conan Doyle,” he said,
“if you believe spirits are the cause of this odd phenomenon — why did you
engage me to investigate?”
“Because, Mr Holmes, if you cannot lay the cause to
any worldly agent, then the only possible explanation is a spiritual one. ‘When
you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable,
must be the truth’! You will help me prove my case.”
“I see,” Holmes said. “You have engaged me to eliminate
causes more impossible than the visitations of spirits. You have engaged me...
to fail.”
“I would not have put it so,” Sir Arthur said.
The trip continued in rather strained silence. Sir Arthur
fell into a restless doze. Holmes stared at the passing landscape, his long
limbs taut with unspent energy. After an eternity, we reached the Hindhead
station. I roused Sir Arthur, who awoke with a great gasp of breath.
“Ma’am!” he cried, then came to himself and apologized most
sincerely. “I was dreaming,” he said. “My dear, late mother came to me. She
encourages us to proceed!”
Holmes made no reply.
Sir Arthur’s carriage, drawn by a pair of fine bays, awaited
us.
“The automobile can’t be started, sir,” the driver said. “We’ve
sent to London for the mechanic.”
“Very well, James,” Sir Arthur said. He shook his head as we
climbed into the carriage. “The motor was quite astonishingly reliable when
first I bought it. But recently it has broken down more often than it has run.”
The comment drew Holmes’s attention. “When, exactly, did it
begin to fail?”
“Eight weeks past,” Sir Arthur said.
“At the same time the field theorems began to appear,”
Holmes said thoughtfully.
Sir Arthur chuckled. “Why, Mr Holmes, surely you don’t
believe the spirits would try to communicate by breaking my autocar!”
“No, Sir Arthur, you are quite correct. I do not believe the
spirits would try to communicate by breaking your autocar.”
“Merely a coincidence.”
“I do not believe in coincidences.”
Holmes was anxious to inspect the field theorems as soon as
we arrived at Undershaw, but by then it was full dark. Sir Arthur showed the
strain of a long and taxing day. He promised that we should leap out of bed
before dawn and be at his tenant’s field as the first rays of the morning sun
touched the dewdrops of night.
And so we did; and so we were.
The descriptions and newspaper engravings of the field
theorems did not do justice to the magnitude of the patterns. We stood on a
hillside above the field to gain an overview of the damage. Three wide paths,
perfectly circular and perfectly concentric, cut through the waving stalks of
grain. A tangent, two radii, and a chord decorated the circles. I had to admit
that the pattern resembled nothing so much as the proof of some otherworldly
geometric proposition.
“The theorems appear only in wheat fields,” Sir Arthur said.
“Only in our most important crop. Never in fields of oats, nor in Indian corn.”
Holmes made an inarticulate sound of acknowledgment.
We descended the hill, and Holmes entered the field.
Sir Arthur looked after him. “John,” he said to me, “will
your friend admit it, if he can find no natural explanation?”
“His allegiance is to the truth, Sir Arthur,” I said. “He
does not enjoy failure — but he would fail before he would propose a solution
for which there were no proof.”
“Then I have nothing to worry about.” He smiled a bluff
English smile.
Holmes strode into the swath of flattened green wheat,
quartering the scene, inspecting both upright and crushed stalks, searching the
hedgerows. He muttered to himself, laughed and snarled; the sound crossed the
field like a voice passing over the sea. He measured the path, the width of the
stalks left standing, and the angles between the lines and curves.
The sun crept into the clear sky; the day promised heat.
“Can you feel it?” Sir Arthur said softly. “The residual
power of the forces that worked here?” He stretched out his hands, as if to
touch an invisible wall before him.
And indeed, I felt something, though whether it was energy
spilled by unimaginable beings, or the Earth’s quiet potential on a summer’s
day, I could not tell.
While Sir Arthur and I waited for Holmes to finish his
search, a rough-shod man of middle years approached.
“Good morning, Robert,” Conan Doyle said.
“Morning, Sir Arthur,” Robert replied.
“Watson, this is one of my tenants, Robert Holder.”
Robert’s work clothes were shabby and sweat-stained. I
thought he might have taken more care with his appearance, when he came to
speak to his landlord.
To Robert Sir Arthur said, “Mr Holmes and Dr Watson have
come to help us with our mystery.”
“Mr Holmes?” Robert exclaimed.
He glanced out into the field, where Holmes continued to
pace and stoop and murmur.
“And you’re Dr Watson?” Robert’s voice rose with the shock
of finding himself in the presence of celebrity. “Why, it’s a pleasure to meet
you, sir,” he said to me. “My whole family, we read your recountings in the
evenings. The children learned their letters, sitting in my lap to listen to
your tales.”
“Er... thank you,” I said, somewhat nonplussed. Though he
was well-spoken for a farmer, I would not have marked him as a great reader;
and, more, I consider the perils encountered by Holmes to be far too vivid for
impressionable young children. However, it was not my place to correct Robert’s
treatment of his offspring, particularly in front of his landlord.
“Have you found the villains?” Robert asked. “The villains
who have crushed my best wheat field!”
Holmes strode across the field and rejoined us, a frown
furrowing his brow. He appeared not even to notice the presence of Sir Arthur’s
tenant.
“Useless,” Holmes said. “Perfectly useless! Here, the artist
stood to sketch the scene.” He flung his hand toward a spot where white dust
covered the scuffed ground. “And there! A photographer, with his camera and
flash powder. Fully six reporters and as many policemen trampled whatever
evidence might have been left.” He did not pause to explain how he could tell
the difference between the footprints of reporters and those of policemen. “And,
no doubt, when the sightseers arrive by the next train — ”
“I can easily warn them off,” Sir Arthur said.
“To what purpose? The evidence is destroyed. No! I could
conjecture, but conjecture is only half the task. Proof, now; that’s a
different story.”
He glared out into the field as if it had deliberately
invited careless visitors to blur the story written there.
“If only,” Holmes said softly, “the scene were fresh.”
He turned abruptly toward Robert. He had taken the measure
of the man without appearing to observe him.
“You saw the lights,” Holmes said. “Describe them to me.”
“Are you Mr Holmes?”
I blushed to admit, even to myself, that the rough farmer
had a better respect for common manners than did my friend.
“Of course I am. The lights.”
“The night was calm. A bit of fog, but no rain, no storms. I
heard a strange noise. Like a musical instrument, but playing no melody I ever
heard. And eerie... It put the chills up my back. Made the baby cry. I went
outdoors — ”
“You were not frightened?”
“I was. Who would not be frightened? The Folk have fled London, but they still live in the countryside, in our hearts.”
“You are a scholar and a folklorist,” Holmes said without
expression.
“I know the stories my family tells. Old stories. The Folk
— ”
“The faerie folk!” Sir Arthur said. “I’ve seen photographs
— they do exist.”
“The Folk,” Robert said, neither agreeing nor disagreeing
with Sir Arthur. “The ones who lived in this land before us.”
“The lights, man!” Holmes said impatiently.
“At first I saw only a glow against the fog. Then — a ring
of lights, not like candles, flickering, but steady like the gaslights of the
city. All different colours. Very beautiful.”
“Foxfire,” Holmes said.
“No, sir. Foxfire, you see it in the marsh. Not the field. It’s
a soft light, not a bright one. These lights, they were bright. The circle
spun, and I thought — ”
He hesitated.
“Go on, man!”
“You’ll think I’m mad.”
“If I do, I shall keep it to myself.”
Robert hesitated. “I thought I saw... a huge solid object,
floating in the sky like a boat in the water.”
“A flying steamship?” I said.
“An aeroplane,” said Sir Arthur. “Though I would have
thought we’d hear of a pilot in the area.”
“More like a coracle,” Robert said. “Round, and solid.”
“Did you hear its motor?” Holmes asked. “A droning, perhaps,
or a sound like the autocar?”
“Only the music,” said Robert.
“I’ve never known an apparition to make a sound like a
motorcar,” Sir Arthur said.
“What happened then?” said Holmes. “Where did it go, what
did it do?”
“It rose, and I saw above it the stars, and Mars bright and
red in the midst of them.” Robert hesitated, considered, continued. “Then the
lights brightened even more, and it vanished in a burst of flame. I felt the
fire, smelled the brimstone — At first I thought I was blinded!”
“And then?” Holmes said.
“My sight returned, and the fog closed around me.”
“What have you left out?” Holmes asked sternly. “What
happened afterwards?”
Robert hesitated, reluctance and distress in every line of
his expression.
“The truth, man,” Holmes said.
“Not afterwards. Before. Before the coracle
disappeared. I thought I saw... a flash of light, another flash.”
“From the coracle?”
“From the sky. Like a signal! White light, white, not red,
from... from Mars!” He drew in a deep breath. “Then the coracle replied, and
vanished.”
I managed to repress my exclamation of surprise and wonder. Holmes
arched one eyebrow thoughtfully. Sir Arthur stroked his mustache.
“Thank you for your help, Robert,” Sir Arthur said as if
Robert had said nothing out of the ordinary. “And your good observation.”
“Sir Arthur,” Robert said, “may I have your permission to
salvage what I can from the field? The grain can’t be threshed, but I could at
least cut the stalks for hay.”
“By no means!” Sir Arthur roared in alarm.
Robert stepped back, surprised and frightened.
“No, no,” Sir Arthur said, calming himself with visible
effort.
“Sir — !”
I was astonished by the tone of protest in which Robert
addressed the landowner.
“It’s imperative that no one enter the field!” Sir Arthur
said. “The pattern mustn’t be disturbed till we understand its meaning.”
“Very well, Sir Arthur,” Robert said reluctantly.
“And set little Robbie and his brothers to keeping the
sightseers out of the patterns. They may walk around the edge, but under no
circumstances may they proceed inside.”
“But, Sir Arthur, this field, every year, has paid your
rent. This field keeps the roof over my family’s head! Sir Arthur, the crop
prices have been low going on two years — ”
I did not blame him for his distress, and he was fortunate
that Sir Arthur is a humane and decent gentleman.
“You’ll not worry about the rent,” Sir Arthur said. “I
relieve you of the obligation for this year.”
On Robert’s open face, gratitude and obligation warred.
“I cannot accept that offer, Sir Arthur,” he said, “generous
though it is, and grateful though I am to you for making it. You and I, we have
an agreement. I cannot take charity.”
Sir Arthur frowned, that his tenant would not accept such a
simple solution to the difficulty.
“We’ll discuss this another time,” Sir Arthur said. “For the
moment, keep the sightseers out of the field.” His tone brooked no
disagreement.
Robert touched the bill of his ragged cap in acquiescence. We
returned to Sir Arthur’s mansion, where his gracious wife Jean, Lady Conan
Doyle, presided over a fine, if long-delayed, breakfast. After our excursion, I
was famished, but Holmes merely picked at his food. This meant the mystery
aroused him. As long as it kept his interest, he would hold himself free of the
embrace of cocaine.
For the rest of the day, we accompanied Sir Arthur to other
fields where theorems had mysteriously appeared over the past few weeks. They
were all, according to Holmes, sadly trampled.
We spoke to tenants who had also seen lights in the sky, but
the apparitions frightened the observers; each gave a different description,
none as coherent as Robert’s. I could not imagine what they had actually seen.
My mind kept returning to Robert’s description. Cogent
though it had been, something about it nagged at my memory. I put my unease down to the mystery of the phenomenon.
And to my wonder. Holmes’s skepticism notwithstanding, it
would be quite marvelous if we were visited by beings from another world,
whether physical or spiritual. Naturally one would prefer friendly beings like
those Sir Arthur described, over the invading forces of Mr Wells’s scientific
romances.
Holmes dutifully explored each damaged field, and listened
to the descriptions of flashing lights in the sky. But as he was presented with
nothing but old and damaged evidence, his inspections became more and more
desultory as the afternoon wore on, his attention more and more distracted and
impatient. He also grew more and more irritated at Sir Arthur’s ruminations on
spiritualism, and nothing I could do or say could divert the conversation. Like
any true believer, Sir Arthur was relentless in his proselytizing.
Toward the end of the afternoon, as I began to hope for tea,
we rested beneath an ancient oak near a patterned field.
“Look,” Sir Arthur said, “at how the grain has been
flattened without breaking. The stalks in the pattern are as green as the
undisturbed growth. Don’t you think it odd?”
“Quite odd,” I agreed.
“Not odd at all,” Holmes said.
He leapt from the carriage, snatched a handful of the crop
from the edge of the field, and returned with a clump of unbroken stems still
sprouting from their original earth. He held the roots in one hand and smashed
the other against the stems, bending them at a right angle to their original
position. Clods of dirt flew from his hand in reaction to the force of his
blow.
But the stems did not break.
“Triticum aestivum at this stage of growth is
exceedingly tough,” Holmes said. “Exceedingly difficult to break.”
Holmes pulled out one stem by its roots and handed it to me,
then another for Sir Arthur. I tried to break my stem, and indeed it took
considerable force even to put a kink in the fibrous growth. Sir Arthur bent
his stem, folding it repeatedly back and forth.
“The field theorems would be more impressive,” Holmes said,
“if the crops were broken.”
“But, Mr Holmes,” said Sir Arthur, “the forces we are
dealing with are mighty. A stem I cannot break would be like a fragile dry
twig, to them. Do you not think it amazing that they can temper themselves to
gentleness?”
Holmes stared at him in disbelief. “Sir Arthur! First you
are impressed with a feat that appears to be difficult, then, when the action
proves simple, you claim yourself impressed because it is simple! Your logic
eludes me.”
In Holmes’s powerful hands, several stalks ripped apart.
We returned to Undershaw. We drank Earl Grey from delicate
porcelain cups, surrounded by heavy, disagreeable silence. Lady Conan Doyle and
I tried in vain to lighten the conversation. When Sir Arthur announced a seance
to be held that very evening, Holmes’s mood did not improve.
A loud knock on the door, followed by shouting, broke the
tension. Sir Arthur rose to attend to the commotion.
“One of your tenants to see you, Sir Arthur,” the butler
said.
Robert had followed the butler from the front door; to my
astonishment he crossed the threshold of the sitting room. Then he remembered
his place and snatched his battered cap from his head.
“There’s been another field done!” he exclaimed. “Little Robbie
just discovered it, coming home to get his brothers some bread and cheese!”
Holmes leapt to his feet, his grey mood vanishing in an
instant.
Sir Arthur called for his autocar and we hurried off to see
the new phenomenon.
The automobile, newly repaired, motored smoothly until we
turned down the final road to the new field theorem. Suddenly it died. Robert
stepped down from the running board to crank it, but none of his efforts
revived it.
Sir Arthur revealed a knowledge of colourful oaths in
several languages.
“Bushman,” Holmes muttered after a particularly exotic
phrase.
I reflected that Sir Arthur must have acquired this unusual
facility during his service in the Boer War.
We walked the last half-mile to the field. The afternoon’s
heat lingered even in the shade of the hedgerows. Birds chirped and rustled the
branches.
“Well, Robert,” I said, “you’ll have the chance to observe
Mr Holmes in action, and he can hear your story in your own words instead of
mine. Holmes, Robert is a great enthusiast for your adventures.”
“I am flattered,” Holmes said, “though of course the credit
goes entirely to you, Watson, and to your craft.”
We had no more opportunity to chat, for we reached the newly
patterned field. Robert’s children — including Little Robbie, who was
considerably taller and larger than his father — had arrived before us, despite
our use of the motorcar. They stood in order of descending height on the bottom
rail of the fence, exclaiming over the pattern crushed into the field.
Sir Arthur made as if to plunge into the very center of the
new theorem, but Holmes clasped him by the shoulder.
“Stay back!” Holmes cried. “Robert! To the lane! Keep away
the spectators!”
“Very well, Mr Holmes.” Robert and his children tramped off
down the path.
I marveled at the efficiency of the “bush telegraph”, to
give everyone such quick notice of the new field theorem.
Holmes plunged past Sir Arthur. But instead of forging into
the field, he climbed the fence and balanced atop the highest rail to gaze
across the waving grain. He traced with his eyes the valleys and gulches etched
into the surface. Only after some minutes, and a complete circumnavigation of
the field, did he venture into the field theorem itself.
Sir Arthur observed Holmes’s method.
“You see, John?” Sir Arthur said. “Even your Mr Holmes
acknowledges the power — the danger — present here.”
“Sir Arthur,” I said in the mildest tone possible, “why
should danger result, if the communication is from those who loved you, in
another life?”
“Why...” he said, momentarily awkward, “John, you’ll
understand after the seance tonight. The other side is... different.”
Robert ran down the path, panting.
“I’m sorry, Mr Holmes, Sir Arthur,” he said. “We kept them
away as long as we could. Constable Brown ordered us to stand aside.”
“More devotion to duty than to sense,” Sir Arthur muttered. He
sighed. “I’m sure you did your best,” said he to Robert.
A group of curious people, led by Constable Brown and
minimally constrained by Robert’s children, approached between the hedgerows. Holmes
was right: Someone, somehow, had alerted the public. Sightseers who had come to
see the other field theorem now found themselves doubly fortunate.
The constable entered the field just as Holmes left it. The
sightseers crowded up to the fence to view the new theorem.
Holmes rejoined Sir Arthur and myself.
“I have seen what I needed,” Holmes said. “It’s of no matter
to me if the tourists trample the fields.”
“But we must survey the theorem!” Sir Arthur said. “We still
do not know its meaning!” He ordered Robert to do his best to prevent the
sightseers from marring the designs.
“If we depart now,” Holmes said, “before the constable
realizes he is baffled by the phenomenon, we will be spared interrogation.”
Dinner’s being far preferable to interrogation, we took
Holmes’s advice. I noticed, to my amusement, that Robert’s children had lined
the spectators up. Some visitors even offered the boys tips, or perhaps entry
fees. At least the family would not count its day an utter loss.
A photographer lowered his heavy camera from his shoulder. He
set it up on its tripod and disappeared beneath the black shadow-cloth to focus
the lenses. He exposed a plate, setting off a great explosion of flash powder. Smoke
billowed up, bitter and sulphurous.
The journalists began to question Constable Brown, who
puffed himself up with importance and replied to their questions. We hurried
away, before the journalists should recognize Sir Arthur — or Holmes — and
further delay us.
“If the motor starts,” Sir Arthur said, “we will be in time
for the seance.”
For a moment I wondered if Holmes would turn volte face,
return to the field, and submit to questioning by Constable Brown and
the journalists, in preference to submitting to the seance.
To our surprise, the motorcar started without hesitation. As
Sir Arthur drove down the lane, Holmes puzzled over something in his hands.
“What is that, Holmes?”
“Just a bit of wood, a stake,” Holmes said, putting it in
his pocket. “I found it in the field.”
As he was not inclined to discuss it further, we both fell
silent. I wondered if we had to contend — besides the field theorems, the
ghostly lights, and the seance — with wooden stakes and vampyres.
“Tell me, Sir Arthur,” Holmes said over the rhythmic cough
of the motor, “are any of your spirits known to live on Mars?”
“Mars?” Sir Arthur exclaimed. “Mars! I don’t believe I’ve
ever heard one mention it. But I don’t believe I’ve ever heard one asked.” He
turned to Holmes, his eyes bright with anticipation. “We shall ask, this very
evening! Why, that would explain Professor Schiaparelli’s ‘canali,’ would it
not?”
“Perhaps,” Holmes said. “Though I fail to understand what
use channels would be — to dead people.”
Darkness gathered as we motored down the rough lane. Sir
Arthur turned on the headlamps of the autocar, and the beams pierced the
dimness, casting eerie shadows and picking out the twisted branches of trees. The
wind in our face was cool and pleasant, if tinged somewhat by the scent of
petrol.
The engine of the autocar died, and with it the light from
the headlamps.
Sir Arthur uttered another of his exotic curses.
“I suppose it will be of no use,” he said, “but would one of
you gentlemen kindly try the crank?”
Holmes — knowing of my shoulder, shattered by a Jezail
bullet in Afghanistan and never quite right since — leapt from the passenger
seat and strode to the front of the automobile. He cranked it several times, to
no avail. Without a word, he unstrapped the engine cover and opened it.
“It’s too dark, Mr Holmes,” Sir Arthur said. “We’ll have to walk
home from here.”
“Perhaps not, Sir Arthur,” said I. “Holmes’s vision is
acute.” I climbed down, as well, to see if I could be of any assistance. I
wished the automobile carried a kerosene lamp, though I suppose I would have
had to hold it too far away from the engine, and the petrol tank, for it to be
of much use.
“Can you see the difficulty, Holmes?” I asked.
His long fingers probed among the machined parts of the
engine.
“Difficulty, Watson?” he said. “There is no difficulty here.
Only enterprising cleverness.”
The automobile rocked, and I assumed Sir Arthur was getting
down to join us and try to help with the repairs.
“Cleverness?” said I. “Surely you can’t mean — Ah!” Light
flickered across his hawkish face, and for a moment I thought he had repaired
the engine and the headlamps. Then I thought that Sir Arthur must have an
innovative automobile, in which the headlamps gained their power from an
independent battery rather than from the workings of the motor.
But then, I thought, they would surely not have failed at
the same moment as the motor.
And finally I realized that the headlamps were dark, the
engine still, and the lights on Holmes’s face emanated from a separate source
entirely.
I raised my eyes in the direction of the flickering lights. An
eerie radiance lit the forest beyond the road. As I watched, it descended
slowly beneath the tops of the trees.
“Sir Arthur!” I cried.
His silhouette moved quickly toward the mysterious lights.
Holmes and I ran after him. I felt a shiver, whether of fear
or of unearthly chill, I could not have said.
Suddenly a great flash of light engulfed us, and a great
shock of sound. Dazzled, I stumbled and fell, crying, “Sir Arthur!” I thought I
heard one of Sir Arthur’s exotic oaths, this time in the voice of Sherlock Holmes.
I came to myself, my sight flickering with brilliant black
and white afterimages. When my vision cleared, I found myself staring straight
up into the night. Among the constellations, Mars burned red in the darkness. I
shivered in sudden dread. I sat up, groaning.
Holmes was instantly at my side.
“Stay quiet, Watson,” he said. “You’ll soon be right. No
injuries, I fancy.”
“And you, Holmes? And Sir Arthur?”
“My sight has recovered, but Sir Arthur does not answer my
hallo.”
“What happened, Holmes? What was that explosion?”
“It was... what Robert called a flying coracle,” Holmes
said. “But it has vanished, and with it Dr Conan Doyle.”
“We must return to Undershaw! Call out a search party!”
“No!” Holmes exclaimed. “He has been spirited away, and we
have no hope of finding the location unless I can inspect the site of his
disappearance. Before searchers trample it.”
“But Lady Conan Doyle!” I said. “She’ll be frantic!”
“If we return now,” Holmes said, “we can only tell her Sir
Arthur is lost.”
“Kidnapped!” I only wished I knew who — or what — had done
the kidnapping.
“Perhaps, though I doubt he believes so.”
“He could be killed — !”
“He is safe, I warrant,” Holmes said.
“How can you be sure?”
“Because,” Holmes said, “no one would benefit from his
death.” He settled into the seat of the autocar. “If we wait till dawn, we may
retrieve him and return him safely to the bosom of his family. Before they have
any more concern than a few hours of wondering where we have got to.”
“Very well, Holmes,” I said doubtfully, “but the
responsibility for Sir Arthur’s safety lies on your shoulders.”
“I accept it,” Holmes said solemnly. Suddenly, he brightened
somewhat. “I fear we shall miss the seance.”
I confess that I dozed, in the darkest hours of the night,
cold and uncomfortable and cramped in the seat of the disabled motorcar. My
last sight, before I slept, was the scarlet glow of Mars sinking beneath the
tops of the trees. I dreamed of a race of beings so powerful that the canals
they built could be seen from another planet.
When I woke, shivering, tiny dewdrops covered my tweeds. The
silence of night gave way to the bright songs of dawn. The scent of wet grass
and sulphur wafted into my nostrils. I tried to remember a particular point of
my dream.
Holmes shook me.
“I’m awake, Holmes!” I said. The snatch of memory vanished
without a trace. “Have you found Sir Arthur?”
“Not yet,” he said. “Hold this, while I crank the motor.”
He handed me a bit of metal — two strips sintered together
to form one curved piece.
“What about Sir Arthur?” I asked. “What about your search?”
“My search is finished,” Holmes said. “I found, overhead, a
few singed tree-leaves. At my feet, a dusty spot on the ground. Marks pressed
into the soil, forming the corners of a parallelogram — ” He snorted. “Not even
a square! Far less elegant than the field theorems. Savory food for
speculation.”
“But no trace of Sir Arthur?”
“Many traces, but... I think we will not find his hiding
place.”
I glanced up into the sky, but the stars had faded and no
trace of light remained.
Holmes fell silent. He would say no more until he was ready.
I feared he had failed — Holmes, failed! — and Sir Arthur lay dead in some
kidnapper’s lair, on or off our world.
The autocar started without hesitation. I had never driven a
motorcar — it is folly to own one in the city, where a hansom is to be had for
a handwave, a shout, and a few shillings. But I had observed Sir Arthur
carefully. Soon we were moving down the road, and I fancy the ruts, rather than
my driving, caused what jolts we felt.
“And what is this, Holmes?” I asked, giving him his bit of
metal. He snatched it and pointed straight ahead. I quickly corrected the
autocar’s direction, for in my brief moment of inattention it had wandered
toward the hedgerow.
“The bit of metal, Holmes?”
“It is,” he said, “a bit of metal.”
“What does it mean?” I said irritably. “Where did you find
it?”
“I found it in the motor,” he said, and placed it in his
pocket. “And may I compliment you on your expert driving. I had no idea you
numbered automobile racing among your talents.”
I took his rather unsubtle hint and slowed the vehicle. Hedgerows
grew close on either side; it would not be pleasant to round a turn and come
upon a horse and carriage.
“I dreamed of Mars, Holmes,” I said.
“Pah!” he said. “Mars!”
“Quite a wonderful dream!” I continued undaunted. “We had
learned to communicate with the Martians. We could converse, with signals of
light, as quickly and as easily as if we were using a telegraph. But of course
that would be impossible.”
“How, impossible?” Holmes asked. “Always assuming there were
Martians with whom to converse.”
“Light cannot travel so quickly between the worlds,” I said.
“Light transmission is instantaneous,” Holmes said in a
dismissive tone.
“On the contrary,” I said. “As you would know if you paid
the least attention to astronomy or physics. The Michelson-Morley experiment
proved light has a finite speed, and furthermore that its speed remains
constant — but that is beside the point!”
“What is the point, pray tell?” Holmes asked. “You
were, I believe, telegraphing back and forth with Martians.”
“The point is that I could not converse
instantaneously with Martians — ”
“I do see a certain difficulty in stringing the wires,”
Holmes said drily.
“ — because it would take several minutes — I would have to
do the arithmetic, but at least ten — for my ‘hallo!’ to reach Mars, and
another length of time for their ‘Good day to you’ to return.”
“Perhaps you should use the post,” Holmes said.
“And that is what troubled me about Robert’s description!” I
exclaimed.
“Something troubled you?” Holmes said. “You have not
mentioned it before.”
“I could not think what it was. But of course! He thought he
saw a signal from Mars, to the coracle, at the instant after its disappearance.
This is impossible, you see, Holmes, because a message would take so long to
reach us. He must have been mistaken in what he saw.”
Holmes rode beside me in silence for some moments, then let
his breath out in a long sigh.
“As usual, Watson, you shame me,” he said. “You have provided
the clue to the whole mystery, and now all is clear.”
“I do?” I said. “I have? It is?” I turned to him. “But what
about Sir Arthur? How can the mystery be solved if we have lost Sir Arthur? Surely
we cannot return to Undershaw without him!”
“Stop!” Holmes cried.
Fearing Holmes had spied a sheep in the road while my
attention was otherwise occupied, I engaged the brake abruptly. The autocar
lurched to a halt, and Holmes used the momentum to leap from the seat to the
roadway.
Sir Arthur sat upon a stone on the verge of the track.
“Good morning, Dr Conan Doyle,” Holmes said. “I trust your
adventure has left you none the worse for wear?”
Sir Arthur gazed up with a beatific expression, his eyes
wide and glassy.
“I have seen things, Mr Holmes,” he said. “Amazing
things...”
Holmes helped him to the automobile and into the passenger
seat. As Sir Arthur settled himself, Holmes plucked a bit of material from Sir
Arthur’s shoe.
“What have you found, Holmes?” I asked.
“Nothing remarkable,” replied Holmes. “A shred of dusty
silk, I believe.” He folded the fabric carefully, placed it into his pocket,
and vaulted into the autocar.
Sir Arthur made no objection to my driving us back to
Undershaw. It was as if he had visited a different world, and still lived in it
in his mind. He refused to speak of it until we returned to his home, and his
worried wife.
A paragon of womanhood, Lady Conan Doyle accepted Sir
Arthur’s assurances that he was unharmed. She led us to the morning room and
settled us all in deep chairs of maroon velvet.
Sir Arthur commenced his story.
“It was amazing,” Sir Arthur said. “Absolutely amazing. I
saw the lights, and it was as if I were mesmerized. I felt drawn to them. I
hurried through the woods. I saw the ring of illumination, just as Robert
described it. Brighter than anything we can manufacture, I’d warrant — never
mind that it floated in the sky! I saw the coracle. A flying vehicle, turning
slowly above me, and windows — and faces! Faces peering down at me.”
Holmes shifted and frowned, but said nothing.
“Then I saw a flash of light — ”
“We saw it, too,” said I. “We feared you’d been injured.”
“Far from it!” Conan Doyle said. “Uplifted, rather!
Enlightened! I swooned with the shock, and when I awoke — I was inside the
coracle!”
“How did you know where you were?” Holmes demanded. “Could
you see out the windows? Were you high above the ground?”
“I was in a round room, the size of the coracle, and I could
feel the wafting of the winds — ”
It occurred to me that the previous night had been nearly
windless. But perhaps the flying coracle had risen higher and the wind aloft
had freshened.
“What of the portholes?” Holmes asked.
“There were no portholes,” Sir Arthur said, still speaking
in a dreamy voice. “The walls were smooth black, like satin. The portholes had
closed over, without leaving a trace!”
“Sir Arthur — ” Holmes protested.
“Hush, Mr Holmes, please,” Lady Conan Doyle said, leaning
forward, her face alight with concentration. “Let my husband finish his story.”
“I was not at all frightened, strangely content, and
immobile,” Sir Arthur said. “Then... the people came in and spoke to me.
They looked like — like nothing on this Earth! They were very pale, and their
eyes were huge and bright, shining with otherworldly intelligence. They told me
— they told me, without speaking, they spoke in my mind, without moving their
lips!”
“Ah,” Holmes murmured, “so at least they had lips.”
“Shh!” Lady Conan Doyle said, dispensing with courtesy.
“What did they tell you, Sir Arthur?” I asked.
“They wished to examine me, to determine if their people and
ours are compatible, to determine if we can live together in peace.”
“Live together!” I ejaculated.
“Yes. They did examine me — I cannot describe the process in
polite company, except to say that it was... quite thorough. Strangely enough,
I felt no fear, and very little discomfort, even when they used the needles.”
“Ah, yes,” Holmes murmured. “The needles.”
“Who were these people?” I asked, amazed. “Where are they
from?”
“They are,” Sir Arthur said softly, “from Mars.”
I felt dazed, not only because of my exhaustion. Lady Conan
Doyle made a sound of wonder, and Holmes — Holmes growled low in his throat.
“From Mars?” he said drily. “Not from the spirit realm?”
Sir Arthur drew himself up, bristling at the implied insult.
“I’ll not have it said I cannot admit I was wrong! The new
evidence is overwhelming!”
Before Holmes could reply, Sir Arthur’s butler appeared in
the doorway.
“Sir Arthur,” he said.
“Tell Robert,” Holmes said without explanation, “that we
have no need to examine any new field theorems. Tell him he may notify the
constabulary, the journalists, and the king if he wishes.”
The butler hesitated.
“And tell him,” Holmes added, “that he may charge what he
likes to guide them.”
The butler bowed and disappeared.
“They’ll trample the theorem!” Sir Arthur objected, rising
from his chair. “We won’t know — ”
“But you already know, Sir Arthur,” Holmes said. “The
creators of the field theorem have spoken to you.”
Sir Arthur relaxed. “That is true,” he said. He smiled. “To
think that I’ve been singled out this way — to introduce them to the world!” He
leaned forward, spreading his hands in entreaty. “They’re nothing like the
Martians of Mr Wells,” he said. “Not evil, not invaders. They wish only to be
our friends. There’s no need for panic.”
“We’re hardly in danger of panic,” Holmes said. “I have done
as you asked. I have solved your mystery.” He nodded to me. “Thanks to my
friend Dr Watson.”
“There is no mystery, Mr Holmes,” Sir Arthur said.
Holmes drew from his pocket the wooden stake, the metal
spring, and the scrap of black silk. He placed them on the table before us. Dust
drifted from the silk, emitting a burned, metallic scent and marring the
polished table with a film of white.
“You are correct. There is, indeed, no mystery.” He picked
up the stake, and I noticed that a few green stalks remained wrapped tightly
around it. “I found this in the center of the new field theorem, the one that
so conveniently appeared after I expressed a desire to see one afresh. Unfortunately,
its creators were unduly hurried, and could not work with their usual care. They
left the center marker, to which they tied a rope, to use as a compass to form
their circles.”
Holmes moved his long forefinger around the stake, showing
how a loop of rope had scuffed the corners of the wood, how the circular motion
had pulled crop stalks into a tight coil.
“But that isn’t what happened,” Sir Arthur said. “The
Martians explained all. They were trying to communicate with me, but the
theorems are beyond our mental reach. So they risked everything to speak to me
directly.”
Holmes picked up the spring.
“Metal expands when it heats,” he said. “This was cunningly
placed so its expansion disarranged a connection in your motor. Whenever the
temperature rose, the motor would stop. Naturally, you drove rapidly when you
went to investigate each new field theorem. Of course your motorcar would
overheat — and, consequently, misbehave — under those circumstances.”
“The Martians disrupted the electrical flux of my motorcar —
it’s an inevitable result of the energy field that supports their coracle. It
can fly through space, Mr Holmes, from Mars to Earth and back again!”
Holmes sighed, and picked up the bit of black silk.
“This is all that is left of the flying coracle,” he said. “The
hot-air balloon, rather. Candles at its base heated the air, kept the balloon
aloft, and produced the lights.”
“The lights were too bright for candles, Mr Holmes,” Sir
Arthur said.
Holmes continued undaunted. “Add to the balloon a handful of
flash powder.” He shook the bit of black silk. White dust floated from it, and
a faint scent of sulphur wafted into the air. “It ignites, you are dazzled. The
silk ignites! The candles, the balloon, the straw framework — all destroyed! Leaving
nothing but dust... a dust of magnesium oxide.” He stroked his fingertip
through the powder.
“It did not burn me,” Sir Arthur pointed out.
“It was not meant to burn you. It was meant to amaze you. Your
abductors are neither malicious nor stupid.” Holmes brushed the dust from his
hands. “We were meant to imagine a craft that could fall from the sky, balance
on its legs, and depart again, powered on flame, like a Chinese rocket! But it
left the tracks of four legs, awkwardly spaced. I found this suspicious. Three
legs, spaced regularly, would lead to more stability.”
“Very inventive, Mr Holmes, but you fail to explain how the
Martians transported me to their coracle, how the portholes sealed without a
trace, how they spoke to me in my mind.”
“Sir Arthur,” Holmes said, “are you familiar with the
effects of cocaine?”
“In theory, of course,” said Sir Arthur. “I’m a medical
doctor, after all.”
“Personally familiar,” Holmes said.
“I’ve never had occasion to use it myself, nor to prescribe
it,” Sir Arthur said. “So, no, I am not personally familiar with the
effects of cocaine.”
“I am,” Holmes said quietly. “And you show every sign of
having recently succumbed to its influence. Your eyes are glassy. Your
imagination is heightened — ”
“Are you saying,” Sir Arthur said with disbelief, “that the
Martians drugged me with cocaine?”
“There are no Martians!” Holmes said, raising his voice for
the first time. “There are hoaxers, who created a clever illusion, dazzled you,
drugged you, and took you to a hiding place — a raft, no doubt, that would
mimic the motions of a boat floating in the air. They disguised themselves,
spoke from behind masks — or behind a curtain! — taking advantage of your
distracted consciousness. You saw the needle yourself, the second needle that
drugged you again, so they could place you where you would be safe, and soon
found!”
Sir Arthur gazed at Holmes for a long moment, then chuckled
softly.
“I understand,” he said softly. “I do understand.”
“You understand that you have been tricked?” Holmes asked.
“I understand all. You need say no more. Some day, in the
future, when you’re persuaded of my complete goodwill, we’ll have occasion to
speak again.”
Sir Arthur rose, crossed the room, and opened his desk. He
drew out a sheet of paper, returned, and presented the paper to Holmes.
“This is a letter of credit,” he said, “in payment for your
services. It’s sufficient, I hope?”
Holmes barely glanced at the paper. “More than sufficient,”
he said. “Most generous, I would say, from a client who believes I have been
made a fool of by Martians.”
“Not at all, Mr Holmes. I understand your reasoning. You are
very subtle, sir, I admire you.”
“Then you accept — ”
“I accept your explanation as proof of my hypothesis,” Sir
Arthur said. “And I admire you beyond words.” He smiled. “And now, we are all
very tired. I must rest, and then — to work! To introduce the world to the
wonders approaching us. I’ve taken the liberty of hiring a private train to
return you to London. A token of my esteem.”
Speechless, Holmes rose.
“Your luggage is in the autocar. James will drive you to the
station. The autocar will not misbehave, because our visitors have gone home
for the moment. But — they will return!”
Sir Arthur and Lady Conan Doyle accompanied us to the drive,
so graciously that I hardly felt we were being shown the door. I climbed into
the motorcar, but Sir Arthur held Holmes back for a moment, speaking to him in
a low voice, shaking his hand.
Holmes joined me, nonplussed, and James drove us away. The
motorcar ran flawlessly. As we passed a field that yesterday had been a smooth
swath of grain, but today was marked by a field theorem more complex than any
before, we saw Robert and Little Robbie directing spectators around the crushed
patterns in the field. They both had taken more care with their appearance than
the previous day, and wore clothes without holes or patches.
His expression hidden in the shade of his new cap, Robert
turned to watch us pass.
“Holmes — ” I said.
Holmes gently silenced me with a gesture. He raised one hand
in farewell to the farmer. Robert saluted him. A small smile played around
Holmes’s lips.
As soon as we were alone in the private train car, Holmes
flung himself into a luxurious leather armchair and began to laugh. He laughed
so hard, and so long, that I feared he was a candidate for Bedlam.
“Holmes!” I cried. “Get hold of yourself, man!” I poured him
a glass of brandy — Napoleon, I noticed in passing.
His laughter faded slowly to an occasional chuckle, and he
wiped tears from his eyes.
“That’s better,” I said. “What is so infernally funny?”
“Human beings,” Holmes said. “Human beings, Watson, are an
endless source of amusement.”
“I do not like leaving Sir Arthur with a misapprehension of
events. Perhaps we should return — seek out the raft on which he was held
captive.”
“It has, no doubt, been sunk in the deepest part of the
lake. We would never find it... unless we could engage the services of Mr
Verne’s Captain Nemo.”
“I’m astonished that you’ve read Twenty Thousand Leagues
Under the Sea,” I said.
“I have not. But you did, and you described it to me quite
fully.” He sipped the brandy, and glanced at the glowing amber liquid in
appreciation. “Hmm. The last good year.”
I poured cognac for myself, warmed the balloon glass between
my hands, and savored the sweet, intoxicating bite of its vapors. It was far
too early in the day for spirits, but this one time I excused myself.
“When we return to Baker Street,” said Holmes, “I might
perhaps borrow your copy of War of the Worlds, if you would be so kind
as to lend it to me.”
“I will,” I said, “if you promise not to rip out its pages
for your files. Bertie inscribed it to me personally.”
“I will guard its integrity with my life.”
I snorted. The train jerked, wheels squealing against the
tracks, and gathered speed.
“What about Sir Arthur?” I asked, refusing to be put off
again. “He believes he’s been visited by Martians!”
“Watson, old friend, Sir Arthur is a willing participant in
the hoax.”
“You mean — he engineered it himself? Then why engage your
services?”
“An innocent, unconscious participant. He wants to
believe. He has exchanged Occam’s razor for Occam’s kaleidoscope, complicating
simple facts into explanations of impossible complexity. But he believes they
are true, just as he believes spirits visit him, and Houdini possesses
mediumistic powers, and I...” He started to chuckle again.
“I don’t understand the purpose of this hoax!” I
said, hoping to distract him before he erupted into another bout of hysteria. “Nor
who perpetrated it!”
“It is a difficult question. I despaired of solving it. I
wondered if Sir Arthur wished to pit his intellect against mine. If the
journalists and photographers conspired to create a story. If Constable Brown
wished to draw more resources to his district — and found he enjoyed the
limelight!”
“Which of them was it, Holmes? Wait! It was the photographer — only he has access to flash powder!”
“And an intimate knowledge of Surrey fields? No. The flash
powder is easily purchased — or purloined. It was no one you mention.”
“Then who?”
“Who benefits?”
I considered. If Sir Arthur wrote of the events, he might
make a tidy sum from a book and lecture tour. But Holmes had already stated
that Sir Arthur was innocent. Still, what benefited Sir Arthur would benefit
his whole family...
“Not Lady Conan Doyle!” I exclaimed, aghast.
“Certainly not,” Holmes said.
“The butler? The driver? He would know how to sabotage the
car — ”
“Robert Holder, Watson!” Holmes cried. “Robert Holder! Perhaps
— indeed, certainly — with help from James and the butler and other tenants in
the neighborhood. But Robert was the mastermind, for all his rough appearance. A
veritable Houdini of the countryside!” Holmes considered. “Indeed, he used some
of my own techniques. And he almost defeated me!”
“He risked all by challenging you!”
“I was unforeseen — surely he intended Sir Arthur to conduct
the investigation. When you and I arrived, Robert must have realized he would
stand or fall by his boldness. He offered Sir Arthur a compelling reason to
dismiss my solution — and me. Sir Arthur accepted the offering. How could he
resist?”
Holmes gazed out the window of the train for a moment. Unmarred
fields rippled past, like miniature green seas.
“If not for Robert’s misapprehension about the velocity of
light,” Holmes said, “a misapprehension that I shared, I would have known what
happened, and I would have known how — but I never would have been
certain who.”
“You sound curiously sympathetic, Holmes,” I said with
disapproval.
“Indeed I am, Watson. Robert is clearly an honourable man.”
“Honourable!”
“He refused Sir Arthur’s offer to relieve him of the year’s
rent. He has no wish to steal.”
“Only to lie.”
“Like Houdini. Like any entertainer, any storyteller. Shakespeare
lied. You have lied yourself, my friend, in your descriptions of our
adventures.”
“I have disguised individuals,” I said, taking offense. “I
have, yes, perhaps, dissembled occasionally...” I hesitated, and then I nodded.
“Very well. I have lied.”
“Life is hard for people who work the land. You and I are
prosperous, now, but remember what it was like when we were younger, scraping
along from season to season, with never a new shirt or a pair of boots that did
not let in the rain? Imagine seeing no better prospects. For the rest of your
life.”
I suddenly remembered father and sons, and their new
clothes.
“Who can blame them for creating a diversion, a mystery to
attract sightseers, people of leisure with money to spare. People,” Holmes
added, “with a blind eye to turn to the evidence lying plain before them?”
“What of your commitment to the truth, Holmes?” I asked with
some asperity.
“I know the truth,” he said. “You know it. Sir Arthur knows
it, but rejects it. I have kept the solution to other mysteries confidential;
it is part of my duty. How is this different?”
I suddenly understood. Holmes’s sympathy was not so much
directed toward the hoaxers as away from the curiosity seekers who were
willing, indeed eager, to be fooled.
“Very well, Holmes,” I said. “I am content, if you are.”
We rode in silence for some miles, lulled by the rocking of
the train, enjoying Sir Arthur’s excellent cognac and the peaceful English
countryside. I wondered what the world would be like if beings from another
planet did visit us.
“Holmes,” I said.
“Yes, Watson?”
“Why was Sir Arthur so willing to pay you, when he did not
believe your solution? What did he say to you, just as we left?”
“He said, ‘I understand why you are such an extraordinary
person. Like Houdini, you have good reason to hide your abilities, your true
nature. I understand why Sherlock Holmes cannot be the one to reveal the truth
about our visitors. I will do it, and you may trust me to keep your
secret.’“
“Your secret?”
“Yes, Watson.” Holmes smiled. “Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
believes I am a Martian.”
oOo
First published in Sherlock Holmes in Orbit
Ed. Mike Resnick & Martin Harry Greenberg
DAW 1995
Reprinted with the kind permission of the editors.
Copyright © 1995 by Vonda N. McIntyre
http://www.vondanmcintyre.com/