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The Final Problem (Sherlock Holmes) - Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
It is with a heavy heart that
I take up my pen to write these the last words in which I shall ever record the
singular gifts by which my friend Mr. Sherlock Holmes was distinguished. In an
incoherent and, as I deeply feel, an entirely inadequate fashion, I have
endeavored to give some account of my strange experiences in his company from
the chance which first brought us together at the period of the "Study in
Scarlet," up to the time of his interference in the matter of the
"Naval Treaty"—and interference which had the unquestionable effect
of preventing a serious international complication.
It was my intention to have stopped there, and
to have said nothing of that event which has created a void in my life which
the lapse of two years has done little to fill. My hand has been forced,
however, by the recent letters in which Colonel James Moriarty defends the
memory of his brother, and I have no choice but to lay the facts before the
public exactly as they occurred. I alone know the absolute truth of the matter,
and I am satisfied that the time has come when on good purpose is to be served
by its suppression.
As far as I know, there have been only three
accounts in the public press: that in the Journal de Genève on May 6th, 1891,
the Reuters dispatch in the English papers on May 7th, and finally the recent
letter to which I have alluded. Of these the first and second were extremely
condensed, while the last is, as I shall now show, an absolute perversion of
the facts.
It lies with me to tell for the first time what
really took place between Professor Moriarty and Mr. Sherlock Holmes. It may be
remembered that after my marriage, and my subsequent start in private practice,
the very intimate relations which had existed between Holmes and myself became
to some extent modified. He still came to me from time to time when he desired
a companion in his investigation, but these occasions grew more and more
seldom, until I find that in the year 1890 there were only three cases of which
I retain any record. During the winter of that year and the early spring of
1891, I saw in the papers that he had been engaged by the French government
upon a matter of supreme importance, and I received two notes from Holmes,
dated from Narbonne and from Nimes, from which I gathered that his stay in
France was likely to be a long one.
It was with some surprise, therefore, that I saw
him walk into my consulting-room upon the evening of April 24th. It struck me
that he was looking even paler and thinner than usual. "Yes, I have been
using myself up rather too freely," he remarked, in answer to my look
rather than to my words; "I have been a little pressed of late. Have you
any objection to my closing your shutters?"
The only light in the room came from the lamp
upon the table at which I had been reading. Holmes edged his way round the wall
and flinging the shutters together, he bolted them securely.
"You are afraid of something?" I
asked.
"Well, I am."
"Of what?"
"Of air-guns."
"My dear Holmes, what do you mean?"
"I think that you know me well enough,
Watson, to understand that I am by no means a nervous man. At the same time, it
is stupidity rather than courage to refuse to recognize danger when it is close
upon you. Might I trouble you for a match?" He drew in the smoke of his
cigarette as if the soothing influence was grateful to him.
"I must apologize for calling so
late," said he, "and I must further beg you to be so unconventional
as to allow me to leave your house presently by scrambling over your back
garden wall."
"But what does it all mean?" I asked.
He held out his hand, and I saw in the light of
the lamp that two of his knuckles were burst and bleeding. "It is not an
airy nothing, you see," said he, smiling. "On the contrary, it is
solid enough for a man to break his hand over. Is Mrs. Watson in?"
"She is away upon a visit."
"Indeed! You are alone?"
"Quite."
"Then it makes it the easier for me to
propose that you should come away with me for a week to the Continent."
"Where?"
"Oh, anywhere. It's all the same to
me."
There was something very strange in all this. It
was not Holmes's nature to take an aimless holiday, and something about his
pale, worn face told me that his nerves were at their highest tension.
He saw the question in my eyes, and, putting his
fingertips together and his elbows upon his knees, he explained the situation.
"You have probably never heard of Professor Moriarty?" said he.
"Never."
"Aye, there's the genius and the wonder of
the thing!" he cried. "The man pervades London, and no one has heard
of him. That's what puts him on a pinnacle in the records of crime. I tell you,
Watson, in all seriousness, that if I could beat that man, if I could free
society of him, I should feel that my own career had reached its summit, and I
should be prepared to turn to some more placid line in life. Between ourselves,
the recent cases in which I have been of assistance to the royal family of
Scandinavia, and to the French republic, have left me in such a position that I
could continue to live in the quiet fashion which is most congenial to me, and
to concentrate my attention upon my chemical researches. But I could not rest,
Watson, I could not sit quiet in my chair, if I thought that such a man as
Professor Moriarty were walking the streets of London unchallenged."
"What has he done, then?"
"His career has been an extraordinary one.
He is a man of good birth and excellent education, endowed by nature with a
phenomenal mathematical faculty. At the age of twenty-one he wrote a treatise
upon the Binomial Theorem, which has had a European vogue. On the strength of
it he won the Mathematical Chair at one of our smaller universities, and had,
to all appearance, a most brilliant career before him. But the man had
hereditary tendencies of the most diabolical kind. A criminal strain ran in his
blood, which, instead of being modified, was increased and rendered infinitely
more dangerous by his extraordinary mental powers. Dark rumors gathered round
him in the university town, and eventually he was compelled to resign his chair
and to come down to London, where he set up as an army coach. So much is known
to the world, but what I am telling you now is what I have myself discovered.
"As you are aware, Watson, there is no one
who knows the higher criminal world of London so well as I do. For years past I
have continually been conscious of some power behind the malefactor, some deep
organizing power which forever stands in the way of the law, and throws its
shield over the wrongdoer. Again and again in cases of the most varying
sorts—forgery cases, robberies, murders—I have felt the presence of this force,
and I have deduced its action in many of those undiscovered crimes in which I
have not been personally consulted. For years I have endeavored to break
through the veil which shrouded it, and at last the time came when I seized my
thread and followed it, until it led me, after a thousand cunning windings, to
ex-Professor Moriarty of mathematical celebrity.
"He is the Napoleon of crime, Watson. He is
the organizer of half that is evil and of nearly all that is undetected in this
great city. He is a genius, a philosopher, an abstract thinker. He has a brain
of the first order. He sits motionless, like a spider in the center of its web,
but that web has a thousand radiations, and he knows well every quiver of each
of them. He does little himself. He only plans. But his agents are numerous and
splendidly organized. Is there a crime to be done, a paper to be abstracted, we
will say, a house to be rifled, a man to be removed—the word is passed to the
Professor, the matter is organized and carried out. The agent may be caught. In
that case money is found for his bail or his defense But the central power
which uses the agent is never caught—never so much as suspected. This was the
organization which I deduced, Watson, and which I devoted my whole energy to
exposing and breaking up.
"But the Professor was fenced round with
safeguards so cunningly devised that, do what I would, it seemed impossible to
get evidence which would convict in a court of law. You know my powers, my dear
Watson, and yet at the end of three months I was forced to confess that I had
at last met an antagonist who was my intellectual equal. My horror at his crimes
was lost in my admiration at his skill. But at last he made a trip—only a
little, little trip—but it was more than he could afford when I was so close
upon him. I had my chance, and, starting from that point, I have woven my net
round him until now it is all ready to close. In three days—that is to say, on
Monday next—matters will be ripe, and the Professor, with all the principal
members of his gang, will be in the hands of the police. Then will come the
greatest criminal trial of the century, the clearing up of over forty
mysteries, and the rope for all of them; but if we move at all prematurely, you
understand, they may slip out of our hands even at the last moment.
"Now, if I could have done this without the
knowledge of Professor Moriarty, all would have been well. But he was too wily
for that. He saw every step which I took to draw my toils round him. Again and
again he strove to break away, but I as often headed him off. I tell you, my
friend, that if a detailed account of that silent contest could be written, it
would take its place as the most brilliant bit of thrust-and-parry work in the
history of detection. Never have I risen to such a height, and never have I
been so hard pressed by an opponent. He cut deep, and yet I just undercut him.
This morning the last steps were taken, and three days only were wanted to
complete the business. I was sitting in my room thinking the matter over, when
the door opened and Professor Moriarty stood before me.
"My nerves are fairly proof, Watson, but I
must confess to a start when I saw the very man who had been so much in my
thoughts standing there on my threshold. His appearance was quite familiar to
me. He is extremely tall and thin, his forehead domes out in a white curve, and
his two eyes are deeply sunken in this head. He is clean-shaven, pale, and
ascetic-looking, retaining something of the professor in his features. His
shoulders are rounded from much study, and his face protrudes forward, and is
forever slowly oscillating from side to side in a curiously reptilian fashion.
He peered at me with great curiosity in his puckered eyes.
"'You have less frontal development that I
should have expected,' said he, at last. 'It is a dangerous habit to finger
loaded firearms in the pocket of one's dressing-gown.'
"The fact is that upon his entrance I had
instantly recognized the extreme personal danger in which I lay. The only
conceivable escape for him lay in silencing my tongue. In an instant I had
slipped the revolved from the drawer into my pocket, and was covering him
through the cloth. At his remark I drew the weapon out and laid it cocked upon
the table. He still smiled and blinked, but there was something about his eyes
which made me feel very glad that I had it there.
"'You evidently don't know me,' said he.
"'On the contrary,' I answered, 'I think it
is fairly evident that I do. Pray take a chair. I can spare you five minutes if
you have anything to say.'
"'All that I have to say has already
crossed your mind,' said he.
"'Then possibly my answer has crossed
yours,' I replied.
"'You stand fast?'
"'Absolutely.'
"He clapped his hand into his pocket, and I
raised the pistol from the table. But he merely drew out a memorandum-book in
which he had scribbled some dates.
"'You crossed my patch on the 4th of
January,' said he. 'On the 23d you incommoded me; by the middle of February I
was seriously inconvenienced by you; at the end of March I was absolutely
hampered in my plans; and now, at the close of April, I find myself placed in
such a position through your continual persecution that I am in positive danger
of losing my liberty. The situation is becoming an impossible one.'
"'Have you any suggestion to make?' I
asked.
"'You must drop it, Mr. Holmes,' said he,
swaying his face about. 'You really must, you know.'
"'After Monday,' said I.
"'Tut, tut,' said he. 'I am quite sure that
a man of your intelligence will see that there can be but one outcome to this
affair. It is necessary that you should withdraw. You have worked things in
such a fashion that we have only one resource left. It has been an intellectual
treat to me to see the way in which you have grappled with this affair, and I
say, unaffectedly, that it would be a grief to me to be forced to take any
extreme measure. You smile, sir, abut I assure you that it really would.'
"'Danger is part of my trade,' I remarked.
"'That is not danger,' said he. 'It is
inevitable destruction. You stand in the way not merely of an individual, but
of a mighty organization, the full extent of which you, with all your
cleverness, have been unable to realize. You must stand clear, Mr. Holmes, or
be trodden under foot.'
"'I am afraid,' said I, rising, 'that in
the pleasure of this conversation I am neglecting business of importance which
awaits me elsewhere.'
"He rose also and looked at me in silence,
shaking his head sadly.
"'Well, well,' said he, at last. 'It seems
a pity, but I have done what I could. I know every move of your game. You can
do nothing before Monday. It has been a duel between you and me, Mr. Holmes.
You hope to place me in the dock. I tell you that I will never stand in the
dock. You hope to beat me. I tell you that you will never beat me. If you are
clever enough to bring destruction upon me, rest assured that I shall do as
much to you.'
"'You have paid me several compliments, Mr.
Moriarty,' said I. 'Let me pay you one in return when I say that if I were
assured of the former eventuality I would, in the interests of the public,
cheerfully accept the latter.'
"'I can promise you the one, but not the
other,' he snarled, and so turned his rounded back upon me, and went peering
and blinking out of the room.
"That was my singular interview with
Professor Moriarty. I confess that it left an unpleasant effect upon my mind.
His soft, precise fashion of speech leaves a conviction of sincerity which a
mere bully could not produce. Of course, you will say: 'Why not take police
precautions against him?' the reason is that I am well convinced that it is
from his agents the blow will fall. I have the best proofs that it would be
so."
"You have already been assaulted?"
"My dear Watson, Professor Moriarty is not
a man who lets the grass grow under his feet. I went out about midday to
transact some business in Oxford Street. As I passed the corner which leads
from Bentinck Street on to the Welbeck Street crossing a two-horse van
furiously driven whizzed round and was on me like a flash. I sprang for the
footpath and saved myself by the fraction of a second. The van dashed round by
Marylebone Lane and was gone in an instant. I kept to the pavement after that,
Watson, but as I walked down Vere Street a brick came down from the roof of one
of the houses, and was shattered to fragments at my feet. I called the police
and had the place examined. There were slates and bricks piled up on the roof
preparatory to some repairs, and they would have me believe that the wind had
toppled over one of these. Of course I knew better, but I could prove nothing.
I took a cab after that and reached my brother's rooms in Pall Mall, where I
spent the day. Now I have come round to you, and on my way I was attacked by a
rough with a bludgeon. I knocked him down, and the police have him in custody;
but I can tell you with the most absolute confidence that no possible
connection will ever be traced between the gentleman upon whose front teeth I
have barked my knuckles and the retiring mathematical coach, who is, I dare
say, working out problems upon a blackboard ten miles away. You will not
wonder, Watson, that my first act on entering your rooms was to close your
shutters, and that I have been compelled to ask your permission to leave the house
by some less conspicuous exit than the front door."
I had often admired my friend's courage, but
never more than now, as he sat quietly checking off a series of incidents which
must have combined to make up a day of horror.
"You will spend the night here?" I
said.
"No, my friend, you might find me a
dangerous guest. I have my plans laid, and all will be well. Matters have gone
so far now that they can move without my help as far as the arrest goes, though
my presence is necessary for a conviction. It is obvious, therefore, that I
cannot do better than get away for the few days which remain before the police
are at liberty to act. It would be a great pleasure to me, therefore, if you
could come on to the Continent with me."
"The practice is quiet," said I,
"and I have an accommodating neighbor. I should be glad to come."
"And to start tomorrow morning?"
"If necessary."
"Oh yes, it is most necessary. Then these
are your instructions, and I beg, my dear Watson, that you will obey them to
the letter, for you are now playing a double-handed game with me against the
cleverest rogue and the most powerful syndicate of criminals in Europe. Now
listen! You will dispatch whatever luggage you intend to take by a trusty messenger
unaddressed to Victoria tonight In the morning you will send for a hansom,
desiring your man to take neither the first nor the second which may present
itself. Into this hansom you will jump, and you will drive to the Strand end of
the Lowther Arcade, handling the address to the cabman upon a slip of paper,
with a request that he will not throw it away. Have your fare ready, and the
instant that your cab stops, dash through the Arcade, timing yourself to reach
the other side at a quarter-past nine. You will find a small brougham waiting
close to the curb, driven by a fellow with a heavy black cloak tipped at the
collar with red. Into this you will step, and you will reach Victoria in time
for the Continental express."
"Where shall I meet you?"
"At the station. The second first-class
carriage from the front will be reserved for us."
"The carriage is our rendezvous,
then?"
"Yes."
It was in vain that I asked Holmes to remain for
the evening. It was evident to me that he though he might bring trouble to the
roof he was under, and that that was the motive which impelled him to go. With
a few hurried words as to our plans for the morrow he rose and came out with me
into the garden, clambering over the wall which leads into Mortimer Street, and
immediately whistling for a hansom, in which I heard him drive away.
In the morning I obeyed Holmes's injunctions to
the letter. A hansom was procured with such precaution as would prevent its
being one which was placed ready for us, and I drove immediately after
breakfast to the Lowther Arcade, through which I hurried at the top of my
speed. A brougham was waiting with a very massive driver wrapped in a dark
cloak, who, the instant that I had stepped in, whipped up the horse and rattled
off to Victoria Station. On my alighting there he turned the carriage, and
dashed away again without so much as a look in my direction.
So far all had gone admirably. My luggage was
waiting for me, and I had no difficulty in finding the carriage, which Holmes
had indicated, the less so as it was the only one in the train which was marked
"Engaged." My only source of anxiety now was the nonappearance of
Holmes. The station clock marked only seven minutes from the time when we were
due to start. In vain I searched among the groups of travelers and leave-takers
for the little figure of my friend. There was no sign of him. I spent a few
minutes in assisting a venerable Italian priest, who was endeavoring to make a
porter understand, in his broken English, that his luggage was to be booked
through to Paris.
Then, having taken another look round, I
returned to my carriage, where I found that the porter, in spite of the ticket,
had given me my decrepit Italian friend as a traveling companion. It was
useless for me to explain to him that his presence was an intrusion, for my
Italian was even more limited than his English, so I shrugged my shoulders
resignedly, and continued to look out anxiously for my friend. A chill of fear
had come over me, as I thought that his absence might mean that some blow had
fallen during the night. Already the doors had all been shut and the whistle
blown, when—
"My dear Watson," said a voice,
"you have not even condescended to say good-morning."
I turned in uncontrollable astonishment. The
aged ecclesiastic had turned his face towards me. For an instant the wrinkles
were smoothed away, the nose drew away from the chin, the lower lip ceased to
protrude and the mouth to mumble, the dull eyes regained their fire, the
drooping figure expanded. The next the whole frame collapsed again, and Holmes
had gone as quickly as he had come.
"Good heavens!" I cried; "how you
startled me!"
"Every precaution is still necessary,"
he whispered.
"I have reason to think that they are hot
upon our trail. Ah, there is Moriarty himself."
The train had already begun to move as Holmes
spoke. Glancing back, I saw a tall man pushing his way furiously through the
crowd, and waving his hand as if he desired to have the train stopped. It was
too late, however, for we were rapidly gathering momentum, and an instant later
had shot clear of the station.
"With all our precautions, you see that we
have cut it rather fine," said Holmes, laughing. He rose, and throwing off
the black cassock and hat which had formed his disguise, he packed them away in
a handbag. "Have you seen the morning paper, Watson?"
"No."
"You haven't' seen about Baker Street,
then?"
"Baker Street?"
"They set fire to our rooms last night. No
great harm was done."
"Good heavens, Holmes! this is
intolerable."
"They must have lost my track completely
after their bludgeon-man was arrested. Otherwise they could not have imagined
that I had returned to my rooms. They have evidently taken the precaution of
watching you, however, and that is what has brought Moriarty to Victoria. You
could not have made any slip in coming?"
"I did exactly what you advised."
"Did you find your brougham?"
"Yes, it was waiting."
"Did you recognize your coachman?"
"No."
"It was my brother Mycroft. It is an
advantage to get about in such a case without taking a mercenary into your
confidence. But we must plan what we are to do about Moriarty now."
"As this is an express, and as the boat
runs in connection with it, I should think we have shaken him off very
effectively."
"My dear Watson, you evidently did not
realize my meaning when I said that this man may be taken as being quite on the
same intellectual plane as myself. You do not imagine that if I were the
pursuer I should allow myself to be baffled by so slight an obstacle. Why,
then, should you think so meanly of him?"
"What will he do?"
"What I should do?"
"What would you do, then?"
"Engage a special."
"But it must be late."
"By no means. This train stops at
Canterbury; and there is always at least a quarter of an hour's delay at the
boat. He will catch us there."
"One would think that we were the
criminals. Let us have him arrested on his arrival."
"It would be to ruin the work of three
months. We should get the big fish, but the smaller would dart right and left
out of the net. On Monday we should have them all. No, an arrest is
inadmissible."
"What then?"
"We shall get out at Canterbury."
"And then?"
"Well, then we must make a cross-country
journey to Newhaven, and so over to Dieppe. Moriarty will again do what I
should do. He will get on to Paris, mark down our luggage, and wait for two
days at the depot. In the meantime we shall treat ourselves to a couple of
carpetbags, encourage the manufactures of the countries through which we
travel, and make our way at our leisure into Switzerland, via Luxembourg and
Basle."
At Canterbury, therefore, we alighted, only to
find that we should have to wait an hour before we could get a train to
Newhaven. I was still looking rather ruefully after the rapidly disappearing
luggage-van which contained my wardrobe, when Holmes pulled my sleeve and
pointed up the line.
"Already, you see," said he.
Far away, from among the Kentish woods there
rose a thin spray of smoke. A minute later a carriage and engine could be seen
flying along the open curve, which leads to the station. We had hardly time to
take our place behind a pile of luggage when it passed with a rattle and a
roar, beating a blast of hot air into our faces.
"There he goes," said Holmes, as we
watched the carriage swing and rock over the point. "There are limits, you
see, to our friend's intelligence. It would have been a coup-de-maître had he
deduced what I would deduce and acted accordingly."
"And what would he have done had he
overtaken us?"
"There cannot be the least doubt that he
would have made a murderous attack upon me. It is, however, a game at which two
may play. The question, now is whether we should take a premature lunch here,
or run our chance of starving before we reach the buffet at Newhaven."
We made our way to Brussels that night and spent
two days there, moving on upon the third day as far as Strasburg.
On the Monday morning Holmes had telegraphed to
the London police, and in the evening we found a reply waiting for us at our
hotel. Holmes tore it open, and then with a bitter curse hurled it into the
grate. "I might have known it!" he groaned.
"He has escaped!"
"Moriarty?"
"They have secured the whole gang with the
exception of him. He has given them the slip. Of course, when I had left the
country there was no one to cope with him. But I did think that I had put the
game in their hands. I think that you had better return to England,
Watson."
"Why?"
"Because you will find me a dangerous
companion now. This man's occupation is gone. He is lost if he returns to
London. If I read his character right he will devote his whole energies to
revenging himself upon me. He said as much in our short interview, and I fancy
that he meant it. I should certainly recommend you to return to your
practice."
It was hardly an appeal to be successful with
one who was an old campaigner as well as an old friend. We sat in the Strasburg
salle-Ă -manger arguing the question for half an hour, but the same night we had
resumed our journey and were well on our way to Geneva. For a charming week we
wandered up the Valley of the Rhone, and then, branching off at Leuk, we made
our way over the Gemmi Pass, still deep in snow, and so, by way of Interlaken,
to Meiringen.
It was a lovely trip, the dainty green of the
spring below, the virgin white of the winter above; but it was clear to me that
never for one instant did Holmes forget the shadow which lay across him. In the
homely Alpine villages or in the lonely mountain passes, I could tell by his
quick glancing eyes and his sharp scrutiny of every face that passed us, that
he was well convinced that, walk where we would, we could not walk ourselves
clear of the danger which was dogging our footsteps.
Once, I remember, as we passed over the Gemmi,
and walked along the border of the melancholy Daubensee, a large rock which had
been dislodged from the ridge upon our right clattered down and roared into the
lake behind us. In an instant Holmes had raced up on to the ridge, and, standing
upon a lofty pinnacle, craned his neck in every direction. It was in vain that
our guide assured him that a fall of stones was a common chance in the
springtime at that spot. He said nothing, but he smiled at me with the air of a
man who sees the fulfillment of that which he had expected.
And yet for all his watchfulness he was never
depressed. On the contrary, I can never recollect having seen him in such
exuberant spirits. Again and again he recurred to the fact that if he could be
assured that society was freed from Professor Moriarty he would cheerfully
bring his own career to a conclusion. "I think that I may go so far as to
say, Watson, that I have not lived wholly in vain," he remarked. "If
my record were closed tonight I could still survey it with equanimity. The air
of London is the sweeter for my presence. In over a thousand cases I am not
aware that I have ever used my powers upon the wrong side. Of late I have been
tempted to look into the problems furnished by nature rather than those more
superficial ones for which our artificial state of society is responsible. Your
memoirs will draw to an end, Watson, upon the day that I crown my career by the
capture or extinction of the most dangerous and capable criminal in
Europe."
I shall be brief, and yet exact, in the little
which remains for me to tell. It is not a subject on which I would willingly
dwell, and yet I am conscious that a duty devolves upon me to omit no detail.
It was on the 3d of May that we reached the
little village of Meiringen, where we put up at the Englischer Hof, then kept
by Peter Steiler the elder. Our landlord was an intelligent man, and spoke
excellent English, having served for three years as waiter at the Grosvenor
Hotel in London. At his advice, on the afternoon of the 4th we set off
together, with the intention of crossing the hills and spending the night at
the hamlet of Rosenlaui. We had strict injunctions, however, on no account to
pass the falls of Reichenbach, which are about halfway up the hill, without
making a small detour to see them. It is indeed, a fearful place. The torrent,
swollen by the melting snow, plunges into a tremendous abyss, from which the
spray rolls up like the smoke from a burning house. The shaft into which the
river hurls itself is a immense chasm, lined by glistening coal-black rock, and
narrowing into a creaming, boiling pit of incalculable depth, which brims over
and shoots the stream onward over its jagged lip. The long sweep of green water
roaring forever down, and the thick flickering curtain of spray hissing forever
upward, turn a man giddy with their constant whirl and clamor.
We stood near the edge peering down at the gleam
of the breaking water far below us against the black rocks, and listening to
the half-human shout which came booming up with the spray out of the abyss. The
path has been cut halfway round the fall to afford a complete view, but it ends
abruptly, and the traveler has to return as he came. We had turned to do so,
when we saw a Swiss lad come running along it with a letter in his hand. It
bore the mark of the hotel which we had just left, and was addressed to me by
the landlord. It appeared that within a very few minutes of our leaving, an
English lady had arrived who was in the last stage of consumption. She had
wintered at Davos Platz, and was journeying now to join her friends at Lucerne,
when a sudden hemorrhage had overtaken her. It was thought that she could
hardly live a few hours, but it would be a great consolation to her to see an English
doctor, and, if I would only return, etc. The good Steiler assured me in a
postscript that he would himself look upon my compliance as a very great favor,
since the lady absolutely refused to see a Swiss physician, and he could not
but feel that he was incurring a great responsibility.
The appeal was one which could not be ignored.
It was impossible to refuse the request of a fellow-countrywoman dying in a
strange land. Yet I had my scruples about leaving Holmes. It was finally
agreed, however, that he should retain the young Swiss messenger with him as
guide and companion while I returned to Meiringen. My friend would stay some
little time at the fall, he said, and would then walk slowly over the hill to
Rosenlaui, where I was to rejoin him in the evening.
As I turned away I saw Holmes, with his back
against a rock and his arms folded, gazing down at the rush of the waters. It
was the last that I was ever destined to see of him in this world. When I was
near the bottom of the descent I looked back. It was impossible, from that
position, to see the fall, but I could see the curving path which winds over
the shoulder of the hill and leads to it. Along this a man was, I remember,
walking very rapidly. I could see his black figure clearly outlined against the
green behind him. I noted him, and the energy with which he walked but he
passed from my mind again as I hurried on upon my errand.
It may have been a little over an hour before I
reached Meiringen. Old Steiler was standing at the porch of his hotel.
"Well," said I, as I came hurrying up, "I trust that she is no
worse?"
A look of surprise passed over his face, and at
the first quiver of his eyebrows my heart turned to lead in my breast.
"You did not write this?" I said, pulling the letter from my pocket.
"There is no sick Englishwoman in the hotel?"
"Certainly not!" he cried. "But
it has the hotel mark upon it! Ha, it must have been written by that tall
Englishman who came in after you had gone. He said—"
But I waited for none of the landlord's
explanations. In a tingle of fear I was already running down the village
street, and making for the path which I had so lately descended. It had taken
me an hour to come down. For all my efforts two more had passed before I found
myself at the fall of Reichenbach once more. There was Holmes's Alpine-stock
still leaning against the rock by which I had left him. But there was no sign
of him, and it was in vain that I shouted. My only answer was my own voice
reverberating in a rolling echo from the cliffs around me.
It was the sight of that Alpine-stock which
turned me cold and sick. He had not gone to Rosenlaui, then. He had remained on
that three-foot path, with sheer wall on one side and sheer drop on the other,
until his enemy had overtaken him. The young Swiss had gone too. He had
probably been in the pay of Moriarty, and had left the two men together.
And then what had happened? Who was to tell us
what had happened then? I stood for a minute or two to collect myself, for I
was dazed with the horror of the thing. Then I began to think of Holmes's own
methods and to try to practice them in reading this tragedy. It was, alas, only
too easy to do. During our conversation we had not gone to the end of the path,
and the Alpine-stock marked the place where we had stood. The blackish soil is
kept forever soft by the incessant drift of spray, and a bird would leave its
tread upon it. Two lines of footmarks were clearly marked along the farther end
of the path, both leading away from me. There were none returning.
A few yards from the end the soil was all plowed
up into a patch of mud, and the branches and ferns which fringed the chasm were
torn and bedraggled. I lay upon my face and peered over with the spray spouting
up all around me. It had darkened since I left, and now I could only see here
and there the glistening of moisture upon the black walls, and far away down at
the end of the shaft the gleam of the broken water. I shouted; but only the
same half-human cry of the fall was borne back to my ears.
But it was destined that I should after all have
a last word of greeting from my friend and comrade. I have said that his
Alpine-stock had been left leaning against a rock which jutted on to the path.
From the top of this boulder the gleam of something bright caught my eye, and,
raising my hand, I found that it came from the silver cigarette-case which he
used to carry. As I took it up a small square of paper upon which it had lain
fluttered down on to the ground. Unfolding it, I found that it consisted of
three pages torn from his notebook and addressed to me. It was characteristic
of the man that the direction was a precise, and the writing as firm and clear,
as though it had been written in his study.
"My dear Watson
[it said], I
write these few lines through the courtesy of Mr. Moriarty, who awaits my
convenience for the final discussion of those questions which lie between us.
He has been giving me a sketch of the methods by which he avoided the English
police and kept himself informed of our movements. They certainly confirm the
very high opinion which I had formed of his abilities. I am pleased to think
that I shall be able to free society from any further effects of his presence,
though I fear that it is at a cost which will give pain to my friends, and
especially, my dear Watson, to you. I have already explained to you, however,
that my career had in any case reached its crisis, and that no possible
conclusion to it could be more congenial to me than this. Indeed, if I may make
a full confession to you, I was quite convinced that the letter from Meiringen
was a hoax, and I allowed you to depart on that errand under the persuasion
that some development of this sort would follow. Tell Inspector Patterson that
the papers which he needs to convict the gang are in pigeonhole M., done up in
a blue envelope and inscribed "Moriarty." I made every disposition of
my property before leaving England, and handed it to my brother Mycroft. Pray
give my greetings to Mrs. Watson, and believe me to be, my dear fellow,
Very sincerely
yours, Sherlock Holmes
A few words may suffice to tell the little that
remains. An examination by experts leaves little doubt that a personal contest
between the two men ended, as it could hardly fail to end in such a situation,
in their reeling over, locked in each other's arms. Any attempt at recovering
the bodies was absolutely hopeless, and there, deep down in that dreadful
caldron of swirling water and seething foam, will lie for all time the most
dangerous criminal and the foremost champion of the law of their generation.
The Swiss youth was never found again, and there can be no doubt that he was
one of the numerous agents whom Moriarty kept in this employ.
As to the gang, it will be within the memory of
the public how completely the evidence which Holmes had accumulated exposed
their organization, and how heavily the hand of the dead man weighted upon
them. Of their terrible chief few details came out during the proceedings, and
if I have now been compelled to make a clear statement of his career it is due
to those injudicious champions who have endeavored to clear his memory by
attacks upon him whom I shall ever regard as the best and the wisest man whom I
have ever known.
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