Now Moriarty did smile. “Your thoroughness is commendable — but facts do not always reveal the man.”
“Ah,” said Reed, warming with the compliment, “but I watched him closely on the voyage and I spent several hours in conversation with him. He has all the qualities we look for in a recruit: nobility, courage, but a life damaged and a nature simmering with bitterness. He is ready, I am sure.”
“I believe Reed is right,” agreed Scoular softly. “In his present state of mind, Walker is rather like a dog that has been rescued from being destroyed. He will give obedience and loyalty to anyone who shows him any form of kindness and generosity.”
Moriarty sipped his brandy, trapping the mouthful until it began to burn his tongue before releasing it. “I am encouraged by your words, gentlemen. If what you say is accurate, it is so very opportune that this remarkable individual has been washed up on our beach at this particular time. He seems to have all the qualities needed for the job I have in mind.”
“May I ask what job that is?” enquired Reed.
Moriarty grinned. “Of course you may. However, you should not expect an answer. Not yet, at least.”
Reed looked nervously away and took a large gulp of brandy.
The room fell into silence, a silence both visitors knew it would be inappropriate to break. The Professor was thinking, and he would be the one to speak first. Scoular and Reed sat impassively as the silence settled on the room, accentuating the crackle of the coals in the grate and the soft tick of the clock on the mantel. At length the Professor began tapping his fingers in a staccato rhythm on the desk, and then at last he spoke.
“You are excellent lieutenants, and I trust your word and your judgement implicitly. However, on this occasion, I need to judge for myself before we go any further with this matter. Reed, I shall call round to your club tomorrow at noon. Make sure there is a private room available where I may have a meeting with Doctor John H. Walker.”
“It shall be done.”
“Very good. Now, gentlemen, I do not think I need keep you any more from your beds or what other pursuits you have in mind at this late hour. Therefore, I bid you goodnight.”
After the two men had gone, Moriarty picked up a copy of the Temple Bar magazine, which Reed had brought him that evening. It was dated 1878. He flipped it open to the page that Reed had marked: ‘The Missing Dagger’ — a mystery story by John H. Walker. Professor James Moriarty settled down in his chair and began to read.
Five
FROM THE JOURNAL OF JOHN WALKER
I only met Professor James Moriarty twice. The first time was in a small dark room at Reed’s club, the morning following my arrival back in England.
The previous evening I had dined with Reed and Scoular, who, although maintaining a veneer of affability, spent the whole time quizzing me about my life, my politics, my family and my views on a whole range of subjects. I realised that they were, in fact, assembling my autobiography as a kind of screening process. I didn’t mind. It was good to feel free to talk about myself again without the fear of censure, and I knew that every firm or organisation of quality has its own method of gauging the worth of a prospective employee. The only aspect of the matter that puzzled me was the exact nature of the position they had in mind for me. But I was prepared to be patient. There were no other demands upon my time or company.
The following morning, I discovered a letter on the breakfast tray that was brought to my room. I had spent the night at the club and slept late, enjoying the luxury of a proper bed after months on straw and sacking in the army prison, and weeks in a cramped bed onboard ship, and was surprised to find that it was after ten o’clock.
The letter was from Reed.
My dear Walker,
I trust you slept well. I have to be about my business. Being out of the country for a few months, there is now much for me to attend to. I am not sure when we shall meet again. However, the principal of the establishment that I represent will be calling on you at the club at noon, and I believe he will be offering you a lucrative role in our organisation. Your appointment is in the Red Room on the second floor. I advise you to be prompt.
Allow me to take this opportunity to wish you the best of luck.
In all sincerity,
A. Reed, Capt. (Retd.)
The tone of the letter suggested that I should not be seeing my newly made acquaintance again. It was as though his part in the strange process of recruitment was over and it was time for him to step out of the picture. Where all this was leading, I could not begin to discern, but I comforted myself that by the time noon had arrived, along with my important visitor, I should be much the wiser.
At the appointed hour, a lackey showed me in to the Red Room, a small book-lined apartment with scarlet furnishings. Two large armchairs were placed on either side of the fireplace, which contained a meagre fire that had only recently been lit and was still struggling for life. On being left alone, I began perusing the shelves. Then a voice addressed me.
“I suspect you will find little to interest you, Doctor. It is just a second-rate collection of outdated tomes. No adventure stories at all.”
I whipped around and found that the voice belonged to a saturnine young man who was sitting in one of the chairs, which had its back to me. He rose and we shook hands.
“I know of your penchant for adventure stories,” he continued, his lips spreading into a wide smile. “I spent an enjoyable hour reading your ‘Mystery of the Missing Dagger’ last night.”
“Really?” I stuttered, in some amazement. “I wrote that some time ago when I was in general medical practice. The long intervals between patients—”
The smile broadened. “I am Professor James Moriarty and I am very pleased to meet you, Doctor John H. Walker. Do sit down.”
I did as I was bid.
“I know all about you. Well, perhaps that is an exaggeration, for who can know everything about anyone? There are always dark, private quarters of the mind and soul that we never reveal to anyone. So, allow me to rephrase that statement. I know a great deal about you. On the other hand, you know nothing about me.”
“Apart from your name and that you are acquainted with Alexander Reed and Lincoln Scoular.”
Moriarty’s eyes twinkled with amusement. “True, but that is very little and of no consequence. If you should seek out the aforementioned gentlemen to verify your assertion regarding our acquaintance, I am sure you would not find them.” The smile vanished and the eyes grew icy.
“I’m sorry, I don’t quite understand...” I said, shaking my head.
“Of course you don’t, my dear doctor. Let me help you a little. I am the head of a vast criminal organisation. It is an efficient structure, which carries out robberies, forgeries and even the occasional murder.”
He paused and raised an eyebrow, awaiting my reaction to this startling revelation. I did not know whether this was some monstrous joke or whether the fellow was mad. My expression must have revealed my thoughts.
“I speak nothing but the truth. At least half of the crimes committed in this great grey city are perpetrated by my employees. And I am the organising power in charge of this most profitable of enterprises.”
“Either this is some rather bizarre test or a jest in bad taste—”
Moriarty shook his head. “It is no jest. Despite my calling, I believe in telling the truth. When necessary. Honesty is a fine virtue, even if it should be exercised sparingly. I assure you, I have no intention of misleading you.”
I rose from my chair, anger boiling within me. “I thank you for that, sir,” I snapped, “but why on earth you feel the need to convey this information to me, I do not know, and furthermore, I do not want to know. However, let me state clearly lest there should be some misunderstanding in the matter, if you hold any notions of involving me in your... activities, let me disabuse you of such ideas now.”
Moriarty did not reply; his features remained passive, but I detected a trace of amusement in
his eyes.
“So,” I continued, “having established that, I believe there is no further purpose to this interview, and therefore if you will excuse me...”
I moved towards the door.
“Stop where you are, Doctor.” His voice was brittle and harsh, like the crack of a whip. “You will appreciate that the knowledge you now possess concerning me and my ‘activities’, as you referred to them so decorously, places you in rather a privileged and, I am afraid, very precarious position. You have now become a threat to my anonymity and safety. I assure you, Doctor, if you leave this room now, you will be dead within the hour. Another fatality floating in the Thames.”
“What?” My blood ran cold at these words. Whatever nightmarish charade I had found myself party to, I was convinced by Moriarty’s demeanour that he meant every word of his warning.
“Trust me. It is not an idle threat. Now, do please sit down, Doctor, and try not to look quite so outraged. You have made the mistake of not listening to the full story — a mistake I had not expected either a doctor or a writer to make.”
I felt trapped, caught in some diabolical web of intrigue which I could not explain. Numbed by fear and with my mind reeling, I slumped down into the chair. What on earth had I let myself in for? There was something about this man — his presence, and the fierce aura that seemed to surround him — that convinced me that all he told me was true, and that indeed my life was in his hands.
“It is not to any stranger that I divulge the secrets of my calling, but of course in one sense you are not quite any stranger. Thanks to my colleagues, Captain Reed and Mr Scoular, I know a great deal about you.”
Until Reed’s name was mentioned, my befuddled mind had not connected him with the creature before me, but then suddenly so many little pieces seemed to float together in my mind to create a very disturbing picture. Reed and the mess funds. Once a thief, always a thief, keeping the company of thieves. And he saw me as being bitter and demoralised enough to turn my hand to crime and join his filthy band. Anger rose within me again. If Reed had been present, I would have knocked the scoundrel to the ground.
“Rest assured, Doctor,” Moriarty continued, breaking into my thoughts, “I have no intention of placing a jemmy in your hand, slipping a black mask over your face and asking you to carry out a burglary. I have something far more sophisticated and essentially law-abiding in mind for you. Something more suited to your talents than cracking a crib.” He laughed.
I opened my mouth to respond, but he held up his gloved hand to silence me.
“The full story, Walker, the full story before you make any more rash statements. Allow me to furnish you with all the facts, and then we can discuss the matter like gentlemen.”
Ambrose Jones was thirsty. And, he thought, so he should be, after traversing the city all morning visiting the various establishments he owned to collect the rent. “Establishments” is how Jones thought of them, but in reality most of them were ramshackle doss-houses in the poorest parts of the city — Houndsditch, Whitechapel and Bethnal Green. Rats, mice and other vermin shared the premises with the poorest families in these damp and depressing dwellings. To Ambrose Jones’ mind, it was a pity that he could not charge the rats and mice rent in addition to his wretched tenants.
There was one property which was in reasonable condition, in the heart of the metropolis, the one where Jones dwelt himself, letting out the two upper floors to “his young gentlemen”, as he referred to them. That was to be his last port of call, but, consulting his watch and noting that it was just past midday, he decided, as he’d had a good morning — no defaulters and only one threatened eviction — that he would treat himself to a glass of ale and some vittals at his favourite inn, The Sparrow’s Nest in Holborn. The inn was situated down a narrow lane off the main thoroughfare. As Jones turned down the lane, a hansom cab drew up beside him at the kerb and the passenger leaned out to address him. He was well made, of muscular build, and dressed as far as Jones could see like so many of the City businessmen that scurry around like ants near St Paul’s.
“Excuse me, sir,” said the stranger. “I wonder if you could help me.”
Jones’s eagle eye noted that the man held a coin in his hand. Grinning, and raising his greasy Homburg, Jones stepped forward. “I should be happy to, if I can, sir.”
The stout man returned the grin and opened the door of the cab. “My query is of a rather delicate nature,” he said, lowering his voice. He beckoned Jones to come near, which the greedy landlord duly did. He now observed that there was another passenger in the cab, his features veiled by shadow.
“What is the query, then?” Jones asked.
Before he knew what was happening, the stranger whipped his arm out and grasped Jones by the neck and pulled him forward. It was an expert move, for not only did it take the landlord by surprise, but also the pressure on his windpipe prevented him from calling out.
“Come gently now,” murmured his assailant, and with a further tug he lifted Jones off the ground and hauled him inside the cab.
The door shut. The blind came down and the cab set off. Jones lay sprawled on the floor of the vehicle, panting for breath and wondering if his world was coming to an end. He was conscious of the cash stowed in his money-belt, his takings from the morning, but in a rare moment he thought more about the possibility of losing his life to these ruffians than losing his ill-gotten gains.
“Take the money,” he croaked, “but don’t hurt me. Please don’t hurt me.”
“It’s not your money we are after, Mr Jones,” came a voice from the darkness. It was not the voice of his assailant. It had a strange dark timbre to it and sounded somehow foreign.
Rather than calming him, this statement made him panic. If they didn’t want his money, then they wanted to kill him. He tried to struggle to his feet while at the same time crying out at the top of his voice, “Help! Murder!”
He felt a blow to the side of the head. Something heavy, like the butt of a revolver, connected with his temple. Further cries for help died in his throat and he slumped back to the floor, dazed and gasping for breath.
Briefly, light flared in the cab as one of the men lit a cigarette, and through bleary eyes Jones saw his abductors. There was the stout man who had first approached him and who had just hit him, judging by the gun he held in his hand. The other man, who reclined in the corner of the cab with his cigarette, was a good-looking black man.
“Relax, Mr Jones, we mean you no harm.”
“Like the devil, you do! You’ve just nearly knocked my brains out!”
“A simple matter of restraint. We have a favour to ask of you, one for which we will gladly pay you.”
At the mention of money, Ambrose Jones’ pulse quickened all the more.
“Favour? What favour? Why not come to see me in my office in Montague Street? Why abduct me, if all you want to do is ask me a favour?”
“We have our methods, Mr Jones,” the voice purred in the darkness. “This way, you know what to expect if you do not agree to our offer.”
“What to expect...?”
“I think you know what we mean.”
Jones felt the barrel of the cold revolver press hard against his forehead. His mouth was now so parched with fear that he could hardly croak a response.
“What do you want of me?”
“It concerns a lodger of yours. In Montague Street.”
“A lodger?”
“Yes, a certain Mr Sherlock Holmes.”
Six
FROM THE JOURNAL OF JOHN WALKER
“I am easily bored, Doctor Walker. You see, I am very successful at what I do, and with success comes a certain security, which is tedious. I abhor the dull routine of existence. Sometimes I long for the excitement and frustration of failure, so that I can rise to the challenge of overcoming it. For a man of my intellectual capacity, I am in constant need of such challenges, something to stimulate me, to strive for. Give me danger, give me risks, give me a puzzle, and I
am in my element.’
Professor Moriarty leaned back in his chair and stared into the fire. Although he was talking to me, his expression and demeanour indicated that he was in essence merely using my presence to express thoughts that had been bound up within him for some time. Much of what he was telling me was a kind of confession, and who better to confess to than a stranger whose very existence you hold in your power? Strangely, I began to feel sorry for this man, trapped, as he seemed to believe, atop his own unique, rarefied ivory tower.
“Please do not think me arrogant when I refer to my intellectual capacity. I speak merely the truth. As I mentioned earlier, I am a strong advocate of the truth in the appropriate circumstances. That I have a refined intelligence is not a brag or boast; it is fact. I am not one of those who rate modesty amongst the virtues.”
He paused again and then suddenly his eyes narrowed, focused, and lost their dreamlike quality. He took a cigarette-case from his pocket and offered it to me. I declined with a shake of the head.
“Pity. They are a special Ukrainian blend. An excellent smoke.” He lit the cigarette and took a deep breath, and then allowed the grey tendrils to drift slowly from his mouth.
“So, you see, Walker,” he said at length, “my life is a continual search for stimulation, that sense of danger, that unique entertainment. Something to keep me from going mad. After all, madness is akin to genius. That lack of fear for the consequences that allows one to dare — and then do. Certainly, that is part of my genius.”
Moriarty drew on the cigarette again and smiled a secret smile to himself. “Something to keep me from going mad,” he repeated softly. “And do you know, I think I have found that stimulation. You will not have heard of a young man called Sherlock Holmes?”
I shook my head again.
“No, of course not. Very few people have — yet. But they will, I am sure, with your help.”
The Veiled Detective Page 5