Sherlock Holmes and the Folk Tale Mysteries - Volume 2

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Sherlock Holmes and the Folk Tale Mysteries - Volume 2 Page 1

by Puhl, Gayle Lange




  Title page

  Sherlock Holmes

  and the

  Folk Tale Mysteries

  Volume 2

  The Dyrebury Danger

  and Other Stories

  Gayle Lange Puhl

  Publisher information

  2016 digital version converted and published by

  Andrews UK Limited

  www.andrewsuk.com

  © Copyright 2016

  Gayle Lange Puhl

  The right of Gayle Lange Puhl to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1998.

  All rights reserved. No reproduction, copy or transmission of this publication may be made without express prior written permission. No paragraph of this publication may be reproduced, copied or transmitted except with express prior written permission or in accordance with the provisions of the Copyright Act 1956 (as amended). Any person who commits any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damage.

  All characters appearing in this work are fictitious or used fictitiously. Except for certain historical personages, any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. Any opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and not necessarily those of MX Publishing or Andrews UK Limited.

  MX Publishing

  335 Princess Park Manor, Royal Drive,

  London, N11 3GX

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  Cover design by www.staunch.com

  Dedication

  For

  Andrew,

  Ainea,

  Anicia,

  and

  Brennen

  The Case of the Dyrebury Danger

  The cases Mr. Sherlock Holmes accepted throughout his long career as a consulting detective came to his attention in various ways. Sometimes the authorities, like Scotland Yard officials or his brother Mycroft, who was once described to me as being “the British Government”, sent for him to request his services. Public servants, not excluding Cabinet Ministers or Members of Parliament, have graced our simple rooms urging Holmes to help them out of their difficulties, either public or private. Humbler clients have written or arrived to our sitting room at 221b Baker Street in person to request his aid. Occasionally he found something to pique his interest in the paragraphs of the numerous daily newspapers he read, many of them from outside London.

  The case I remember as one of our most unusual adventures came to us in a new fashion, shortly after Holmes had finally decided to have a telephone installed.

  In my surgery a few streets away I had grown used to the benefits of having a telephone and had urged my friend for months to get one for his exclusive use. Typically he had taken some time to investigate the pros and cons of such a move. I think he thought that such an invention situated in his own rooms might disturb the mental processes he had hoped to such fine points while sunk in deep deliberation of clues and observations gathered during his intricate cases. An insistent ringing might also draw him from his chemical experiments at a critical moment.

  Finally modernity won out and Sherlock Holmes soon found that the instrument greatly simplified his work. Now experts could be consulted and lines of information opened immediately to him, instead of his enduring the frustrating time spent waiting for answers to the many wires and notes he was accustomed to send out daily in the course of his profession. Mrs. Hudson was saved the trotting up and down the seventeen steps of our staircase to deliver questions and information that arrived via her instrument installed in the lower hall. Holmes himself no longer needed to bestir himself to walk down the stairs to talk into the receiver several times a day. After a week I could see that he revelled in the ease of sitting in his armchair and reaching out a hand to pluck the gadget from a nearby table in order to place his calls.

  He also took advantage of the simple act of taking the receiver off the hook to silent the telephone when he engaged in such important work he felt it must not be disturbed by any outside concerns.

  This had been a half-day for me at the surgery and I returned to Baker Street at lunch time. I found my friend sprawled in on the sofa, a newspaper spread across his chest, wearing his dressing gown.

  He lifted languid eyes to me and acknowledged my presence with a wave of his hand. For a moment I wondered, but a quick glance at his eyes reassured me that the pledge made to me long before still held. Sherlock Holmes was merely resting.

  “You solved that case that worried you last night,” I remarked.

  “You progress, Watson. Yes, I called up the Yard this morning and gave them the last bit of information needed to put Lady Spratt away for the murder of her husband. They thought it was a simple case of voluntary starvation, but the marks on the pantry door told the true tale. But I didn’t expect to see you here in the middle of the day.”

  “I had a half-day today and thought you might like to go out for some lunch.”

  “I am feeling a little peaked. The last meal I remember was dinner at that vile little café by the docks two days ago.”

  “Yes, and you haven’t had a bite since. Come, get dressed and we’ll try that new restaurant you mentioned on Gloucester Street. You said their chef is remarkable.”

  “Watson, you scintillate today!” He jumped up off the sofa and went his bedroom. A few moments later he emerged, the dressing gown gone. In its stead he wore a smart City suit. He was knotting the tie around his collar when the telephone rang.

  “Oh, bother the thing and just when I’m hungry! Hello? Hello? Yes, this is Mr. Sherlock Holmes. Who’s this? Lord Owen Sessamy of Dyrebury? What, in Yorkshire? Ah. You want to come here and consult me on a case? What kind of case? Oh, you would rather not say over the ‘phone. Very well. Are you in London? I am just going out but you may meet me at the “Gai Souterrain” in Gloucester Street in twenty minutes. You know the place? Excellent. Goodbye.

  “Well, this should be a most fruitful lunch, Watson. A meal to sustain the outer man and a murder to occupy the inner man.”

  “How do you know it is a case of murder?”

  “When a busy and important man like Lord Sessamy, who owns several thousand acres of land in the West Riding of Yorkshire peopled with tenant farmers and who controls two coal mines and a limestone quarry currently producing building materials for the Sheffield Cathedral repairs project travels all the way to London to consult with me, you may feel assured that is not because of some trifling robbery or trespass on his estate better handled by the local constabulary. No, it is something grave. That is clearly stated by his reluctance to even mention it over an open telephone line. Ah, Watson, that’s a lot of information for you to digest on an empty stomach. The place is close so I think we shall walk. I think for once we both can say that we approach this meal with hearty appetites.”

  Yet I had one more question. “How do you know so much about Lord Sessamy, Holmes?”

  “You have forgotten my subscription to the Leeds Mercury, Watson, not to mention those commendable publications the Doncaster Voice and the Sheffield Star. As a consulting detective it behoves me to keep up with the doings of my old London “friends” when they decide to rusticate in the country. A change of air and scenery may motivate a man to try new variations on certain old tricks and I like to keep up with the latest modes of crime wherever they appear. There has been much in the newspapers lately about Lord Sessamy’s in
volvement in the Cathedral rebuilding, and there was a short paragraph earlier this week about the accidental death of his castle librarian.”

  The “Gai Souterrain” was set beneath pavement level under another eating establishment and entered by a set of well-trod stone stairs. The space within was lit with flickering gaslights along the drab walls, although it was the middle of the day. A French maître d’, solemn in white tie and tails, ushered us to a table and slapped down the hand-written menus on the white tablecloth before us. He motioned for another waiter to attend to our wants and returned to his station by the front entrance.

  There were no windows. Despite the flaring flambeaux the restaurant was only half-lit. There were a dozen tables, each with its candle, and the subterranean motif was carried out with a flagstone floor and fitted stone walls. Overhead the ceiling seemed to hang heavily, as if it hadn’t decided if it would remain there, or crash down on our heads. The place was filled and the clientele murmured quietly to each other as a trio played softly in a corner.

  We had barely picked up our menus when Owen Sessamy, Baron of Dyrebury, was shown to our table. He was a man with broad shoulders and a trim waist, just over medium height. He was about thirty years of age with fair hair smoothed back over a high brow. His dark eyes looked from one to the other of us as he took his seat. His nose was aristocratic, his mouth thin-lipped but backed by a good set of white teeth, and the cleft in his chin gave him a somewhat rakish appearance. He was clad in a dark suit of tweed and wore a striped school tie. His hands gripped the menu with strong fingers and he moved with the masculine grace of a lion. I noticed several women at other tables watching him as he joined us.

  We ordered lunch. As the waiter left Sherlock Holmes shook out his serviette and invited Lord Sessamy to explain his problem.

  “I am the twenty-first Baron of Dyrebury and my home is Cliffdale Castle in the Yorkshire Dales. We have lived there since Edward III set up the office to fight for and defend the northern Border. My widowed mother and my two younger sisters live there with me. The nearby village of Dyrebury hosts a holy spring, dedicated to St. Galena. There was in olden times a steady stream of pilgrims travelling north to visit it and bathe in its waters, for it was as renowned as a healing spring and many miracles were wrought there. Indeed, there is a little cave hard by the water that is filled with the small stones tradition calls for the pilgrims to leave at the site. The spring still draws visitors to this day.”

  “Are there many caves in the Yorkshire Dales?” I asked, as Holmes sat fidgeting with a fork.

  “Yes, a great many. The base is limestone, you see, with other mineral veins shooting through at intervals. On the estate I have a large quarry for the stone, and also a couple of smaller coal mines. The tenant farmers do well with sheep and hay and some grain, but mostly sheep, because the land is cut up into many little valleys set among the rolling hills and other higher elevations. There are many streams that drain away into the Ouse and the Humber. I may be biased, but I think there can be no prettier sight than the Dales in early morning, when the rising sun picks out the huddled flocks safe within the long, dry stone walls set up by sturdy peasants centuries ago.”

  “You are a poet, sir,” I said.

  “There is a literary strain that runs through the family, Dr. Watson, and it plays a part in this problem.”

  At this moment the waiter appeared with our first course and we took a few minutes to appreciate the chef’s efforts.

  “Please state the nature of your problem, Lord Sessamy. Leave nothing out. Even the most insignificant detail may prove important to the case.” said Holmes. Lord Sessamy continued as the waiter served us throughout the meal.

  “Yes, Mr. Holmes. I fear it is a long tale, but I will try to condense it down to the major points. It naturally resolves itself into three parts. The first part starts back in the days of King James II, when the government was corrupt and crime was rife. For a period of nearly two years a band of highwaymen roamed the Yorkshire Dales. There were rumours that over time there were as many as forty men on horseback involved. They covered a large area in their depredations, but their robberies and assaults centred mainly on the pious travellers that came to Dyrebury to take the healing waters, so they were referred to as the Dyrebury Danger. Reports said that their leader, called the Captain, a dashing figure swathed in a blood-red cloak and wearing a wide-brimmed hat festooned with sweeping feathers, rode a great black stallion. He seemed invincible. Officers of the King’s Law, along with many local men, organized mounted parties and patrols that ranged over the Dales in attempts to capture or kill him. Occasionally they would find members of his band and summary justice would be done, but the Captain would always escape. It was said that local people helped to conceal him, for he was a romantic figure and even admired by some. Some helped him hoping to discover where he had hidden his cache of ill-gotten gains, a treasure of gold, silver and precious gems taken from the wealthy victims. Men wanted to learn his secrets and as for women…well, he was reputed to have long light hair, a handsome face, dark eyes that could mesmerize a girl at a glance, and a way with a woman unequalled in the district.

  “It was his penchant for the ladies that finally did him in. Officials discovered that the Captain regularly visited an innkeeper’s daughter, named Bess Boniface, in her room at her father’s pub, the “Lamb and Lion”. They threw a guard around the building and waited for him to appear. Many a cold and weary night they watched and waited until they wondered if their information was true.

  “He must have been watching them, for the first cloudy, moonless night after they had called off the surveillance he was sighted in the courtyard, embracing the girl before he mounted his steed. A cry went up and in a moment six men were running for their mounts. He laughed at them before spurring his black horse down the road that led into the countryside. As they scrambled to follow him, one constable, too fat to join in the hasty pursuit, grabbed Bess and forced open her clenched hand. He found four sovereigns and a gold ring that fitted the description of one stolen from a lady waylaid on the road to Dyrebury only three days before. She was dragged to a storeroom and locked inside, while more help was summoned from the town.

  “Meanwhile the ruffian led his pursuers a merry chase. Sparks flashed from his horse’s steel shoes as he thundered down the frozen highway. He galloped the animal at such a pace that the plumed hat flew from his head. . The Captain used all his tricks; suddenly turning off onto soft ground to disguise the sounds of his horse’s footfalls, standing hidden by shadows as the posse blundered past, and finally, when it seemed he was to be surrounded at last, dashing over a bridge and galloping into a thick wood. It appeared that he had made his escape, but a couple of the officials drew pistols and fired just before the thick trees hid the fugitive. They both swore they hit him.

  “The men were not far from Cliffdale Castle, my family’s seat, and decided to ride there in order to inform the Baron that the Dyrebury Danger was abroad on his estate. As they clattered up the hill to the front entrance of the Castle, they were astonished to find a fine black horse standing, floundered, by the icy steps. At its feet lay the huddled body of a man, tangled in a blood-red cloak, and bleeding to death from two pistol shots. The Baron was called out and he was horrified to find, when the body was turned over and a horn lantern held up, his youngest son, Jarvis Sessamy, breathing his last under the cold, starless sky.

  “The evidence was clear. Jarvis Sessamy, third son of Lord Clarence Sessamy, had led the Dyrebury Danger. He was by all accounts a reckless lad, who was destined for the military. But he resented all authority and resisted his father’s half-hearted attempts to get him to enlist, for he was his mother’s favourite. She was French and very passionate, by all accounts, and her husband could deny her nothing. She died soon after Jarvis. Bess Boniface pleaded her belly before the Justice of the Peace and was allowed to remain locked in her bedroom at the “Lamb a
nd Lion” until she was delivered of the child. The baby, a girl, was born five months later, but Bess died in childbirth and the infant was handed over to the innkeeper’s wife to raise.

  “The rest of the gang were either captured or driven from the district, but all suspects questioned claimed that their shares were divided up and given to them immediately. Only Jarvis Sessamy knew the location of the cave that held his lion’s share of the treasure they had stolen. Many men went out, armed with shovels and picks, to search the caves and caverns of the Yorkshire Dales in a vain attempt to discover the treasure of the Dyrebury Danger. Not a trace of it was ever found.”

  The waiter came and cleared away the last course. Brandy was poured and Owen Sessamy and I accepted cigars. Sherlock Holmes, his thin fingers now steepled before him, waited for the Baron to continue.

  “The second part of the story occurred about fifty years later. The scandal had receded into legend. Dunley Sessamy, the Baron’s oldest son, had inherited the title and estate decades before. His surviving brother, Creighton, had gone into the clergy and raised a family on the estate, having been given the living of the Dyrebury parish as a young man by their father.

  “Creighton had a granddaughter, fancifully named Berengaria, whom the family called Berry. By all accounts she was a bright girl, only sixteen, but a bit bookish. She had heard the story of the Dyrebury Danger and took it upon herself to research the tale with the intention of writing it all down as an adventure to read to the younger children in the family as a night-time story.

  “No one saw any harm in that. In truth the people in the area had come to consider Jarvis as a bit of a rogue to be proud of. He had never seriously injured anyone and the local population held him to be a sort of Robin Hood, although there was not much evidence that he distributed more than a few coins among the poor. In any case, much time had passed and memories had softened. Berry interviewed the oldest remaining residents; of which there were only a few. She visited the various places the Captain and the Danger had been known to be seen, the better to describe them. The only people that would not talk to her about the incident were the Bonifaces of the “Lamb and Lion”. Yes, the same family still owned and ran the public house. Bess’s daughter had lived and it was her family who refused to talk to Berry. The child was a sensible girl and did not press the issue.

 

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