The Mammoth Book of New Sherlock Holmes Adventures - Mike Ashley [204]
“Metal?” said Traill, now still more puzzled. “I wear no rings.”
“True enough. But your right hand contains a steel needle, inserted there by the false Dr James under the pretext of removing the poisoned mouth-parts of the red leech.”
I was thunderstruck as I realized the fiendish ingenuity of the plot. Even the quill pen was part of the design, for a steel nib would instantly have given the game away. And of course that faint smell in the air was the sulphuric-acid reek of hidden wet-cell batteries. Meanwhile, Jarman uttered a forced laugh. He appeared to be sweating profusely. “What a farrago of nonsense! Such a thing would be impossible to prove.”
“On the contrary, I have photographed it by means of X-radiation.” Holmes drew something from one of his capacious pockets. “This shadowgraph shows the bone structure of Mr Traill’s right hand. Bone, being less previous to the rays than flesh, appears as nearly white. Here is the solid white of the needle, lying between the metacarpal bones.”
Traill shuddered again.
“No doubt we will find that Mr Jarman cannot account for his time on that Tuesday six months ago when you had your famous adventure on Hampstead Heath … ah, Mr Jarman, you are smiling. Therefore you have an alibi, and the deed was done by your good brother Basil, who likes to experiment with electricity. What, no smile now?”
I had belatedly trained my revolver on Jarman.
“What was the purpose of this terrible charade?” asked Traill.
“It is possible,” said Holmes gently, “that you are no longer heir to a great estate. If the assets or a large part of them have somehow slipped through the fingers of Jarman, Fittlewell and Coggs, then it naturally became necessary to delay – by fair means or foul – your legal acquisition of Sir Maximilian’s fortune. We shall find out when, as Mr Jarman very nearly put it, those who lived by the law shall perish by the law.”
“Mr Sherlock Holmes, you are an officious meddler,” stated Jarman, gazing intently at my friend. “And you over-reach. Your remarks are slanderous, sir. A true accounting of the estate’s affairs lies here upon my desk, and will show no defalcation: perhaps you would care to glance through the record?” The lawyer tapped his scorched index finger upon the book in question, a heavy ledger with a tarnished brass clasp that lay askew upon a mound of papers near the desk’s far edge. “Within, all your questions are answered.”
For half a minute, Holmes’s right hand had lain concealed within the folds of his bulky Inverness cape. Now he reached forward to the ledger, but did not flick open the clasp as I had anticipated. Instead he swiftly lifted the entire tome clear of the papers, and two oddities were made manifest. First, from the underside of the book’s brass clasp there trailed a long, springy, shining copper wire which vanished into the artfully disarrayed papers. Second, Holmes’s hand was seen to be sheathed in a heavy, rubber glove.
“How many volts, Mr Jarman?” he enquired pleasantly. “Hundreds? Thousands? I presume this jest was ultimately intended for Mr Traill, whose death would have bought you yet more time. My admiration for your ingenuity increases.”
WIlfrid Jarman’s composure was broken at last, and with an inarticulate cry of rage he stepped to one side, reaching into a drawer. Even as I realized that his hand now held an old-fashioned pistol, he had dextrously placed himself so that Holmes lay in my line of fire. I flung myself uselessly forward, to see Jarman aiming at point-blank range while Holmes flung the ledger in what seemed a futile shielding gesture. Blue-white sparks flew. The pistol’s flash and bang echoed with dread authority in the musty room. Then a heavy body fell to the floor. There was a long silence.
“I suspect that our friend did not finish pulling the trigger,” said