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The Moor - Laurie R. King [46]

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grew up, moving from Germany to the south of France and back again, until he was about fifteen, when he finally spent some time here. What a way to spend your childhood, eh? No teachers, no rules, learning languages by speaking them and science when it interests you."

It was much the same history that Baring-Gould himself had told us the first night, and now, having some idea of the man's life, I reflected that his parents' approach towards their son's education did explain something about Baring-Gould's flighty attitude towards research.

"Have you read his memoirs?" he asked us. I shook my head, having just taken a mouthful of food, and Holmes said simply that he had not. "Very interesting book. Very interesting life. It's just the first volume, of course. The next will be out next year, and he's working on the third one now."

"There's nothing about the Baskerville legend in the first volume," Scheiman remarked.

"Of course not," said Ketteridge, a touch repressively. "It ends thirty years before that. Now tell me, Mr Holmes, you're something of an antiquarian. Do you think the Romans ever made it up onto Dartmoor?"

The conversation moved away from Holmes' professional life for a time while Ketteridge and Holmes discussed tin mining and Phoenician traders, moorland crosses, the conflict between the military and the visitor during the summer months, prison reform, and the possible meanings behind the avenues of standing stones (which personally I had decided were the result of near terminal boredom on the part of the natives, who would have found heaving large rocks into upright lines an exciting alternative to watching the fog blow about) while I sat and listened politely and Scheiman drank three glasses of wine.

Gradually the topic turned back towards Baring-Gould and his work, the problems the man had in maintaining a writing schedule with his failing health, and the progress of the third and final volume of his memoirs. At this point Scheiman again interjected a comment.

"I wonder if The Hound of the Baskervilles will be in that volume," he said to Holmes. His speech was slightly slurred, and I thought that perhaps he had not missed his predinner drinks, after all. Ketteridge shot him a hard glance.

"David, I think you've had enough wine," he said. His voice was quiet but hard, almost threatening, and his secretary put down his glass in an instant and automatic response. Unfortunately, the edge of it caught the side of his dinner plate, a glancing blow but enough to jolt the glass out of his hand and send its contents shooting down the table straight at me. I jerked back, avoiding the worst of it, but not all.

Everyone but Holmes was on his feet, me dabbing at the front of my dress, Scheiman looking abruptly ill, and Ketteridge flushing with anger.

"David, I think you'd better leave." Without a word, his secretary dropped his table napkin on his chair and obeyed. Ketteridge apologised;one of Tuptree's minions silently whisked away the place setting, I reassured him (I hoped not falsely) that no permanent damage had been done my frock, and we resumed our places and our meal.

Ketteridge picked up his fork and determinedly resumed the conversation where he had left off, regaling us with stories of our host in Lew House. We heard about the pet bat that used to perch on Baring-Gould's shoulder when he was a schoolmaster (the boys called it his familiar, and swore it whispered dark secrets in his ear), and the Icelandic pony he had rescued and brought home with him, about the long black bag he had taken to carrying as a travel case, draped over his shoulder and called by the pupils "Gould's Black Slug." Ketteridge had never met Baring-Gould's wife, Grace, who died in 1916, but had prised the story of their courtship out of Baring-Gould's half brother and one-time curate, Arthur Baring-Gould, and recounted for us the tale of how the thirty-year-old parish priest had seen a nearly illiterate, sixteen-year-old girl going home in her clogs from her work in the mill and known that she would be his

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