Young Sherlock Holmes_ Fire Storm - Andrew Lane [78]
She broke contact suddenly, not pushing him away but stepping back. He might have taken it as a rejection except for the fact that her hands were resting on his arms. She gazed at him from those bottomless violet eyes, and he saw that she was on the verge of tears.
‘You came looking for us,’ she whispered.
‘I had to,’ he said simply. The words came out of nowhere, unplanned. ‘I can’t live without you.’
‘Much as ah hate to break up this reunion,’ Amyus Crowe rumbled, ‘there’s a whole heap of talking that needs to be done, an’ I do believe that Mr Stone might expire here on the mat if he don’t get a drink inside him. Ginnie, be a darlin’ and get refreshments for our guests.’
Virginia’s hands squeezed Sherlock’s arms for a second, and then she let go. She backed away, still maintaining eye contact. He felt as if he could drown in those eyes. It was as if she was sending him a message, but he didn’t know what it was. Perhaps she didn’t either. Perhaps the important thing was that there was a message, not the content.
Virginia dropped her gaze, and Sherlock felt like a puppet whose strings had suddenly been released. He turned to look at the rest of the room, at the others, and the world seemed to have changed. Everything looked the same, but it was different. He couldn’t explain it.
Amyus Crowe was staring at him with a strange expression on his face. He raised a shaggy eyebrow. ‘A handshake will suffice for me, if that’s all right with you.’
Sherlock smiled. ‘I’m glad you’re all right,’ he said. ‘I’m glad you’re both all right. When we found your cottage was deserted, we were worried.’
Crowe nodded. ‘Couldn’t be helped. Ah got wind that someone was in the vicinity askin’ ’bout me and mah girl. Normally ah’d go in search of the people askin’ questions an’ ask them some of mah own, but when ah heard the descriptions of the fellows doin’ the askin’ ah decided that discretion was the better part of valour, an’ made a run for it.’
‘They’re as dangerous as that?’ Stone asked. ‘I have to say that young Sherlock here dealt very well with two of them – a black-haired fellow who appears to be deficient in the hearing department and a friend of his with a face like a potato.’
‘That’ll be Ned Fillon an’ Tom Payne.’ Crowe suddenly seemed to realize that he was still holding the gun and placed it on a table by his side. ‘They ain’t anything more than small fry. It’s the man they work for that scares the bejazus out of me.’
‘I think we met him,’ Sherlock said. ‘I couldn’t see his face, but I heard him speak. He talked really quietly.’
‘I saw him,’ Stone said, ‘and I really wish I hadn’t. He had tattoos all over. People’s names.’ He looked briefly at Virginia, but Crowe shook his head slightly, warning Rufus off. Only Rufus and Sherlock noticed.
‘Bryce Scobell,’ Crowe said heavily. ‘So he’s here.’ He sighed. ‘Ah was hopin’ that he might have just sent his men over to find me, but ah guess ah was too optimistic in that regard. He wants me so badly that he’s made the journey from America himself. You saw him in Farnham, ah suppose?’
‘I’m afraid he followed us here,’ Sherlock admitted. ‘To Edinburgh.’
Even in the dim light Sherlock could see that Crowe’s face seemed suddenly to grow paler and even more immobile than usual. To Sherlock the signs were clear. Crowe was in the grip of some strong emotion. His hand reached out to rest on the pistol on the table, and his gaze flickered towards the window, through which the approach to the cottage was visible. ‘Ah would have expected,’ the big American said, choosing the words carefully, like a man stepping on stones to cross a dangerous river, ‘that you’d cover your own tracks well enough that he couldn’t come after you. Does he know about this cottage?’
‘No.’
‘It’s only a matter of time.’ Crowe shook his head angrily. ‘Sherlock, how on