Read The Exploits of Sherlock Holmes Online
Authors: Adrian Conan Doyle,John Dickson Carr
superiority which it seemed nothing could shake.
"By George," Whispered Lestrade. "When I was here last night, I never saw Mr. and Mrs.
Cabpleasure together. That may account for the false moustache I found hidden in the hall.
Only one person was in that house this morning, and one person is still there. That means
—" Now it was Holmes's turn to be taken aback. "Lestrade, what has got into your head at
this late date?"
"They can't deceive me. If Mr. Cabpleasure is the same person as Mrs. Cabpleasure, if he
or she simply walked out of the house in man's clothes and then walked back in again—I
see it all now!"
"Lestrade! Stop! Wait! "
"We have female searchers in these days," said Lestrade, dashing towards the house.
"They'll soon prove whether it's a lady or a gentleman."
"Holmes," cried I, "can this monstrous theory possibly be true?"
"Nonsense, Watson."
"Then you must restrain Lestrade. My dear fellow," I expostulated presently, as Mrs.
Cabpleasure disappeared from the window and a piercing female shriek indicated that Lestrade
had imparted the intelligence of what he proposed to do, "this is unworthy of you. Whatever
we may think of the lady's manners, especially in commanding you to be here in a sober
condition, you must spare her the indignity of an enforced visit to the police-station!"
"Yet I am not at all sure," said he, thoughtfully, "that the lady would be greatly harmed by
such an enforced visit. Indeed, it may serve to teach her a salutary lesson. Don't argue,
Watson! I have an errand for you."
"But—"
"I must pursue certain lines of enquiry which may take all day. Meanwhile, since my address is
readily accessible to anyone, I feel sure that the conscientious Mr. Mortimer Brown will send me
a certain telegram. Therefore I would be grateful, Watson, if you would wait at our rooms and
open the telegram should it arrive before my return."
Lestrade's mood must have been contagious. Otherwise I know not why I should have
rushed back in such a hurry to Baker Street, shouting to the cab-driver that I would give him
a guinea if he took me there in an hour.
But the anticipated telegram from Mr. Mortimer Brown found me discussing midday dinner,
and added a fresh shock. It read:
"Regret my too-expeditious departure this morning. Must state openly I am, and have
always been, only a nominal partner of Cabpleasure and Brown, whose assets belong entirely to
Mr. James B. Cabpleasure. My telegraphed enquiry as to the twenty-six diamonds in the
Cowles-Derningham purchase was caused by caution in making certain be had brought these
diamonds safely home. If he took the diamonds, he had a perfect right to take them.—
Harold Mortimer Brown."
Then James Cabpleasure was not a thief! But, if he had not meant to fly the law, I was
at a loss to account for his behaviour. It was seven o'clock that night, and I heard Holmes's
familiar tread on the stairs, when inspiration came to me.
"Pray enter," cried I, as the knob turned, "for I have found the only possible explanation at
last!"
Flinging open the door, Holmes glanced quickly round, and his face fell.
"What, is there no visitor? Yet, perhaps I am premature; yes, premature. My dear Watson,
I apologize. What were you saying?"
"If Mr. Cabpleasure had in fact vanished," said I, as he scanned the telegram, "it would
have been the miracle Lestrade called it. But miracles do not happen in the nineteenth century.
Holmes, our diamond-broker only seemed to vanish. He was there all the time, but we did not
observe him."
"How so?"
"Because he had disguised himself as a police-constable."
Holmes, who was in the act of hanging up his cape and cloth cap on the hook behind the
door, turned round with his dark brows drawn together. "Continue!" said he.
"In this very room, Holmes, Mrs. Cabpleasure said that her husband's moustache made
him resemble a constable. We know him to be a fine mimic, with a reprehensible sense of
humour. To procure a fancy-dress policeman's uniform would have been easy. After the
misdirection with which he walked from the house and walked back again, he then put on the
uniform. In the half-light, with so many constables about, he went unobserved until he could
escape.
"Excellent, Watson! It is only when I have been with Lestrade that I learn to value you.
Very good indeed."
"I have found the solution?"
"It is not, I fear, quite good enough. Mrs. Cabpleasure also said, if you recall, that her
husband was of medium height and had no more figure than a hop-pole, by which she meant
he was thin or lanky. That this was a fact I proved today by many photographs of him in the
drawing room at Happiness Villa. He could not have simulated the height or the beef of a
metropolitan policeman."
"But mine is the last possible explanation!"
"
I
think not. There is only one person who meets our requirements of height and figure, and
that person—"
There was a loud clamour and jangle of the bell from below.
"Hark!" said Holmes. "It is the visitor, the step upon the stair, the touch of drama which I
cannot resist! Who will open that door, Watson? Who will open the door?"
The door opened. Clad in evening clothes, with cape and collapsible hat, our visitor stood
upon the threshold. I found myself looking incredulously at a long, cleanshaven, familiar face.
"Good evening, Mr. Alf Peters," said Holmes. "Or should I say—Mr. James Cabpleasure?"
Realization smote me like a blow, and I all but staggered.
"I must congratulate you," continued Holmes, with sternness. "Your impersonation of the
persecuted milkman was admirably done. I recall a similar case at Riga in 1876, and it is faintly
reminiscent of an impersonation by a Mr. James Windibank in '88; but certain features here
are unique. The subject of removing a heavy moustache for changing a man's appearance,
especially in making him look younger, is one to which I may devote a monograph. Instead
of assuming a moustache for disguise, you took yours off."
When he was dressed in evening clothes, our visitor's face showed as mobile and highly
intellectual, with dancing brown eyes which crinkled at the corners as though he might smile.
But, far from smiling, he was desperately worried.
"Thank you," said he, in a pleasant and well-modulated voice. "You gave me a very bad
moment, Mr. Holmes, when I sat on that milk-wagon outside my own house and I observed
that suddenly you saw through my whole plan. Why did you refrain from unmasking me then?"
"I wished first to hear what you had to say for yourself, unembarrassed by the presence of
Lestrade."
James Cabpleasure bit his lip.
"Afterwards," said Holmes, "it was not difficult to trace you through the Purity Milk
Company, or to send you the judiciously worded telegram which has brought you here. A
photograph of James Cabpleasure with moustache eliminated, shown to your employer,
disclosed the fact that he was the same man as one Alfred Peters, who six months ago
applied for a post with the milk company, and obtained two days' leave of absence for Tuesday
and Wednesday.
"Yesterday, in this room, your wife informed us that on Tuesday you 'returned' from an
unheard-of six months' absence in Amsterdam and Paris. That was suggestive. Taken together
with your curious conduct as regards the umbrella—which you did not prize when you
purchased it, but only when you had decided on your plan—and your incredible statement
that the umbrella would be the death of you, it already suggested a hoax or imposture designed
to deceive your wife."
"Sir, let me tell you—!"
"One moment. Shaving off your moustache, for six months you drove that milk-round;
and I have no doubt you enjoyed it. On Tuesday you 'returned' as James Cabpleasure. I find
that Messrs. Clarkfather, the wigmakers, supplied you with a real-hair duplicate of your lost
moustache. In dark winter weather or by gas-light it would deceive your wife, since the lady
takes small interest in you and we know you occupy separate rooms.
"Quite deliberately you acted in a violently suspicious manner. On Tuesday night you staged
that sinister scene with a non-existent 'fellow-conspirator' outside a window, hoping to drive
your wife into those vigorous measures which you believed she was certain to take.
"On Wednesday night the visit of Inspector Lestrade, who is perhaps not the most subtle of
men, told you that you would have witnesses for your projected disappearance and that it was
safe to go ahead. Dismissing the servants and drugging your wife, you left the house.
"This morning, hatless and without a greatcoat, you had the effrontery—don't smile, sir!
—to drive the milk-wagon straight up to your house, where in the pitchdark entry you played
the part of two men.
"Descending from the wagon, you disappeared into the entry as the milkman. Inside,
already prepared, lay Mr. Cabpleasure's greatcoat, hat, and moustache. It required only
eight seconds to put on hat and coat, and hastily to affix a moustache which on that occasion
need be seen only briefly from a distance and in halflight.
"Out you walked as the elegant diamond-broker,
seemed
to remember your missing
umbrella, and rushed back in again. It took but a moment to throw the trappings inside the front
door, together with an umbrella already left there, and slam the front door from the outside.
Again you reappeared as the milkman, completing the illusion that two men had passed each
other.
"Though Inspector Lestrade honestly believes he saw two men, we all observed that the
entry was far too dark for this to have been possible. But we must not too much blame
Lestrade. When he stopped the milk-wagon and swore he had seen you before, it was no mere
bullying. He really had seen you once before, though he could not remember where.
"I have said you had no fellow-conspirator; strictly speaking, this is true. Yet surely you
must have shared the secret with your nominal partner, Mr. Mortimer Brown, who appeared
this morning for the purpose of drawing away attention and preventing close scrutiny of the
milkman. Unfortunately, his caution and apprehension rendered him useless. You made a bad
mistake when you hid that false moustache in the hall. Still, the police might have found it
when they searched you. This so-called miracle was possible because you very deliberately had
accustomed your wife and her acquaintances to your worship of that umbrella. In reality, you
cherished the umbrella because your plans could not have succeeded without it."
Sherlock Holmes, though he had been speaking curtly and without heat, seemed to rise up
like a lean avenger.
"Now, Mr. James Cabpleasure!" said he. "I can perhaps understand why you were
unhappy with your wife, and wished to leave her. But why could you not leave her openly, with
a legal separation, and not this mummery of a disappearance into nowhere?"
Our guest's fair-complexioned face went red.
"So I should have," he burst out, "if Gloria had not been already married when she married
me."
"I beg your pardon?"
Mr. Cabpleasure made a grimace, with a sudden vivid flash of personality, which showed
what he might have accomplished as a comic actor.
"Oh, you can prove it easily enough! Since she longs to go back to her real husband—
never mind who he is; it's an august name—I'm afraid Gloria wants to be rid of me,
preferably by seeing me in gaol. But I can earn money, whereas the august personage is too
lazy to try, and Gloria's prudence has become notorious."
"By Jove, Watson!" muttered Holmes. "This is not too surprising. It supplies the last
link. Did I not say the lady insisted too much on her married name of Cabpleasure?"
"I am tired of her chilliness; I am tired of her superiority; and now, at forty-odd, I wish only
to sit in peace and read. However, sir, let me acknowledge that it was a cad's trick if you
insist."
"Come!" said Holmes. "I am not the official police, Mr. Cabpleasure—"
"My name is not even Cabpleasure. That was forced upon me by my uncle, who founded
the business. My real name is Phillimore, James Phillimore. Well! I have put all my
possessions into Gloria's name, except twenty-six costly and negotiable diamonds. I had hoped
to found a new life as James Phillimore, free of a blasted silly name. But I have been defeated
by a master strategist, so do what you like."
"No, no," said Holmes blandly. "Already you have made one bad blunder, though I was
deplorably late in seeing it. When a milk-wagon is driven to the front door instead of to the
tradesmen's entrance, the foundations of our social world are rocked. If I am to help you in
forming this new life—"
"If you are to help me?" cried our visitor.
"Then you must not be betrayed by a real name of which someone is sure to be aware.
From diplomatic necessity, until the day you die, Watson shall call the problem of your
disappearance unsolved. Assume what other name you choose. But Mr. James Phillimore must