The Great Game (8 page)

Read The Great Game Online

Authors: Michael Kurland

Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Mystery Fiction, #Holmes; Sherlock (Fictitious Character), #Moriarty; Professor (Fictitious Character), #Historical, #Scientists

BOOK: The Great Game
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Kasper struggled to his feet. "I will be a moment, only," he told the Barnetts. "Then we can finish our so-interesting discussion." The fat journalist and the small clergyman went off to the rear of the car and consulted earnestly together.

 

             
"This is very strange," Barnett whispered to Cecily when the other two had left the table.

 

             
"How odd that you should think so," Cecily replied, smiling sweetly at him.

 

             
"What do you suppose it's all about?"

 

             
"I imagine we shall find out soon enough, but be on your guard. That priest is not a priest; and that fat man is no journalist."

 

             
"I believe you," Barnett said. "But I wish I could figure out what they're after."

 

             
Cecily patted his hand. "I think they seek something we do not have."

 

             
Before she had a chance to explain, Kasper returned to the table and Father Ugarti left the way he had come.

 

             
"A minor matter of liturgical interest only," Kasper told them, "but I most humbly apologize for the interruption. Now, let us return to the matter at hand. An extensive article by you concerning the habits, manners, and abilities of Mr. Holmes would be welcome. I think something of his history, also, should be included. Where he went to school; how he developed these marvelous deductive powers for which he has become so justly noted; his relationship with Professor Moriarty—"

 

             
"His what?"

 

             
"His relationship with Professor James Moriarty, author of
The Dynamics of an Asteroid,
and a well-regarded monograph on the binomial theorum.
Surely his association with such a distinguished scientist must have had some impact on Mr. Holmes's own theories and techniques."

 

             
"I couldn't say," Barnett replied.

 

             
"Come now, it is well known that you, yourself, are an associate of Professor Moriarty."

 

             
"I have the honor to be his friend," Barnett replied, "but I know nothing of his work. I am not a scientist." He stood up. "I regret to have wasted your time, Signor Kasper, but I am afraid I cannot take a commission from the
Staatlicher
Ü
berblicken
at this time."

 

             
Kasper pushed himself to his feet. "On the contrary," he said, "if that is the case, then it is I who
have
wasted your time. I wish you good day." He nodded to Cecily and stalked firmly off down the aisle.

 

             
"Of all the nerve," Barnett muttered. "I am impressed with that man's gall!"

 

             
"I am impressed with his information," Cecily said. "It's not exactly public knowledge that Mr. Holmes ever had anything to do with Professor Moriarty, or that you are an associate of the professor or know Mr. Holmes. Dr. Watson never mentions it in any of his case histories."

 

             
"That's true," Barnett admitted. "Holmes once asked Watson, in my presence, not to mention the professor until Holmes had apprehended him for some major crime.
Which is a good example of the state of their 'relationship.
' And, as that has never happened—"

 

             
Cecily stood up. "I'm tired," she said. "Let's return to the compartment."

 

             
"Are you still mad at me?" Barnett asked.

 

             
"No. I'm no longer angry. Do you grant me that there was something odd about the confrontation we just had?"

 

             
"How could I deny it?" Barnett said.

 

             
They went back to their compartment and settled down, Cecily to her Baedeker and Benjamin to staring out the window at the passing hillsides. After a while Cecily put down the book and began rummaging through her traveling bag.

 

             
"It is a puzzle," Barnett said after a while. "I wish Professor Moriarty were here. He enjoys puzzles."

 

             
"Benjamin!"

 

             
"What is it, Dove?"

 

             
Cecily put the bag on the seat beside her and took a deep breath. "Somebody has gone through my traveling bag.
"

 

             
"
Gone through? You mean searched?"

 

             
"Yes. Somebody has been pawing about my personal belongings." She shuddered. "It makes my skin crawl to think of it.
"

 

             
"
Is anything missing?
"

 

             
"
No. I don't think so.
"

 

             
"
But you're sure?"

 

             
"I can tell. The bag has been rearranged. I am sure." She got up and pulled the large leather portmanteau from the shelf.

 

             
Benjamin caught her and the bag as she staggered back with it. "Here," he said, "let me." They put the bag on the opposite seat and opened it together, undoing the straps and unlocking the small brass lock with a key which Barnett kept in his watch-pocket.

 

             
"What do you think?" Barnett asked.

 

             
"That red scarf has been refolded. Your two light sweaters are out of line. Someone has been through this bag also.
Very carefully, but undoubtedly."

 

             
"But why?
Nothing seems to be missing. Is anything missing from this bag?"

 

             
"No. Your gold cufflinks and studs are still here. My bracelets and earrings are still here. They're not particularly valuable, but they are certainly portable. Whoever searched our belongings thinks it more important that we remain unaware of it than that he makes a profit. If I weren't, as you keep telling me, excessively orderly and organized, we never would have noticed."

 

             
"That Kasper fellow!"
Barnett said.

 

             
"My belief also," Cecily told him. "It was obvious from his second sentence that he was one of the
group
following us.
"

 

             
"
His second sentence?"

 

             
"Certainly.
He said that the
conduttore
told him who we are. The conductor of this train has no idea who we are. The ticket was booked by the hotel, and they got our name wrong."

 

             
"That's right," Barnett said.

 

             
"Kasper was just keeping us out of the way, so that his companions could search our belongings."

 

             
"Say," Barnett remembered, "he and that adolescent came into the dining car from the rear of the train. I'll bet they were in the baggage van. It must have disappointed them to discover that our luggage was sent on ahead."

 

             
Cecily closed the portmanteau and fastened the straps. "I feel degraded," she said. "I must have all my clothing laundered before I wear any of it again."

 

             
"I believe it has something to do with Holmes or Professor Moriarty," Barnett said.

 

             
"Well I hope that, whoever they are and whatever they want, that they're done with us," Cecily said. "I don't want this to go on and ruin our vacation."

 

             
"We won't let it!" Barnett said stoutly.

 

             
"Well it already is!" Cecily said, and burst into tears. "First these people are following us all over, and then you won't believe me when I tell you about it, and then they come into our very own railway carriage and paw through our personal belongings. I'm sorry, Benjamin, but I am very upset."

 

             
Barnett pulled a clean pocket-handkerchief from his jacket and passed it to his wife. "There, there," he said, taking her in his arms. "Mustn't be upset, really you mustn't. We won't let anything else happen to spoil our vacation. I've learned my lesson. From now on I shall listen abjectly to anything you say."

 

             
"Not abjectly, my love," Cecily said, wrapping her arms around his neck, "but carefully and honestly. I am usually right, you know."

 

             
"Yes, dear," Barnett said.

 

CHAPTER
FOUR

THE FREEDOM LEAGUE

 

One man, with a dream, at pleasure,

Shall go forth and conquer a crown;

And three with a new song's measure

Can trample a kingdom down

— Arthur William Edgar O'Shaughnessy

 

             
The Vienna cell of the
Geheime Verein f
ü
r Freiheit,
the Secret Freedom League, met in the box cellar of the Werfel Chocolate manufactory in the Mariahilf District of Vienna. A dank, cold, windowless room separate from the main cellar, it held a table, a few chairs, a row of cupboards along one wall, and an assortment of abandoned packing crates. What light there was came from the glare of a single-mantle gas fixture emerging from the ceiling, and the glow of a couple of ancient oil lamps suspended from hooks in the brick walls. Neither Herr Werfel, nor any of the management of the chocolate manufactory knew of the use to which their box cellar was being put.

 

             
The members of the League professed anarchism and practiced terror. Their weapons were the bomb, the pistol, the ice pick, and the lives of their members. They seemed to be well financed, although how or by whom was known only to their leaders. The Vienna cell numbered between twelve and twenty-two men, depending on the phases of the moon, the vagaries of conscience, and the diligence of the
Kundschafts Stelle
—the Austrian counterintelligence bureau.

 

             
Fourteen men were present at tonight's meeting; among them a pair with the thick-necked, broken-nosed look of professional toughs who would not be out of place at a daily police lineup; a trio with the furtive look of unsuccessful sneak-thieves; and a well-dressed young man with a bowler hat and the detached air of a gentleman of leisure, or a successful pickpocket. Most of the rest looked like—and for the most part were—university students who divided their time between attending lectures on the economic consequences of the great upheavals of 1849 and plotting upheavals of their own.

 

             
The cell leader was known as "Number One" at meetings. Outside, as Paul Donzhof had discovered with a bit of discreet research, he was Dietrich Loomer, called "the Ferret" by his acquaintances. He was a gaunt, sallow, notably short, totally bald man with no eyebrows who habitually wore a black cloak made of a material usually reserved for horse blankets and a black, wide-brim hat pulled close over his eyes. This gave him a furtive look which made one instinctively put him down as a sneak thief or a police spy. He had been both. His formative years had been spent in a horse regiment of the Austrian Army, where he had risen to the rank of corporal before being kicked out for irregularities of a highly personal and unmentionable nature.

 

             
Paul, known as "Number Thirty-seven" to his fellow anarchists, was assigned to guard-duty for this meeting. His job was to stand outside the door and give warning if danger, in the form of the police or a Werfel employee, approached.

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