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'I have been retained,' said Holmes, moving forward, 'by Pope Leo XIII to investigate the theft of certain doc.u.ments from this library. My time is short, and I would request your cooperation.'
'Of course,' the man whispered. 'My name is Ambrose, Jehosephat Ambrose. I am the Head Librarian of the Library of Saint John the Beheaded. Whatever questions you have, please ask them.'
'Which doc.u.ments are missing?' my friend snapped.
'Three books from our alternative zoology and phantasmagorical anthropology section. Here are the t.i.tles.' He held out a sheet of paper.
'You were expecting us?'
'I was expecting someone.'
'What, pray tell,' I interjected, 'is "alternative zoology"?'
'The study of fabulous beasts,' Ambrose answered. 'Dragons and deamons, griffins and chimerae. You may have heard rumours concerning a sea creature which inhabits Loch Ness, near Inverness in Scotland. We have a number of ma.n.u.scripts describing its habits and its physiognomy.
You may also remember the discovery of the fossilized bones of what might be termed "primeval monsters" at Charing Cross some ten years ago, now. Again, we have quite a selection of books on that subject, going right back to the Bible.'
'The Bible?' I said, scandalized.
' "There were giants in the Earth in those days",' Ambrose quoted.
'And these books were kept where?' Holmes said tersely, trying to get the conversation back on the right track.
'In a room, not far from here.'
'And your security procedures?'
'n.o.body is allowed to remove books from the library.'
'So I am informed. I am not concerned with what people are allowed to do, but with what they are forbidden to do.'
Ambrose had the grace to look discomfited.
'You will have noticed,' he began, 'that we have an arrangement with the local criminal fraternity. More precisely, two of the local gang leaders, or "scurfs" as the argot has it, guarantee the safety and integrity of the Library in return for financial recompense.'
'And how exactly do they operate?'
'Very simply. There is only one way out of the Library - the doorway through which you entered. At no other point do its bounds come near the outside world; apart from that door we are completely sealed in. Every visitor and every member of staff who leaves is searched by the skilled pickpockets, or "fine wirers", of each gang. If anybody is caught attempting to remove a book - and they will be caught - their hands are cut off. It's a very simple deterrent!'
'Bribery?' Holmes suggested.
Ambrose shook his head. 'It was obvious to the original creators of the Library that any one set of guards could be suborned by bribery or threats.
Since time immemorial we have used two tribes, or gangs, who are in compet.i.tion. Each watches the other, you see? Each would like nothing more than to catch the other one out, and so we avoid placing too much reliance on any one person or group of people.'
'An equitable arrangement,'Holmes said brusquely. 'Do these gang leaders have names?'
'They are known by the colourful sobriquets of Mr Jitter and Mack "The Knife" Yeovil'
'I know of them. Men without any notion of decency or morals: thieves and killers whose catalogues of crimes are exceeded only by their hatred of each other. I have often suspected them of being linked to the Moriarty gang.'
Ambrose smiled.
'That rivalry a.s.sures our security,' he said. 'Each man would take great pleasure in catching the other one out, or discovering a theft that the other had overlooked.'
'What about ventilation?' I asked. 'Could somebody gain access through ventilation ducts?'
'There is no ventilation.'
'But the air . . . it's fresh.'
Ambrose smiled. 'The Library has been designed to provide a natural channel for the transit of air from the doorway, around the many corridors and rooms, and out of the same doorway whilst still maintaining a constant temperature and humidity. Effectively, and without wanting to appear melodramatic, the Library breathes, just as you or I.'
'Very interesting, I am sure,' said Holmes, who could be very blinkered when he chose to be. 'But how soon would the theft have been discovered?'
'We had just completed a full inventory of the Library's stock a month back when an old and respected visitor asked to see the very books that were stolen. Thus we were able to narrow the time of the theft down considerably.'
'Most fortuitous,' Holmes said dryly. 'I will need the names and addresses of all visitors to the Library, starting a month before the theft.'
'Already prepared.' He held out another sheet of paper. Holmes took it and scanned the list. His eyes widened in surprise at one of the names. He cast a covert glance at me, and read on.
'This W C. Minor. . ' he said a few moments later. 'The name is familiar to me.'
'Ah' Ambrose said, and trailed off. 'You have hit upon one of our more unusual members. Dr Minor is the only man who is allowed to read our books outside the library.'
'I believed you to say that n.o.body was allowed to remove books.'
'He does not remove them. We send them to him.'
'And why is that?' Holmes snapped.
'He is aiding in the compilation of a dictionary to rival that of Dr Johnson, one that will contain every word in the English language. Our archives of arcane doc.u.ments are invaluable to his researches.'
'And why can he not consult them here?'
Ambrose blinked.
'Because he is confined within the hospital for the criminally insane at Broadmoor.'
'Of course!' Holmes cried. 'I thought I knew the name. He shot an innocent man under the delusion that he was being pursued by Irishmen. I was briefly involved in the case. I presume that you have recovered all of the books that you sent him?'
'Of course.'
'Then, a.s.suming that he is still in captivity, we can provisionally rule him out as a suspect. This last one on the list interests me, however,' he said thoughtfully. 'You have him listed only as "The Doctor", and you give no address.'
'That is how he styles himself,' Ambrose said, and smiled reminiscently.
'The Doctor has been a visitor here since before my father's time. I believe his ticket was first issued . . . oh, let me see . . . five hundred years ago.'
'Not to him personally, I hope,' Holmes said.
'I would not have thought so,' Ambrose said, offended. 'Many families treat their visitors' tickets as family heirlooms, pa.s.sing them down from generation to generation. Strangely enough, it was he who asked to see the missing books, and sparked off this business.'
I could see my friend's eyebrows lift slightly at this.
'I would like to see the room from which the thefts occurred,' he said.
Ambrose nodded, levered himself from behind his desk and gestured for us to follow him out of the room. He led us another merry dance; switching back and forth along corridors, climbing stairs and descending ramps until I felt quite dizzy and had no idea where we were or even upon which floor. Eventually we stopped by a room, no different from the myriad others we had pa.s.sed.
'Alternative zoology and phantasmagorical anthropology,' he announced.
I stood on the threshold as Holmes leapt into action. I had seen my friend's methods put into effect before, and so I was not surprised when he dropped to the floor and began to crawl around the room like some huge, dun-coloured beetle.
'You must be terribly well read,' I said to Ambrose in an attempt to make small talk. He looked strangely at me.
'We do not read any of the doc.u.ments here,' he said.
'What, not at all?'
'No, sir. We have all taken a vow for the sake of our own safety.'
'Why on Earth would you want to do that?'
'Too much knowledge can drive a man mad,' he said strangely, and would not be drawn further.
Using a small pair of scissors, Holmes took clippings from the ornate carpet and placed them into a series of envelopes. Eventually he tired of the floor, and turned his attention to the book-lined walls. He began by moving rapidly along them with his hands clasped behind his back, sniffing at the spines. He then took out his magnifying gla.s.s and spent ten minutes examining the spine of one book in particular in almost infinite detail. It was when he reached out a bony finger to remove the book from the shelf that Ambrose's expression changed from polite disdain to shock.
'Sir!' he exclaimed, and leapt forward. Using a pair of vellum-swathed tongs which he removed from a pocket in his robes, he carefully prised the book from its perch. Holding it in one hand, he removed a pair of dove-grey gloves from a hidden pocket of his robes and presented them to Holmes.
'How remiss of me,' Ambrose said.
Holmes flicked through the volume in a cursory manner and replaced it on the shelf.
'Ludwig Prinn's De Vermiis Mysteries, German black letter edition, sixteenth century. A remarkably good copy.' He turned towards the door. 'I have seen enough,' he announced. 'I would inspect the rest of the Library.'
It took Holmes three hours to cover the entire extent of the Library of St John the Beheaded, during which time Mr Ambrose and I finished most of a bottle of sweet sherry, and I flicked through various volumes of morally suspect theology. Eventually he returned, downcast.
'He was right,' Holmes muttered. 'No concealed exits, no trapdoors, no skylights. I did, however, come across one locked room, which our host informed me was for members to entertain visitors in, should they so wish.'
'At the head of a ramp?'
'Indeed. You noticed it?'
'I saw a figure entering the room, covered from head to foot in robes of the type that monks wear. He walked strangely, as if he was deformed in some way.'
'Hmm. Well, I suppose that the Library does cater to Catholic tastes.' He smiled briefly. 'It may interest you to learn that I confirmed our host's statement to the effect that there is only one way in or out. I would suggest that we now avail ourselves of it.'
Ambrose escorted us to the egress.
'Good luck, gentlemen,' he said. We turned, blinking in the sudden sunlight, to thank him, but he had vanished into the gloom.
''Scuse us, gents,' said a voice from the alley. Standing in front of us was an oafish figure wearing stained trousers, a s.h.i.+rt with neither cuffs nor collar and a trilby whose band had almost become detached from its crown.
'Rules is rules,' he said and stepped forward, revealing a smaller, rat-faced man behind him. I prepared to remonstrate with him, whilst reaching in what I hoped was a surrept.i.tious manner for the gun in my pocket, but Holmes put his hand on my arm.
The search,' he reminded me.
The oaf stepped forward and ran his hands down the outside and inside of my topcoat, barely brus.h.i.+ng my waistcoat.
'Five guineas in loose change and a Webley revolver,' he grinned, stepping away. I could smell the rank odour of his breath: stale ale, rancid meat and dental decay. He moved to Holmes and repeated the procedure whilst Ratface - presumably a member of the rival gang - frisked me as well.
'What's this?' The ruffian searching Holmes smiled a vicious, tight little smile. His hand came away holding a book. Ratface looked downcast, and my heart sank. It was the book that Holmes had been looking at in the Library. How could he have been so stupid?
'Well, it's been a time since a cove like you tried to smug the Library there, and you a peach, or so's they say.' A knife as big as my forearm appeared in his hand as if by magic. 'You take me for a queer diver, did you? In for a chivvin' then, aint'cha?'
I made a grab for my gun, but my arms were suddenly pinioned by Ratface, who was surprisingly strong for a man of his size. The knife man raised his blade to the level of Holmes's eyes. My friend was calm, but I could see him looking from side to side, searching for some means of escape.
'Hold 'is 'ands up where's 'e can see 'em for the last time,' said the knife man.
'Let him be,' commanded a deep, authoritative voice. The knife man stepped back, contrite, his blade vanis.h.i.+ng into thin air. The hands holding Holmes and I also disappeared.
A owner of the voice stepped into sight from beyond the edge of my vision.
He was small, with oiled hair and a long frock coat that had seen better days, but which was still better than any other clothing I had seen in the area. His face was deeply pocked and his nose was almost eaten away by syphilis.
'Testing my security, were you?' he said. His eyes didn't seem to connect with ours; his gaze drifted across us like smoke. 'Can't say I blame you.
You'll be the jack from up West, then? Mr Sherlock Holmes?'
Holmes nodded.
'Well, Mr Holmes, you tell them that wants to know that Mr Jitter's turf is as tight as a drum, and always has been. You hear that? Always has been.'
He looked away, down the street. 'I've already taken steps to check out my men here, me and Mack Yeovil between us. I'll be watching out for you, and you watch out for me, hear? I want to know who's been doing me over.
Consider yourself hired.'
'Mr Yeovil's not gonna like this,' Ratface whined.
'I'll sort out Yeovil's hash,' Jitter snarled. 'Mack and I are together on this.
We've both been made monkeys of, an' we want to know who to see about it.'
Holmes glanced at me, then stepped forward to face Jitter.
'I will find the thief,' he said. 'Depend upon it.'
He extended his hand towards Jitter. The man looked down at it, and then, as quick as a striking snake, he grabbed the hand and raised it up in front of Holmes's face.