Authors: H. F. Heard
“I may take off my gloves now?” That seemed a good, dutiful, childlike question with which to break the silence which had become worse than the most boring talk.
“Yes, yes,” he said, and began to pull off his, which he had evidently forgotten, and, as absently, handed them to me. I felt like the page to Good King Wenceslaus, as I trotted along in the wake of the old fellow, hoping that if I kept in his footsteps the cold of fear would be less. For somehow I was quite severely frightened by the whole thingâthe awful silence, the loneliness, the emptiness, that wretched dead trader, that vacant sinister hole.
My reflections, milling round that scene, broke out into a question, “Who killed Kerson?”
The reply shut me up completely: “As far as anyone, you.”
We reached the great natural Stonehenge, picked up our flasks, and worked our way through the forest of geological obelisks back to the bend in the main trail. It was dusk, and the stars were out already, but our guide was waiting for us patiently enough. We saw the glow of his pipe. It looked no different from the glow of a red star which had appeared on the rock-crest of the canyon-cliff above. A thousand yards, a thousand light-years, I thought, unless we have a scale we just can't say how far anything is, just by looking at it. The guide said nothing as he untethered the horses; Mr. Mycroft said nothing as we mounted. I said nothing. We creaked and jingled along.
As we alighted at our cabin Mr. Mycroft remarked to the man, “We've had an interesting time up here; we'll be going back tomorrow.”
“O.K.,” like the croak of a frog, the “reflex of assent” told us in the dark that he heard.
When we were alone and, following Mr. Mycroft, I had begun to get ready our evening meal, I said in rather a beaten way, I own, “Will you explain?”
“If you will confess,” was the rather grim retort.
“Well,” I said, trying to show that at least I had something to contribute, “I can explain all I know. But it isn't much, and I don't see how I can have done really any harm.”
“I didn't ask for a defense; I asked for facts,” he replied quite harshly.
It was no use. I must get him to tell me where we stood, what we had been up againstâwere up against. I just couldn'tâhowever much I hated being treated as a combination of a criminal and a silly schoolboyâI couldn't be left, as I was, completely in the dark. And this old man alone knew.
“I suppose you've guessed,” I began, as we sat down to a meal I hardly relished, “Kerson came to see me. He had a copy of the code and, as you know, I find it hard for an ignoramus to treat me as one and, as you and I had not complete confidence in each other, I thought I could at least show him I wasn't a complete fool.”
“And how was that proof established?” he asked cuttingly.
“Well, Kerson had a strip, like the strip you burgled out of Sanderson's desk. I only showed him, at first and after he had provoked me, how it should be wound up in order to make the words appear.”
“And when you had shown him this piece of plagiarized intelligence, and had established, no doubt without acknowledgment, that you were âknowing,' then you made your well-known wholly mistaken reading of the script?”
I let the point passâthat the first part of the reading, about the time, was mine and was right. I was now, under his cross-examining pressure, hopelessly on the defensive. I just made the feeble parry, “If it was quite wrong, then it could have done no harm? Anyhow, you can't say I sent the wretched man to his death! I didn't know the place or the way to it, and even now I have no idea how he was killedâperhaps he died a natural deathâheart or something.”
“No,” said the inflexible voice of my judge. “He was killed; there's no doubt, and, but for you, he might well be alive.”
I pushed back my plate. I had eaten all I could swallow. I drank a little coffee. It was dim in the cabin and the light was behind Mr. Mycroft's head. I turned with a sort of servile gesture and began to clear the bench on which we had eaten. I washed the dishes in the pail, cleansed the knives and forks, rinsed the cups and put them on a rack, and poured out the soiled water. I felt as though I were already doing time in a penal settlement. There was only one streak of relief in the dull gloom of my mind: Miss Delamere need never know anything of this. The old figure sat silent. If only he had smoked, but he didn't, and somehow, though I don't know why, if a person stays still smoking or just holding a cigarette, they aren't quite so unpleasantly still and waiting as if they just sit. Finally there was nothing more to tidy up. I hovered. Should I sit down, or should I say shortly, “I'm turning in,” and prepare to get into my bunk.
“Now will you come outside?” said a voice, which though it may have had no welcome in it, at least had no rebuke. Almost like a spaniel petted after it has been smacked, I said, “Certainly.”
We settled on the plank just outside the door. The sky looked more solid than the earth, and more active, more alive. We were in a little cup of congealed dark. That was all the earth had shrunk to; that was all our senses recorded. The hard bit of wood of the bench, the hard bit of ground under one's heels, this was all one felt. One saw only the black curve of the rock-rim opposite one, dead black and vacant as Chaos itself, and then sharp above it the dense, glittering heaven. There seemed hardly a millimeter of that embracing expanse that wasn't crammed with stars, flares that sparkled and flashed in all colors, like lighthouses and ships in a thick lane of shipping, and all the interstices filled with the wide-weltering phosphorescence of the Galaxy: stars like great cut jewels and stars like tons of diamond dust poured out in an inexhaustible cascade. And, as if that were not enough, every now and then across the glittering parade, the gala display made on a scale which makes the mind dizzy, cruised long-tailed meteors, leaving, even when they had gone, a dusty trail of brightness showing their path. Then down the sky sailed one so bright that for a moment its flash of fire almost made sufficient illumination for me to see that the earth we rested on was not merely congealed blackness.
As it faded, the voice beside me said, “Literally, we have been following a star. There's been enough mystery, too, in our search, for us little creatures not to quarrel and blame each other. âWhat is man,' asked a desert poet, as, early in our history, he looked at that same ocean of light and dark which now hangs above us, hangs above us completely unchanged, while here in our dark little dell we have run through our civilizationsâbut never found the answer to that first question.”
It wasn't very original moralizing. But then I suppose moralizing can never be. “The eternal commonplaces,” weren't the great truths called? I suppose they are like that because we never really can find an answer to such obvious questionsâand yet we can't get past themâthere they stick, as simple and embarrassing as a fish-bone in one's throat.
Anyhow, I was sufficiently relieved that my problem and my mistake were being lifted onto a scale where perhaps we could hope, as the matter couldn't be settled, I might get off with an open verdict. Mr. Mycroft's next remark really did give me a new kind of interest.
“There's been present in this case of ours,” he continued, “an element of which detectives are often aware as lurking somewhere, but which I believe they hope they will never have fully to confront.”
“An element?” I questioned, for I thought I ought to say something, and I was really interested as well as relieved at the turn things had taken. Even if he were going to start making a partnership between himself and providence, the senior partner of this big firm might put in a word for me with his active “junior.”
“Perhaps,” he continued, “I may call itâI do to myselfâThe Element. It is hard to define, as are most elemental thingsâsave by negatives. But, if that is allowed, then one might define, and yet not limit it, by saying, âThere is no chance or accident.'”
“What do you mean?” I questioned.
“I mean that absolutely true reporting of any detection, of the elucidation of any secret, shows unmistakably that there is present some basic factor moving teleologically, or, if you like, purposely, behind what seems to be chance happenings, blind hits and misses, random guessings.”
“You mean all this extra-sensory perception stuff?” I asked.
“That's only the tip of the topmost fin of this vast engulfed Leviathan. For centuries, for millennia, men knew about electricity as a funny little anomaly which made grains of salt leap up and cling to a rod of amber if it had been rubbed. Now we know that electricity is the force which holds everything together, the force which makes everything we call material. Believe me, the anomalies of today are the foundations of tomorrow.”
“Butâ” I questioned.
He completed my question, “What has that to do with us and with you in particular? All through this case, I have felt, as never before, The Element, the vast submerged drive, as being quite close, uncannily close to the surface on which we have been working. With you, as one might say, it broke through.” Then I could hear that he had turned toward me to emphasize his remark: “You thought you were guessing when you gave your wrong reading, but you were not. Without knowing it, you gave Kerson a clue and that clue sent him to his death.”
“How?”
“I'll deal with his death later. First, to your clue âFriar's Heel' which you translated âMission Trail.'”
“Well, it might have been,” I said defensively, making as it were a last stand.
His reply jiu-jitsued me. “It was! When I was making arrangements with our present laconic friend now acting the part poor Kerson played on our earlier trip, I made all the inquiries I could. The man himself knew little and cared less, but as he, too, runs a store, I talked about the locality's history with one or two of the Indians and other wanderers. You may recall, as we left the main trail, to start off into the true wilderness, I told you I thought once that we were actually on an abandoned trail. Indeed, I am sure that to eyes more practiced than mine at that kind of tracking, there is a âfossil trail' there, starting off from the spot where the present, used trail bends back from that outer desolation. For my informants told me that even in their time this district has âparched out' increasingly. One also told me that there is a tradition that earlier there were actual drinkable springs in that area which we were stumbling in. The tree-ring records of Douglas show that all through this desert Southwest only some centuries ago the Indians were able in a number of places to have settlements which, later, drought made them abandon. And these great century-spanning droughts come on like glacial ages, in waves, with lulls and recessions in between. This area had such a recession or backwash of almost adequate rains perhaps a century ago. For then some Catholic missionaries, I estimate from the story I was told, actually made a trail up here. There was even a bit of a story that on their trail they reported seeing the ruins of an immense heathen temple. The stones we saw would not suggest a temple to a non-European but any cultured Europeanâand some of the Franciscans were very cultured menâwould, of course, know the megalithic âtemple ruins' scattered all over Europe from Britain through France to Greece. They would be struck by the geological formation which we have seen and would say it was like a heathen temple, while a native, not having that association in his mind, would pass it unnoticing. So you sent Kerson hunting a mission trail unknown to you and unrecorded save in a very slender local tradition.”
“But how did he know that he had to start from the Great White Throne?” I asked.
“I'm certain he knew a great deal about Sanderson. He had surely watched the old man when he was through his country. It is a bit far from here by our European standards, where if you move fifty miles you may be in another nation, country, and culture. But in these huge, undetailed areas, men cover a lot of ground. Why, even in Europe, stone-age man thought little of tramping on his ten toes all the way from the Black Sea out to Irelandâand that meant two sea voyages to bootâand back.
“When Kerson learned that other people were interested in Sanderson's dives into the back of beyond, his interest became keen. Did he steal the code from Intil or from Sanderson? From Sanderson, I suspect. Intil would be harder to rob, and once he had Sanderson's code probably put it away safe until he had your help to decode it. We know he cherished the little stick on which it had to be âenscrolled.' Sanderson would, no doubtâI expect you have come to a similar conclusionâhave been the trader's guest more than once, and the old Scotchman must every now and then have talked a little when he was holding perhaps more than he ought of the liquid âScotch'; small, discreet (as he thought) boasts about his own cunning. No man who is as interested in locking up secrets in clues, as was he, but wants, sooner or later, to share his cleverness with someoneâsomeone, I have generally found, whom he likes to think of as a fool. Many a criminal has been caught simply because the detective was not clever in anything but in his power to look like a sucker.”
It went through my mind that Mr. Mycroft certainly lacked that gift and, indeed, had the complementary weakness which he had just been pointing outâthe need to describe his cleverness. Well, but for that I might easily be left never knowing exactly where I stood in all this tangle.
“I surmise,” he went on, “that probably Kerson, on one of Sanderson's âlook-in's,' opened the old man's lips with the native solvent I've just mentioned. Kerson would copy the clue and replace it. Maybe it was coiled up on its stick in the old fellow's effects.'”
I interrupted, for here I actually knew more than he. “Yes, Kerson had evidently made a very careful copy and had his own idea of what the clue might be, for when he came to me he thought it might be Ogham, an example of which he had seen in a puzzle book.”