Young Sherlock Holmes: Knife Edge (30 page)

‘You did,’ Crowe observed.

The giant to whose chest and limbs Maupertuis was strapped shifted slightly, in response to some hidden command, and the Baron’s head appeared to tilt to one side, as if he were thinking.
‘You claim that the third demonstration was faked as well? Prove it! Tell me how it was done!’

‘And you will let us live?’ Sherlock asked quietly.

‘No,’ the Baron said, just as quietly, ‘but I will kill you quickly, rather than slowly. Your death has been on my mind for a long while now, and I will not be cheated of
it.’

Sherlock briefly explained the way the tides had been used to raise the folly and allow one of the servants – or maybe, it occurred to him, Niamh Quintillan herself – to observe the
inside of a castle room that
no human being could apparently have seen into. Maupertuis was quiet for a minute or two afterwards, eyes closed. Sherlock was about to say something else when the
Baron’s eyes snapped open again.

‘You are lying,’ he said. ‘You want the psychic for the British Empire. You cannot have him – he works for the Paradol Chamber now, whether he wants to or not.’ His
arm, attached to the larger
arm behind him, rose up, and his hand made a gesture to the men surrounding them. ‘Kill them both now. They have wasted enough of my time.’

‘Ah, but do you know why we’ve wasted it?’ Crowe asked.

‘To delay the inevitable, of course.’

‘No. To delay until this happened!’

Before Sherlock could react, a group of men burst out of the bushes and shrubs that surrounded them. They were
dressed in rough jackets and trousers, and most of them were wearing cloth caps and
scarves. They were carrying heavy sticks and pitchforks, and they fell on the Paradol Chamber’s men like wolves on lambs. Shouts rang out, some of anger and some of pain.

Sherlock was about to ask what the hell was going on, but then he saw Rufus Stone among the ruffians, raising a club and bringing it down
hard on an arm that was holding a sword. A scream
pierced the air, and the arm bent in a way that arms normally don’t.

‘How did they know we were here?’ Sherlock called to Crowe.

‘Ah saw Matty on the back of the other carriage,’ Crowe called back. ‘Stone must’ve got him to hide there when the carriage was on its way up to the castle. When he
spotted us goin’ in the other direction,
he must’ve hopped off to warn Stone, an’ the violinist got his bunch of heavies to come up here after us. Ah was holdin’ Maupertuis
off until they got here.’

‘Good thinking!’

A halberd – an axe blade set on a shaft almost as long as Sherlock was tall and with a spear point on top – fell near him, dropped by one of Maupertuis’s thugs. He picked it
up, ready to use it on anyone who came
close. The fight seemed to be self-contained, though, and the Irish contingent was clearly winning.

But where was the Baron?

He had moved – or his giant carrier had moved him – away from the fight. Sherlock caught a glimpse of them heading off into the furze.

He chased after them.

‘Sherlock – come back!’ Crowe yelled. ‘He’s not worth it! Whatever plan he had, it’s all over now,
an’ we know the Paradol Chamber killed Sir
Shadrach!’

‘It’ll never be over until he’s dead or in custody!’ Sherlock shouted back. ‘He hates me, and he wants me dead.’

And, he thought, he’s
insane
.

Just beyond the nearest bushes, which were higher than Sherlock’s head, the undergrowth thinned out. Emerging at a run, Sherlock found himself at the edge of a cliff. He skidded to a halt
before he could fall over. He could see the white-capped waves far below. In the distance, off to the left, the battlements of Cloon Ard Castle were visible.

There was no sign of Baron Maupertuis.

Sherlock glanced in all directions, frustrated. A narrow path led away along the edge of the cliff, but he could see for a few hundred yards in each direction before the cliff curved away and
there was no sign of anyone. Had the Baron doubled back into the undergrowth? Was he creeping up on Sherlock from behind, even now?

He whirled around, but nobody was there. In the near distance he could still hear the sound of fighting.

Sherlock turned back to the cliff edge and, on instinct, walked right up to the edge. He gazed straight down.

A narrow ledge led downward, hard against
the rock.

Sherlock glanced around one more time, trying to convince himself that this was the best thing to do, and then he followed, still holding the halberd.

Pebbles skittered away from his feet as he moved down the ledge. The wind alternately blew him against the face of the cliff and then tried to pull him away from it. The path was only just wide
enough for him to go down; he wondered
how Baron Maupertuis’s giant carrier could have managed it.
If
he had managed it.
If
he had gone this way at all.

A strong gust of wind nearly plucked him away. He flattened himself against the rock until it abated, the fingers of his free hand clutching at cracks, pebbly projections and tufts of grass. If
he fell he would plummet hundreds of feet down to the sea. He would be lucky if he
didn’t get smashed against the cliff by the wind as he fell. He would be even luckier if he didn’t hit
a boulder in the sea, or smash himself to pulp on a stretch of sand. His heart raced, and he could feel the prickle of sweat breaking out down his back.

After a moment he forced himself to go on.

The ledge narrowed to a few inches just moments before he spotted the dark hole of a cave
in the cliff face. That had to be where Maupertuis had gone. The Baron knew the area around here better
than Sherlock – he had been there for longer.

Sherlock moved carefully along the narrowing ledge, chest flat against the rock. He could feel his heels hanging over the long drop down to the sea as he slowly slid one foot after the other:
right then left, right then left.

The rock
beneath his right foot began to give way.

Sherlock jumped awkwardly, flinging the halberd ahead of him and then landing in the cave mouth. His shoulder hit the floor, sending pain lancing up his arm, but he didn’t care. At least
he was off the ledge, and safe.

Relatively safe.

He glanced back at the ledge. A stretch of six feet or more had vanished, falling into the sea. Maybe it
had been weakened by the passage of the giant carrying Baron Maupertuis. Perhaps
millennia of storms and wind had just eaten it away. Whatever the reason, there was no way back for him there.

He looked around warily. In the scant sunlight that penetrated the cave he could only see a few tens of feet inside. There were scuff marks in the dirt – made recently, which indicated
that the Baron
had indeed come this way – but they vanished into the darkness.

He had to follow. He knew he did.

Screwing his courage up and holding it close, he went deeper into the cave.

The darkness swallowed him. He moved carefully, testing each step before he put his full weight down in case there was a sudden drop, or a sharp section of rock. He trailed his fingers against
the rough rock
of the wall, making sure that he didn’t miss any openings, or turns.

A breeze gusted into his face, from deeper inside the cave. There must be a way back to the surface somewhere in there, he thought, otherwise there would be nowhere for it to blow from, but
there was a smell of decay on the air. Something had died down here. Perhaps many things, over the years. Perhaps the bones of smugglers
littered the floor, and he just couldn’t see them in
the darkness.

Something thin and brittle crunched beneath his shoe, and he cursed his over-active imagination. It was probably just a twig, he told himself, or the skeleton of a seabird.

Somewhere ahead, the cave had to join up with the others that he had explored – the ones that joined up with the base of the folly and the cellars
of the castle. All the caves in the cliff
were probably connected, in some great warren of tunnels, like a huge anthill.

Which only meant, he thought, that he could wander down here for days, maybe weeks, before he died of starvation and dehydration.

No, this was stupid, he told himself. Where there was a breeze, there was a way out. He just had to follow the breeze.

And hope it
wasn’t coming out of a crack no wider than his hand.

Up ahead, something made a sound.

Sherlock froze.

His heart hammered in his chest, and he could feel the breath rasping in his throat. Surely whoever was there could hear them too? If it was a person. His mind flashed back to the blind albino
dogs that he had seen in the sewers beneath the streets of Moscow. What kinds of things
might be in here? Wild boar that hadn’t seen the sun for generations, and had adapted to life in total
darkness? Or perhaps something stranger, something that no human had ever seen and lived to tell about?

He took a deep breath. This was getting stupid. He was panicking over nothing. It was just a sound.

But something had to have made that sound.

After a few minutes of silence,
and trying to keep his breath and his heartbeat under control, Sherlock started to move again. Whatever had made the sound was either an illusion, had gone, or
was standing in the darkness waiting for him. Whatever the explanation, he couldn’t delay any longer. He had to move.

He inched forward as quietly as he could. Nothing leaped out at him from the darkness, and with each step he felt
slightly more relieved.

His eyes had become completely accustomed to the dark now, so when a faint glow shone around a bend in the tunnel ahead it hit his eyes like a lantern pointed directly into them. He had to wait
for a few minutes for his eyes to get used to the idea of light again before he could move towards it.

The light intensified as he went further. It was a warm, buttery
illumination that caused the projections in the rocky walls to cast long shadows towards him, like clutching fingers. He moved
cautiously towards the bend and poked his head around to see what was there.

It was, of course, another tunnel, but at least this one was illuminated by a lantern set on a wooden crate.

By the light of the lantern, Sherlock could see a body lying on the tunnel
floor. It was thin, and twisted, and it looked like the skeleton of some long-ago smuggler who had died down there and
been left to rot.

It was the body of Baron Maupertuis.

Cautiously, Sherlock moved closer, worried that it might be some kind of trick, but by the time he was staring down at the grotesque corpse it was obvious that the Baron was dead. The straps
that had held him on
to his giant carrier were draped over him like ribbons. His eyes were open, but the force of his maniacal willpower was gone. All the energy that had kept him alive had ebbed
away now, leaving him looking like a bundle of sticks that had been carelessly dropped in a pile.

‘He died while I was carrying him,’ a deep voice said, echoing along the tunnel. ‘I didn’t even notice for a while. He
always was just one step away from death, and it
was only his willpower that kept him going. Maybe his heart gave out, or maybe I jogged him too much and his neck snapped. At least he’s at rest now, and at least that means I can finally
take care of you, you interfering whelp!’

‘Mr Kyte,’ Sherlock said softly. ‘I rather thought it might be you under that hood.’

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

Sherlock glanced further along the tunnel. Up ahead, blocking the light from another lantern like a boulder blocking a stream so that the water spilt around it, was the figure
of a large man. A very large man. Sherlock couldn’t see his face, but he recognized the voice. He had last seen the man briefly on a railway station platform as he was heading up towards
Edinburgh
almost two years ago, and before that driving a carriage in Moscow. His name was Kyte, and he was an agent of the Paradol Chamber.

‘A little beneath your station, isn’t it, carrying a man like the Baron around?’ Sherlock asked, straightening up. ‘It’s a bit like carrying luggage, which makes
you just a porter.’

‘The Baron made the mistake of actually listening to you,’ Kyte said. He
stepped forward, and the light from the lantern beside the Baron’s body illuminated his ruddy face and
his massive red beard. They had been hidden beneath the hood that he had been wearing outside, but he had thrown that away now. He had also thrown away the grey clothing that he had been wearing,
and was now clad in black trousers and a black shirt with the sleeves rolled up. Some kind of leather
cuffs were attached to his forearms, stretching from wrists to elbows. His arms were enormous,
and his hands were the size of spades.

‘We don’t have to do this,’ Sherlock said.

‘Oh, but we do. You’ve got in our way too many times, young Holmes. There has to be a reckoning.’

Kyte knocked his wrists together, and twin blades sprang out of the cuffs strapped to his forearms. They made
a deadly
click-click
sound as they locked into place. They extended past
his hands, which he clenched to keep them out of the way of the blades. In the guttering light of the lanterns, they seemed to glow like gold.

Sherlock braced himself: right leg back, left leg forward, halberd held ready in both hands.

Kyte rushed at Sherlock, whirling his blades in front of his chest as he ran.

Sherlock took a step back and jabbed the halberd at Kyte’s face. Kyte ducked to his right, still moving forward, using his blades to push the axe out of the way. Sherlock flung himself in
the opposite direction, pressing himself against the wall of the tunnel. As Kyte thundered past, Sherlock swung the halberd around and jabbed the long shaft between Kyte’s legs. As his legs
came together,
they clamped on the shaft, almost wrenching it out of Sherlock’s grip but sending Kyte stumbling forward, off-balance. Sherlock pulled the halberd back and turned it to jab the
spear-point at Kyte, but despite his bulk the man had rolled gymnastically out of the way and was springing to his feet. He turned, snarling, and barrelled straight for Sherlock again, this time
with the blades held
straight out in front of him like horns on a charging bull.

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