Chapter 6
Baskerville Hall
Sir Henry Baskerville and Dr. Mortimer
were ready upon the appointed day, and we started
as arranged for Devonshire. Mr. Sherlock Holmes
drove with me to the station and gave me his last
parting injunctions and advice.
“I will not bias your mind by
suggesting theories or suspicions, Watson,”
said he; “I wish you simply to report facts in
the fullest possible manner to me, and you can leave
me to do the theorizing.”
“What sort of facts?” I asked.
“Anything which may seem to
have a bearing however indirect upon the case, and
especially the relations between young Baskerville
and his neighbours or any fresh particulars concerning
the death of Sir Charles. I have made some inquiries
myself in the last few days, but the results have,
I fear, been negative. One thing only appears
to be certain, and that is that Mr. James Desmond,
who is the next heir, is an elderly gentleman of a
very amiable disposition, so that this persecution
does not arise from him. I really think that
we may eliminate him entirely from our calculations.
There remain the people who will actually surround
Sir Henry Baskerville upon the moor.”
“Would it not be well in the
first place to get rid of this Barrymore couple?”
“By no means. You could
not make a greater mistake. If they are innocent
it would be a cruel injustice, and if they are guilty
we should be giving up all chance of bringing it home
to them. No, no, we will preserve them upon our
list of suspects. Then there is a groom at the
Hall, if I remember right. There are two moorland
farmers. There is our friend Dr. Mortimer, whom
I believe to be entirely honest, and there is his
wife, of whom we know nothing. There is this
naturalist, Stapleton, and there is his sister, who
is said to be a young lady of attractions. There
is Mr. Frankland, of Lafter Hall, who is also an unknown
factor, and there are one or two other neighbours.
These are the folk who must be your very special study.”
“I will do my best.”
“You have arms, I suppose?”
“Yes, I thought it as well to take them.”
“Most certainly. Keep your
revolver near you night and day, and never relax your
precautions.”
Our friends had already secured a
first-class carriage and were waiting for us upon
the platform.
“No, we have no news of any
kind,” said Dr. Mortimer in answer to my friend’s
questions. “I can swear to one thing, and
that is that we have not been shadowed during the
last two days. We have never gone out without
keeping a sharp watch, and no one could have escaped
our notice.”
“You have always kept together, I presume?”
“Except yesterday afternoon.
I usually give up one day to pure amusement when I
come to town, so I spent it at the Museum of the College
of Surgeons.”
“And I went to look at the folk
in the park,” said Baskerville. “But
we had no trouble of any kind.”
“It was imprudent, all the same,”
said Holmes, shaking his head and looking very grave.
“I beg, Sir Henry, that you will not go about
alone. Some great misfortune will befall you if
you do. Did you get your other boot?”
“No, sir, it is gone forever.”
“Indeed. That is very interesting.
Well, good-bye,” he added as the train began
to glide down the platform. “Bear in mind,
Sir Henry, one of the phrases in that queer old legend
which Dr. Mortimer has read to us, and avoid the moor
in those hours of darkness when the powers of evil
are exalted.”
I looked back at the platform when
we had left it far behind, and saw the tall, austere
figure of Holmes standing motionless and gazing after
us.
The journey was a swift and pleasant
one, and I spent it in making the more intimate acquaintance
of my two companions and in playing with Dr. Mortimer’s
spaniel. In a very few hours the brown earth
had become ruddy, the brick had changed to granite,
and red cows grazed in well-hedged fields where the
lush grasses and more luxuriant vegetation spoke of
a richer, if a damper, climate. Young Baskerville
stared eagerly out of the window, and cried aloud
with delight as he recognized the familiar features
of the Devon scenery.
“I’ve been over a good
part of the world since I left it, Dr. Watson,”
said he; “but I have never seen a place to compare
with it.”
“I never saw a Devonshire man
who did not swear by his county,” I remarked.
“It depends upon the breed of
men quite as much as on the county,” said Dr.
Mortimer. “A glance at our friend here reveals
the rounded head of the Celt, which carries inside
it the Celtic enthusiasm and power of attachment.
Poor Sir Charles’s head was of a very rare type,
half Gaelic, half Ivernian in its characteristics.
But you were very young when you last saw Baskerville
Hall, were you not?”
“I was a boy in my ’teens
at the time of my father’s death, and had never
seen the Hall, for he lived in a little cottage on
the South Coast. Thence I went straight to a
friend in America. I tell you it is all as new
to me as it is to Dr. Watson, and I’m as keen
as possible to see the moor.”
“Are you? Then your wish
is easily granted, for there is your first sight of
the moor,” said Dr. Mortimer, pointing out of
the carriage window.
Over the green squares of the fields
and the low curve of a wood there rose in the distance
a gray, melancholy hill, with a strange jagged summit,
dim and vague in the distance, like some fantastic
landscape in a dream. Baskerville sat for a long
time, his eyes fixed upon it, and I read upon his
eager face how much it meant to him, this first sight
of that strange spot where the men of his blood had
held sway so long and left their mark so deep.
There he sat, with his tweed suit and his American
accent, in the corner of a prosaic railway-carriage,
and yet as I looked at his dark and expressive face
I felt more than ever how true a descendant he was
of that long line of high-blooded, fiery, and masterful
men. There were pride, valour, and strength in
his thick brows, his sensitive nostrils, and his large
hazel eyes. If on that forbidding moor a difficult
and dangerous quest should lie before us, this was
at least a comrade for whom one might venture to take
a risk with the certainty that he would bravely share
it.
The train pulled up at a small wayside
station and we all descended. Outside, beyond
the low, white fence, a wagonette with a pair of cobs
was waiting. Our coming was evidently a great
event, for station-master and porters clustered round
us to carry out our luggage. It was a sweet,
simple country spot, but I was surprised to observe
that by the gate there stood two soldierly men in
dark uniforms, who leaned upon their short rifles and
glanced keenly at us as we passed. The coachman,
a hard-faced, gnarled little fellow, saluted Sir Henry
Baskerville, and in a few minutes we were flying swiftly
down the broad, white road. Rolling pasture lands
curved upward on either side of us, and old gabled
houses peeped out from amid the thick green foliage,
but behind the peaceful and sunlit country-side there
rose ever, dark against the evening sky, the long,
gloomy curve of the moor, broken by the jagged and
sinister hills.
The wagonette swung round into a side
road, and we curved upward through deep lanes worn
by centuries of wheels, high banks on either side,
heavy with dripping moss and fleshy hart’s-tongue
ferns. Bronzing bracken and mottled bramble gleamed
in the light of the sinking sun. Still steadily
rising, we passed over a narrow granite bridge, and
skirted a noisy stream which gushed swiftly down,
foaming and roaring amid the gray boulders. Both
road and stream wound up through a valley dense with
scrub oak and fir. At every turn Baskerville
gave an exclamation of delight, looking eagerly about
him and asking countless questions. To his eyes
all seemed beautiful, but to me a tinge of melancholy
lay upon the country-side, which bore so clearly the
mark of the waning year. Yellow leaves carpeted
the lanes and fluttered down upon us as we passed.
The rattle of our wheels died away as we drove through
drifts of rotting vegetation—sad gifts,
as it seemed to me, for Nature to throw before the
carriage of the returning heir of the Baskervilles.
“Halloa!” cried Dr. Mortimer, “what
is this?”
A steep curve of heath-clad land,
an outlying spur of the moor, lay in front of us.
On the summit, hard and clear like an equestrian statue
upon its pedestal, was a mounted soldier, dark and
stern, his rifle poised ready over his forearm.
He was watching the road along which we travelled.
“What is this, Perkins?” asked Dr. Mortimer.
Our driver half turned in his seat.
“There’s a convict escaped
from Princetown, sir. He’s been out three
days now, and the warders watch every road and every
station, but they’ve had no sight of him yet.
The farmers about here don’t like it, sir, and
that’s a fact.”
“Well, I understand that they
get five pounds if they can give information.”
“Yes, sir, but the chance of
five pounds is but a poor thing compared to the chance
of having your throat cut. You see, it isn’t
like any ordinary convict. This is a man that
would stick at nothing.”
“Who is he, then?”
“It is Selden, the Notting Hill murderer.”
I remembered the case well, for it
was one in which Holmes had taken an interest on account
of the peculiar ferocity of the crime and the wanton
brutality which had marked all the actions of the
assassin. The commutation of his death sentence
had been due to some doubts as to his complete sanity,
so atrocious was his conduct. Our wagonette had
topped a rise and in front of us rose the huge expanse
of the moor, mottled with gnarled and craggy cairns
and tors. A cold wind swept down from it and set
us shivering. Somewhere there, on that desolate
plain, was lurking this fiendish man, hiding in a
burrow like a wild beast, his heart full of malignancy
against the whole race which had cast him out.
It needed but this to complete the grim suggestiveness
of the barren waste, the chilling wind, and the darkling
sky. Even Baskerville fell silent and pulled
his overcoat more closely around him.
We had left the fertile country behind
and beneath us. We looked back on it now, the
slanting rays of a low sun turning the streams to
threads of gold and glowing on the red earth new turned
by the plough and the broad tangle of the woodlands.
The road in front of us grew bleaker and wilder over
huge russet and olive slopes, sprinkled with giant
boulders. Now and then we passed a moorland cottage,
walled and roofed with stone, with no creeper to break
its harsh outline. Suddenly we looked down into
a cup-like depression, patched with stunted oaks and
firs which had been twisted and bent by the fury of
years of storm. Two high, narrow towers rose
over the trees. The driver pointed with his whip.
“Baskerville Hall,” said he.
Its master had risen and was staring
with flushed cheeks and shining eyes. A few minutes
later we had reached the lodge-gates, a maze of fantastic
tracery in wrought iron, with weather-bitten pillars
on either side, blotched with lichens, and surmounted
by the boars’ heads of the Baskervilles.
The lodge was a ruin of black granite and bared ribs
of rafters, but facing it was a new building, half
constructed, the first fruit of Sir Charles’s
South African gold.
Through the gateway we passed into
the avenue, where the wheels were again hushed amid
the leaves, and the old trees shot their branches
in a sombre tunnel over our heads. Baskerville
shuddered as he looked up the long, dark drive to
where the house glimmered like a ghost at the farther
end.
“Was it here?” he asked in a low voice.
“No, no, the Yew Alley is on the other side.”
The young heir glanced round with a gloomy face.
“It’s no wonder my uncle
felt as if trouble were coming on him in such a place
as this,” said he. “It’s enough
to scare any man. I’ll have a row of electric
lamps up here inside of six months, and you won’t
know it again, with a thousand candle-power Swan and
Edison right here in front of the hall door.”
The avenue opened into a broad expanse
of turf, and the house lay before us. In the
fading light I could see that the centre was a heavy
block of building from which a porch projected.
The whole front was draped in ivy, with a patch clipped
bare here and there where a window or a coat-of-arms
broke through the dark veil. >From this central block
rose the twin towers, ancient, crenelated, and pierced
with many loopholes. To right and left of the
turrets were more modern wings of black granite.
A dull light shone through heavy mullioned windows,
and from the high chimneys which rose from the steep,
high-angled roof there sprang a single black column
of smoke.
“Welcome, Sir Henry! Welcome to Baskerville
Hall!”
A tall man had stepped from the shadow
of the porch to open the door of the wagonette.
The figure of a woman was silhouetted against the
yellow light of the hall. She came out and helped
the man to hand down our bags.
“You don’t mind my driving
straight home, Sir Henry?” said Dr. Mortimer.
“My wife is expecting me.”
“Surely you will stay and have some dinner?”
“No, I must go. I shall
probably find some work awaiting me. I would
stay to show you over the house, but Barrymore will
be a better guide than I. Good-bye, and never hesitate
night or day to send for me if I can be of service.”
The wheels died away down the drive
while Sir Henry and I turned into the hall, and the
door clanged heavily behind us. It was a fine
apartment in which we found ourselves, large, lofty,
and heavily raftered with huge balks of age-blackened
oak. In the great old-fashioned fireplace behind
the high iron dogs a log-fire crackled and snapped.
Sir Henry and I held out our hands to it, for we were
numb from our long drive. Then we gazed round
us at the high, thin window of old stained glass, the
oak panelling, the stags’ heads, the coats-of-arms
upon the walls, all dim and sombre in the subdued
light of the central lamp.
“It’s just as I imagined
it,” said Sir Henry. “Is it not the
very picture of an old family home? To think
that this should be the same hall in which for five
hundred years my people have lived. It strikes
me solemn to think of it.”
I saw his dark face lit up with a
boyish enthusiasm as he gazed about him. The
light beat upon him where he stood, but long shadows
trailed down the walls and hung like a black canopy
above him. Barrymore had returned from taking
our luggage to our rooms. He stood in front of
us now with the subdued manner of a well-trained servant.
He was a remarkable-looking man, tall, handsome, with
a square black beard and pale, distinguished features.
“Would you wish dinner to be served at once,
sir?”
“Is it ready?”
“In a very few minutes, sir.
You will find hot water in your rooms. My wife
and I will be happy, Sir Henry, to stay with you until
you have made your fresh arrangements, but you will
understand that under the new conditions this house
will require a considerable staff.”
“What new conditions?”
“I only meant, sir, that Sir
Charles led a very retired life, and we were able
to look after his wants. You would, naturally,
wish to have more company, and so you will need changes
in your household.”
“Do you mean that your wife and you wish to
leave?”
“Only when it is quite convenient to you, sir.”
“But your family have been with
us for several generations, have they not? I
should be sorry to begin my life here by breaking an
old family connection.”
I seemed to discern some signs of
emotion upon the butler’s white face.
“I feel that also, sir, and
so does my wife. But to tell the truth, sir,
we were both very much attached to Sir Charles, and
his death gave us a shock and made these surroundings
very painful to us. I fear that we shall never
again be easy in our minds at Baskerville Hall.”
“But what do you intend to do?”
“I have no doubt, sir, that
we shall succeed in establishing ourselves in some
business. Sir Charles’s generosity has given
us the means to do so. And now, sir, perhaps
I had best show you to your rooms.”
A square balustraded gallery ran round
the top of the old hall, approached by a double stair.
From this central point two long corridors extended
the whole length of the building, from which all the
bedrooms opened. My own was in the same wing as
Baskerville’s and almost next door to it.
These rooms appeared to be much more modern than the
central part of the house, and the bright paper and
numerous candles did something to remove the sombre
impression which our arrival had left upon my mind.
But the dining-room which opened out
of the hall was a place of shadow and gloom.
It was a long chamber with a step separating the dais
where the family sat from the lower portion reserved
for their dependents. At one end a minstrel’s
gallery overlooked it. Black beams shot across
above our heads, with a smoke-darkened ceiling beyond
them. With rows of flaring torches to light it
up, and the colour and rude hilarity of an old-time
banquet, it might have softened; but now, when two
black-clothed gentlemen sat in the little circle of
light thrown by a shaded lamp, one’s voice became
hushed and one’s spirit subdued. A dim line
of ancestors, in every variety of dress, from the
Elizabethan knight to the buck of the Regency, stared
down upon us and daunted us by their silent company.
We talked little, and I for one was glad when the
meal was over and we were able to retire into the modern
billiard-room and smoke a cigarette.
“My word, it isn’t a very
cheerful place,” said Sir Henry. “I
suppose one can tone down to it, but I feel a bit out
of the picture at present. I don’t wonder
that my uncle got a little jumpy if he lived all alone
in such a house as this. However, if it suits
you, we will retire early to-night, and perhaps things
may seem more cheerful in the morning.”
I drew aside my curtains before I
went to bed and looked out from my window. It
opened upon the grassy space which lay in front of
the hall door. Beyond, two copses of trees moaned
and swung in a rising wind. A half moon broke
through the rifts of racing clouds. In its cold
light I saw beyond the trees a broken fringe of rocks,
and the long, low curve of the melancholy moor.
I closed the curtain, feeling that my last impression
was in keeping with the rest.
And yet it was not quite the last.
I found myself weary and yet wakeful, tossing restlessly
from side to side, seeking for the sleep which would
not come. Far away a chiming clock struck out
the quarters of the hours, but otherwise a deathly
silence lay upon the old house. And then suddenly,
in the very dead of the night, there came a sound
to my ears, clear, resonant, and unmistakable.
It was the sob of a woman, the muffled, strangling
gasp of one who is torn by an uncontrollable sorrow.
I sat up in bed and listened intently. The noise
could not have been far away and was certainly in
the house. For half an hour I waited with every
nerve on the alert, but there came no other sound save
the chiming clock and the rustle of the ivy on the
wall.