Chapter 11
The Man on the Tor
The extract from my private diary
which forms the last chapter has brought my narrative
up to the 18th of October, a time when these strange
events began to move swiftly towards their terrible
conclusion. The incidents of the next few days
are indelibly graven upon my recollection, and I can
tell them without reference to the notes made at the
time. I start then from the day which succeeded
that upon which I had established two facts of great
importance, the one that Mrs. Laura Lyons of Coombe
Tracey had written to Sir Charles Baskerville and made
an appointment with him at the very place and hour
that he met his death, the other that the lurking
man upon the moor was to be found among the stone
huts upon the hill-side. With these two facts
in my possession I felt that either my intelligence
or my courage must be deficient if I could not throw
some further light upon these dark places.
I had no opportunity to tell the baronet
what I had learned about Mrs. Lyons upon the evening
before, for Dr. Mortimer remained with him at cards
until it was very late. At breakfast, however,
I informed him about my discovery, and asked him whether
he would care to accompany me to Coombe Tracey.
At first he was very eager to come, but on second
thoughts it seemed to both of us that if I went alone
the results might be better. The more formal we
made the visit the less information we might obtain.
I left Sir Henry behind, therefore, not without some
prickings of conscience, and drove off upon my new
quest.
When I reached Coombe Tracey I told
Perkins to put up the horses, and I made inquiries
for the lady whom I had come to interrogate.
I had no difficulty in finding her rooms, which were
central and well appointed. A maid showed me
in without ceremony, and as I entered the sitting-room
a lady, who was sitting before a Remington typewriter,
sprang up with a pleasant smile of welcome. Her
face fell, however, when she saw that I was a stranger,
and she sat down again and asked me the object of
my visit.
The first impression left by Mrs.
Lyons was one of extreme beauty. Her eyes and
hair were of the same rich hazel colour, and her cheeks,
though considerably freckled, were flushed with the
exquisite bloom of the brunette, the dainty pink which
lurks at the heart of the sulphur rose. Admiration
was, I repeat, the first impression. But the
second was criticism. There was something subtly
wrong with the face, some coarseness of expression,
some hardness, perhaps, of eye, some looseness of lip
which marred its perfect beauty. But these, of
course, are after-thoughts. At the moment I was
simply conscious that I was in the presence of a very
handsome woman, and that she was asking me the reasons
for my visit. I had not quite understood until
that instant how delicate my mission was.
“I have the pleasure,”
said I, “of knowing your father.”
It was a clumsy introduction, and the lady made me
feel it.
“There is nothing in common
between my father and me,” she said. “I
owe him nothing, and his friends are not mine.
If it were not for the late Sir Charles Baskerville
and some other kind hearts I might have starved for
all that my father cared.”
“It was about the late Sir Charles
Baskerville that I have come here to see you.”
The freckles started out on the lady’s face.
“What can I tell you about him?”
she asked, and her fingers played nervously over the
stops of her typewriter.
“You knew him, did you not?”
“I have already said that I
owe a great deal to his kindness. If I am able
to support myself it is largely due to the interest
which he took in my unhappy situation.”
“Did you correspond with him?”
The lady looked quickly up with an angry gleam in
her hazel eyes.
“What is the object of these questions?”
she asked sharply.
“The object is to avoid a public
scandal. It is better that I should ask them
here than that the matter should pass outside our
control.”
She was silent and her face was still
very pale. At last she looked up with something
reckless and defiant in her manner.
“Well, I’ll answer,”
she said. “What are your questions?”
“Did you correspond with Sir Charles?”
“I certainly wrote to him once
or twice to acknowledge his delicacy and his generosity.”
“Have you the dates of those letters?”
“No.”
“Have you ever met him?”
“Yes, once or twice, when he
came into Coombe Tracey. He was a very retiring
man, and he preferred to do good by stealth.”
“But if you saw him so seldom
and wrote so seldom, how did he know enough about
your affairs to be able to help you, as you say that
he has done?”
She met my difficulty with the utmost readiness.
“There were several gentlemen
who knew my sad history and united to help me.
One was Mr. Stapleton, a neighbour and intimate friend
of Sir Charles’s. He was exceedingly kind,
and it was through him that Sir Charles learned about
my affairs.”
I knew already that Sir Charles Baskerville
had made Stapleton his almoner upon several occasions,
so the lady’s statement bore the impress of
truth upon it.
“Did you ever write to Sir Charles
asking him to meet you?” I continued.
Mrs. Lyons flushed with anger again.
“Really, sir, this is a very extraordinary question.”
“I am sorry, madam, but I must repeat it.”
“Then I answer, certainly not.”
“Not on the very day of Sir Charles’s
death?”
The flush had faded in an instant,
and a deathly face was before me. Her dry lips
could not speak the “No” which I saw rather
than heard.
“Surely your memory deceives
you,” said I. “I could even quote
a passage of your letter. It ran ’Please,
please, as you are a gentleman, burn this letter,
and be at the gate by ten o’clock.’”
I thought that she had fainted, but
she recovered herself by a supreme effort.
“Is there no such thing as a gentleman?”
she gasped.
“You do Sir Charles an injustice.
He did burn the letter. But sometimes a letter
may be legible even when burned. You acknowledge
now that you wrote it?”
“Yes, I did write it,”
she cried, pouring out her soul in a torrent of words.
“I did write it. Why should I deny it?
I have no reason to be ashamed of it. I wished
him to help me. I believed that if I had an interview
I could gain his help, so I asked him to meet me.”
“But why at such an hour?”
“Because I had only just learned
that he was going to London next day and might be
away for months. There were reasons why I could
not get there earlier.”
“But why a rendezvous in the
garden instead of a visit to the house?”
“Do you think a woman could
go alone at that hour to a bachelor’s house?”
“Well, what happened when you did get there?”
“I never went.”
“Mrs. Lyons!”
“No, I swear it to you on all
I hold sacred. I never went. Something intervened
to prevent my going.”
“What was that?”
“That is a private matter. I cannot tell
it.”
“You acknowledge then that you
made an appointment with Sir Charles at the very hour
and place at which he met his death, but you deny
that you kept the appointment.”
“That is the truth.”
Again and again I cross-questioned
her, but I could never get past that point.
“Mrs. Lyons,” said I,
as I rose from this long and inconclusive interview,
“you are taking a very great responsibility and
putting yourself in a very false position by not making
an absolutely clean breast of all that you know.
If I have to call in the aid of the police you will
find how seriously you are compromised. If your
position is innocent, why did you in the first instance
deny having written to Sir Charles upon that date?”
“Because I feared that some
false conclusion might be drawn from it and that I
might find myself involved in a scandal.”
“And why were you so pressing
that Sir Charles should destroy your letter?”
“If you have read the letter you will know.”
“I did not say that I had read all the letter.”
“You quoted some of it.”
“I quoted the postscript.
The letter had, as I said, been burned and it was
not all legible. I ask you once again why it was
that you were so pressing that Sir Charles should
destroy this letter which he received on the day of
his death.”
“The matter is a very private one.”
“The more reason why you should avoid a public
investigation.”
“I will tell you, then.
If you have heard anything of my unhappy history you
will know that I made a rash marriage and had reason
to regret it.”
“I have heard so much.”
“My life has been one incessant
persecution from a husband whom I abhor. The
law is upon his side, and every day I am faced by the
possibility that he may force me to live with him.
At the time that I wrote this letter to Sir Charles
I had learned that there was a prospect of my regaining
my freedom if certain expenses could be met.
It meant everything to me—peace of mind,
happiness, self-respect—everything.
I knew Sir Charles’s generosity, and I thought
that if he heard the story from my own lips he would
help me.”
“Then how is it that you did not go?”
“Because I received help in the interval from
another source.”
“Why then, did you not write to Sir Charles
and explain this?”
“So I should have done had I
not seen his death in the paper next morning.”
The woman’s story hung coherently
together, and all my questions were unable to shake
it. I could only check it by finding if she had,
indeed, instituted divorce proceedings against her
husband at or about the time of the tragedy.
It was unlikely that she would dare
to say that she had not been to Baskerville Hall if
she really had been, for a trap would be necessary
to take her there, and could not have returned to
Coombe Tracey until the early hours of the morning.
Such an excursion could not be kept secret. The
probability was, therefore, that she was telling the
truth, or, at least, a part of the truth. I came
away baffled and disheartened. Once again I had
reached that dead wall which seemed to be built across
every path by which I tried to get at the object of
my mission. And yet the more I thought of the
lady’s face and of her manner the more I felt
that something was being held back from me. Why
should she turn so pale? Why should she fight
against every admission until it was forced from her?
Why should she have been so reticent at the time of
the tragedy? Surely the explanation of all this
could not be as innocent as she would have me believe.
For the moment I could proceed no farther in that
direction, but must turn back to that other clue which
was to be sought for among the stone huts upon the
moor.
And that was a most vague direction.
I realized it as I drove back and noted how hill after
hill showed traces of the ancient people. Barrymore’s
only indication had been that the stranger lived in
one of these abandoned huts, and many hundreds of them
are scattered throughout the length and breadth of
the moor. But I had my own experience for a guide
since it had shown me the man himself standing upon
the summit of the Black Tor. That then should
be the centre of my search. From there I should
explore every hut upon the moor until I lighted upon
the right one. If this man were inside it I should
find out from his own lips, at the point of my revolver
if necessary, who he was and why he had dogged us
so long. He might slip away from us in the crowd
of Regent Street, but it would puzzle him to do so
upon the lonely moor. On the other hand, if I
should find the hut and its tenant should not be within
it I must remain there, however long the vigil, until
he returned. Holmes had missed him in London.
It would indeed be a triumph for me if I could run
him to earth, where my master had failed.
Luck had been against us again and
again in this inquiry, but now at last it came to
my aid. And the messenger of good fortune was
none other than Mr. Frankland, who was standing, gray-whiskered
and red-faced, outside the gate of his garden, which
opened on to the high road along which I travelled.
“Good-day, Dr. Watson,”
cried he with unwonted good humour, “you must
really give your horses a rest, and come in to have
a glass of wine and to congratulate me.”
My feelings towards him were very
far from being friendly after what I had heard of
his treatment of his daughter, but I was anxious to
send Perkins and the wagonette home, and the opportunity
was a good one. I alighted and sent a message
to Sir Henry that I should walk over in time for dinner.
Then I followed Frankland into his dining-room.
“It is a great day for me, sir—one
of the red-letter days of my life,” he cried
with many chuckles. “I have brought off
a double event. I mean to teach them in these
parts that law is law, and that there is a man here
who does not fear to invoke it. I have established
a right of way through the centre of old Middleton’s
park, slap across it, sir, within a hundred yards of
his own front door. What do you think of that?
We’ll teach these magnates that they cannot
ride roughshod over the rights of the commoners, confound
them! And I’ve closed the wood where the
Fernworthy folk used to picnic. These infernal
people seem to think that there are no rights of property,
and that they can swarm where they like with their
papers and their bottles. Both cases decided,
Dr. Watson, and both in my favour. I haven’t
had such a day since I had Sir John Morland for trespass,
because he shot in his own warren.”
“How on earth did you do that?”
“Look it up in the books, sir.
It will repay reading—Frankland v.
Morland, Court of Queen’s Bench. It cost
me 200 pounds, but I got my verdict.”
“Did it do you any good?”
“None, sir, none. I am
proud to say that I had no interest in the matter.
I act entirely from a sense of public duty. I
have no doubt, for example, that the Fernworthy people
will burn me in effigy to-night. I told the police
last time they did it that they should stop these
disgraceful exhibitions. The County Constabulary
is in a scandalous state, sir, and it has not afforded
me the protection to which I am entitled. The
case of Frankland v. Regina will bring the matter
before the attention of the public. I told them
that they would have occasion to regret their treatment
of me, and already my words have come true.”
“How so?” I asked.
The old man put on a very knowing expression.
“Because I could tell them what
they are dying to know; but nothing would induce me
to help the rascals in any way.”
I had been casting round for some
excuse by which I could get away from his gossip,
but now I began to wish to hear more of it. I
had seen enough of the contrary nature of the old sinner
to understand that any strong sign of interest would
be the surest way to stop his confidences.
“Some poaching case, no doubt?”
said I, with an indifferent manner.
“Ha, ha, my boy, a very much
more important matter than that! What about the
convict on the moor?”
I started. “You don’t
mean that you know where he is?” said I.
“I may not know exactly where
he is, but I am quite sure that I could help the police
to lay their hands on him. Has it never struck
you that the way to catch that man was to find out
where he got his food, and so trace it to him?”
He certainly seemed to be getting
uncomfortably near the truth. “No doubt,”
said I; “but how do you know that he is anywhere
upon the moor?”
“I know it because I have seen
with my own eyes the messenger who takes him his food.”
My heart sank for Barrymore.
It was a serious thing to be in the power of this
spiteful old busybody. But his next remark took
a weight from my mind.
“You’ll be surprised to
hear that his food is taken to him by a child.
I see him every day through my telescope upon the roof.
He passes along the same path at the same hour, and
to whom should he be going except to the convict?”
Here was luck indeed! And yet
I suppressed all appearance of interest. A child!
Barrymore had said that our unknown was supplied by
a boy. It was on his track, and not upon the
convict’s, that Frankland had stumbled.
If I could get his knowledge it might save me a long
and weary hunt. But incredulity and indifference
were evidently my strongest cards.
“I should say that it was much
more likely that it was the son of one of the moorland
shepherds taking out his father’s dinner.”
The least appearance of opposition
struck fire out of the old autocrat. His eyes
looked malignantly at me, and his gray whiskers bristled
like those of an angry cat.
“Indeed, sir!” said he,
pointing out over the wide-stretching moor. “Do
you see that Black Tor over yonder? Well, do you
see the low hill beyond with the thornbush upon it?
It is the stoniest part of the whole moor. Is
that a place where a shepherd would be likely to take
his station? Your suggestion, sir, is a most
absurd one.”
I meekly answered that I had spoken
without knowing all the facts. My submission
pleased him and led him to further confidences.
“You may be sure, sir, that
I have very good grounds before I come to an opinion.
I have seen the boy again and again with his bundle.
Every day, and sometimes twice a day, I have been
able—but wait a moment, Dr. Watson.
Do my eyes deceive me, or is there at the present
moment something moving upon that hill-side?”
It was several miles off, but I could
distinctly see a small dark dot against the dull green
and gray.
“Come, sir, come!” cried
Frankland, rushing upstairs. “You will
see with your own eyes and judge for yourself.”
The telescope, a formidable instrument
mounted upon a tripod, stood upon the flat leads of
the house. Frankland clapped his eye to it and
gave a cry of satisfaction.
“Quick, Dr. Watson, quick, before
he passes over the hill!”
There he was, sure enough, a small
urchin with a little bundle upon his shoulder, toiling
slowly up the hill. When he reached the crest
I saw the ragged uncouth figure outlined for an instant
against the cold blue sky. He looked round him
with a furtive and stealthy air, as one who dreads
pursuit. Then he vanished over the hill.
“Well! Am I right?”
“Certainly, there is a boy who seems to have
some secret errand.”
“And what the errand is even
a county constable could guess. But not one word
shall they have from me, and I bind you to secrecy
also, Dr. Watson. Not a word! You understand!”
“Just as you wish.”
“They have treated me shamefully—shamefully.
When the facts come out in Frankland v. Regina
I venture to think that a thrill of indignation will
run through the country. Nothing would induce
me to help the police in any way. For all they
cared it might have been me, instead of my effigy,
which these rascals burned at the stake. Surely
you are not going! You will help me to empty the
decanter in honour of this great occasion!”
But I resisted all his solicitations
and succeeded in dissuading him from his announced
intention of walking home with me. I kept the
road as long as his eye was on me, and then I struck
off across the moor and made for the stony hill over
which the boy had disappeared. Everything was
working in my favour, and I swore that it should not
be through lack of energy or perseverance that I should
miss the chance which fortune had thrown in my way.
The sun was already sinking when I
reached the summit of the hill, and the long slopes
beneath me were all golden-green on one side and gray
shadow on the other. A haze lay low upon the
farthest sky-line, out of which jutted the fantastic
shapes of Belliver and Vixen Tor. Over the wide
expanse there was no sound and no movement. One
great gray bird, a gull or curlew, soared aloft in
the blue heaven. He and I seemed to be the only
living things between the huge arch of the sky and
the desert beneath it. The barren scene, the
sense of loneliness, and the mystery and urgency of
my task all struck a chill into my heart. The
boy was nowhere to be seen. But down beneath
me in a cleft of the hills there was a circle of the
old stone huts, and in the middle of them there was
one which retained sufficient roof to act as a screen
against the weather. My heart leaped within me
as I saw it. This must be the burrow where the
stranger lurked. At last my foot was on the threshold
of his hiding place—his secret was within
my grasp.
As I approached the hut, walking as
warily as Stapleton would do when with poised net
he drew near the settled butterfly, I satisfied myself
that the place had indeed been used as a habitation.
A vague pathway among the boulders led to the dilapidated
opening which served as a door. All was silent
within. The unknown might be lurking there, or
he might be prowling on the moor. My nerves tingled
with the sense of adventure. Throwing aside my
cigarette, I closed my hand upon the butt of my revolver
and, walking swiftly up to the door, I looked in.
The place was empty.
But there were ample signs that I
had not come upon a false scent. This was certainly
where the man lived. Some blankets rolled in
a waterproof lay upon that very stone slab upon which
Neolithic man had once slumbered. The ashes of
a fire were heaped in a rude grate. Beside it
lay some cooking utensils and a bucket half-full of
water. A litter of empty tins showed that the
place had been occupied for some time, and I saw,
as my eyes became accustomed to the checkered light,
a pannikin and a half-full bottle of spirits standing
in the corner. In the middle of the hut a flat
stone served the purpose of a table, and upon this
stood a small cloth bundle—the same, no
doubt, which I had seen through the telescope upon
the shoulder of the boy. It contained a loaf
of bread, a tinned tongue, and two tins of preserved
peaches. As I set it down again, after having
examined it, my heart leaped to see that beneath it
there lay a sheet of paper with writing upon it.
I raised it, and this was what I read, roughly scrawled
in pencil:—
Dr. Watson has gone to Coombe Tracey.
For a minute I stood there with the
paper in my hands thinking out the meaning of this
curt message. It was I, then, and not Sir Henry,
who was being dogged by this secret man. He had
not followed me himself, but he had set an agent—the
boy, perhaps—upon my track, and this was
his report. Possibly I had taken no step since
I had been upon the moor which had not been observed
and reported. Always there was this feeling of
an unseen force, a fine net drawn round us with infinite
skill and delicacy, holding us so lightly that it
was only at some supreme moment that one realized
that one was indeed entangled in its meshes.
If there was one report there might
be others, so I looked round the hut in search of
them. There was no trace, however, of anything
of the kind, nor could I discover any sign which might
indicate the character or intentions of the man who
lived in this singular place, save that he must be
of Spartan habits and cared little for the comforts
of life. When I thought of the heavy rains and
looked at the gaping roof I understood how strong and
immutable must be the purpose which had kept him in
that inhospitable abode. Was he our malignant
enemy, or was he by chance our guardian angel?
I swore that I would not leave the hut until I knew.
Outside the sun was sinking low and
the west was blazing with scarlet and gold. Its
reflection was shot back in ruddy patches by the distant
pools which lay amid the great Grimpen Mire. There
were the two towers of Baskerville Hall, and there
a distant blur of smoke which marked the village of
Grimpen. Between the two, behind the hill, was
the house of the Stapletons. All was sweet and
mellow and peaceful in the golden evening light, and
yet as I looked at them my soul shared none of the
peace of nature but quivered at the vagueness and
the terror of that interview which every instant was
bringing nearer. With tingling nerves, but a
fixed purpose, I sat in the dark recess of the hut
and waited with sombre patience for the coming of
its tenant.
And then at last I heard him.
Far away came the sharp clink of a boot striking upon
a stone. Then another and yet another, coming
nearer and nearer. I shrank back into the darkest
corner, and cocked the pistol in my pocket, determined
not to discover myself until I had an opportunity
of seeing something of the stranger. There was
a long pause which showed that he had stopped.
Then once more the footsteps approached and a shadow
fell across the opening of the hut.
“It is a lovely evening, my
dear Watson,” said a well-known voice.
“I really think that you will be more comfortable
outside than in.”