A study in scarlet
CHAPTER V. OUR ADVERTISEMENT BRINGS A VISITOR.
OUR morning's exertions had been too much for my weak
health, and I was tired out in the afternoon. After Holmes' departure for the
concert, I lay down upon the sofa and endeavoured to get a couple of hours'
sleep. It was a useless attempt. My mind had been too much excited by all that
had occurred, and the strangest fancies and surmises crowded into it. Every
time that I closed my eyes I saw before me the distorted baboon-like
countenance of the murdered man. So sinister was the impression which that face
had produced upon me that I found it difficult to feel anything but gratitude
for him who had removed its owner from the world. If ever human features
bespoke vice of the most malignant type, they were certainly those of Enoch J.
Drebber, of Cleveland. Still I recognized that justice must be done, and that
the depravity of the victim was no condonment 11 in the eyes of the law.
The more I thought of it the more extraordinary did my
companion's hypothesis, that the man had been poisoned, appear. I remembered
how he had sniffed his lips, and had no doubt that he had detected something
which had given rise to the idea. Then, again, if not poison, what had caused
the man's death, since there was neither wound nor marks of strangulation? But,
on the other hand, whose blood was that which lay so thickly upon the floor?
There were no signs of a struggle, nor had the victim any weapon with which he
might have wounded an antagonist. As long as all these questions were unsolved,
I felt that sleep would be no easy matter, either for Holmes or myself. His
quiet self-confident manner convinced me that he had already formed a theory
which explained all the facts, though what it was I could not for an instant
conjecture.
He was very late in returning—so late, that I knew that the
concert could not have detained him all the time. Dinner was on the table
before he appeared.
"It was magnificent," he said, as he took his
seat. "Do you remember what Darwin says about music? He claims that the
power of producing and appreciating it existed among the human race long before
the power of speech was arrived at. Perhaps that is why we are so subtly
influenced by it. There are vague memories in our souls of those misty
centuries when the world was in its childhood."
"That's rather a broad idea," I remarked.
"One's ideas must be as broad as Nature if they are to
interpret Nature," he answered. "What's the matter? You're not
looking quite yourself. This Brixton Road affair has upset you."
"To tell the truth, it has," I said. "I ought
to be more case-hardened after my Afghan experiences. I saw my own comrades
hacked to pieces at Maiwand without losing my nerve."