Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle
The Crooked Man Page 9
At ten o'clock the same night I started off upon my journey. There were a thousand lives to save, but it
was of only one that I was thinking when I dropped over the wall that night. "My way ran down a dried-
up watercourse, which we hoped would screen me from the enemy's sentries; but as I crept round the
corner of it I walked right into six of them, who were crouching down in the dark waiting for me. In an
instant I was stunned with a blow and bound hand and foot. But the real blow was to my heart and not
to my head, for as I came to and listened to as much as I could understand of their talk, I heard enough
to tell me that my comrade, the very man who had arranged the way that I was to take, had betrayed
me by means of a native servant into the hands of the enemy. "Well, there's no need for me to dwell on
that part of it. You know now what James Barclay was capable of. Bhurtee was relieved by Neill next day,
but the rebels took me away with them in their retreat, and it was many a long year before ever I saw a
white face again. I was tortured and tried to get away, and was captured and tortured again. You can
see for yourselves the state in which I was left. Some of them that fled into Nepaul took me with them,
and then afterwards I was up past Darjeeling. The hill-folk up there murdered the rebels who had me,
and I became their slave for a time until I escaped; but instead of going south I had to go north, until I
found myself among the Afghans. There I wandered about for many a year, and at last came back to
the Punjaub, where I lived mostly among the natives and picked up a living by the conjuring tricks that I
had learned. What use was it for me, a wretched cripple, to go back to England or to make myself
known to my old comrades? Even my wish for revenge would not make me do that. I had rather that
Nancy and my old pals should think of Harry Wood as having died with a straight back, than see him
living and crawling with a stick like a chimpanzee. They never doubted that I was dead, and I meant that
they never should. I heard that Barclay had married Nancy, and that he was rising rapidly in the
regiment, but even that did not make me speak.
"But when one gets old one has a longing for home. For years I've been dreaming of the bright green
fields and the hedges of England. At last I determined to see them before I died. I saved enough to
bring me across, and then I came here where the soldiers are, for I know their ways and how to amuse
them and so earn enough to keep me." "Your narrative is most interesting," said Sherlock Holmes. "I
have already heard of your meeting with Mrs. Barclay, and your mutual recognition. You then, as I
understand, followed her home and saw through the window an altercation between her husband and
her, in which she doubtless cast his conduct to you in his teeth. Your own feelings overcame you, and
you ran across the lawn and broke in upon them." "I did, sir, and at the sight of me he looked as I have
never seen a man look before, and over he went with his head on the fender. But he was dead before
he fell. I read death on his face as plain as I can read that text over the fire. The bare sight of me was
like a bullet through his guilty heart." "And then?"
"Then Nancy fainted, and I caught up the key of the door from her hand, intending to unlock it and get
help. But as I was doing it it seemed to me better to leave it alone and get away, for the thing might
look black against me, and any way my secret would be out if I were taken. In my haste I thrust the key
into my pocket, and dropped my stick while I was chasing Teddy, who had run up the curtain. When I
got him into his box, from which he had slipped, I was off as fast as I could run." "Who's Teddy?" asked
Holmes. The man leaned over and pulled up the front of a kind of hutch in the corner. In an instant out
there slipped a beautiful reddish-brown creature, thin and lithe, with the legs of a stoat, a long, thin
nose, and a pair of the finest red eyes that ever I saw in an animal's head.