papers to make over the girl's fortune--of which he

  may be trustee--to them. This he refuses to do. In

  order to negotiate with him they have to get an

  interpreter , and they pitch upon this Mr. Melas,

  having used some other one before. The girl is not

  told of the arrival of her brother, and finds it out

  by the merest accident."

  "Excellent, Watson!" cried Holmes. "I really fancy

  that you are not far from the truth. You see that we

  hold all the cards, and we have only to fear some

  sudden act of violence on their part. If they give us

  time we must have them."

  "But how can we find where this house lies?"

  "Well, if our conjecture is correct and the girl's

  name is or was Sophy Kratides, we should have no

  difficulty in tracing her. That must be our main

  hope, for the brother is, of course, a complete

  stranger. It is clear that some time has elapsed

  since this Harold established these relations with the

  girl--some weeks, at any rate--since the brother in

  Greece has had time to hear of it and come across. If

  they have been living in the same place during this

  time, it is probable that we shall have some answer to

  Mycroft's advertisement."

  We had reached our house in Baker Street while we had

  been talking. Holmes ascended the stair first, and as

  he opened the door of our room he gave a start of

  surprise. Looking over his shoulder, I was equally

  astonished. His brother Mycroft was sitting smoking

  in the arm-chair.

  "Come in, Sherlock! Come in, sir," said he blandly,

  smiling at our surprised faces. "You don't expect

  such energy from me, do you, Sherlock? But somehow

  this case attracts me."

  "How did you get here?"

  "I passed you in a hansom."

  "There has been some new development?"

  "I had an answer to my advertisement."

  "Ah!"

  "Yes, it came within a few minutes of your leaving."

  "And to what effect?"

  Mycroft Holmes took out a sheet of paper.

  "Here it is," said he, "written with a J pen on royal

  cream paper by a middle-aged man with a weak

  constitution. 'Sir,' he says, 'in answer to your

  advertisement of to-day's date, I beg to inform you

  that know the young lady in question very well. If

  you should care to call upon me I could give you some

  particulars as to her painful history. She is living

  at present at The Myrtles, Beckenham. Yours

  faithfully, J. Davenport.'

  "He writes from Lower Brixton," said Mycroft Holmes.

  "Do you not think that we might drive to him now,

  Sherlock, and learn these particulars?"

  "My dear Mycroft, the brother's life is more valuable

  than the sister's story. I think we should call at

  Scotland Yard for Inspector Gregson, and go straight

  out to Beckenham. We know that a man is being done to

  death, and every hour may be vital."

  "Better pick up Mr. Melas on our way," I suggested.

  "We may need an interpreter."

  "Excellent," said Sherlock Holmes. "Send the boy for

  a four-wheeler, and we shall be off at once." He

  opened the table-drawer as he spoke, and I noticed

  that he slipped his revolver into his pocket. "Yes,"

  said he, in answer to my glance; "I should say from

  what we have heard, that we are dealing with a

  particularly dangerous gang."

  It was almost dark before we found ourselves in Pall

  Mall, at the rooms of Mr. Melas. A gentleman had just

  called for him, and he was gone.

  "Can you tell me where?" asked Mycroft Holmes.

  "I don't know, sir," answered the woman who had opened

  the door; "I only know that he drove away with the

  gentleman in a carriage."

  "Did the gentleman give a name?"

  "No, sir."

  "He wasn't a tall, handsome, dark young man?"

  "Oh, nor, sir. He was a little gentleman, with

  glasses, thin in the face, but very pleasant in his

  ways, for he was laughing al the time that he was

  talking."

  "Come along!" cried Sherlock Holmes, abruptly. "This

  grows serious," he observed, as we drove to Scotland

  Yard. "These men have got hold of Melas again. He is

  a man of no physical courage, as they are well aware

  from their experience the other night. This villain

  was able to terrorize him the instant that he got into

  his presence. No doubt they want his professional

  services, but, having used him, they may be inclined

  to punish him for what they will regard as his

  treachery."

  Our hope was that, by taking train, we might get to

  Beckenham as soon or sooner than the carriage. On

  reaching Scotland Yard, however, it was more than an

  hour before we could get Inspector Gregson and comply

  with the legal formalities which would enable us to

  enter the house. It was a quarter to ten before we

  reached London Bridge, and half past before the four

  of us alighted on the Beckenham platform. A drive of

  half a mile brought us to The Myrtles--a large, dark

  house standing back from the road in its own grounds.

  Here we dismissed our cab, and made our way up the

  drive together.

  "The windows are all dark," remarked the inspector.

  "The house seems deserted."

  "Our birds are flown and the nest empty," said Holmes.

  "Why do you say so?"

  "A carriage heavily loaded with luggage has passed out

  during the last hour."

  The inspector laughed. "I saw the wheel-tracks in the

  light of the gate-lamp, but where does the luggage

  come in?"

  "You may have observed the same wheel-tracks going the

  other way. But the outward-bound ones were very much

  deeper--so much so that we can say for a certainty

  that there was a very considerable weight on the

  carriage."

  "You get a trifle beyond me there," said the

  inspector, shrugging his shoulder. "It will not be an

  easy door to force, but we will try if we cannot make

  some one hear us."

  He hammered loudly at the knocker and pulled at the

  bell, but without any success. Holmes had slipped

  away, but he came back in a few minutes.

  "I have a window open," said he.

  "It is a mercy that you are on the side of the force,

  and not against it, Mr. Holmes," remarked the

  inspector, as he noted the clever way in which my

  friend had forced back the catch. "Well, I think that

  under the circumstances we may enter without an

  invitation."

  One after the other we made our way into a large

  apartment, which was evidently that in which Mr. Melas

  had found himself. The inspector had lit his lantern,

  and by its light we could see the two doors, the

  curtain, the lamp, and the suit of Japanese mail as he

  had described them. On the table lay two glasses, and

  empty brandy-bottle, and the remains of a meal.

  "What is that?" asked Holmes, sud
denly.

  We all stood still and listened. A low moaning sound

  was coming from somewhere over our heads. Holmes

  rushed to the door and out into the hall. The dismal

  noise came from upstairs. He dashed up, the inspector

  and I at his heels, while his brother Mycroft followed

  as quickly as his great bulk would permit.

  Three doors faced up upon the second floor, and it was

  from the central of these that the sinister sounds

  were issuing, sinking sometimes into a dull mumble and

  rising again into a shrill whine. It was locked, but

  the key had been left on the outside. Holmes flung

  open the door and rushed in, but he was out again in

  an instant, with his hand to his throat."

  "It's charcoal," he cried. "Give it time. It will

  clear."

  Peering in, we could see that the only light in the

  room came from a dull blue flame which flickered from

  a small brass tripod in the centre. It threw a livid,

  unnatural circle upon the floor, while in the shadows

  beyond we saw the vague loom of two figures which

  crouched against the wall. From the open door there

  reeked a horrible poisonous exhalation which set us

  gasping and coughing. Holmes rushed to the top of the

  stairs to draw in the fresh air, and then, dashing

  into the room, he threw up the window and hurled the

  brazen tripod out into the garden.

  "We can enter in a minute," he gasped, darting out

  again. "Where is a candle? I doubt if we could

  strike a match in that atmosphere. Hold the light at

  the door and we shall get them out, Mycroft, now!"

  With a rush we got to the poisoned men and dragged

  them out into the well-lit hall. Both of them were

  blue-lipped and insensible, with swollen, congested

  faces and protruding eyes. Indeed, so distorted were

  their features that, save for his black beard and

  stout figure, we might have failed to recognize in one

  of them the Greek interpreter who had parted from us

  only a few hours before at the Diogenes Club. His

  hands and feet were securely strapped together, and he

  bore over one eye the marks of a violent blow. The

  other, who was secured in a similar fashion, was a

  tall man in the last stage of emaciation, with several

  strips of sticking-plaster arranged in a grotesque

  pattern over his face. He had ceased to moan as we

  laid him down, and a glance showed me that for him at

  least our aid had come too late. Mr. Melas, however,

  still lived, and in less than an hour, with the aid of

  ammonia and brandy I had the satisfaction of seeing

  him open his eyes, and of knowing that my hand had

  drawn him back from that dark valley in which all

  paths meet.

  It was a simple story which he had to tell, and one

  which did but confirm our own deductions. His

  visitor, on entering his rooms, had drawn a

  life-preserver from his sleeve, and had so impressed

  him with the fear of instant and inevitable death that

  he had kidnapped him for the second time. Indeed, it

  was almost mesmeric, the effect which this giggling

  ruffian had produced upon the unfortunate linguist,

  for he could not speak of him save with trembling

  hands and a blanched cheek. He had been taken swiftly

  to Beckenham, and had acted as interpreter in a second

  interview, even more dramatic than the first, in which

  the two Englishmen had menaced their prisoner with

  instant death if he did not comply with their demands.

  Finally, finding him proof against every threat, they

  had hurled him back into his prison, and after

  reproaching Melas with his treachery, which appeared

  from the newspaper advertisement, they had stunned him

  with a blow from a stick, and he remembered nothing

  more until he found us bending over him.

  And this was the singular case of the Grecian

  Interpreter, the explanation of which is still

  involved in some mystery. We were able to find out,

  by communicating with the gentleman who had answered

  the advertisement, that the unfortunate young lady

  came of a wealthy Grecian family, and that she had

  been on a visit to some friends in England. While

  there she had met a young man named Harold Latimer,

  who had acquired an ascendancy over he and had

  eventually persuaded her to fly with him. Her

  friends, shocked at the event, had contented

  themselves with informing her brother at Athens, and

  had then washed their hands of the matter. The

  brother, on his arrival in England, had imprudently

  placed himself in the power of Latimer and of his

  associate, whose name was Wilson Kemp--that through

  his ignorance of the language he was helpless in their

  hands, had kept him a prisoner, and had endeavored by

  cruelty and starvation to make him sign away his own

  and his sister's property. They had kept him in the

  house without the girl's knowledge, and the plaster

  over the face had been for the purpose of making

  recognition difficult in case she should ever catch a

  glimpse of him. Her feminine perception, however, had

  instantly seen through the disguise when, on the

  occasion of the interpreter's visit, she had seen him

  for the first time. The poor girl, however, was

  herself a prisoner, for there was no one about the

  house except the man who acted as coachman, and his

  wife, both of whom were tools of the conspirators.

  Finding that their secret was out, and that their

  prisoner was not to be coerced, the two villains with

  the girl had fled away at a few hours' notice from the

  furnished house which they had hired, having first, as

  they thought, taken vengeance both upon the man who

  had defied and the one who had betrayed them.

  Months afterwards a curious newspaper cutting reached

  us from Buda-Pesth. It told how two Englishmen who

  had been traveling with a woman had met with a tragic

  end. They had each been stabbed, it seems, and the

  Hungarian police were of opinion that they had

  quarreled and had inflicted mortal injuries upon each

  other. Holmes, however, is, I fancy, of a different

  way of thinking, and holds to this day that, if one

  could find the Grecian girl, one might learn how the

  wrongs of herself and her brother came to be avenged.

  Adventure X

  The Naval Treaty

  The July which immediately succeeded my marriage was

  made memorable by three cases of interest, in which I

  had the privilege of being associated with Sherlock

  Holmes and of studying his methods. I find them

  recorded in my notes under the headings of "The

  Adventure of the Second Stain," "The Adventure of the

  Naval Treaty," and "The Adventure of the Tired

  Captain." The first of these, however, deals with

  interest of such importance and implicates so many of

  the first families in the kingdom that for many years

  it will be imp
ossible to make it public. No case,

  however, in which Holmes was engaged has ever

  illustrated the value of his analytical methods so

  clearly or has impressed those who were associated

  with him so deeply. I still retain an almost verbatim

  report of the interview in which he demonstrated the

  true facts of the case to Monsieur Dubugue of the

  Paris police, and Fritz von Waldbaum, the well-known

  specialist of Dantzig, both of whom had wasted their

  energies upon what proved to be side-issues. The new

  century will have come, however, before the story can

  be safely told. Meanwhile I pass on to the second on

  my list, which promised also at one time to be of

  national importance, and was marked by several

  incidents which give it a quite unique character.

  During my school-days I had been intimately associated

  with a lad named Percy Phelps, who was of much the

  same age as myself, though he was two classes ahead of

  me. He was a very brilliant boy, and carried away

  every prize which the school had to offer, finished

  his exploits by winning a scholarship which sent him

  on to continue his triumphant career at Cambridge. He

  was, I remember, extremely well connected, and even

  when we were all little boys together we knew that his

  mother's brother was Lord Holdhurst, the great

  conservative politician. This gaudy relationship did

  him little good at school. On the contrary, it seemed

  rather a piquant thing to us to chevy him about the

  playground and hit him over the shins with a wicket.

  But it was another thing when he came out into the

  world. I heard vaguely that his abilities and the

  influences which he commanded had won him a good

  position at the Foreign Office, and then he passed

  completely out of my mind until the following letter

  recalled his existence:

  Briarbrae, Woking.

  My dear Watson,--I have no doubt that you can remember

  "Tadpole" Phelps, who was in the fifth form when you

  were in the third. It is possible even that you may

  have heard that through my uncle's influence I

  obtained a good appointment at the Foreign Office, and

  that I was in a situation of trust and honor until a

  horrible misfortune came suddenly to blast my career.

  There is no use writing of the details of that

  dreadful event. In the event of your acceding to my

  request it is probably that I shall have to narrate

  them to you. I have only just recovered from nine

  weeks of brain-fever, and am still exceedingly weak.

  Do you think that you could bring your friend Mr.

  Holmes down to see me? I should like to have his

  opinion of the case, though the authorities assure me

  that nothing more can be done. Do try to bring him

  down, and as soon as possible. Every minute seems an

  hour while I live in this state of horrible suspense.

  Assure him that if I have not asked his advice sooner

  it was not because I did not appreciate his talents,

  but because I have been off my head ever since the

  blow fell. Now I am clear again, though I dare not

  think of it too much for fear of a relapse. I am still

  so weak that I have to write, as you see, by dictating.

  Do try to bring him.

  Your old school-fellow,

  Percy Phelps.

  There was something that touched me as I read this

  letter, something pitiable in the reiterated appeals

  to bring Holmes. So moved was I that even had it been

  a difficult matter I should have tried it, but of

  course I knew well that Holmes loved his art, so that

  he was ever as ready to bring his aid as his client

  could be to receive it. My wife agreed with me that

  not a moment should be lost in laying the matter

  before him, and so within an hour of breakfast-time I

  found myself back once more in the old rooms in Baker

  Street.

  Holmes was seated at his side-table clad in his

  dressing-gown, and working hard over a chemical

  investigation. A large curved retort was boiling

  furiously in the bluish flame of a Bunsen burner, and

  the distilled drops were condensing into a two-litre

  measure. My friend hardly glanced up as I entered,

  and I, seeing that his investigation must be of

  importance, seated myself in an arm-chair and waited.

  He dipped into this bottle or that, drawing out a few

  drops of each with his glass pipette, and finally