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Copyright 2010 by Nancy Springer. All rights reserved.
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Published simultaneously in Canada.
Text set in Cochin.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Springer, Nancy.
The case of the Gypsy good-bye / Nancy Springer.
p. cm.(An Enola Holmes mystery)
Summary: After fourteen-year-old Enola Holmes seeks the missing Duquessa del
Campo in the seedy underbelly of nineteenth-century London, she finally
reaches an understanding with her brothers, Sherlock and Mycroft.
[1. KidnappingFiction. 2. Brothers and sistersFiction. 3. Self-realizationFiction.
4. Characters in literatureFiction. 5. London (England)History19th centuryFiction.
6. Great BritainHistory19th centuryFiction. 7. Mystery and detective stories.] I. Title.
PZ7.S76846Cari 2010
[Fic]dc22 2009027141
eISBN : 978-1-101-18765-4
http://us.penguingroup.com
To my mother
ALSO BY NANCY SPRINGER
THE ENOLA HOLMES MYSTERIES
The Case of the Missing Marquess The Case of the Left-Handed Lady The Case of the Bizarre Bouquets The Case of the Peculiar Pink Fan The Case of the Cryptic Crinoline
THE TALES OF ROWAN HOOD
Rowan Hood, Outlaw Girl of Sherwood Forest
Lionclaw
Outlaw Princess of Sherwood
Wild Boy
Rowan Hood Returns, the Final Chapter
THE TALES FROM CAMELOT
I am Mordred
I am Morgan le Fay
Ribbiting Tales
JULY, 1889
MISTER SHERLOCK, IM THAT GLAD TO SEE YOU, I am, and that obliged... Mrs. Lane, faithful Holmes family servant, who has known the great detective since he was a boy in short pants, cannot keep the quaver out of her voice or the tears out of her dim old eyes.... that obliged to you for coming...
Nonsense. Shrinking, as usual, from any display of emotion, Sherlock Holmes studies the dark woodwork of Ferndell Hall. I welcome the opportunity to visit my ancestral home. Dressed in summertime country attirebeige linen suit, lightweight tan kidskin boots and gloves, deer-stalker caphe lays the gloves and hat on the parlour table, as well as his stick, and proceeds at once to business. Mr. Lanes telegram was rather enigmatic. Pray, what is so odd about this package you hesitate to open?
Before she can answer, into the parlour hurries her husband, the white-haired butler, with considerably less than his usual dignity. Mister Sherlock! How good of you! And much the same prattle must be gone through all over again.... delight to my old eyes... so very kind of you... very warm day; might I presume, sir, to offer you a seat outside?
So Sherlock Holmes is hospitably settled on the shady porch, where breezes mitigate the heat, and Mrs. Lane is offering iced lemonade and macaroons, before Holmes succeeds in addressing business once more.
Lane, he asks the venerable butler, what exactly alarms you and Mrs. Lane about this package you recently received?
Well trained by decades of sorting out household disorder, Lane answers methodically. First and foremost, Mister Sherlock, the way it came in the middle of the night and we dont know who left it there.
For the first time looking less than bored, the great detective leans forward in his cushioned wicker chair. Left it where?
At the kitchen door. We wouldnt have found it till morning if it were not for Reginald.
The shaggy collie dog, who is lying flat on his side nearby, raises his blunt head when he hears his name.
Weve been letting him sleep indoors, explains Mrs. Lane as she settles her amplitude in another chair, being that hes getting along in years, like us.
Reginald lays his head down again and thumps his furry tail against the floor-boards of the porch.
He barked, I suppose? Sherlock Holmes is growing impatient.
Oh, he barked like a tiger, he did! Mrs. Lane nods emphatically. But even so, I dont suppose we would have heard him if it were not that Ive been sleeping in the library on the davenport, begging your pardon, Mister Sherlock, because the stairs plague my knees so.
But I was in our proper quarters, says Lane with emphasis, and knew nothing of the matter until Mrs. Lane summoned me with the bell.
Leaping at the kitchen door and barking like a lion, he was! Presumably Mrs. Lane refers to the dog. Her excited comments quite contrast with her husbands careful report, especially given that neither tigers nor lions bark. I was afraid to do a thing until Mr. Lane came down.
Sherlock Holmes leans back in his chair with his aquiline features resuming their usual expression of disappointment with the folly of humankind. So when you eventually investigated, you found a parcel, but no sign of the mysterious person or persons who had left it there atwhat time was it?
Lane answers, Three-twenty of Thursday morning, or thereabouts, Mister Sherlock. I went and hunted a bit outside, but it was a dark night, cloudy like, and nothing to be seen.
Of course. So you brought the package inside but you did not open it. Why not?
Not for us to presume, Mister Sherlock. Also the parcel itself is peculiar in several ways rather difficult to explain.
It appears that Lane is going to attempt to explain anyway, but Sherlock Holmes raises a commanding hand to stop him. I will rely upon my own impressions. Kindly bring me this mysterious parcel.
Not so much a parcel as a flat, oversized envelope made of heavy brown paper glued together, it is so lightweight that there seems to be nothing inside it. The inscriptions upon it, however, cause even Sherlock Holmes to stare. Every inch of the envelopes face is covered with crude ornamentation done in black. All four sides of the rectangle are heavily bordered with lines that include zigzags, spirals, and serpentines, whilst diagonally across the corners, almond-and-circle designs peer like primitive eyes, heavily outlined.
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