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Donald Thomas - Sherlock Holmes and the Kings Evil: And Other New Tales Featuring the Worlds Greatest Detective

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Donald Thomas Sherlock Holmes and the Kings Evil: And Other New Tales Featuring the Worlds Greatest Detective
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Five stunning novellas featuring the Great Detective, by the acknowledged master of Sherlockian pastiche.In these five tales of intellectual derring-do, Sherlock Holmes is shown at the height of his powers: he co-operates with a young Winston Churchill in the famed siege of Sydney Street; helps defeat a plan for a German invasion outlined in the Zimmerman Telegram; establishes a link between two missing light-house keepers and the royal treasures of King John; contends with a supernatural curse placed upon an eccentric aristocrat and discovers a lost epic of Lord Byron. But it is all in a days work for the great detective, who continues to defy the odds and lives to ratiocinate another day.

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Table of Contents

ALSO BY DONALD THOMAS
POETRY
Points of Contact Welcome to the Grand Hotel

FICTION
Prince Charlies Bluff The Flight of the Eagle The Blindfold Game Belladonna: A Lewis Carroll Nightmare
The Day the Sun Rose Twice
The Raising of Lizzie Meek
The Rippers Apprentice
Jekyll, Alias Hyde
Dancing in the Dark
The Arrest of Scotland Yard
Red Flowers for Lady Blue
The Secret Cases of Sherlock Holmes Sherlock Holmes and the Running Noose
The Execution of Sherlock Holmes

BIOGRAPHY
Cardigan: The Hero of Balaclava Cochrane: Britannias Sea-Wolf Swinburne: The Poet in his World Robert Browning: A Life Within Life
Henry Fielding: A Life
The Marquis de Sade
Lewis Carroll: A Portrait With Background

CRIME AND DOCUMENTARY
A Long Time Burning: The History of Censorship in England
Freedoms Frontier: Censorship in Modern Britain
State Trials: Treason and Libel
State Trials: The Public Conscience Honour Among Thieves: Three Classic Robberies Dead Giveaway: Murder Avenged from the Grave
Hanged in Error
The Victorian Underworld
An Underworld at War: Spies, Deserters, Racketeers and Civilians in the Second World War
Villains Paradise: Britains Post-War Underworld The Everyman Book of Victorian Verse: The Post-Romantics The Everyman Book of Victorian Verse: The Pre-Raphaelites to the Nineties
Everyman Selected Poems of John Dryden
SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE KING4S EVIL Pegasus Books LLC - photo 1
SHERLOCK HOLMES AND THE KING4S EVIL

Pegasus Books LLC


************Copyright TK************

Interior design by Maria Fernandez
For Robert, Peindre and Jane
I am most grateful for information on Byrons handwriting from Dr Linda Shakespeare and for Charles Schlessigers fellow enthusiasm for the Great Detective.
I
The Case of the Tell-tale Hands
I t was on a fine May morning in 1901 that Holmes and I first made the acquaintance of Raymond Ashley Savile, 3rd Earl of Blagdon. The Earl was in his mid-forties at the time of our meeting.
His grandfather, the 1st Earl of Blagdon, had gained a fortune and a title as the founder of Saviles Commercial Bank in the City of London in 1839. In the heyday of Victorias England, Saviles Bank had been a name to conjure with. Plain old John Savile, before he acquired his earldom, made his first million in the railway boom of the 1840s. He then sold his shares in the Great North Eastern Railway and its rivals shortly before the bubble burst. Whatever his profit, he doubled itand doubled it againthrough his stake in Ocean Coal, as well as in several of the new department stores which graced Londons West End in the later decades of the nineteenth century.
The old man died in 1897 and was succeeded by his eldest son who outlived him only for a few months. It was old John Saviles grandson who then became the 3rd Earl of Blagdon. By that time, as Sherlock Holmes remarked acidly, the aristocratic title had passed through three generations and had been washed clean of the whiff and taint of trade. In the House of Lords and elsewhere, Raymond Ashley Savile stood equal with the descendants of Plantagenet knights and Elizabethan statesmen.
The name most closely associated with the Savile family and its title as Earls of Blagdon was that of their country house, Priorsfield. It had been built no more than forty years before Holmes and I first saw it. Infinite pains had been taken to suggest that a 16th century chateau of the Loire had been whisked up and set down in a valley of the River Thames, half way between Oxford and London.
Priorsfield was soon brought to our attention and I must say a word about it. It was best seen from a distance, as passengers on the Oxford train glimpsed it across the Berkshire meadows beyond Windsor. Despite the best efforts of the architect and the builders, its French Renaissance design had too much of the new in its appearance to be anything but the plaything of commercial success. The dome between its round towers with their conical roofs might as easily have graced the Winter Gardens Pavilion or the Grand Hotel of a popular seaside resort.
Other stately homes might be known for suits of armour or the banners of chivalry. Priorsfields fame came from glass cases of Svres porcelain, from gold lustre centrepieces with fresh flowers down the length of polished dining tables and overblown garden scenes painted in oils. The Earls of Blagdon walked on flower-decorated carpets ordered by Louis XIV for the halls of Versailles.
Raymond Ashley Savile came to see Sherlock Holmes by appointment. He was a tall rather gaunt man, perhaps in his prime but already with a pronounced stoop. It was not only this stoop which made the fair-complexioned and clean-shaven aristocrat appear to bear the weight of the world on his shoulders. He glanced at me, uneasily as I thought, swept his long morning-coat about him and sat down. He turned to my friend.
Mr Holmes, what I have to tell you must remain between ourselves.
Of course, my lord, said Holmes courteously, However you may speak as freely before Dr Watson as to myself. Indeed, it is advisable that you should do so. The resolution of most difficulties benefits from a second opinion. It is far better that my friend and colleague should hear of the matter from your own lips. Indeed, I would consider it essential.
In this polite but inflexible manner, Sherlock Holmes had laid down the law to the aristocracy on many occasions. Lord Blagdon paused, as if he might even now stand up and take his leave. Then he sighed and began his explanation.
Mr Holmes, you are probably aware that my fathers youngest brother was Lord Frederick Savile who together with his young wife was killed in the Clapham train crash of 1879.
Indeed, my lord, said Holmes quietly.
He left a five-year-old son, Lord Arthur Savile, who was brought up by my father as if he had been my younger brother rather than my cousin. We were not close, of course, because there was a gap of almost twenty years between us. However, I have always behaved towards him as though he were more than a young cousin. He will only carry the courtesy title of Lord Arthur Savile and therefore cannot inherit. However, I have seen to it that he need not want for money. He left Oxford without a degree but, curiously, he had the makings of a budding pianist. Were he not otherwise provided forand had he the persistence-1 daresay he might have made a career in that way.
I take some interest in concert music, said Holmes casually, and have heard of Lord Arthurs remarkable talent. I am sorry he has not cultivated it. His private impromptu performance at Priorsfield of Chopins C sharp minor study, several years ago, was described to me by the great Vladimir de Pachmann himself as a tour de force. It might not have done for him to play in public but he was a most accomplished performer.
The Earl inclined his head in acknowledgement.
It is a matter of character, Mr Holmes. Unfortunately it is not his accomplishments which are the subject of my present visit. To speak frankly he is better known in certain outlandish and Bohemian areas of London society than I should care to be. As for his music, he plays less and less, except occasionally in the company of his family. Let me be plain. I am attached to Lord Arthur and I have helped him, from time to time, as I have been able. But his conduct is become a matter of concern.
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