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The Repulsive Story of the Red Leech [MultiFormat]
eBook by David Langford

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eBook Category: Mystery/Crime/Science Fiction
eBook Description: A borderline-SF case for Holmes; one of the stories that Watson mentions in the sacred texts but never wrote up. The revolting Red Leech, Sanguisuga rufa, is even more sinister than it looks.... [Authorized by the Doyle estate.]

eBook Publisher: Fictionwise.com, Published: The Mammoth Book of New Sherlock Holmes Stories, ed. Mike Ashley, 1997
Fictionwise Release Date: September 2002


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Available eBook Formats [MultiFormat - What's this?]: Adobe Acrobat (PDF) [80 KB], eReader (PDB) [33 KB], Palm Doc (PDB) [20 KB], Rocket/REB1100 (RB) [18 KB], Microsoft Reader (LIT) [68 KB] - PocketPC 1.0+ Compatible, Franklin eBookMan (FUB) [92 KB], hiebook (KML) [72 KB], Sony Reader (LRF) [48 KB], iSilo (PDB) [16 KB], Mobipocket (PRC) [21 KB], Kindle Compatible (MOBI) [49 KB], OEBFF Format (IMP) [30 KB]
Words: 5382
Reading time: 15-21 min.
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"Our client, Watson, would seem somewhat overwrought," remarked Sherlock Holmes without lowering his copy of the Times.

We were alone, but I had grown accustomed to the little puzzles which my friend was amused to propound. A glance at the window showed nothing but grey rain over Baker Street. I listened with care, and presently was pleased to say: "Aha! Someone is pacing outside the door. Not heavily, for I cannot discern the footsteps, but quite rapidly--as indicated by the regular sound from that floorboard with its very providential creak."

Holmes cast aside his newspaper and smiled. "Capital! But let us not confuse providence with forethought. That board has been carefully sprung in imitation of the device which in the Orient is known as a nightingale floor. More than once I have found its warning useful."

As I privately abandoned my notion of having the loose plank nailed down and silenced, there was a timid knock at the door.

"Come in," cried Holmes, and in a moment we had our first sight of young Martin Traill. He was robust of build but pale of feature, and advanced with a certain hesitation.

"You wish, I take it, to consult me," said Holmes pleasantly.

"Indeed so, sir, if you are the celebrated Dr Watson."

A flash of displeasure crossed Holmes's face as he effected the necessary introductions; and then, I thought, he smiled to himself at his own vanity.

Traill said to me: "I should, perhaps, address you in private."

"My colleague is privy to all my affairs," I assured him, suppressing a smile of my own.

"Very well. I dared to approach you, Dr Watson, since certain accounts which you have published show that you are not unacquainted with outré matters."

"Meretricious and over-sensationalized accounts," murmured Holmes under his breath.

I professed my readiness to listen to any tale, be it never so bizarre, and--not without what I fancied to be a flicker of evasiveness in his eyes--Martin Traill began.

"If I were a storyteller I would call myself hag-ridden ... harried by spirits. The facts are less dramatic, but, to me, perhaps more disturbing. I should explain that I am the heir to the very substantial estate of my late father, Sir Maximilian Traill, whose will makes me master of the entire fortune upon attaining the age of twenty-five. That birthday is months past: yet here I am, still living like a remittance-man on a monthly allowance, because I cannot sign a simple piece of paper."

"A legal document that confirms you in your inheritance?" I hazarded.

"Exactly so."

"Come, come," said Holmes, reaching for a quire of foolscap and a pencil, "we must see this phenomenon. Pray write your name here, and Watson and I will stand guard against ghosts."

Traill smiled a little sadly. "You scoff. I wish to God that I could scoff too. This is not a document that my hand refuses to touch: see!" And, though the fingers trembled a little, he signed his name bold and clear: Martin Maximilian Traill.

"I perceive," said Holmes, "that you have no banking account."

"No indeed; our man of business pays over my allowance in gold. But--good heavens--how can you know this?"

"Yours is a strong schoolboy signature, not yet worn down by repeated use in the world, such as the signing of many cheques. After ten thousand prescriptions, Watson's scrawl is quite indecipherable in all that follows the W.--But we digress."

Traill nervously rubbed the back of his right hand as he went on. "The devil of it is that Selina ... that my elder sister talks to spirits."

I fancied that I took his point a trifle more quickly than the severely rational Holmes. "Séances?" I said. "Mischief in dark rooms with floating tambourines, and the dead supposedly called back to this sphere to talk twaddle? It is a folly which several of my older female patients share."

"Then I need not weary you with details. Suffice it to say that Selina suffers from a mild monomania about the ingratitude of her young brother--that is, myself. Unfortunately she has never married. When I assume formal control of our father's fortune, her stipulated income from the estate will cease. Naturally I shall reinstate and even increase the allowance ... but she is distrustful. And the spirits encourage her distrust."

"Spirits!" snapped Holmes. "Professor Challenger's recent monograph has quite exploded the claims of spirit mediums. You mean to say that some astral voice has whispered to this foolish woman that her brother plans to leave her destitute?"

"Not precisely, sir. On the occasion when I was present--for sisters must be humoured--the device employed was a ouija board. You may know the procedure. All those present place a finger on the planchette, and its movements spell out messages. Nonsense as a rule, but I remember Selina's air of grim satisfaction as that sentence slowly emerged: BEWARE AN UNGENEROUS BROTHER. And then, the words that came horribly back to mind on my twenty-fifth birthday: FEAR NOT. THE HAND THAT MOVES AGAINST ITS OWN KIN SHALL SUFFER FIRE FROM HEAVEN.


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