Read The Confidential Casebook of Sherlock Holmes Online
Authors: Marvin Kaye
The Confidential
Casebook of
Sherlock Holmes
N
OVELS BY
M
ARVIN
K
AYE
Fantastique
Ghosts of Night and Morning
The Possession of Immanuel Wolf
A Cold Blue Light
(with Parke Godwin)
Bullets for Macbeth
The Incredible Umbrella
The Masters of Solitude
(with Parke Godwin)
Wintermind
(with Parke Godwin)
The Amorous Umbrella
My Son, the Druggist
My Brother, the Druggist
The Soap Opera Slaughters
The Country Music Murders
The Laurel and Hardy Murders
A Lively Game of Death
O
THER
A
NTHOLOGIES BY
M
ARVIN
K
AYE
The Game Is Afoot
Masterpieces of Terror and the Supernatural
The Penguin Book of Witches and Warlocks
Lovers and Other Monsters
Haunted America
Ghosts
Devils and Demons
13 Plays of Ghosts and the Supernatural
Weird Tales,
â¢
the Magazine That Never Dies
Sweet Revenge: Ten Plays of Bloody Murder
Masterpieces of Terror and the Unknown
Frantic Comedy
Readers Theatre, What It Is
. . .
Angels of Darkness
From Page to Stage
Don't Open This Book!
E
DITED BY
Marvin Kaye
THE CONFIDENTIAL CASEBOOK OF SHERLOCK HOLMES
. Copyright © 1998 by Marvin Kaye. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information, address St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.
Additional copyrights in
Acknowledgments
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
The confidential casebook of Sherlock Holmes / Marvin Kaye,
       editor.â1st ed.
                p.  cm.
ISBN 0-312-18071-3Â Â Â ISBN 978-0-312-18071-3
1. Dectective and mystery stories, American. 2. Holmes,
Sherlock (Fictitious character)âFiction. 3. Private
investigatorsâEnglandâFiction. I. Kaye, Marvin.
PS648.D4C68Â Â Â Â Â Â 1998
813'.087208351âdc21Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 97-38389
CIP
First Edition: February 1998
10Â Â Â 9Â Â Â 8Â Â Â 7Â Â Â 6Â Â Â 5Â Â Â 4Â Â Â 3Â Â Â 2Â Â Â 1
To the memory
of a dear friend and fine writer
William L. DeAndrea
The Darlington Substitution Scandal
Henry Slesar
The Adventure of the Old Russian Woman
H. Paul Jeffers
The Adventure of the Noble Husband
Peter Cannon
The Case of the Woman in the Cellar
Pat Mullen
The Adventure of the Boulevard Assassin
Kathleen Brady
The Case of the Ancient British Barrow
Terry McGarry
The Adventure of the Dying Ship
Edward D. Hoch
The Revenge of the Fenian Brotherhood
Carole Buggé
The Affair of the Counterfeit Countess
Craig Shaw Gardner
Aline Myette-Volsky
The Little Problem of the Grosvenor Square Furniture Van
“Patrick LoBrutto” (ascribed to Arthur Stanley Jefferson)
P. C. Hodgell
The Adventure of Vanderbilt and the Yeggman
Roberta Rogow
The Secret Marriage of Sherlock Holmes
Shariann Lewitt
The Case of Vittoria the Circus Belle
Jay Sheckley
The Confidential
Casebook of
Sherlock Holmes
If you love the Sherlock Holmes adventures . . . you have sorely lamented the fact that The Great Detective's best friend, coadventurer and erstwhile roommate John H. Watson, M.D., only wrote sixty of them
.
Like me, you have . . . surely dreamed about visiting the bank vaults of Cox & Company, London, to peep into the battered tin dispatch-box that Dr. Watson stored there. This legendary container was crammed full of notes for over sixty additional Sherlock Holmes cases that, for various reasons, Watson never got around to writing. For the past half-century, this seemed to be a forlorn dream, for Cox & Company was destroyed during a World War II Nazi bombing raid
.
But now, fifty years later, the truth can at last be told
â
Dr. Watson's unpublished records have survived!
âfrom the Introduction to
The Resurrected Holmes
by Professor J. Adrian Fillmore,
Gadshill Adjunct, Parker College (Pa.)
I
magine the thrill when Dr. R., the wealthy Philadelphia scholar and book collector who bought the fabled dispatch-box, first opened his trove of unpublished Holmesiana. The box actually contained a variety of documents: daily memoranda and anecdota that the author did not choose to write up for
The Strand
, the British magazine that first reported the principal adventures of England's remarkable consulting detective, Mr. Sherlock Holmes.
Careful examination of the box's contents revealed a number of tales that Watson never afforded that final professional polish that would have qualified them for publication. Some were cases too mundane or inconclusive to work up as dramatic narrative; some were too sensitive in nature to be made public at the time.
A selection of the latter casesâwhich Dr. R. arranged to have “ghost-written” from Watson's notes by such renowned authors as H. G. Wells, Theodore Dreiser, H. P. Lovecraft, Dashiell Hammett, etc.âappeared in print for the first time last year in the St. Martin's Press collection
The Resurrected Holmes
, a volume prepared in association with the distinguished Parker College teacher J. Adrian Fillmore, who helped review and choose its contents, and who wrote its introduction.
One evening while examining the Watsonian archives, the professor reflectively stroked his chin and observed to me that the tin dispatch-box was ever so much larger than most Holmesian buffs probably realized.
“Well, it would have to be,” I said sardonically, “considering how many âauthentic' manuscripts have come out of it since 1930.”
*
“Yes,” Fillmore mused, resting his hand on the lid of the box, “but isn't it odd that no one has ever reported the precise dimensions of this fabled repository? Or do you recall any such paper?”
“I do not.” I quickly consulted the entries under the heading “Untold Tales and Dr. Watson's Tin Dispatch-Box,” in my copy of Ronald Burt DeWaal's
The World Bibliography of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson
, but their titles suggested that their authors (quite properly) were more concerned with the contents of Watson's box than the container itself. Still, the true aficionado thirsts for all possible knowledge concerning his field of specialization.
The professor agreed. Forthwith and posthaste, he fetched a tailor's tape measure and with great exactitude recorded the width, breadth and height of the tin dispatch-box. I wrote them on a slip of paper as he announced them to me. Next, the pedagogue aligned the tip of the tape with the top of the inner lid, plumbed the container's depths with the measuring device, and read off the results.
“No, that must be wrong,” I said, comparing the figure with the exterior height. Fillmore carefully remeasured the box's depth, but the answer was the same: four inches shorter than seemed likely. We inspected the workmanship, looking for evidence of layered reinforcement. We lifted the heavy container. Fillmore rested a palm on the lower surface, stuck his other hand in the box and rapped smartly on what should have been the upper side of its bottom. The dull sound produced by this action mutually widened our eyes . . .
“Eureka!”
the professor exclaimed. For we had discovered the snug false bottom that partitions Watson's dispatch-box into an upper and a secret lower compartment.
In this nether recess we found two thick stacks of manuscripts whose existence till now has been unknown to Holmesians. Needless to say, Professor Fillmore and I set aside the fascinating contents of the box's upper chamber, and voraciously pored over the new material.
It was apparent to us that these manuscripts differed in character from those that rested so many years in the “B,” or upper
apartment, of the dispatch-box. Most of the new discoveries appeared to have been written by Dr. Watson himself.
Then why had they never been published? The first few that the professor and I read that evening were too sensitive for publication during Queen Victoria's heyday, yet might have been offered to a Holmes-hungry public during Edward's reign. But then we read further.
I forget whose breath first hissed through clenched teeth.
B
efore the abrupt and unexplained disappearance of Professor Fillmore from the academic, or for that matter, all scenes, he made preliminary notes for an introduction to the volume you hold in your hand. Here is the final paragraph of that composition:
“As you read through these tales
*
,” Fillmore wrote, “you will see why Watson and Holmes kept these narratives from all eyes. The fact that they were written at all, or, having been penned, had not been subsequently consigned to some working fireplace, attests, I think, to the psychology of our favorite medical amanuensis. Watson was, after all, an author, subject to the generous vanity of that breed of being who collectively set down experience for the edification of some hypothetical future generation.”