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Authors: Shane Peacock

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But when Sherlock turns the corner onto Montague Street, he spots three people on the far side of the road: Grimsby, Crew, and Malefactor. He hates them. He can’t admit any weakness, any failure, to them, and prays they will go away.

At first, all four walk in the direction of Irene’s house: the three young crooks on the east side, Sherlock on the west. He and Malefactor eye each other all the way. The young crime boss seems emboldened. He struts right up to the Doyle home and stands there – he must know that Irene is alone in the house today, as she often is, that she might come out to see him. The curtains pull back in a window on the ground floor and a face peeks out. At first, it notices only Malefactor and his henchmen and the fine white muslin material seems about to close. Then she looks out, across the street to where Sherlock is standing. Moments later, Irene descends the short front stone staircase and walks past the black wrought-iron fence to the footpath. She keeps her eye on the boy across the street.

The young mobsman near her looks pleased with himself. He takes Irene’s gloved hand and kisses it. She looks ashamed and turns her eyes from Sherlock. But Malefactor keeps his gaze on him as he holds out his other hand. Grimsby produces a newspaper from an inner pocket in his coat and hands it to his boss with a grin. Malefactor is smiling too.

What is this about?
wonders Sherlock.

“Master Holmes, I perceive,” the young criminal genius announces across the street.

“Malefactor.”

“Read the news, sir?” he enquires. “A sort of … hold-the-presses-early-morning-last-minute special?”

“I don’t care about the news. I have a question for you that I want answered.”

Malefactor yawns and puts his hand to his mouth.

“I’m sure we’ve heard it before.”

“But you haven’t answered it yet!” growls Sherlock. He strides across the street. Irene can’t suppress a smile and steps away from Malefactor, moving closer to her friend. Excitement is growing on her face. Holmes notices, but tries to ignore it. He wants his answer first.

“Did you try to have me killed? Were you helping the Brixton Gang?”

“They are no longer a factor,” responds Malefactor, tapping on the newspaper.

Why is he so happy about the gangs downfall?

Sherlock could understand the young crime boss being pleased, if the Brixton group was merely eliminated from the streets – there would be more treasures to go around for the likes of his mob, fewer complications, and fewer Peelers on the alert. But he must know that Sherlock played a huge role in their spectacular capture. That must disturb him deeply somewhere inside.

“You are well aware that I was at the scene of the arrest,” intones Holmes, “and that it was through my deductions and actions that those fiends have been put into the custody of the Force!”

Irene glows at him.

“Oh, am I?” answers Malefactor with a smile.

Why is he acting this way?

“I asked you a question!” repeats Sherlock.

“And I told you, some time ago, that such things are mysteries … and shall remain so.”

Then the boss turns to his two companions.

“Master Crew?” he says, handing the newspaper to his second lieutenant. “Do the honors, please.”

Silent Crew, the hint of a short, toothbrush moustache beginning on his upper lip, takes the newspaper and spreads it open at the front page so Sherlock can read it. A huge black headline runs across the top.


MERCURE AWAKES!
” it shouts.

Sherlock almost staggers.


TWO CRIMES SOLVED! BRIXTON GANG CAPTURED!
” the headline continues.

“Seems the great man has roused from his brain concussion,” smiles Malefactor, “and has told Inspector Lestrade what he saw in the vault room of the Crystal Palace. The good inspector then informed the press that the Force was suspicious that the Brixton Gang was involved from the start, had been on their trail for some time, and tracked them to their lair.”

Sherlock is speechless. His mouth actually hangs open. He has never, in all the time he’s known the Trafalgar Square Irregulars, heard the frightening Crew utter a single word. But now he does. His voice is high-pitched and nasal.

“They don’t mention you,” he squeaks.

“Why yes, you are correct Master Crew, they don’t,” adds Malefactor. “I neglected to note that. It seems that Lestrade was in possession of an extraordinary amount of information about this crime … and the press is more than willing to accept that Scotland Yard’s hard work coupled with the submission of the only eyewitness to the crime, was what shed such a clear light upon this entire mystery and led to their brilliant solution.”

“There’s somethin’ ’bout a boy ’elpin’ out at the scene,” snickers Grimsby “but ’e ’as no name! ’em Peelers and press boys is good friends, Master ’olmes!”

There is still Irene. She looks at Sherlock with an expression of the deepest sympathy. She was with him through much of the Whitechapel case and knows what he is capable of, knows that he doesn’t lie, is sure that whatever his version of the Brixton Gang’s capture is, it is the truth.

The moment has come for her to reach out to him, make it all right between them. She turns away from Malefactor and steps toward him.

But Sherlock Holmes is boiling.

He cannot believe that he came here to seek comfort, cannot believe he was so weak. Comfort is not what he wants anymore. He wants his due; he wants his mother’s due. He will rise from this … and bring down evil again in a resounding crash that no one, not Lestrade or the press or the entire populace of London will be able to ignore.

Redhorns plans to descend on Sigerson Bell today. That dirty five pounds will put him off for now. But before long, the boy will have to strike.

He violently pulls his hand away from Irene Doyle and steps back from all of them. He will work this out. He will return to the apothecary; learn Bellitsu, boxing, chemistry build his brain every day; he will try hard at school, prepare himself to some day enter a university … by any means. He will outsmart them all. He will continue his plan to turn himself into a crime-fighting machine unlike any England has ever seen. When he becomes a man, he himself will be a mystery. No one will know who he really is and where he came from. He will use whatever he must to fight evil … even evil itself.

Irene Doyle is no shrinking violet. She has been taught independence and has a great inner strength. Her eyes harden too. She turns away from the good boy to the darker one … and slips her arm through his.

But Sherlock doesn’t care anymore. He glares at all four of them.

“This is just the beginning,” he vows. “Just the beginning.”

He turns on his heels and stalks into the London day.

Text copyright ©
2008
by Shane Peacock

Published in Canada by Tundra Books,
75
Sherbourne Street, Toronto, Ontario
M5A 2P9

Published in the United States by Tundra Books of Northern New York, P.O. Box
1030
, Plattsburgh, New York
12901

Library of Congress Control Number:
2007927388

All rights reserved. The use of any part of this publication reproduced, transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, or stored in a retrieval system, without the prior written consent of the publisher – or, in case of photocopying or other reprographic copying, a licence from the Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency – is an infringement of the copyright law.

Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

Peacock, Shane
Death in the air : his second case / Shane Peacock.

(The boy Sherlock Holmes)

eISBN: 978-1-77049-080-2

1. Holmes, Sherlock (Fictitious character) – Juvenile fiction.

I. Title. II. Series.

PS8581.E234D42 2008
    jc
813′.54
    
C2007-902739-3

We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program
(BPIDP)
and that of the Government of Ontario through the Ontario Media Development Corporations Ontario Book Initiative. We further acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council for our publishing program.

The author wishes to thank Patrick Mannix and Motco Enterpises Ltd., U.K., ref:
www.motco.com
, for the use of their Edward Stanford’s Library Map of London and its suburbs,
1862
.

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