Here is the opening to The Thames Torso Murders.
In recalling the numerous individuals
I have encountered in the cases I have shared with my friend Sherlock Holmes,
there have been some whose very appearance has betrayed their baleful
intent.
Readers
of my memoirs may remember Dr. Grimesby Roylott whom I described as having a
large face seared with a thousand wrinkles, burned yellow with the sun, and
marked with every evil passion. He possessed deep-set, bile-shot eyes, and a
high thin fleshless nose. Dr. Roylott succeeded in killing one of his stepdaughters
and almost succeeded in murdering the other.
Then
there was the statue-smashing Beppo, who was absolutely simian in appearance
and knifed a man on the street.
Who
could forget the master blackmailer Charles Augustus Milverton whom Sherlock
Holmes described as a slithering venomous serpent, with deadly eyes and a
wicked face?
Only
after his crime was uncovered did Josiah Amberley’s true features reveal
themselves. If I recall, I compared him to a misshapen demon with a soul as
distorted as his body.
Culverton
Smith who killed Victor Savage and attempted to murder my friend Sherlock
Holmes looked every inch the villain he was with a great yellow face,
coarse-grained and greasy, with a heavy double-chin, and two sullen, menacing
grey eyes.
Finally,
a man whose name will forever live in infamy, the late Professor Moriarty whom
Holmes himself described as extremely tall and thin, with deeply set puckered
eyes. His pale and ascetic-looking face oscillated from side to side in a
curiously reptilian fashion.
It
is not always prudent to judge someone or something from its outward
appearance, and so not all the characters we encountered lived up to their
looks. Holmes once told me of the most winning woman he ever knew was hanged
for poisoning three children for their insurance money.
In
our first encounter with Dr. Moore Agar, both Holmes and I believed he was some
nefarious villain, for he looked the part, but of course, we were sorely
mistaken.
The
same could be said for the aloof and taciturn Ian Murdoch of whom Holmes
described as having some strange outlandish blood that was reflected in his
coal-black eyes and in his ferocious temper, but he proved not to be the killer.
Baron
Gruner was a handsome man, with the ability to charm women, but both his good
looks and charm hid the heart of an abuser and a murderer.
I
recall it was in May 1887, when Holmes and I had finished our breakfast, and we
heard a peal of the bell. This was followed by the light tread of footsteps on
the stairs, a knock at our door, and Mrs. Hudson stepped into the room to
announce a young lady was here to consult with Mr. Holmes.
“What
is your impression of the young lady, Mrs. Hudson?” Holmes asked, standing by
the mantel, filling his after-breakfast pipe.
“She
appears to be a very fine and well-mannered young lady, Mr. Holmes.”
“If
she meets with your approval, please send the young lady right up, Mrs.
Hudson.”
In
another minute, the woman was standing in our sitting room.
She
introduced herself to us as Miss Angela Moore. She struck me as a demur,
attractive young
woman, who could not have been more than two and twenty. Miss Moore had dark
blue eyes, a delicate nose, a small mouth, and a lovely, unblemished porcelain
complexion. She was impeccably dressed in a form-fitted, long-waisted purple
dress with dark polka dots that displayed a fine figure. The dress had a modest
bustle and not one of those fashionable bustles so large you could set a tea
tray upon it.
I
consider myself a particularly good judge of women, and even before getting
acquainted with her, I had the strong feeling this young woman was the epitome
of innocence that can be found in British womanhood. Her voice was the perfect
pitch, not too high or low, and though she spoke softly, her every word carried
gently to the ear. As she entered the room and stood before us, it was obvious
the young woman was attempting to control some deep distress.
“Won’t
you take a seat, Miss Moore,” Holmes said, motioning her to the basket chair.
She
sat and folded her hands upon her lap. Her lovely face reflected urgency, but
she bore up under it with both a deep-rooted strength and a feminine
vulnerability. “I have come to you, Mr. Sherlock Holmes, because I believe you
are the only man in London, nay, the only man in all England who can help me,
and I am sorely in need of your help.”
Miss
Angela Moore had spoken with sincere conviction. Her pleading was obvious, but
not overstated.
“I
am very willing to lend whatever help you desire, Miss Moore,” said Sherlock
Holmes in a reassuring manner. “Pray, tell me your problem.”
She
took in two deep breaths and released them before she began her
narrative.
“Have
either of you gentlemen heard of the terrible, gruesome murders that the press has
dubbed ‘The Thames Torso Murders’? Over the past several months, the bodies
of both men and women have been found floating in the river. The bodies were
discovered… with… without….” Here she brought a handkerchief to her mouth to
stifle her anguish.
“Calm
yourself, Miss Moore,” said Holmes soothingly. “There is no reason to continue.
I am well versed in the details as the newspapers have related them.”
Indeed,
both Holmes and I had read with interest the news reports of these murders. The
murder victims were found without heads, arms, or legs. The torsos were
discovered in and around the Thames, some floating in the water, some at the
water’s edge. Two amputated arms and one amputated leg were discovered about
the same time; one arm had been buried on a construction site, the other two
floating in the Thames. The murders, dating back over a year, were quite
gruesome, and I shuddered to think of a fine young woman like Miss Moore even
reading about them. She eventually regained her composure.
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