A DOGGED MEMORY
by elfin
Part Two - Jack Stapleton
Had I known then what I know now, I'd have shot Stapleton on the moor that
afternoon and never regretted it.
But despite his knowing exactly who I was, I had no idea of the fellow's
name or background.
Not even when he mentioned Holmes were my suspicions aroused.
My mind, I admit, was elsewhere. I'd woken that morning in the possessive
embrace of the man I'd taken to my bed the night before. What we'd done
could certainly ruin us if the details of our encounter ever became public
knowledge. But the warmth and joy to which I'd woken was far from perverted.
It had been wonderful.
Stapleton met me on the moor, at the site of his archaeological dig, and
invited me back to Merripit House to meet his sister. He kept his initial
promise not to ask about Holmes again after that first time, and we had a
pleasant yet somewhat queer chat over tea.
He was a strange man. His ego was one of the biggest I've come across
and I imagined, for a moment, having he and Holmes in the same room.
He spoke of himself a lot, of his accomplishments in the field of natural
archaeology and his fascination with bones, especially skulls. He possessed
much knowledge in the area of medicine and cranial studies and, although I
didn't like the man, he and I shared many similar interests.
But it was his sister who caught my attention upon my arrival at the house,
and also as I was leaving. She'd mistaken me for Henry and, in the moments
we had alone when I'd first met her, had begged me to return to London.
As I left, she caught me alone again at the front door and asked me to disregard
her earlier pleas.
I told her that I could not. That if Henry was in danger it was my
sworn duty to protect him. Sworn duty indeed! Holmes had bound
me to Sir Henry's side back in London and last night that bond had been deepened.
I couldn't let him come to harm. But neither would I enjoin him to
run from the place that was rightfully his home. I would protect him,
I swore to myself.
~~~
"Must we spend the night making dull conversation, John?" Henry asked when
I put Stapleton's invitation to dinner to him upon my return to Baskerville
Hall. Stepping around the desk that was next to the library window,
he checked that the door behind me was closed before taking my hands in his
and grasping them tightly.
"I'm under no illusions. I won't have your company for very long,
but while I do have it I want to make the most of it!"
His declaration surprised me, and I felt the heat rise in my cheeks.
"We should go," I told him with little heart, "they're your nearest neighbours
and I imagine it could get very lonely out here. One day you might appreciate
their company."
He sighed. "Of course, you're right. Accept their invitation
then." A smile returned to his lips, a sly one at that. "It's
not until Friday after all."
I spent a good deal of the afternoon recounting some of my experiences,
in writing, as my first report back to Holmes in London. All I said
of Henry was that he was in fine health and enjoying exploring his new home.
But it wasn't his home that he'd spent much of his time in exploration of.
It was me. Making it look as if his hard bed had been slept in was easy
enough, even though he had not yet spent a night in it. After retiring
to bed, he would wait until the sounds of the servants ceased, and then creep
across the hall to my room. Behind the locked door, we sought intimate
knowledge of one another.
He was a generous, talented and adventurous lover. I had little experience,
but made up for it by experimenting with some of the ideas my heated mind
brought forth.
At night we spoke only in whispers. Only once did he ask me who it
was that kept my heart under lock and key. I gently refused him an answer,
telling he that, as he would never chance to meet the man, it was of no consequence
to him.
Of course, it was on the Thursday night that we made the discovery of Barrymore
at the window. He was signalling to, he said at the time, a woman
with whom he was conducting an illicit affair. They met after dark,
he told us, out in the summerhouse when his wife was asleep. This was
one of the things I wrote in my next letter to Holmes, and the one detail
he positively tore strips from me for a few days after the whole case was
closed.
(Even now, as I write this, I read the lines to him and he rolls his eyes
heavenward. How could I fall for such an obvious, blatant falsehood?
'And you a doctor, Watson! Pray, tell me, what effect does the freezing
temperature have on a man's sexual prowess?')
~~~
Dinner at Merripit House was an odd affair.
Dr Mortimer and his lovely wife had also been invited, and they proved to
be highly intelligent and interesting people. Stapleton again brought
Holmes' name into the conversation and asked many questions, all general things,
and all of which I answered as such. But his interest in my friend
piqued my interest in him, and I know that I responded to his queries with
a proprietary air, one not missed by Henry.
After dinner, I put it to the doctor that he had lied about the money Sir
Charles Baskerville had left to him, and he admitted that the sum had been
twice what he'd told us. But save from adding detail in my next letter
to Holmes, it seemed not to mean a great deal.
I watched out for those small clues that Holmes always observes and relays
to me after the fact - those things only he seems to ever see, yet once he
has pointed them out, are so very obvious. All I really saw, however
(and I didn't understand its significance until much later) was Miss Stapleton's
not-so-subtle advances toward Henry.
They amused me, for all his polite smiles and laughs at her jokes, his occasional
glances at me were more meaningful than any words he spoke to her. For
some reason, his indifference to her was annoying Jack Stapleton, although
I couldn't for the life of me fathom why.
Mrs Mortimer was a medium, or psychic, or some such nonsense. She
claimed to have the ability to speak to the dead, and Henry, obviously, enquired
whether or not she had spoken to his uncle. When she told him that she
hadn't, and asked him what it was he would like to know from Sir Charles,
I could see that Henry was quite taken in.
A séance was hurriedly arranged around the card table in the library.
We all sat and held hands. With three men and three women, this should
have been a simple set up, but somehow Henry ensured that I sat on his other
side, and thus it was my hand in his. When we were instructed to close
our eyes and wipe all earthly thoughts from our minds, he began a discreet
yet incredibly erotic caress of my palm with the tips of his fingers.
My rebellious mind filled with thoughts, all of which were earthly indeed.
My body reacted the same way it had from the very first time he'd touched
me, and I had to shift in my chair to relieve the painful strain in my underwear.
The absurdity then, of hearing Sir Charles' supposed words coming from Mrs
Mortimer's mouth, quickly followed by the fright of the wolf, or dog, or whatever
it was at the window, quite dulled my inconvenient arousal and helped me
recover my wits.
Until, that is, we reached Baskerville Hall around midnight.
As I moved to the roaring fire in order to rescue my frozen hands, Henry
grabbed me from behind, spun me to face him and kissed me fiercely.
I pushed him away with all my strength. "Are you mad?!" But
the expression on his face showed me no remorse. I lowered my voice.
"We could be caught!"
"The servants are asleep. Who else is there to catch us?"
He had a point and made it well... still, I had hidden my whole life and
was not easily persuaded that I was free to love as I pleased in what felt
like such a public place, when in fact it was almost entirely private.
He smiled at me with such affection. "Tell you what, my uncle kept
some excellent old French brandy. Would you care to join me?"
"It would be a pleasure," I accepted happily, back on known ground.
His fight with Seldon, the convict, is well recorded. The first I
heard was a crash - Henry hitting the cupboards as he was pushed to the floor
of the kitchen - and grabbing my revolver from my jacket, I ran after him.
As I entered the kitchen, Henry was sitting up on the floor and Seldon was
reaching for a chicken leg left out on the table.
"Stop where you are or I'll shoot," I warned him, taking my aim.
When he threw himself bodily through the window, I was more than a little
shocked, and it took a moment for me to find the presence of mind to give
chase. By the time I reached the end of the dark walk, he was off over
the moor. I refused to shoot him in the back, and it seemed our night's
adventures were finally at an end. Then I saw the man on the top of
the Black Tor, watching us, the moon at his back creating a silhouette.
When I pointed him out to Henry, he'd already vanished.
We went to bed an hour or so later, and took our time with one another.
I came to a slow crescendo, Henry swallowing every drop of me. It was
his name on my lips, but not his face in my mind.
I missed Holmes, and wished to see him again.
~~~
fin part two