As the men stepped back into the toyshop, a crouching shape stirred to life in the shadows, luminous eyes aglow. Startled, Blenkinsop turned and fired a single shot. BANG! Silver smoke purled in the air as the men crept forward and discovered what it was. The bullet had struck the wooden head of the Automaton Turk cleanly between the eyes. Despite the injury, the Turk stared demonically as his wooden arm lifted the pipe to his carved lips, exhaled a tendril of steam, and then swept smoothly across the chessboard and tapped three times.
“What is this infernal device?” Conan Doyle asked. He started to snatch open the various doors, revealing the clockwork mechanisms within. At the heart was a metal box, warm to the touch. His fingers fumbled a latch and the door sprung open. No one was prepared for the horror they found within.
A pair of living eyes stared back at them like bloody marbles and below, glistening white fangs. The men recoiled, exclaiming in shock and disgust. What they had found was an abomination: a monkey’s head, very much alive, although severed from its physical body. A metal collar encircled the stump of a neck. Rubber hoses pulsed with blood being pumped by a steam pump, leather bellows creaked up and down, pumping air, replacing lungs.
The ghastly secret of the Turkish Automaton revealed.
“Blimey! That’s nasty, that is!” Detective Blenkinsop breathed. He covered his mouth with his hand and turned away.
“What is it?” the blind veteran asked. “What’s he see?”
“A sin against man and nature,” Wilde hissed.
Conan Doyle touched a hand to his friend’s arm. They shared a look that acknowledged both were gripped by horrid speculation as to the well-being of their loved ones. “Come,” he urged, “we must search the workshop.”
The door in the floor flung open when Conan Doyle yanked the rope and the men peered down the precipitous steps. A light had been left burning as if someone or something down there waited for them. Detective Blenkinsop brandished his pistol and stepped cautiously forward. “I should be the one to lead the way,” he said. “This is now police business.”
They left the Crimean veteran to guard the top of the stairs and crept down the creaking steps, eyes probing the shadows. At the bottom they found a well laid-out workshop: half-assembled toys scattered atop workbenches, rolls of tinplate neatly stacked, tools hanging from hooks on the walls. There was nothing sinister about the place. No place prisoners could be held. No hidden cubbyholes.
“Nothing here,” Blenkinsop said. “Not a sausage.”
“Blast!” Wilde shouted, his voice cracking with disappointment. “Where can they be?”
Conan Doyle looked about the workshop. “Wait. There is something odd about this space.”
“Odd?” Blenkinsop said.
“It is too small. The shop upstairs is quite large. This looks to be half the size.”
He crossed to one wall, examining the bricks. “Note that the bricks on this wall are much newer than the bricks on the opposite wall.” His eyes traced the brickwork until he found what he was searching for: a straight crack that ran from floor to ceiling. The workbench set against the wall bore a cut that ran at an angle and intersected the same crack. He studied the hooks projecting from the brickwork. Only one was not hung with a tool. He grasped it and gave an experimental tug. The hook swung down on an invisible hinge and the wall opened with a clunk, rotating smoothly on an invisible pivot. They crossed through into the resurrection chamber.
“Another workshop,” Wilde said.
Conan Doyle looked around at the giant restraining chair, the laboratory tables, and the scarred wooden operating bench. “A workshop for evil. This is where they assemble their monsters.”
Blenkinsop found the door to the old larder. “Wonder where this leads?” He opened the door and went in. Conan Doyle and Wilde waited. After what seemed a very long time, Blenkinsop reemerged. Only now his expression was dire.
“What?” Wilde asked.
“Everything’s cold in there. On ice. And there’s two metal coffins.”
Wilde exchanged a look of dread with his friend.
Conan Doyle handed Blenkinsop the hissing lantern. “You open them, Tom.”
The younger man nodded. “Yeah. Right you are.” He stepped back into the larder and they heard the clang of metal lids being thrown open. Blenkinsop emerged moments later, his face ashen. He licked his lips, struggling to find his voice. “A young woman… pretty.” He looked at Wilde. “And a little boy.”
At the news, Wilde clamped a hand over his mouth to stifle a moan of despair. Conan Doyle stepped forward and said, “I must see for myself.” He took the lantern and entered the larder. By the time he stepped back out, Wilde was shaking with dread anticipation.
“It’s all right, Oscar. It’s not Vyvyan, nor is it Jean. The two metal tanks contain the bodies of Solomon’s young wife and son. Although preserved in chilled alcohol, the corpses have deteriorated quite badly.”
Wilde shook his head. “Dear Lord, what demons are driving this man? Surely, he does not hope to revivify their corpses after so long?”
A terrible thought occurred to Conan Doyle. Maybe he does not. Maybe that is why he has abducted Miss Leckie and Wilde’s young boy. Perhaps he will somehow replace his missing family. He made the mistake of looking at Wilde. As the two friends’ eyes met, it was as if the thought was transmitted telepathically between them.
“Dear God, no!” Wilde breathed.
“Come!” Conan Doyle shouted as he hurried back across the workshop and charged up the wooden steps to the toyshop.
“What now, Doctor Doyle?” Blenkinsop shouted as he and Wilde hurried along behind.
“Our course of action is clear. All paths lead to one man: Rufus DeVayne, the Marquess of Gravistock. We must hurry to his family seat. I’ll warrant that is where Jean and Vyvyan have been taken. And I’ll warrant that is where we will find Jedidiah, or as he is really known, Solomon Arkwright. We cannot delay a moment longer, for fear of what is happening to our loved ones. Oscar and I will lead the charge.”
“Sorry, sir,” Blenkinsop said. “But I believe that is my job.”
“I must differ with you, Tom. You must alert your colleagues in the police and then I want you to go to Buckingham Palace.”
“To the palace? Me?” He laughed. “Copper or not, I doubt they would let the likes of me in.”
“I will give you a note explaining everything. You must deliver it personally to a man named Cypher. Saying his name will open doors.”
“A bloke named Cypher?”
“They will understand. Now Oscar and I must make haste.”
“But how will you get there in this fog? The trains do not run. There’s not a hansom to be had.”
Conan Doyle pondered a moment, brows knit, but then something hanging on the wall caught his eye and a tight smile formed upon his face. “I think the evil genius Solomon Arkwright has provided the answer.” He pointed to the steam motorcycle hanging on the wall.
After they wheeled it out of the shop and onto the street, it took Conan Doyle ten minutes of head scratching before he could puzzle out its operation. “The water goes in here,” he said, patting the streamlined brass tank. “And the calcium carbide pellets go in here.” He yanked the cork from a smoked glass bottle and tipped a stream of white pellets into a metal reservoir. “Now, I believe the boiler is lit using this striker.” He depressed a spring-loaded plunger. There was a scratching sound and the foop! of a gas flame lighting. Within moments, the boiler hissed as it worked up a head of steam. He climbed astride the saddle, opened a petcock, and pistons began to drive up and down in their cylinders. And with that the machine came to life, throbbing between his legs, tendrils of steam wraithing about the engine. He had discovered two pairs of goggles hanging from a hook above the motorcycle and now he pulled on a pair and handed the spare to Wilde. “Here, Oscar, you will be needing these.”