Complete synopsis of The valley of fear
The Valley of Fear is a mystery novel by Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle and was the last of the four Sherlock Holmes novels written by the
author. It was first published in serial form in the Strand Magazine from
September 1914 to May 1915.
At the outset of the novel Sherlock Holmes receives a message from
Porlock, an agent to Professor Moriarty. Porlock occasionally sends Holmes
insider information.
Moriarty is blameless in the eyes of the law
but Holmes knows him to be "the controlling brain of the underworld."
Together Holmes and Watson decipher Porlock's message as indicating that a man
named Douglas residing at Birlstone is in danger.
Inspector MacDonald of Scotland Yard calls upon
Holmes to ask for his help and informs him that Mr Douglas of Birlstone Manor
House has been murdered that morning. Holmes tells MacDonald that since he
received an alert from Porlock it is probable that Professor Moriarty's
influence exists in the matter.
MacDonald reminds Holmes that the professor is
an educated and well respected man. Holmes informs MacDonald that although the
Professor's salary is seven hundred pounds a year he owns a painting worth over
forty thousand pounds and the Inspector agrees that this is suspicious.
Holmes, Watson and MacDonald travel to
Birlstone village in Sussex. John Douglas was murdered at around midnight and
had been shot in the head. The house is an old manor with a moat and
drawbridge. A man name Cecil Barker was staying at the house on the night the
murder took place and was a regular guest of Mr and Mrs Douglas.
A sawn off shotgun was found at the scene. It
appeared to have been fired at close range which caused the head to have been
completely blown to pieces.
Cecil Barker claims that he was upstairs in his
room when he heard the shot and rushed downstairs. The drawbridge was up at
this time and Cecil claims that he lowered it in order to admit help. There is
a mark of blood upon the window sill where someone seems to have entered. Cecil
says that he thinks the intruder got away by wading through the moat but has no
explanation for how the assailant entered the house in the first place unless he
entered before that time and waited in the house.
A card lays beside the body with the initials
V.V scrawled in ink upon it. A small branded mark is seen on the man's arm but
it has not been made recently. Douglas' wedding ring appears to have been taken
from his hand which seems indicative since no others rings were taken.
The police speculatethat the murderer must have
escaped across the moat but if this was so then the question of how he has so
far eluded the police when all his clothes were wet as he walked through the
town is a mystery.
Holmes notices that Mr Douglas seems to have
had only one dumbbell to hand in the study which strikes him as odd.
From interviews with the people in the house
more details about the events are established. Cecil Barker heard the shot,
rushed down from his bedroom and entered the study and upon seeing Douglas
murdered he rang violently on the bell. The servants and Mrs Douglas all rushed
to the scene. Mr Barker persuaded Mrs Douglas to return to her room which she
did. Holmes mentions to Watson that he thinks it was strange for Mrs Douglas to
have shown so little outward emotion and not to have rushed to her husband's
body.
Cecil Barker says that he believes a secret
society of men pursued Douglas and that this fear for his life is what prompted
him to live in such a quiet area of England.
Mr Douglas married his wife when he came to
England five years previously. He had been married before and this first wife
died of Typhoid. Douglas had met and worked with Cecil Barker in America for a
time and then and suddenly left for Europe.
Both Cecil Barker and Mrs Douglas were aware
that some danger overhung Douglas and that this danger was connected with some
episode of his life in America. Mrs Douglas says that she had heard her husband
mention "The Valley of Fear".
By studying the soles of Cecil Barker's
slippers Holmes ascertains that Barker used the sole of his own shoe to make
the mark on the window sill so as to give the appearance that someone exited
that way.
Back at their lodgings in the village Holmes
tells Watson that Cecil Barker and Mrs Douglas are certainly lying but that why
they are lying is not yet clear.
When a shotgun is fired at close range the
sound is muffled. The housekeeper heard what she described as a door slamming
half an hour before the alarm was raised. Holmes believes that what the
housekeeper actually heard was the shot fired when the murder really took
place.
White Mason, the Sussex detective, and
MacDonald report that they have traced a bicycle found on the grounds of the
house to an American staying at a guest house. It seems likely that he was the
assailant since the gun used in the murder was of an American make but there is
no sign of the man.
Holmes tells MacDonald to write to Cecil Barker
and inform him that the police ntend to search the moat the next day. That
night Holmes, Watson, MacDonald and White lay in wait outside Birlstone Manor
and see Cecil Barker fish something out of the moat. Cecil refuses to explain
the situation but at that moment Mr Douglas appears, alive and well.
Douglas hands Dr Watson a written account
called The Valley of Fear which he says explains the early part of his story
and why he ended up being hunted in such a desperate way.
Douglas explains the recent events. He had
spotted an enemy of his, Ted Baldwin, in the area and expected an attack. The
next day he was attacked is his study, the assailant attempted to shoot him but
Douglas grabbed the gun first and in the struggle between the two men Baldwin
received a shot to his face. With Cecil's help Douglas dressed the man in his
own clothes and disposed of Baldwin's suit in the moat. He put his rings on the
man's fingers except his wedding ring which he could not get off.
The card was the mark that Baldwin had brought
with him and intended to leave on Douglas' body, V.V stood for Vermissa Valley.
Douglas explains that the branding mark was that of a society to which both he
and Baldwin belonged. Since they both bore the mark on their arms this would
make it likely that the bodies could not be told apart since Baldwin's head was
destroyed utterly by the shot.
Since the time of the murder Cecil and Mrs
Douglas had covered for Douglas who was hiding in the house.
The report Douglas gives to Watson explains how
he came to be hunted so viciously. Douglas' real name is Birdy Edwards and he
was at one time a detective with the Chicago detective agency Pinkerton's.
Edwards had infiltrated a dangerous gang in
Vermissa Valley, which had become known as the Valley of Fear, and brought them
to justice.
Edwards' life had never been safe since some of
the criminals who had escaped the death penalty were released from jail.
Edwards had moved around from place to place. His first wife Ettie, whom he had
met in the valley, passed away. He then met Cecil and the two made a fortune in
business together. Hounded once again Douglas disappeared and made for England
where he met and married his second wife.
Holmes urges Douglas to leave England and warns
that a new threat, greater than all those of his past, now hangs over him.
Douglas takes this advice but is mysteriously lost overboard on the vessel
bearing him and his wife to Africa.
Holmes is convinced that Professor Moriarty was
consulted by the men who hunted Douglas and that it was this criminal
mastermind whose direction ended Douglas' life. Holmes intends to bring
Moriarty down but warns Watson and MacDonald that it will take some time to
achieve.
The four men rush in and surprise Cecil, the
bundle he has fished from the moat turns out to be the clothes of the missing
American connected with the bicycle. It was weighted down with the missing
dumbbell.
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Act 1 Scene 14 Wrong Summary.
ReplyDeleteMcGinty was not there barker and mrs.allen heardthe door slamming
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