“On
Christmas Day 1950 four Scottish students removed the Stone of Destiny from
Westminster Abbey. On 11 April 1951 it turned up 500 miles away – at the high
altar of Arbroath Abbey!”
So
says the official souvenir guide to Edinburgh Castle, which I picked up last
year on our Scottish vacation. The oblong red sandstone block – also known as
the Stone of Scone and used for centuries in the coronation ceremony of Scottish
monarchs – has been on display at the castle since the English returned it to
Scotland in 1996.
That
is the historical fact. But there are many alternative facts, and one of the
most intriguing is the idea that Sherlock Holmes (or a reasonable facsimile)
was involved retrieving the stolen stone. August Derleth ploughed this ground
in “The Adventure of the Stone of Scone” in The
Return of Solar Pons. More recently, Mike Hogan spun a great yarn with The Scottish Questions: Sons of the Thistle.
Now
comes Richard T. Ryan with another enjoyable tale, The Stone of Destiny. This time around, it’s a group of Irish
rebels who decide to kidnap the ancient stone shortly after the death of Queen
Victoria and hold it ransom. The price for Edward to get it back for his
coronation is independence for the Emerald Isle.
Like
Ryan’s earlier The Vatican Cameos,
the story is told in chapters that alternate between Dr. Watson’s narrative and
another viewpoint. In this case, the other narrative is a third-person account
from the point of view of the Irish who took the stone. Since we already who
they are, the suspense is wondering how Holmes will figure out where the stone
is being held.
Holmes
does not disappoint. His method, combining brilliant deduction and a trap or sorts,
is extremely clever and worthy of the Master. In a foreshadowing of his undercover
work in Irish disguise in “His Last Bow,” Holmes masquerades in Ireland as a chimney
sweep. And Watson goes undercover, too – even sacrificing his mustache for the
cause!
The Stone of Destiny: A Sherlock Holmes Adventure is available for from all good bookstores including The Strand Magazine, Amazon USA, Amazon UK, Waterstones UK and for free shipping worldwide Book Depository. In ebook format it is in Kindle.
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