by Robin Paige
"For centuries," the vicar was saying, "the bird has represented immortality. The eyes depicted on its splendid tail feathers suggest the supernatural ability to see deeply into the spirit. And, of course, that is what we of the Golden Dawn are about. Seeing deeply into our hearts, in search of our souls."
"I see," Kate said thoughtfully, wondering to herself whether she should convey this information to Sir Charles or keep it to herself.
Aunt Sabrina put her arm around Kate's shoulders. "You must come and be introduced, Kathryn. Annie Horniman wants to meet you, and Rachel Cracknell. And of course, our dear Dr. Westcott, the founder of our Order, for whom we all have such deep affection and respect." She smiled at the vicar. "If you will excuse us, Barfield."
"By all means," the vicar said, bowing. His eyes held a special warmth as he looked at Aunt Sabrina. "It is always good to see you once again, Sabrina. Soon, perhaps?"
"Indeed," Aunt Sabrina murmured, and took Kate's elbow.
After several other introductions and polite social conversation, Aunt Sabrina steered Kate toward a corner. "Dr. Westcott," she whispered in Kate's ear.
To Kate's surprise, Dr. Westcott proved to be the same man who had spoken so heatedly with Mrs. Farnsworth. But the
mottled red had faded from his cheeks, and he smiled graciously when Aunt Sabrina introduced them.
"Welcome to our Order, Miss Ardleigh." His words were resonant, his sentences fully rounded.
"Kathryn is assisting me with our history," Aunt Sabrina put in. "She has an interest in ritual magic."
Dr. Westcott's look became stern. "You understand, I trust, that our magical practices are not parlor amusements. They are handed down from the ancients through a long line of individuals-priests-who communicate the sacred teaching to those who are willing to accept its esoteric discipline." He lifted his hand, as if in blessing, and his voice took on an even richer timbre. "This sacred work enables us to raise ourselves to an understanding of our inner truth, our unerring and divine genius."
Kate inclined her head, feeling almost obliged to say "Amen." She couldn't help wondering how Dr. Westcott's unerring and divine genius had allowed him to be misled by the miscreant Mathers.
And what, if anything, the Order's emblem had to do with the broken blue feather she had found in the carriage that had borne a man to his death.
25
" 'And yet you've gay gauntlets ana blue leathers three! — ' 'Yes: mat's what we wear when we're ruined/ said he."
— AFTER THOMAS HARDY, The Ruined Maid
Given the inspector's chilly reception of his first two pieces of evidence, the feather and the fingerprint, Charles had not thought it helpful to mention the third: the name of the street for which Monsieur Armand had been bound. And since it did not seem likely that Wainwright would release either Sergeant Battle or PC Trabb to make inquiry in Queen Street, he decided to do it himself. On Monday morning he borrowed Bradford's saddle horse and rode to Colchester through a chilly gray drizzle. He left his horse at Taylor's Livery Stable and asked directions of a vendor of hot pies. Having purchased a fragrant, crusty pork pie, he ate it with relish as he walked.
Queen Street proved to be a residential street a stone's throw from the old castle. Chimney pots poured sooty smoke over roofs of gray slate that rose steeply above the narrow three- and four-story houses, closely spaced to conserve land. Charles noted with disapproval that here, as in the new suburbs of London, the roof lines of the ill-proportioned brick houses were interrupted at irregular intervals by gables, turrets, battlements, and dormers, so many and so varied that they confused the eye. The houses fronted directly on the
street, so that there was not even the relief of a square of grass fenced by a few sprigs of privet.
Having arrived at his destination, Charles opened his portfolio and took out a photograph of the dead man. He looked once over his shoulder to ascertain that Miss Ardleigh was not following after him; then he climbed the first stoop and rang the bell. His summons was answered by a stiff-backed parlor maid with a long face, a trace of dark mustache over her upper lip, and the saddest eyes he had ever seen.
"Good day, miss," Charles said, raising his brown felt hat. "I am making inquiries for the police about-"
"Tradesman's entrance round back," the maid said. She gave his canvas coat a scornful glance and shut the door.
Charles frowned with irritation. His hand was poised to ring again, but he thought better of it. He would return later, and trust that a more receptive person might answer his knock. He went back down the stoop, out to the sidewalk, and up the stairs of the next house. This door was opened by a butler with a brilliant red nose. Taking no chances, Charles swiftly inserted his foot in the opening.
"I represent the police," he said, "in an inquiry of great importance." He held up the photograph. "This man is said to have visited a house on this street. Have you seen him?"
The butler sniffed. "I have not," he said with grave dignity. "Are you the police?"
"No," Charles said, "I merely-"
"Pray remove your foot, sir."
Charles held his ground. ' 'I would like to inquire of other members of your household. Perhaps your mistress-"
The butler's right arm disappeared behind the door and reappeared again with a silver-tipped cane. "Your foot, sir," the butler said, and stabbed Charles's toe smartly.
The third door, which Charles approached with trepidation and a slight limp, was not answered at all. The fourth, however, was opened by a middle-aged man whom Charles took by his dress and manner to be the gentleman of the house. He was apparently on his way out, for he wore a velvet-collared chesterfield and held one end of a leather leash, the other end of which was attached to a fluffy white poodle
about the size of a lady's muff, furiously yapping. When he saw Charles, he looked alarmed.
"If it's the money you're after," he said over the dog's din, "I have already-"
"I am not a bill collector," Charles said with dignity.
"Good," the man said. He looked down, obviously flustered. "Be quiet, Precious." The poodle ducked behind the man's ankle and glowered at Charles, continuing to bark. From somewhere within the house, a woman's voice fretfully commanded, "Take that dog out of here, Frank, before my brain explodes."
"Yes, Irene," Frank replied nervously, over his shoulder. "Precious and I are just leaving." He looked out at the gray drizzle. "Is it raining?" he asked Charles.
Charles held up his photo. "Have you seen this man?"
"Can't say that I have," Frank said, giving the photograph barely a look. He reached behind the door and Charles stepped back quickly. But when his hand reappeared again, it held only a gray bowler and an umbrella.
"Are you sure?" Charles persisted. "It is a matter of some importance. The police-"
"Frank!" The female voice was loudly petulant. "Can't you manage to do even one simple thing? Get that dog out of-"
"Yes, my dear," Frank replied, putting his hat on his head. Precious launched a swift sortie at Charles's trouser leg. He retired to the top step. Frank yanked the dog back, stepped out of the door, and closed it behind him. "Never saw the fellow," he muttered, pushing past Charles. "I say, old chap, I really must be off."
Charles stared at him. A jaunty trio of peacock feathers was inserted into the band of trim that encircled Frank's bowler. He couldn't be sure, but it looked as if one were broken. He was seized by a sudden excitement. "Pardon me," he said, gesturing at the hat, "but I wonder if you would permit me to have a look at those feathers."
Frank frowned. "Feathers? I don't know about any-" He apparently recollected them, for he reddened and, still holding the leash, snatched off his hat and pulled out the cockade of
feathers. Precious took advantage of Frank's inattentiveness to lunge at Charles's shoe.
"Do the feathers have a special significance?" Charles asked. "Perhaps-"
"I tell you," Frank said loudly, "there are no feathers!" He stuffed them into his
pocket, jammed his bowler back on his head, and put up his umbrella. He walked smartly away, dragging Precious with him. As he did so, a gentleman wearing a caped Inverness came toward him. The two were apparently acquainted, for as they passed on the sidewalk, Frank tipped his gray bowler and the other inclined his head. As the man in the Inverness drew nearer, Charles saw that in his lapel was fixed a cluster of peacock feathers.
26
"It's worse than wicked, my dear, it's vulgar."
— Puncn
Charles was fully soaked by the time he retrieved Brad-'ford's horse from Taylor's Livery Stable, but the rain stopped as he rode back to Marsden Manor, his portfolio under his arm. He was able to contemplate the outcome of the morning's inquiry in the pale light of an afternoon sun, as he rode under trees that scattered raindrops with every breeze.
But there was regrettably little to contemplate. His efforts on Queen Street had come to nothing-well, almost. There was still the matter of Frank's feathers to be looked into, and those of the man in the Inverness. Surely some significance
lay in those odd lapel decorations. For the moment, he couldn't imagine what it was, and although Charles was resourceful, he had been pulled up short. Hunting a single peacock feather was hard enough. Hunting one peacock feather in a blizzard of peacock feathers was much harder. Still, he was confident. Something would come to him.
Something did, but not quite in the way he might have imagined. To Charles's surprise, the Marsden stable yard was crowded. The indoor and outdoor servants were standing in a circle, talking and gesturing excitedly. As he dismounted and turned his horse over to a groom, he saw that everyone was looking at a motorcar, a Panhard-Levassor with a forward-mounted vertical engine, tiller steering, and a red parasol canopy. An elegant machine.
"Charles!" Eleanor cried breathlessly, running up to him with Patsy behind her, and, to his surprise and quickly stifled pleasure, Miss Ardleigh. ' 'Whatever do you think?''
Charles regarded the motorcar with interest. He had considered buying a similar model the year before, but its engineering problems had deterred him.
"I doubt," he said, "that you bought this in London. The Honorable Thomas Milbank must have favored us with a visit."
"Indeed he has," Eleanor said. "Have you and Mr. Mil-bank met?''
"Actually, yes," Charles said. "Last autumn, on the occasion of his driving this car through Windsor at the speed of fourteen miles an hour."
"Fourteen miles an hour on the road?" Miss Ardleigh was aghast.
"Indeed," Charles said.
"But what about the Red Flag Act?" Eleanor asked. "Did the police not arrest him?"
"No, blast it," drawled a lazy voice. They were joined by a tall, thin young man in a khaki-colored twill dustcoat, leather helmet and goggles and leather gloves. Bradford Marsden accompanied him.
"Hello, Tommy," Charles said cordially.
"Hullo, Charlie," the young man said. They shook hands.
"They did not arrest you, Mr. Milbank?" Patsy's tone and glance were openly admiring, and Charles wondered if he might be about to experience a reprieve from the matrimonial sword Lady Marsden and her daughter were holding over his head.
Milbank took off his helmet and goggles. "They were meant to, but I'm afraid the pater's connections discouraged 'em."
"Which is not to say," Charles said to Patsy, "that Mr. Milbank's action was anything but heroic. Quite the contrary. He deliberately flouted the law."
"Mr. Milbank's father," Bradford explained to Miss Ar-dleigh, ' 'is Lord Howard Milbank. He is influential in Whitehall circles. The police were understandably reluctant to collar his son and haul him off to jail like a common criminal, even though he volunteered."
Miss Ardleigh looked confused. "I'm afraid I don't understand any of this," she said. "What did you do wrong, Mr. Milbank? And why should you have wanted to be arrested?"
Milbank unbuttoned his dustcoat. "It's the Home Office, y' see, ma'am. Rules of the road. Parliament has set a speed limit of four miles an hour in open country and two miles an hour in towns. And a man has to walk twenty yards in front, carrying a red flag."
"It's to ensure the citizens' safety," Patsy explained excitedly to Miss Ardleigh. "Motorcars go so exceedingly fast that-"
"Safety be damned," Milbank said with a snort. "Begging your pardon, ma'am. It's the commercial interests, y' see. The railroads, chiefly. They fear competition."
"So Mr. Milbank has made a cause of it," Bradford told Miss Ardleigh. "He travels about, lecturing on the promise of the combustion engine and breaking the law wherever he can."
"Breaking the law!" Patsy cried, wide-eyed. "How wonderfully wicked!"
"Right," Bradford said emphatically. "Shouldn't wonder if he'll be arrested yet."
"Shouldn't wonder," Charles agreed affably, glancing once more at Patsy. He was gratified to see the blush on her cheek as she looked at her new hero. Eleanor's eyes, as well, were fixed on Milbank. Miss Ardleigh, he saw, merely looked thoughtful.
' 'I suppose the combustion engine will make some people very rich," she observed, stepping back to look at the machine with a critical eye.
Milbank and Bradford Marsden exchanged glances. "To be sure," Milbank said, "provided that the Home Office takes the blinders off before it's too late. The Self-Propelled Traffic Association, of which I am proud to be a member, is trying to persuade 'em."
Bradford looked somber. "What do you think of the chances, old man?"
Milbank shrugged. "Could be worse," he said. "We could be trying to bargain with the Royal Navy."
There was a commotion on the other side of the stable yard, and the lookers-on began to scramble. "I demand to know the meaning of this!" a voice roared. Charles turned. It was Lord Marsden, striding formidably across the yard in his riding clothes.
With a look of trepidation, Bradford stepped forward. "Let me present the Honorable Mr. Thomas Milbank to you, Papa. He has stopped on his way back from Cambridge to show us his-"
"The cfo-honorable Mr. Milbank," Lord Marsden thundered. He raised his riding crop in a threatening gesture. "Sir, I'll thank you to get your bloody contraption out of my stable yard. It's scared the horses and fouled the air. And there's not been tuppence of work out of anybody since you got here." He glared at the motorcar. "Not only wicked, but vulgar," he muttered.
"But Papa," Eleanor objected hurriedly, "we've asked Mr. Milbank to stay to tea."
"Didn't ask me," Lord Marsden snapped, and stalked off.
Bradford looked chagrined. "Fearfully sorry, old chap," he muttered. ' 'The guv has no love for motorcars. But I didn't think he would be insulting."
"Not to worry," Mr. Milbank said comfortably. "I'm continually being insulted. The motorcar has a way of stirring men up." He buttoned up his dustcoat. "Should be off, anyway. Dining in Colchester tonight. Friend of mine-actress- has removed there from London. D'you know her? Mrs. Farnsworth. Florence Faber, she was, when she was on the stage."
"Oh, yes," Miss Ardleigh said unexpectedly. "My aunt introduced me to her last Saturday. Quite an interesting lady."
Eleanor stared, her sensibilities obviously shocked. "An… actress? And you found such a person… interesting?"
Miss Ardleigh smiled. "I did indeed," she answered. "It was at her house that I met Conan Doyle, the author of the Sherlock Holmes mysteries-and Oscar Wilde, as well."
"Dear Kathryn," Eleanor said with a nervous turn of her head. "Murder mysteries and Oscar Wilde. You constantly amaze me." She paused, seeming to reflect. "But then, you are an American. I suppose that is the explanation."
"Doyle and Wilde, eh?" Milbank remarked with a laugh. "That's Florence Farnsworth, to be sure. She dares to be both wicked and wonderful at once, and everyone flocks to her. What a creature."
What a creature indeed, Charles was thinking. The object of his attention, however, was not Tommy Milbank's Farnsworth, but Miss Ardleigh, absorbed just now in her conversation with Eleanor. The woman at once intrigued and exasperated him. St
umbling onto the dig as if by accident, pretending that she had chanced into the railway station in search of a timetable, intruding upon his investigation of Prodger, finding that fragment of feather-blast it, the woman was ubiquitous! The more he thought about her, the more outrageous her behavior seemed to him. It was a wonder he had been able to get to Queen Street and back today without her turning up.
While the women talked, Bradford pulled Milbank aside. "I wonder, Milbank," he said, lowering his voice, "if I might drive into Colchester with you. I have some questions about motorcars. In particular, about Mr. Harry Landers. He has
acquired a number of patent licenses and is planning to float a new company, which he calls the British Motor Car Syndicate. Are you acquainted with him?''
Charles turned his attention from Miss Ardleigh to Bradford. Harry Landers? If his friend was involved with that charlatan, no wonder he had been worried of late. Anything Landers turned his hand to be likely to prove a confidence game.
Milbank jerked on his helmet. "To be sure, I know Landers," he said. "Wish I didn't, either," he added.
"I think we had better talk," Bradford said quietly. "I'll get my coat."
A few minutes later, Charles watched Bradford and Tommy Milbank drive off, accompanied by the vulgar belch-ings of the motor, the exultant shouts of small children, and the excited yapping of the manor dogs. Eleanor picked up the skirt of her green dress. "I suppose we might as well go in to tea," she said with evident regret. "Although how Papa could be so rude-"
"Yes, he was rude, wasn't he?" Patsy said, frowning. "I can't think why." She shook her golden curls, clearly nettled. "Mr. Milbank is such a handsome gentleman." A veiled glance at Charles suggested that her remark was intended to inspire jealousy.
Charles responded with a quick smile. "Handsome and rich," he said agreeably. "The Milbanks, of course, hold quite a prominent role in society." Patsy lapsed into a thoughtful silence.