There was a noise outside, and she paused, counting the heavy beats of her heart till a footstep had passed in the hall, then turned her attention again to the pile of papers on the blotter. They were drafts or partial drafts of a letter, and she shuffled them between her hands for a few moments, frowning. Wicksteed had a very precise hand, she found herself thinking it a little too florid, too practiced for a gentleman … then the fragments of phrases began to coalesce in her mind.
“Oh really?” she murmured. “That is what we are about, is it not?”
Another step. She dropped the papers and turned to the window, so that when Wicksteed pushed the door open again, a little suddenly, she could affect to turn away from the view. He paused in the doorway. Harriet looked at him expectantly.
“Here is the receipt from our cook.” He held it out to her and she folded it neatly and slipped it into her glove. “And you were correct. The price was indeed twenty-one guineas.”
She clapped her hands together. “You are so kind! That is perfect!”
His eyes tracked across the room to the papers on the desk. Harriet saw, a little tightness growing in her throat, that she had pulled the locked drawer a little proud of the surrounding timbers as she tugged on it. Wicksteed met her eyes and she felt her smile start to falter from within.
“I hope you have all the information you need now, Mrs. Westerman, for your calculations.”
His dry voice seemed to press on each of her vertebrae in turn.
“I have enough for now, I think, Mr. Wicksteed.” Her own voice was perhaps a shade too light. “Thank you for your assistance.” She made as if to go, but he did not move away from the door, lifting and dropping the catch, watching it closely.
“Can I trouble you for a little news?” he said. “I hear Joshua Cartwright was taken ill last evening, and Mr. Crowther was attending to him. Have you heard anything further?” Harriet’s mouth went dry. He looked up at her. His eyes were shadowed and black.
“He died early this morning,” she said in a low voice. “In terrible pain.”
Wicksteed looked away from her to his rather meager view.
“Poor gentleman!”
He did not move, and continued to deliberately lift and drop the latch as if fascinated by its redundant clatter. Harriet waited for him to speak again, willing herself to keep still as the latch clacked again and again. When she thought another strike would cast her into hysterics, he suddenly stopped and spoke, and she could swear she heard some hiss in his voice.
“It seems none of us, however well established, can be sure to avoid terrible accident and great reversal, does it not?” He smiled a dead smile and then, with sudden energy, pulled the door wide enough for her to pass. “But I am keeping you from your books.”
Harriet found she had not the voice to reply, and passed him with a slight bow. She had to go so close she could smell his breath, a sweetness, overlaid with lavender. She hurried out of the house, and set off rather fast toward her own estate, her cheeks flushed and her heart dancing against her ribs.
Mr. Graves was still too much concerned with what to do next for the children to note the air of collusion and triumph in the faces of Susan and Miss Chase over breakfast. The black box had yielded up some other treasures as he sat with it the previous night, and he was keen to know what the advice of the Chase family would be.
“I have found the will, Mr. Chase,” he said, putting that document into the buttery fingers of his host.
Mr. Chase nodded a little cautiously and, having drawn a pair of spectacles from his waistcoat, began to read.
“You are named as the guardian of the children then, Mr. Graves.”
Susan gave a little yelp of pleasure and Jonathan clapped his hands. Mr. Chase looked narrowly at Graves over the top of his spectacles as he grinned back at the children. “It is a heavy responsibility to place on one so young. I hope you will not take offense when I say I think it wrong of Alexander to place such a burden on you.”
The children’s faces fell, but Graves put his hands out to them between the bread rolls and coffee pots.
“I am sure he never thought it would be necessary to pass on their care. I am honored he thought so well of me.”
Mr. Chase continued to frown. “Yes, yes. That is all very fine and noble, sir, and I know you are a good man. But are you indeed a fit guardian for such young people? You are hardly established in the world yourself.”
Graves instinctively looked out into the street where Molloy had been standing the last day. His place was empty. He turned back to Chase, his face serious.
“You are right, of course, sir. But I am in a position to take over the shop, if necessary, in a way those with greater concerns,” he dropped his eyes, “might not be able to do.”
“Though that might be moot, given what we have discovered about Alexander’s family.”
“As you say.”
“But I told you what that man said!” Susan looked at them both, wide-eyed. “We must not let him know where we are. The people at the Hall sent him to kill us.”
Mr. Chase looked very dark. “If that is so, Susan, they will be punished. But, you are right, my dear, do not be alarmed, we must be discreet.” He looked at Graves again. “What do you propose, Mr. Graves? You and the children have a home here as long as you require it.”
“You are all kindness, sir.” Graves paused and then declared, “I propose to write to the local magistrate, if I can find out who he is.” And when Susan shook her head violently, “No, don’t worry, Susan, we can ask for any responses to be sent to the White Horse coffee shop. There is no need for us to tell them where we are.” Susan’s shoulders dropped again. “Then we can see where we are at.”
“Very well, Mr. Graves. That seems sensible, but I would be glad to talk to you more on these subjects.” Mr. Chase placed his napkin on the tablecloth. “Perhaps you will walk out with me today. I wish to see what the situation is in the town and would be glad of your company. My daughter and wife will look to the children in our absence.” He turned to his daughter. “Indulge an old man, my dear. Do not go beyond our street. Mr. Graves and I will know more when we return, but I think the streets are still too rough for ladies today.”
5
The vicar looked deeply uncomfortable. “Surely the squire …” he began.
Michaels’s voice in reply was almost a growl. “Squire’s got work enough. Your word is as good as anyone’s in the parish, is it not?”
The vicar decided not to answer directly.
They made an odd little group in the back yard of Crowther’s house. Hannah, rather pale, but steady on her feet, Michaels like an oak walking, with his unsuspecting dog at his feet, the vicar, red in the face already, and Crowther with the bundle under his arm.
“Right then,” Michaels announced. “First off, Hannah, I want you to have a look at the bottle there and say if it is the one Joshua drank out of last afternoon, and if it looks as it did when we sealed it after he was taken ill.”
She stepped forward smartly enough as Crowther unwrapped his bundle and showed her the bottle. She bent forward and ran her finger over the seal.
“Just as it was, sir.” She looked up at the vicar. “See, the wax we put around the stopper is just as it was last night. That’s the color of our kitchen candles. Look! There’s a bit where I let the wax fall crooked, because my hands were shaking a little.”
The vicar caught Michaels’s eye and hurriedly leaned forward to peer more closely where she indicated. He looked about him and shuffled his feet.
“Yes, I see, I see.”
The door to the house opened with a clatter and they saw Mrs. Westerman step into the yard. She paused for a second to look at them, before saying, “Good morning, Crowther. Gentlemen, Hannah. Your maid tells me you are about to kill a dog.”
The gentlemen bowed, and Hannah gave a friendly bob. Crowther replied rather wearily, “Indeed we are, Mrs. Westerman. At least, I fear so. Do you wish to observe
?”
“If I may.”
Michaels turned to Hannah. “No need for you to stay now, if you don’t wish it, girl.”
Hannah glanced quickly at Crowther. “I am not afraid to see it,” she said, “but the kitchen at home is still in an awful mess.”
Crowther blinked at her. “I don’t doubt your stomach. Best go to your work though.”
She smiled in return, and at Harriet as she passed.
“I shan’t delay you by asking about Joshua’s kitchen,” Harriet said, “but if you are going to get that poor dog to drink liquor, had you not better pour it onto some meat of some sort?”
The men looked at each other in surprise and nodded. Harriet sighed and turned back into the kitchen, emerging a few moments later with a piece of beef shank on a cracked plate, that Crowther rather suspected had been designed for his own dinner. The dog caught the scent and whined. Harriet passed him the dish, and she saw the face of his own servant appear, then disappear rapidly at the back window.
“Mrs. Westerman, you are the handmaiden of science.”
She did not deign to reply, but took a seat on the edge of the raised herb beds. Crowther broke the seal and poured a glassful or so of the liquid over the meat and into the bowl. The dog whined again, and Michaels reached down automatically to stroke her head and pull her soft black ears. Crowther hesitated. Michaels caught his movement and looked up at him with a sad smile.
“Needs must, Mr. Crowther. Perhaps I shall put a sign over her grave saying ‘handmaiden of science’ too.”
The dog looked up at her master and licked his hand. Crowther set down the dish, and Michaels pulled free the string around the little bitch’s neck. She ran to the plate and paused briefly to sniff it, and then got down to eating with an appetite. They stood around and watched her. The dog dragged the last scraps from the bowl, sitting down to enjoy them in a splayed crouch on the flagstones, looking up every now and then as if afraid the strange figures standing around her might try to snatch it away. More minutes passed, and the dog wagged her tail and looked as if she planned to sleep.
Harriet wondered vaguely if she should ask Betsy to bring out tea. She plucked a sage leaf from the bush beside her and crushed it between her fingertips, holding it to her nose for the scent. There was a sharp whine and she looked at the dog. Her ears were back tightly on her head and she slunk to her master’s boot. Crowther picked up the dish by its extreme edge and took it to the pump, washing and filling it with water before putting it in front of the dog again. She sank her muzzle into it, lapping greedily, then whined and shivered again, then with a retch began to vomit. Crowther touched the vicar’s sleeve. He started a little.
“Note the yellow bile. Typical of arsenic, and just as Joshua.”
The vicar nodded, his eyes wide. Michaels got down onto his knees and rubbed the dog’s flanks, as she looked up at him. Harriet felt the back of her eyelids twitch. Crowther cleared his throat.
“It will not take long.”
The dog howled and scrabbled her legs, the nails scraping along the stone. Michaels kept his hand on her.
“Easy there, my dear. Easy there.”
The dog tried to lick his hand again, then gave a sudden yelp. Harriet set her jaw. The animal continued to whine and whimper and wriggle under Michaels’s heavy paw. Crowther folded his long limbs to crouch alongside him, looking into the dog’s pupils.
“Careful it does not bite you, Michaels.”
He looked at his watch again. Michaels kept his eyes on the dog.
“No, she’ll not do that. No matter what.”
The dog jerked and yelped again, looking out past them all at the sky visible over the wall of the courtyard, retched again, then with almost a sigh, the cage of her ribs shuddered and was still. Crowther snapped his watch shut, making the vicar jump.
“Half an hour from when she began to eat.”
The vicar, who was very white, simply nodded.
“And you’ll testify to what you have seen this afternoon at the inquest?”
“This afternoon, why … yes, of course.”
Michaels still knelt by his dead dog, stroking her ears. Harriet watched them.
“Poor little bitch,” she said, and let the last of the crumbled sage fall from between her fingertips.
6
Graves was amazed by the pace at which Mr. Chase could walk. Even with the heat of the day boiling up, and the crowds shoving each other horribly near the churning wheels of carriage and cart along High Holborn, he strode forward, and the people of London, recognizing a strong will and a firm hand, parted for him. Graves bobbed along in his wake, occasionally shouldered by those who had stepped aside for the older man, and missing his step on the wreckage and rubbish knocked about on the pavements. He wondered if he were being subject to a demonstration; an illustration of his own small powers in contrast to the solidity of his host. He was torn between resenting it, and recognizing the justice. He had been quick to calm the children in the morning, but his first sensation on seeing his name as guardian in Alexander’s will had been one of fear. He would let no man call him a coward, but this was a burden that terrified him.
Mr. Chase came to a sudden stop, and caught up in his own thoughts as he was, Graves almost barreled into the back of him. Mr. Chase paused and put his nose into the air.
“This way, Mr. Graves. I should like to talk this over with you away from the house, and I think my coffee house is the place to be.”
Graves put his hand to his pocket. He had four shillings, though they were owing to Molloy, but it would be enough to give him the appearance of a gentleman in a public place. They were not far from the coffee shop, which turned out to be a pleasant enough little house whose high bay windows were already full of customers at their pipes and papers, the long handled coffee pots set among them like the hookahs in the Arab houses by the wharf. Mr. Chase greeted half a dozen men as they entered, but found a table that would admit no more than himself and Graves in a more secluded corner, and ordered drink and pipes from a young serving girl who greeted him by name.
Graves looked about him. Each of the coffee shops that had become so much part of the fabric of London in the last years had developed its own character and its own clientele within a few months of its existence. Where Graves usually went in Fleet Street to comfort himself in disappointment, or to celebrate any victory real or imagined, the drinkers looked pinched and bitter, or loudly traded barbs and satires. One could not take two steps before a friend or casual acquaintance placed an inkstained palm on one’s sleeve to whisper gossip or complain of their outrageous treatment at the hand of a printer, or to claim they had been insulted in the ill-read and ill-rhymed verses of another. Some men scratched at their badly fitting wigs and screwed up their eyes against the smoke to try and find floating free above them the right word, the right ringing phrase to seal a paragraph, make their friends jealous and their enemies fall like so many wooden soldiers. Others boasted at broad tables of their latest commissions and future successes, apparently oblivious to the fact that none of their companions was willing to look them in the eye.
Graves always felt a twinge of sympathy when he saw the boasters, knowing, as sure as he knew himself, that their desks were dusty and the pages empty. No man who has seriously begun a work speaks of it with such pride and pleasure. Only the idea is that delightful. It was the quiet men with an air of abstraction, deep lines in their foreheads and the impression of being continually almost in tears, in whom Graves believed as writers, after his faith in the boasters and versifiers continually searching for a patron or cursing their enemies had failed.
Mr. Chase’s preferred coffee house was altogether more comfortable. The men were as well dressed as Mr. Chase himself, and mostly as broad. There were no pretensions to high fashion-the waistcoats of the gentlemen were not heavily embroidered or strung about with fobs and seals, but the cut of the cloth was universally good, and the quality fine. Graves thought of his mother’s tw
o tabbies, sleek, happy animals, licking their paws in front of the fire when they had enjoyed a successful hunt. Business must be in general good, despite the disturbances in town. Graves could fancy he heard an underlying purr among the talk and clatter of cups, the sound of men who even as they drank and drew on their pipes were making more money than their families and other dependents could spend.
Graves looked across at his companion. “Do you think the rioters are done, Mr. Chase?”
Mr. Chase looked up, as if surprised to find he was not alone.
“Eh, my boy? Oh, perhaps. We shall know in a few hours.” He pulled at his earlobe and his eyes clouded a little. “That is Mr. Landers standing by the door. He is a Catholic with a neat little warehouse in Smithfields, and he looks a trifle wan. And there is Granger, a rival of his, in the other corner; he would set the mob on him without a second thought if he believed we would not suspect and shun him for it in future. We must wait and observe. The brewers will be nervous. Gordon’s lot have decided that brewing is a Catholic trade, and of course a distillery is the crowd’s favorite place to pillage and burn.”
Graves frowned and looked around the room again, noticing under the creamy prosperity he had observed at first, signs of abstraction and concern. The low murmur of talk seemed to change key in his inner ear and he felt a tension, overlaid by good manners and reticence, breathe through the air.
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