Read A Beautiful Blue Death Online
Authors: Charles Finch
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Traditional British, #Historical
“In a case for Lady Jane Grey.”
“Must be ugly business, Mr. Lenox.”
“Uglier by the moment, Mr. Jensen.”
“Tell me how I can help you, sir.”
Lenox pulled McConnell’s piece of paper from his pocket. “Have you heard of a man named Jeremiah Jones? Another chemist?” he asked.
“How did you get that name?”
“My friend Thomas, the doctor you once met.”
“Ah, Mr. McConnell. Knows a far sight more than many of the trade about their work. Yes, he would know of Jerry Jones.”
“Is this Jones a man to deal with?”
“He is,” Jensen said. “A peculiar man, Mr. Lenox, but honest.”
“And not likely to bridle if I ask him whether he has sold a vial of poison recently and to whom?”
“He might be, sir, he might be. Wait a moment, though.”
Jensen turned around and wrote something on a piece of paper. Then he folded it twice and handed it to Lenox.
“Give him this note and two pounds, Mr. Lenox, and be careful you don’t read the note.”
“As you say, Mr. Jensen. Thank you, as always.”
“A pleasure, sir.”
“One of these days I’ll buy something, perhaps.”
“Well, sir, I’ve seen a ghost now, so my days of nonbelieving are over. But anything for Lady Grey.”
Both men laughed again, and Lenox waved goodbye as he went out the door. He came back into the store a moment later.
“It may be today after all,” he said, reaching into his pocket. He found the small brown-stoppered bottle of poison from
Prue Smith’s desk and set it before Jensen. “Any chance of tracing this to its owner?”
Jensen picked it up and looked carefully at the crest on the stopper, where a row of numbers were printed into the glass. “I could try,” he said. “Arsenic, is it?” “I think so. How did you know?” “Common, this sort of bottle. Let me keep it.” The old man put it into his pocket, and Lenox said goodbye again and went outside to a waiting cab, having foolishly elected to send his carriage home after the morning errands. He gave the cabbie the address McConnell had written for him and settled back in his seat.
“Are you sure?” the driver asked. “Penny Farthing Place, sir?” Lenox looked at the paper. “That’s right,” he said, so the man shrugged and lifted the reins.
They rode through Grosvenor Square and through the streets inhabited by those of Lenox’s friends who lived in large, freshly painted houses, with activity within and without; then, gradually, there was a subtle change and they were riding through streets slightly less well-founded, where perhaps the paint was a few years older; then, after those, through streets Lenox had never seen; and, at last, into the fringe of the Seven Dials.
When people thought of London, they generally thought of the West End as aristocratic and East London as poor, and while this was generally true, the poorest part of London, the Dials, was in the West End, just a ten- or fifteen-minute drive from Lenox’s house.
The neighborhood had gotten its name from a meeting of its seven largest avenues; it was the sort of place where the streets were so narrow that the sky looked dark, and the cobblestones were cracked and broken. There were dozens of pubs, called the Queen’s Arms or the Prince and Peasant, all badly lit, with pints of penny gin. Dogs ran in the streets, and scavengers traveled along the sewers, some of them children, looking for the
glint of a spare coin, a pack of cigarettes, even a length of rope, anything to sell. Nobody had enough room to live.
But the Dials wasn’t the worst part of London in Lenox’s opinion; that was the Rookery, by Bainbridge Street in East London. The vices here were drink and cruelty. The vices there were theft and prostitution. The Rookery was the home of the Hammer Gang, which Edmund had told him might have been involved in the attempts on the mint.
The cab stopped in front of a tiny brick house with broken windows and no shingle declaring its business.
“Will you wait?” Lenox asked.
“Not likely, sir.”
“This ride has cost a shilling, correct? Here’s a shilling. And now here’s another,” he said, pulling it from his pocket and showing it. “It’s yours if you wait for ten minutes. After ten minutes, you may leave.”
The man looked at him warily and said, “Fine.”
Lenox nodded and slid into the street. He looked at his pocket watch, said, “Ten minutes, beginning now!” and knocked on the door.
Jeremiah Jones spent forty-five of Lenox’s precious seconds coming to the door, and another fifteen asking him what his business was. He was a thin stooped man, with wild white hair sticking up, an uneven collar, and spectacles on the tip of his nose. When the detective handed over the piece of paper and the money, the man looked at the paper, smiled thinly, pocketed the money, and walked inside, leaving the door open, which was, Lenox presumed, an invitation to go in.
The room he entered was perhaps six feet high, so low that both men had to stoop. There was one table in the middle of it, and one chair. On the back wall was a door, which must have led to the living quarters and the storeroom. The potions were nowhere to be seen, but there was a large ledger on the table and a gilt silver pen on top of it. Other than the table, the chair,
the book, the pen, and a small kerosene lamp, the room had only one distinguishing feature: an enormous boy of fifteen, strong, fat, and tall, who appeared to be eating an entire black sausage—or at least he had eaten half a foot of it and looked by no means ready to slow down. He was sitting on a stool.
“Yes?” said Jeremiah Jones.
“I need to know about
bella indigo.”
Jones took a snuffbox from his pocket, pinched a large amount of snuff, and stared at it, rolling it reverently between his fingers. Lenox felt his ten minutes melting away. But at last the chemist placed the snuff in his nostril and snorted it in. Then, mystify-ingly to Lenox, who still had one eye on the boy and his food, Jones simply left the room through the door in the back wall.
Lenox counted to sixty before he asked the boy, as politely as he knew how to, where the man had gone. The boy looked up slowly and said, “He gone through that door.”
This could have been more helpful. “What’s in there?” Lenox asked.
“D’you ’ave summing to eat?”
In the best society such an abrupt change of subject was unusual, but Lenox searched in his pocket and produced a piece of candy. The boy looked at it the way a lion might look at a bony old antelope, half hungry and half disappointed, as if he had been hoping that Lenox might produce a twelve-pound roasted chicken.
“Another room,” he said, reaching for the candy. “That’s what’s in there.”
Lenox gave up, and the two resumed their rather gloomy silence. After another half minute, though, Jones came out again, carrying a small turquoise bottle.
“Fifty pounds,” he said. “But it’s nearly eleven months old.”
“Why does that matter?”
Jones looked up. “Because
bella indigo
only lasts for a year after it’s brewed.”
“Where do you get more?”
“Oxford.”
“The university?”
“The only place in England that grows it. Or in Europe, for that matter. It’s a famous poison, in my trade, from Asia, but only Oxford dares to grow it.”
“And sells it?”
“Oh, no—never. They wouldn’t sell it. Very closely restricted.”
“Then how did you get it?” Lenox asked.
“Well, not never. See now, would you like to buy it?”
“Can you tell me when the last bottle of
bella indigo
was bought and by whom?”
“Do you have two more pounds?”
Lenox handed over the money, and Jones pulled open his book, which seemed to be cross-referenced, in a remarkably Byzantine way, by the potion’s source.
“Four years ago,” Jones said.
“So the bottle you sold would no longer be effective?”
“No.”
“And you’re the only person in London, or in England, who sells it.”
“Yes.”
“Except for the person who gives it to you from Oxford?”
Jones slammed the book shut and carefully capped the pen and placed it back on top of the ledger. “Good day, sir,” he said.
Lenox stepped forward. “Please, one more question. Here’s another pound.”
He handed Jones the money.
“One more.”
“Why do they make it? At Oxford or anywhere?”
“Why do they make any poison, sir?”
“No other reason?”
“Well,” Jones said, “it has one other use.”
“What’s that?”
“The chemistry dons sometimes mulch their flower beds with it,” he said. “It’s particularly good for roses and orchids.” And then he walked through the door again, without so much as looking back.
Lenox said thank you as quickly as he could and ran outside to catch the cab before it left. When he stepped onto the curb, though, he saw that it was several blocks away already and looked ready to turn. A shilling didn’t buy what it had when he was a boy.
“No!” he said, and waved his arm, and in his haste stepped into the road. But he was unaccustomed to the broken cobblestones of the neighborhood, and his foot plunged halfway up his calf into an icy pool of water beside the gutter.
Lenox swore only rarely, but he did so now. The chill ran through him, and as he began to walk the wind battered his leg. But he made haste, and soon he was out of the Dials; perhaps there would be a cab, and then, he thought hopefully, it would be no time until he was in his library, sitting by the fire and eating something good.
T
he man who walked up the stoop of 11 Hampden Lane that afternoon, just before four o’clock, was not, his friends would agree, Charles Lenox at his best. He had been forced to walk the better part of the way home, and a fringe of snow covered his coat, the brim of his hat, and his scarf. One of his feet, he was convinced, would fall off soon, and the other one, though near-perfect by comparison, felt as if it was stepping barefoot on the street as he walked.
Add to that his perplexity about Prudence Smith’s murder, his eagerness to solve the case for his dear friend, and the fact that he was worn out and hungry from his walk, and one might begin to understand his circumstances.
But when an upper maid opened the front door to him, he said hello as cheerfully as though he had been out for a lazy walk in late spring. She took his coat, his hat, and his scarf and asked if she ought to bring tea to the library, to which he assented. Only when he had walked through the hallway, turned right, and shut the doors of his sanctuary behind him did he sigh and wince and gingerly remove his mutinous boots.
Things soon began to improve. The fire was warm, and he
had changed into a spare set of hunting clothes—a houndstooth suit—that he kept in a drawer in the back of the room. And when the tea came, he felt warm enough, and cozy in his high-backed chair, watching the snow fall outside, with a paper in his hand that he might choose to read or not, as the mood took him, and a happy heaviness in his eyes, as of contentment.
He asked the girl for his slippers, and she fetched them, and in the space of fifteen minutes, happiness had returned to his face, and before he had even had a chance to read the headlines the newspaper had fallen from his hands and he had dozed off pleasantly into sleep.
He awoke thirty minutes later, first half-sleeping and then gently opening his eyes. As he gazed into the whitened street, he thought drowsily that it had been a perfect nap—the sort a man runs into now and again by chance, when he has had a difficult day but comes back to his hearth to find a brief moment of peace and rest, the sort that leaves him renewed, still sleepy, and at ease with the world.
There was a knock on the door, and he heard the maid walking briskly across the hallway to answer it. It occurred to him then that Graham must not have returned yet from the two tasks he had set out to do.
The maid tapped on the door to the library, and Lenox said, “Come in.” She swung the double doors open, and Lady Jane, who was on the threshold, said to her, “Bring the tea now if you would, my dear.”
Lenox stood up and smiled.
“I’ve only just woken up,” he said, “from the loveliest nap.”
“What a lucky thing!” Lady Jane said, pulling off her gloves and leaning back, with an exhale, into the red sofa. She was wearing a pale blue dress that brought out the flush in her cheeks.
“Oh, it was very nice.”
“Such a horrid day, too. I saw you coming back home from my window, Charles, and I saw your poor leg was drenched,
and I thought I would give you an hour to rest, but it’s only been forty-five minutes and here I am already. I hope you don’t mind.”
“Never,” he said. “Or, if ever, I would have minded forty-five minutes ago, when I first came in. But at the moment nothing could bring me more pleasure. Now, have you had your tea?”
“I haven’t.”
“Neither have I.”
“I know,” she said. She smiled. “Your maid told me that she brought it in, but you were asleep. She’s bringing a fresh pot now.”
“I thought I heard you say something to her.”
“It will only be a moment, I think.”
“It seems ages since lunch. Though the company was good; I was with my brother.”
“Edmund!”
“I enjoyed seeing him, of course, but it was hours and hours ago. You’re lucky you didn’t find me fainted dead away on the sidewalk.”
“Did you have a trying day, otherwise?”
He smiled. “Of course not,” he said.
“Oh, I know you did, you fibber. Was it too terrible?”
“I’ll only admit I was cross with the city when I came home, but it passed within a moment and I no longer have any idea of moving to the American prairie.”
“Thank goodness. We should have seen much less of each other.”
“Not a fashionable enough neighborhood, my lady?”
“Not by half,” she said, and they both laughed.
The tea came a moment later, and Jane, as she always did, served it.
“Two pieces of toast?” she asked.
“How about four?”
“Four!”
“Yes.”
“A bear couldn’t eat four pieces of toast!”
“A bear who had walked through London all day, and stepped in a puddle, and been betrayed by a cabdriver, very well might eat four pieces of toast.”