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Authors: C. S. Harris

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BOOK: What Darkness Brings
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Chapter 27

S
eba
stian arrived back at Brook Street to find Hero seated at the library table calmly cleaning a tiny muff flintlock with a burnished walnut stock and engraved gilt mounts that had been a gift from her father.

He said, “Is this general maintenance, or did you shoot some-
one?”

She looked up at him. There was no humor in her face, only a cold purposefulness that reminded him disconcertingly of Lord Jarvis. “Ever hear of a man named Jud Foy?”

He thought about it a moment, then shook his head. “I don’t believe so. Why do you ask?”

“Because he was waiting for me when I came out of Abigail McBean’s house today—the same man who was watching this house last night. He said his name is Jud Foy, and he wanted me to give you a message.”


Bloody hell.
How did he know where you were?”

She shook her head. “I’ve no notion. But he called you ‘captain.’ He said, ‘Tell the captain I’m owed what I’m owed.’”

“‘Owed’? What does he think he’s owed?”

“He didn’t specify. Whatever it is, though, he seems to believe it’s your responsibility to see that he gets it. You may not remember him, but he obviously thinks you should.”

Sebastian walked over to where a bottle of burgundy stood with glasses on a tray. He poured himself a drink, then stood with the glass in one hand, his thoughts far away.

Jud Foy.
Jud Foy?
He tried to put the name together with the wet, disheveled, skeletally thin man from last night, and knew it again, that vague sense of an elusive memory gone before it was quite grasped.

Hero said, “You told me last night that you thought he looked familiar.”

“He did. But I still can’t place him.” Sebastian took a slow sip of his wine. “I thought last night that he must have something to do with my investigation into the murder of Daniel Eisler. Now I’m not so sure.”

“Because he knows you were in the army?”

Sebastian nodded. “Although I suppose it’s possible he’s linked in some way to Matt Tyson. When he said, ‘I saw you coming out of his house,’ I assumed he was talking about Eisler’s house. But he could have meant Hope’s house.”

She listened to him, her face impassive, while he told her of his conversations with Francillon and Perlman. Then she said, “Is it possible Foy could have something to do with your friend Rhys Wilkinson? You’ve visited his lodgings several times in the last few days, haven’t you?”

“I suppose that’s possible too, although I doubt it.” He set aside his glass and reached for his hat and gloves.

“Where are you going?”

“To ask Sir Henry to look into this Foy. And then I think it’s time Lieutenant Tyson and I had a little talk.”

“Jud Foy?” Sir Henry Lovejoy frowned, his lips pursing thoughtfully as he shook his head. “The name’s not familiar to me. But I can ask one of the lads to look into him. Do you want him arrested?”

“He hasn’t exactly done anything,” said Sebastian.

They were walking down Bow Street. The rain had eased up again, but the narrow lane was dark and wet and crowded with a crush of ragged costermongers and squeaky carts overflowing with produce from the nearby market of Covent Garden. The scent of damp earth and sweaty, unwashed bodies hung thick in the air.

Sir Henry said, “I had a visit yesterday evening from Mr. Bertram Leigh-Jones.”

Sebastian looked over at him. “Oh?”

“Your name came up in conversation. He made a number of demands.” Sir Henry pulled at his earlobe, the faintest hint of a smile playing about his normally serious features. “Unfortunately, I can’t seem to recall what any of them were.”

“He’s a very prickly magistrate, Mr. Leigh-Jones.”

“Most West End magistrates are—with good reason.”

“Oh? Why’s that?”

They turned down the short stretch of Russell Street that led to the open market square. The press had become a nearly intolerable squeeze, and Sebastian noticed that Lovejoy was careful to keep his hand in his pocket, guarding his purse.

The magistrate sniffed. “Let’s just say that a parliamentary inquiry into the licensing of pubs in a number of parishes might uncover a pattern of irregularity.”

“Interesting.”

“Mmm. After he left, I decided to send one of my lads over to Fountain Lane to make a few inquiries. Given the quick apprehension of Mr. Yates, I suspected Lambeth Street might have neglected to interview some of the locals not directly involved.”

Sebastian huffed a soft laugh. Leigh-Jones should have known better than to demand that Bow Street stay out of his district’s affairs. “And?”

“The constable couldn’t find anyone who would admit to being in the area at the time of the murder.” Sir Henry cast Sebastian a quick sideways glance. “You’ve heard that two men were found dead at Eisler’s house early this morning? One stabbed in the house, the other shot down in the rear alley.”

“I’d heard, yes.”

“You wouldn’t happen to know anything about that, would you?”

Sebastian kept his gaze on the crowded market square before them, its rickety stalls piled high with turnips and potatoes, cabbages and squash. “Have they been identified?”

Sir Henry nodded. “They have, yes. The ruffian in the house was Morgan Aldrich, a man well-known to the authorities in the area, whilst the body in the alley belonged to his young brother, Piers.”

“How did they manage to enter the house?”

“I understand they worked the bars loose at a window in the basement light well, then used a diamond-tipped blade to cut the glass.”

“Unusually sophisticated for common ruffians.”

“It is, yes. Curiously, however, the bolt on the back door also appears to have been tampered with. It was very subtle—so subtle I suspect most people would have missed it entirely. Only, Eisler’s old retainer, Campbell, noticed it.”

“He would,” said Sebastian.

“One suspects,” continued Sir Henry, looking at Sebastian intently, “that some unknown personage, desirous of concealing his illicit entry, gained admittance through the back door, and that unknown personage is the one responsible for the deaths of the Aldrich brothers, who came in through the basement with no regard for whatever evidence of their housebreaking they were leaving behind.”

“An interesting theory. Only, how likely is it that two different sets of ruffians would break into the same house at the same time, and take to murdering one another?”

“I suppose that would depend on what they were looking for. You wouldn’t happen to have any ideas, would you?”

Sebastian kept his features carefully schooled. “Mr. Eisler was known to possess a number of valuable items.”

“So he was.” Lovejoy paused, his attention momentarily caught by a Punch and Judy professor set up beneath the nearest arcade, then walked on. “Ah, I almost forgot; my constable did uncover one interesting piece of information. One of the individuals with whom he spoke—a chandler’s apprentice—recalled seeing Mr. Yates standing on the pavement before the victim’s house the morning of the murder. Eisler himself was in his open doorway, and the two men were engaged in what the apprentice described as a ‘right royal row.’”

Sebastian felt his jaw tighten with a spurt of quiet rage. Yates had assured him quite emphatically that he’d had no quarrel with Eisler. “The apprentice knew Yates by name?”

“No. But his description of the man involved was unmistakable. There can’t be many sun-darkened gentlemen in London who wear their hair long and affect a gold pirate’s hoop in one ear.”

“And the apprentice was certain the argument he witnessed occurred Sunday morning?”

“He was, yes. Seems he encountered the altercation on his way home from services at Holy Trinity.”

“Did he happen to hear the subject of their quarrel?”

“He did not. He did, however, catch the final, heated exchange of words. Seems Eisler told Yates, ‘Don’t even think about crossing me. I can destroy you and you know it.’”

Sebastian squinted up at the templelike facade of the church overlooking the square. “And did he manage to catch Yates’s reply?”

“I’m afraid he did. He says Yates laughed out loud and said, ‘I can split your gullet from stem to stern quicker than a Haymarket whore can pick your pocket, and don’t you forget
that
, you bloody little bastard.’” The magistrate paused to look out over the churchyard’s jumble of gray, moss-covered tombstones. “Of course, Eisler was shot, not stabbed. But still . . . it doesn’t look good for Mr. Yates.”

“No,” said Sebastian, drawing up beside him. “No, it doesn’t.”

Chap
ter 28

R
ussell Yates had drawn his cell’s slat-backed chair up to a small table and was busy writing when the turnkey opened the iron-banded oak door for Sebastian. In the last twenty-four hours, the ex-privateer had managed to shave and change into clean clothes. A feather bed and warm blankets softened his cot; a pitcher of water and a basin stood on a plain shelf beside a bottle of good cognac and a crystal glass. Prison could be surprisingly comfortable for those wealthy enough to make the appropriate arrangements.

But it was still prison.

“I ought to let you hang,” said Sebastian without preamble as the turnkey locked the heavy door behind him. “I swear to God, if it weren’t for Kat, I would.”

Yates pushed awkwardly to his feet, his leg irons throwing him off balance. “What the bloody hell does that mean?”

“It means that if you can’t be honest with me, then you’re just wasting my time—and yours. And the way I see it, you don’t have much time left to waste.”

A muscle ticked along the ridge of the man’s jawbone. “What do you think I’m lying to you about?”

Sebastian gave a humorless laugh. “Have you told me so many bouncers that you can’t be certain which ones I’ve caught on to? I’m talking about last Sunday morning. When you stood in the middle of Fountain Lane and threatened to gut Eisler from stem to stern. The chandler who witnessed the exchange will doubtless be testifying at your trial. What do you think the chances of your acquittal are now?”

Yates simply stared at him, his face pale.

Sebastian said, “You claimed you had no quarrel with Eisler. What the hell was it about?”

Yates sank into his chair again, one splayed hand pressing against his cheek with such force that it distorted his features.

“What was the quarrel about?” Sebastian demanded again when the other man remained silent.

Yates shifted his hand so that it covered his lower face and mouth. “The old bugger was trying to cheat me. He’d somehow managed to acquire certain information. . . . I don’t suppose I need go into detail as to its nature. He thought he could use it to his advantage.”

“Why the devil didn’t you tell me this before?”

A faint flush darkened the other man’s face. “I suppose I thought if you knew I had a reason to kill him, you wouldn’t help me. But I didn’t shoot him. I won’t deny that I considered it. But I didn’t actually do it.”

Sebastian studied the other man’s pinched features. The ponderous British legal system called men such as Yates “sodomites” and punished them with a rare viciousness. But they tended to call themselves “mollies.” They had created a shadowy culture of their own in London, a hidden but vibrant subworld of pubs and coffeehouses called molly houses where they felt free to mingle and meet, to dance and cut up a lark. Yet the threat of disgrace, imprisonment, and death hung over them always. The men who moved through that world lived in constant fear of both detection and extortion.

Sebastian said, “Where did Eisler acquire this information?”

“The bastard traded in other people’s secrets, the same way he traded in gems and fine furniture and art objects. He was always getting nasty bits of information out of people who owed him money.”

“You mean he was a blackmailer?”

“Not in the strictest sense. He was more subtle than that. But he certainly used what he knew about people to his own advantage.”

“Exchanging shouted threats in the street doesn’t exactly sound subtle to me.”

Yates gave a ghost of a smile. “True. But then, I was refusing to play his game.”

“You weren’t afraid?”

The privateer’s jaw hardened. “Men have tried extortion with me before.”

Sebastian had heard about the schemes often run against the mollies. Two confederates would cruise the parks and byways known to be frequented by London’s mollies. Then they’d separate, with one of the pair—usually young and attractive—approaching a likely target to “make a bargain.” Once the target was in a compromising position, the second confederate would rush in on the couple and threaten to denounce the extortion victim to the authorities unless he paid them. Handsomely and repeatedly.

“And what did you do to those who thought you a likely victim for extortion?” asked Sebastian. “Kill them?”

Yates simply stared back at him.

“Bloody hell,”
swore Sebastian.

“Would you have me believe you wouldn’t do the same, in my position?”

The two men’s gazes met. Clashed.

Yates said, “If I’d killed Eisler, I would tell you
. I didn’t kill him.

Sebastian went to stare out the small barred window overlooking the Press Yard below. They called it the Press Yard because, until recently, it was where those who refused to enter a plea against charges were literally
pressed
: Increasing loads of weights were placed upon the accused’s chest until he—or she—agreed to plead.

Or until they were crushed to death, at which point the legal niceties were no longer relevant.

He said, “I’m told Daniel Eisler was in the process of trying to sell a large blue diamond—a very large blue diamond. Do you know anything about that?”

“No.”

“What about a man named Jud Foy? Ever hear of him?”

“Foy?” Yates shook his head. “I don’t think so. What does he look like?”

“Thin. Disheveled. Like he belongs in Bedlam.”

A smile flickered across the ex-privateer’s features. “Really, Devlin, I’ll admit I associate with some rougher sorts, but I do draw the line somewhere.”

“What about a former army lieutenant named Tyson?”

“You mean Matt Tyson?”

“So you do know him.”

“I’ve met him a few times, here and there. Why?”

“Know if he had any dealings with Eisler?”

Yates thought about it a moment, then said, “He must have. I remember running into him once in Fountain Lane, although it was some time ago now. Perhaps as much as a month or so ago.”

“Do you know why he was there?”

“No. Why? What does Tyson have to do with this?”

Sebastian pushed away from the window. “I don’t know. But I intend to find out.”

Lieutenant Matt Tyson was about to enter Gentleman Jackson’s Boxing Salon when Sebastian walked up to him and said, “We need to talk. Come walk with me.”

Tyson paused, the faintest hint of a smile tightening the sun-darkened flesh beside his thin lips as he shook his head. “Sorry; I’m meeting someone here at four.”

Sebastian kept his voice pleasant. “We can have our conversation inside, if you prefer. I’ve no doubt Jackson’s other patrons would find the sordid details of your court-martial fascinating.”

Something flashed in the lieutenant’s eyes, something almost immediately hidden by his carefully lowered lids. “I was acquitted; remember?”

“Not by me.”

Without glancing at him again, Tyson resettled his hat on his head and turned his steps toward Piccadilly. A thick bank of dark clouds still hung low over the sodden city. Water dripped from overhanging eaves and misted windowpanes; the pavement glistened dark and wet.

“When did you sell out?” asked Sebastian, falling into step beside him.

“A couple of months ago, if you must know. What the devil difference does it make to you?”

“Curious timing.”

“What is that supposed to mean?”

“Only that after all these years, it looks as if Wellington is finally turning the tide against the French. I should think it would be a time of great opportunity for a man of your . . . talents.”

Tyson’s eyes narrowed. But all he said was, “Sometimes a man just gets tired of killing.”

“Not all men.”

Tyson threw him a quick sideways glance. “You did.”

It had been two years now since Sebastian had sold out for a complicated crescendo of reasons he’d yet to come to grips with. But then, he had never been the kind of man who took pleasure in killing.

Tyson had.

Sebastian said, “What was your business with Daniel Eisler?”

The man’s faint smile broadened. “My, my, you have been busy, haven’t you?”

“What was it?” Sebastian said again.

Tyson shrugged. “Eisler bought jewels. I had some to sell. And no, I didn’t slit some señorita’s throat or rape a convent full of nuns to get them. I took them off a dead French colonel at Badajoz. Where he got them is really none of my affair, now, is it?”

The bodies of the French dead were routinely stripped of their valuables, uniforms, and boots before being buried or burned. The spoils of war had long been considered a natural supplement to the King’s shilling. Officers didn’t usually join in the looting of the dead, although some did.

But the systematic looting of civilians was something else again. Wellington had always discouraged the age-old tradition of subjecting a conquered city to three days of ritual pillage by marauding, drunken soldiers—both because it was bad for discipline and because the British liked to portray themselves as saviors rather than conquerors. But Badajoz would remain forever a stain on the honor of the modern British army, for the fortified Spanish frontier city had endured days of savage rape, murder, and pillage after being stormed by Wellington’s troops last March. Tyson might claim his booty came from the body of a French colonel, but Sebastian suspected otherwise.

He said, “And did Eisler give you a fair price for your ‘items’?”

“He did, yes. Otherwise, why would I have done business with him?”

“Who suggested him to you? Thomas Hope?”

Tyson shook his head. “A friend from Spain. And I haven’t been anywhere near the old goat in weeks, so if you’re looking for someone besides Yates to pin this murder on, you’re just going to have to keep looking.”

In Sebastian’s experience, most people had a tendency to fidget when they lied; they hesitated, or their voices rose in pitch, or their demeanor shifted in some subtle way. But there were those who could meet your gaze, smile, and lie with a careless grace born of a complete absence of either guilt or fear of detection. Matt Tyson was one of those men.

“I might actually believe you,” said Sebastian, “if I hadn’t sat on your court-martial board.”

A quick flare of anger tightened the lieutenant’s features before being carefully smoothed away. He turned his head to watch an elegant red barouche dashing up the street. After a moment, he said, “I did see something at Eisler’s house the last time I was there, which you might find relevant.”

“Oh? What’s that?”

“A woman was leaving Fountain Lane just as I arrived. A young, nicely dressed gentlewoman. I couldn’t tell you who she was—she was heavily veiled and got into a hack that was waiting for her. I assumed at first she was there for much the same reason I was—to sell Eisler a piece of her jewelry, probably to pay off a gaming debt. Then I saw Eisler.”

“And?”

“The old goat had his flap buttoned awry. He must have taken her right there in the parlor because I could still smell the stink of his lust in the air. I’ve since heard it’s where he always took his women—whores and ladies alike.”

“You’re saying he made a practice of it?”

“Didn’t you know?” Smug amusement bordering on derision suffused the other man’s face. “He was quite the nasty old sot, your Eisler. He’d loan money to pretty young things, and then when they couldn’t pay his ruinous interest rates, he’d offer them a choice: Either let him tumble them on that ratty old couch or have whatever trinket they’d pledged declared forfeit. He offered the same deal to men who were late on their payments—if they had a pretty wife.”

When Sebastian remained silent, Tyson laughed out loud. “Don’t believe me? Ask that sybaritic nephew of his.”

“You mean Perlman? What would he know of it?”

“Far more than you might think. I’ve heard that one of the ways Perlman kept in his uncle’s good graces was by providing him with whores.” Tyson paused as the church bells of the city began to chime the hour, one after the other ringing out over the wet streets. “And now, you really must excuse me. I did mention I was meeting someone at four.”

Sebastian let him go.

Under ordinary circumstances, he’d have been inclined to doubt just about anything a man like Tyson said. But he kept remembering that dank, foul room with its heavy, old-fashioned chimneypiece and a small pair of cheap blue satin slippers peeking out from beneath a worn horsehair sofa.

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