When the Devil Drives

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Authors: Caro Peacock

BOOK: When the Devil Drives
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The Liberty Lane Series from Caro Peacock
DEATH AT DAWN
(USA: A FOREIGN AFFAIR)
DEATH OF A DANCER
(USA: A DANGEROUS AFFAIR)
A CORPSE IN SHINING ARMOUR
(USA: A FAMILY AFFAIR)
WHEN THE DEVIL DRIVES
A Liberty Lane Mystery
Gillian Linscott writing as Caro Peacock
This eBook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author's and publisher's rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
 
First world edition published 2011
in Great Britain and the USA by
Crème de la Crime, an imprint of
SEVERN HOUSE PUBLISHERS LTD of
9–15 High Street, Sutton, Surrey, England, SM1 1DF.
Copyright © 2011 by Caro Peacock.
All rights reserved.
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
Peacock, Caro.
When the devil drives. – (A Liberty Lane mystery)
1. Lane, Liberty (Fictitious character)–Fiction. 2. Women
private investigators–Fiction. 3. London (England)–
Social conditions–19th century–Fiction. 4. Detective
and mystery stories.
I. Title II. Series III. Linscott, Gillian.
823.9′2-dc22
ISBN-13: 978-1-78010-140-8 (ePub)
ISBN-13: 978-1-78029-011-9 (cased)
ISBN-13: 978-1-78029-513-8 (trade paper)
Except where actual historical events and characters are being described for the storyline of this novel, all situations in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to living persons is purely coincidental.
This ebook produced by
Palimpsest Book Production Limited,
Falkirk, Stirlingshire, Scotland.
COURT CIRCULAR
The Hereditary Prince (Ernest) and Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg Gotha landed at the Tower at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon from the Continent. Their Serene Highnesses and suite were conveyed in two of the Queen's landaus to the Royal Mews at Pimlico, and shortly afterwards left town with their suite in two of the Royal carriages and four, for Windsor Castle, on a visit to the Queen.
Cutting from
The Times
, 11 October 1839,
recording the arrival of Princes Ernest
and Albert to visit Queen Victoria.
PROLOGUE
J
ust after one o'clock on a damp October night, in Knightsbridge, on the south side of Hyde Park. Inside the grand new houses most people had gone to bed. In drawing rooms, servants put out the candles in chandeliers with long snuffers on poles, clumsy from tiredness, so that hot wax dropped and solidified on carpets. Trouble in the morning, probably, but that was five hours' sleep away. A police constable trod the pavement, slow and unworried. Knightsbridge was an easy beat. Most trouble happened east of the park in the livelier night time streets around Piccadilly. He was patrolling so that the sound of his feet, steady as a dray-horse, could reassure people inside the fine houses that they might fall asleep in safety.
The back door of one of the houses opened a crack. A girl came out of the door and stood in the candlelight from the scullery, listening. She was fifteen, with a pale round face, wearing the black dress and stained brown apron of a kitchen maid. When the sound of the policeman's boots died away, she let herself out of the yard gate and ran round the corner to the back of another house, much like the one she'd left.
‘Stephen?'
The gate opened. A hand pulled her inside, as urgently as if rescuing her from a river.
‘Jeanie. I've waited. Every night like I said.' He was a servant too and not much older than the girl.
‘I couldn't get away till tonight. I can't stay, either.'
But she stayed for a while. They sat side by side on a rabbit hutch, his arm round her, the animals shifting on the straw inside. A vacancy for a maid had come up in the house where the young man worked. If she was lucky enough to get the position, they could be under the same roof, seeing each other every day. She was hardly able to believe in such luck, reluctant to give notice to her employers. He encouraged her: do it tomorrow. A shout came from inside the house.
‘Stevie, where are you?'
‘Got to go. You'll be all right back?'
They kissed. He disappeared inside. She unlatched the yard gate and stepped onto the deserted pavement.
Between the back of his house and hers were two corners and one short stretch of roadway. She worried she might meet the constable, who'd want to know what she was doing out so late and probably insist on escorting her home. Being absent from the house without permission would cost her a character reference and so any prospect of the position in the other house. The pavement was empty. She adjusted her shawl round her head and stepped out, walking quickly. She was halfway between the two corners when the carriage came along from the opposite direction.
It had the high rectangular shape of a gentleman's dress chariot and was drawn, at a walk, by two dark coloured horses, the coachman on the box in a black cloak. She couldn't make out any more because the lamps on the front were not lit. At first she was relieved, knowing that no gentleman would stop his chariot to take notice of a servant walking home late. It rumbled past, and she was only a few dozen steps away from her turning. Then it stopped. The rumble of wheels and slow hoofbeats gave way to brakes grinding, the jingle of harness, as the horses were reined in. She glanced up, saw the footmen at the back, opened her mouth and felt terror rushing into her whole body. Before she could even let it out in a scream the footmen had vaulted off the back of the chariot and were on her. She was plucked up into the air, blackness all round her. Blackness of the street or the sky, of their arms, their masked faces. She tried to scream, but one of them had his arm locked over her face. They carried her as easily as a stick of firewood and bundled her inside the chariot. One of them got in and slammed the door. The other jumped on the back of the chariot. It moved off, the horses going into a fast trot. The whole thing hadn't taken more than thirty seconds.
Later, while it was still dark, a different police constable almost tripped over the form of a girl, hunched in the gutter in another part of Knightsbridge. A damp shawl was wrapped round her head and she was so still that he thought at first she was dead. He drew back the shawl and saw a pale face smeared with blood and tears. Her eyes opened, staring at him as if he were some horror from another world. She struggled to get away, weak as a butterfly in a boy's hand. He held her, spoke kindly, tried to soothe her. When she talked at last he could hardly make out what she was saying, but the word ‘devils' kept coming up. Yes, he agreed, any man's a devil who does this to a poor girl. He tried patiently to get her to tell him where she lived. It took a long time.
When my part in the story began, I didn't know about the attack on Jeanie. The rape of a servant girl, with an hysterical-sounding description of her attackers, was not unusual enough to make a paragraph in the newspapers. I did not know Jeanie or anybody connected with her. It was only weeks later, after everything else had happened, that I found her and heard her account at first hand. By that time, her story wasn't hysterical at all and made perfect sense – not that that was much help to poor Jeanie. Looking back, I can tell myself that I should have known. It was no more than a mile away across the park from where I live. But then, most of us worry about what's nearest to ourselves and at the time I had enough to concern me. Such as the fact that rent day was fast approaching. Such as that Mrs Martley, my more-or-less housekeeper, kept dropping hints about the rising price of meat and coal. Such as what to do about Tabby. Then there was a certain gentleman who, I feared, was dangerously close to asking me to marry him. Altogether, I was looking the wrong way that October but so was almost everybody else.
Most people's eyes were on another event, which also passed me by. The Court Circular in
The Times
is not my normal reading.
The Hereditary Prince and Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg arrived in London yesterday by the Antwerp Company's steamship,
Antwerp
. They were accompanied by a small suite, and brought with them three carriages. Their Highnesses landed at the Tower, and immediately took their departure with their suite for Windsor by two of Her Majesty's carriages, which had been waiting from an early hour in the morning.
From the Court Circular, you'd have thought the arrival was all over in a matter of minutes. From the point of view of the two principals, it probably was. Two dark-haired young princes, one very dignified and upright with a Roman beak of a nose, the other with a softer and younger look, would have walked down the gangplank to be greeted by a line of top-hatted worthies, then been whisked away towards Windsor in the first of the carriages, the coachmen on the box in his blue Windsor uniform.
Even in the Court Circular, there's a hint of how far from immediate it was for everyone else involved. Those carriages waiting from an early hour in the morning; you can almost hear the horses shifting their hooves, smell the pipe-smoke of grooms and drivers who spend half their lives waiting. The second of the carriages would carry the more important members of the princes' small suite. There'd be no urgency about the servants' departure. They'd have had to wait on the quayside while the three German carriages were unloaded, along with trunks, crates, sword and gun cases, hat boxes and saddles. By the time this procession of servants and luggage set out to follow the princes to Windsor, it consisted of six vehicles. The three German carriages, plus a landau, a phaeton, and an indeterminate luggage cart bringing up the rear. At some point, I don't know when, a seventh vehicle fell in behind the luggage cart. It was a plain black gentleman's dress chariot, drawn by a pair of bay horses. Later, various people claimed they'd taken particular notice of it, but nobody commented at the time. All these details I found out later, at third or fourth hand. When they arrived, I had no interest in yet another party of European royals on the well-trodden trail to enjoy Little Vicky's hospitality at Windsor. I was a newly-fledged private investigator with a living to earn, and hadn't seen a serious client in a month or more.
ONE
‘
D
ora will be totally lost in London,' the young man said.
He was leaning forward in his seat from desire to convince me, long fingers clasping the edge of my table, fair hair flopping over his forehead. ‘She's only nineteen. She'll be an abandoned fawn on a prairie of prowling lions.'
The sound that came from the girl on the other side of the table might have been a suppressed sneeze. Since the poetical young man didn't react to it, I hoped that was what he took it for, but I knew better. I glared at Tabby, to remind her of strict orders to keep quiet. From childhood, Tabby had survived by her own resources on the prairie of prowling lions, so had precious little sympathy for the fawns of the world. This interview was her first official appearance as my assistant and the start of what would probably prove to be an apprenticeship that tried the patience of both of us. At least she looked reasonably tidy in her grey dress, with hair clean and tied back. I picked up my pencil.

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