The Fleet Street Murders (3 page)

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Authors: Charles Finch

Tags: #Private Investigators, #Traditional British, #Journalists, #Mystery & Detective, #Fiction, #london, #Mystery Fiction, #General, #Crimes against, #Crime, #Private investigators - England - London, #England, #Journalists - Crimes against, #London (England)

BOOK: The Fleet Street Murders
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CHAPTER THREE

T

wo days later a mild late December sun set over Hampden Lane. Lenox sat with Lady Jane Grey on the sofa in her rose-colored sitting room—a chamber famous for the exclusivity of the evening gatherings it hosted and for its inaccessibility to all but Jane’s favorite people—fixing his cuff links. She was telling him about the dinner party they were to attend that night.

Lady Jane was a lovely woman, with fine skin that in the sunless winter had gone quite pale, though her lips were ruby red. Her eyes were lively and gray, often amused but never cynical, with the generous cast of someone more accustomed to listening than speaking. Her intelligence shone out of them. A dark corona of hair was piled atop her head, precariously designed for the dinner party. Lenox liked it best when it shook down in curls across her shoulders, however. She dressed plainly and well; the widow of James Grey, Lord Deere, she had lived these fifteen years next door to Lenox, his closest friend in the world. Only recently, however, had he found the courage to declare his love—and found to his ongoing elation that she returned it.

Far more so than Lenox, she was a member of London’s very highest society. In that caste there were two types of ruling women: those who campaigned, gossiped, and mocked, and those who through natural grace and intelligence gradually became arbiters of taste. Lady Jane belonged definitely to the second group. Her closest friends were Toto McConnell and the Duchess of Marchmain, and the three of them formed a triumvirate of power and taste. Their houses often hosted the defining parties of a season or the most select evening salons. Yet it was typical of Lady Jane that she was going to marry a man who would much rather be searching for clues in the alleyway of a slum than having supper in one of the palaces of Grosvenor Square. She never let her place in society determine her actions or thoughts. Perhaps that was the secret of having her place there to begin with.

This was the woman Lenox was to marry, whose counsel he valued above any other, and who was to his spirit both sun and moon, midnight and noon.

“Shall we take anything to supper?”

“Oh—yes—they asked me to bring wine, didn’t they? Bother, I forgot.”

Lenox perked up. “Let’s go by Berry’s,” he said.

“Charles, they deliver,” said Lady Jane, an exasperated look on her face. “We’ll send someone around, and they’ll send the wine to Lady Nevin’s.”

“But I like to go,” was his stubborn reply.

“Then go, and come pick me up on your way back.”

Lenox was not, as many of his friends were, much addicted to the charms of wine, but nobody could enter Berry Brothers and Rudd Wine Merchants for more than a few minutes without wanting immediately to lay down a few cases of Médoc or to rush off and lecture the barman at his club about the importance of grape variety.

The shop, its front painted a dark, rich green, and its vaulted Gothic windows bearing its name in yellow stencil, was dusty, old, and wonderful, located a few paces off of Pall Mall on St. James’s Street. The darkened floorboards creaked over a cellar as valuable as any in private hands; at one end of the room was a scale as tall as a man, and beside it an old table crowded with a dozen quarter-full glasses of red wine, which customers had been tasting. Berry’s had existed since 1698 and looked as if it would go on forever.

The place was largely deserted. One stooped old man—an oenophile, judging from the excited quiver of his nose over every bottle he smelled—was rooting through a case in the back, but the proprietor didn’t pay him any mind, standing instead at the desk in front of his ledger.

Now, this ledger was famous. It was magnificently large, bound in the same hunter green that the shop was painted, and recorded the preferences and history of every client who visited the shop more than once. As soon as Lenox’s face had appeared in the doorway, the man behind the ledger was riffling through it to find the
L
section.

“Hullo, Mr. Berry,” said Lenox.

“Mr. Lenox, sir,” said Mr. Berry, with a slight nod of his head. “How may I be of service to you?”

Lenox put his hands in his pockets and frowned, looking around the glass cases that held the sample bottles. “What do I like?” he said.

In general conversation this would be a peculiar question, but Mr. Berry heard it a dozen times a day. “What are you eating?”

“Probably beef.”

“You have two cases of the Cheval Blanc ’62 laid down, sir,” he said.

Lenox frowned again. “Does Graham know?”

Graham knew everything about wine.

“Yes, sir. I believe you purchased it under his advisement.”

“And I like it?”

“Yes, sir,” said Mr. Berry. “You took two bottles of it to a dinner party in March. You said it was”—he consulted the ledger—“tasty, sir.” This word repeated with faint disapproval.

“Well, better give me three bottles.”

“Straightaway, sir.”

This business soon transacted, Lenox and Mr. Berry spent a quarter of an hour discussing Scotch whisky, and before he left Lenox had tasted several samples and was feeling distinctly warm in his belly. He left with a bottle of the darkest sample he had tried, Talisker.

Lenox returned to Lady Jane’s to find her ready and was enjoying a quick sip of the Talisker when there was a knock on the door.

It was Graham. Because Lenox and Lady Jane lived in houses that adjoined, their servants often popped back and forth to deliver messages.

“You have a visitor, sir,” said Graham.

“Damn. Who is it?”

“Inspector Exeter.”

“Oh, yes? Well, Jane, do I have time to see him?”

She looked over at the silver clock that stood on her desk. “Yes, if you like,” she said. “I’ll order my carriage. That should take a quarter of an hour.”

“I’ll be faster than that, I hope.”

Exeter was waiting in Lenox’s study. He was a large, physically imposing man, who—to give him his credit—had evinced time and again tremendous physical bravery. Cowardice was never his flaw. Rather, it was that he was so hidebound and resistant to new ideas. He had a stubborn face, adorned somewhat absurdly with a fat black mustache. He was twisting the ends of this with two fingers when Lenox came in.

Well, thought Lenox, what will it be: a plea for help or a warning to stay out of the case? The two men stood facing each other.

“Mr. Lenox,” said Exeter with a supercilious smile.

Here to crow, then, thought Lenox. “How do you do, Inspector? Good evening.”

“I expect you’ve been following the murders? The Fleet Street murders?”

“I have, certainly, with keen interest. I hope their solution progresses well?”

“In fact it does, Mr. Lenox. In fact it does. We have apprehended the criminal responsible.”

Lenox was shocked. “What? Poole?”

Exeter frowned. “Poole? How did you—never mind—no, it’s a young cockney chap, Hiram Smalls. He’s a short, strong fellow.”

“Oh?” he said. “I’m delighted to hear it. How, pray tell, did he move between the two houses so rapidly? He flew, I take it?”

The smile returned to Exeter’s face. “We expect Smalls to give us his compatriot, after a few solitary days with the prospect of the gallows in mind.”

“Indeed,” said Lenox and nodded. “How did you find him?”

“Eyewitness. Always begin, Mr. Lenox—and I say this with the benefit of many professional years of hindsight—always begin with a canvass of the area. Now, that’s something an amateur might find difficult, comparatively, given the resources in manpower and time of the Yard.”

Damn the man’s insolence, thought Lenox. “Indeed,” was all he said.

“Well, I thought I ought to let you know.”

“I thank you.”

“I know you’ve taken an interest . . . an amateur interest in several of our cases and even helped us once or twice, but I wanted to tell you that this one is solved. No need for your heroics, sir!”

“I’m very happy for you.”

“Thank you, Mr. Lenox, most gracious. Well—and good day.”

“Good day, Mr. Exeter.”

“Enjoy your party.”

These words he said with as much sarcasm as he could muster, and then he nodded to Lenox and left.

“It’s for the best anyway,” Lenox muttered to himself as he poured a glass of sherry at his side table. It was time to focus on politics, after all.

The dinner party that evening was at the house of Lady Emily Nevin, a rather mysterious Hungarian woman (said to be the daughter of some nobleman in her home country) who had married a romantic young baronet just before his death. She had inherited everything but his title, which had gone to an impoverished country cousin who could make no bread by it and still had to till his own earth. Still, people “went to see her,” as the phrase went—because the Prince of Wales, on whom Lady Nevin exerted all of her many charms, did.

It was Lady Nevin’s great conceit that wherever she went she kept a pet on a leash—a hedgehog. It was called Jezebel and waddled around with a surly look on its face, its well-groomed coat glistening with perfume and pomade. She had found it in the basement of her house; indeed, many people in London kept hedgehogs in their basements—the animals slept a great deal in whatever warm corner they could find and voraciously discovered and ate all of a house’s insects. Few, though, brought them upstairs as Lady Nevin had. She even took the creature to other people’s houses. It was considered either wickedly funny or profoundly tasteless, depending whom you spoke to. Lenox found it primarily silly, although he never entirely discounted the bond between a human and an animal because of a Labrador (Labbie, by name) that he had been given as a child and loved with all his heart.

Despite the hedgehog, Lenox was having no fun at the party. Held in a broad, overheated room with windows overlooking the Thames, it contained few people he knew and fewer of his friends. Lady Jane, with her inexhaustible acquaintance, moved easily among the small groups, but Lenox stood by the window, glumly eating a sherbet. They made a funny sort of couple on occasions like this.

Just then Lenox heard a voice behind him, and every nerve in his body went taut.

“An orchid, for the lady of the house,” it said, in a tone that had once sounded arrogant to his ears but now sounded sinister as well.

“Why, thank you, Mr. Barnard,” said Lady Nevin graciously. “How kind you are to a poor widow.”

Lenox half-turned, if only to confirm that it was indeed George Barnard.

He was a powerful man, aged fifty or so, who had served time in Parliament and just finished a successful stint as Master of Great Britain’s Royal Mint. He had retired into private life with an eye toward the House of Lords; judicious donations to the correct charities (and he was opulently rich, if nothing else) were, society assured him, enough to earn a title to match his wealth. He was a self-made man who had grown up somewhere in the north of England, which London associated, to the region’s detriment, with factories and soot, but he had shaken off that dubious birth to rise to his current heights. He was well liked now and known for the beautiful orchids he grew himself and always brought to parties—or, if there wasn’t one at its peak, a bowl of the oranges and lemons he grew in his green house.

He was also, Lenox felt with complete certainty, the most dangerous man in London.

For many years his feelings toward Barnard had been neutral. Lenox had gone to the man’s parties and suppers and met him in society. Two years before, that had changed.

It was a famous case, which Lenox had been proud to solve. One of Barnard’s maids had been killed, and while Barnard was innocent of that crime—his two nephews had committed the murder—in the course of his investigation Lenox had discovered something shocking: Barnard had stolen nearly twenty thousand pounds of the Mint’s money for himself. Once he knew this, Lenox began to trace a whole host of crimes back to Barnard, carefully taking notes on the unsolved mysteries in Scotland Yard’s files and developing a dossier on them.

It was personal, too, Lenox’s pursuit of Barnard, for two reasons. First, he had sent his thugs (he worked with an East End group called the Hammer Gang, who provided him with muscle) to beat half the life out of Lenox; second, and more irrationally, Barnard had proposed marriage to Lady Jane. Ever since she had rejected him and taken Lenox, Barnard had been scornful of Lady Jane, which was more than Lenox could take.

In all this time, though, he had been careful to keep his hatred of the man to himself, to greet Barnard with cordiality, never to let on what he knew.

“George, how do you do?” he said, shaking hands.

“Not badly, Lenox, not badly. There, thanks,” he said, handing a footman his overcoat. “A lovely party with a lovely hostess, isn’t it? How is Jane?”

Lenox didn’t like the sneer on Barnard’s face. “Very well, thank you.”

“Good, excellent. I admire her greatly, you know, for looking past your . . . profession. Or would you call it a hobby?”

“How are your days occupied now, Barnard?” asked Lenox, in a tone that even he recognized was barely civil.

Barnard wouldn’t let go of the subject. “Fine, fine,” he said, “but you—are you looking into these murders at the newspapers? It’s a great shame about, what are they called, Win Carruthers and Simon Pierce.”

“Did you know them?”

“Oh, no, of course not. Vulgar chaps, no doubt, but we mustn’t allow anarchy. Are you looking into it?”

“I’m running for Parliament soon, actually. Everything has fallen behind that priority in my life, I’m afraid.”

Barnard looked bilious at this and only said in response, “Ah—I see Terence Flood, I must speak to him.”

“Good evening,” said Lenox with a nod.

Lady Jane came back to Lenox. “Are you almost ready to leave?” she asked.

“Lord, yes,” he said.

They returned to Lenox’s house after circulating to say good-bye. Though he was troubled both by Exeter’s visit and by seeing Barnard, Lenox threw off his cares long enough to have a late snack—milk and cake—with his betrothed, and an hour’s conversation with her put him in a better mood. Walking back up her stoop, she permitted him a short kiss before going inside with a cheerful laugh. Well, he thought; all will be well in the end. This time next year perhaps I’ll be in Parliament.

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