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Authors: Ashley Gardner

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BOOK: The Thames River Murders
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My wife’s idea of humor was sometimes lost on me. I imagined Grenville laughing even now.

I spent a fairly restless night, mostly because of soreness from my fall. My dreams spun endlessly. I saw a young woman who looked much like Gabriella but my fancy painted her as Judith Hartman—young, dark-haired, vibrant. She came at me along the crowds of the Strand, waving to me, calling.
 

But when she reached me, the skin of her face fell away, and she was nothing more than bones at my feet, her empty eye sockets turned up to me in pleading, one of them smashed.

I jerked awake early, my head aching, my limbs stiff.

I rose, trying to swallow enough coffee to banish the visions, and put forth plans to find out about Mr. Hartman. I went through the cards I collected and pulled out the one handed to me by Mr. Molodzinski, when he’d come to thank me for defending him against Mr. Denis.

I dressed, hired a hackney, collected Brewster, who’d returned to the house, looking half asleep, and journeyed to the City.

We traveled eastward via the wide stretch of Holborn, where molly houses nestled into the back lanes and barristers’ inns and solicitors’ offices faced the street.
 

The road sloped down to become Newgate Street, the grim prison walls enclosing those awaiting trial and execution, the dome of Saint Paul’s rising beyond it. After that, Cheapside led us to a six-way junction and Mansion House, where the Lord Mayor of London presided. Beyond that, Threadneedle Street held the Bank of England; Cornhill, the Royal Exchange; and Lombard Street, moneylenders and the Post Office.

Molodzinski’s house was in between these streets of great wealth. As a man of business, advising his clients on their personal financial affairs, I imagined him opening his window to hear how best to invest the fortunes of those he represented.

Molodzinski’s abode was a modest one, in a modest court between Cornhill and Lombard Street. His card was of cheap paper, and so I concluded that his clients were middle class, and not those middle class who’d amassed great fortunes. Ordinary folk, I surmised as his young clerk admitted me to ordinary rooms in an ordinary house.

“Captain Lacey.” Molodzinski came from his office at the top of the stairs as I made my stiff way up them. He gazed down at me, the relief on his still-bruised face puzzling. “How delightful. Please, do come in.”

He sounded extremely nervous. He waited for me to reach the landing, then he took my elbow with the pretense of assisting me, and nearly dragged me into his office.

I understood Molodzinski’s anxiousness as soon as I walked inside. James Denis turned from the window, where he’d been gazing down at the street.

He looked me over in his cold way and gave me a slight nod. “Captain.”

Chapter Fourteen

I nodded in return. “Mr. Denis.”

Molodzinski hovered just inside the door, clasping his hands. Any moment, he’d bolt. “You have come to discuss business, Captain? Perhaps, you would like to speak privately?”

His eyes begged me to agree. “Of course,” I said. I bowed to Denis. “Will you excuse us?”

Denis didn’t move. “Whatever business you have, you may discuss before me. I am discreet.”

Molodzinski began, “Perhaps the captain would be more comfortable …”
 

“He means it’s none of your affair,” I said bluntly to Denis. “Which it is not.”

Denis gave me a weary look. “Captain, I will not allow you to spirit Mr. Molodzinski away in hopes he can elude me. He cannot. State your business—it is bound to be of interest to me as well.”

I did not want Denis in this. I hoped to give Hartman peace now that he knew his daughter was dead. Denis was excellent at bringing wrongdoers to justice—when he wished—but Hartman hardly needed Denis in his affairs.

“Perhaps I will call on you another time,” I said to Molodzinski. “Or, you are welcome in South Audley Street.”

“No.” Molodzinski gazed at me in desperation. “Please, do not go.”

“He fears I will strike him dead the moment your back is turned,” Denis said. “And I might. You should stay, Captain, and prevent the tragedy.”

Denis’s sense of humor was even more obscure than my wife’s.

“Very well,” I said, losing my patience. I thumped myself onto a hard wooden chair, one of the few in the rather barren, high-ceiling room. The windows were open, early summer warmth and the stench of the city floating in. “Mr. Molodzinski, I would like to know all you can tell me about a shopkeeper called Joseph Hartman and his family. His daughter has been killed, and I am seeking information about her and her last days.”

Molodzinski blinked. “His daughter was killed? Dear, dear. Poor man.”

“Do you know him?”

Molodzinski, despite his nervousness, looked amused. “Because he is a Jew, as am I? I do not believe I’ve even heard of him.”

I suppressed an impatient noise. “No, I mean because you are a man of business to shopkeepers like him, and you might know who handles his affairs. I cannot ask Hartman himself, because he has warned me off.”

“Ah.” Molodzinski looked a bit more interested. “Perhaps I could make inquiries.”

Denis broke in. “This is the same dead woman you came to me about? Or have you found another unfortunate in the meantime?”

“The same,” I said tightly. “I have managed to discover her identity without you, thank you.”

Denis’s eyes went colder still. “I know what Mr. Brewster did. I am not happy with him, as I have explained to him.”

I thought of Brewster’s exhausted look this morning and wondered now whether he’d been able to go home at all. Had he spent the hours between seeing Donata safely to our house and my leaving the next morning being berated by Denis? Denis did not seem particularly fatigued, but then, he never did.

“Mr. Brewster, in his own way, has honor,” I said. “Allow him to rest from time to time, and see his wife.”

“Mr. Brewster’s loyalties have become a bit fluid,” Denis said. “Please remember that I pay his wages.”

“Yes, you are the master of us all,” I said, my hot temper bubbling high. Molodzinski gave me a fearful look, but I could not cease. I pointed at him. “Whatever this man has done cannot be worth you coming here yourself to reprimand him. I do my best to vex you all the time, but
he
is rather harmless.”

“He is a murderer, Lacey,” Denis said.

I stopped. I’d been drawing a breath to contradict him, and I nearly choked on it.

I swung back to Molodzinski. His face was red, his dark eyes full of shame. His voice dropped to a near whisper. “Not on purpose.”

My words halted again. Manslaughter then? And why, if he’d killed a person, intentionally or no, was he free to go about his business?

“If you were acquitted,” I said slowly, “then Mr. Denis should have no hold on you.”

“He has never been arrested,” Denis said. “The only one who knows he killed this man is myself. And now, you.”

Molodzinski took a step toward Denis. “You promised your silence, that you would not betray me to the magistrates. Gave your word.”

Denis transferred his frosty look to Molodzinski. “In return for your services when I wished them, yes. Which you have been reluctant to furnish. But Captain Lacey is not a magistrate. If he decides to keep your secret, it will be safer with him than anyone in London.”

I tried to ignore Denis while I faced Molodzinski. “Will you tell me what happened?” This man did not look like a killer, not even an accidental one.

Molodzinski let out a sigh that came from the bottom of his boots. “I was approached by some … men. Four of them. One was a client. They wanted me to embezzle from two other of my clients, to ruin the gentlemen, and of course pass on their money to them. When I continually refused, they sent a ruffian to persuade me. I fought with him, and he fell down the stairs. Broke his neck.”

Molodzinski snapped his mouth shut, as though reminding himself to say nothing further. A plausible tale, but I wondered whether there was more to it.

“These men who’d asked you to embezzle must have noticed that the ruffian they sent to you had died,” I said.

Molodzinski shuddered. “I’d had some dealings with Mr. Denis in the past—the money I told you I borrowed from him. I asked for his help.”

Denis finished. “I made certain that the ruffian’s death was not connected to Mr. Molodzinski, and that the consortium took their business elsewhere.”

I imagine Denis willingly performing these tasks in order to have a man of business in his pocket. Though Molodzinski was not wealthy, he’d have access to information, could pry information out of other men of business, and would know of dealings on the exchanges, perhaps before others became aware of them.

What Denis prized above all else was knowledge.

The fact that Denis was here now told me that perhaps Molodzinski was reluctant to give Denis this information.
 

“I understand your quandary,” I said to Molodzinski. “I will keep your confidence.”

Molodzinski looked surprised but grateful. “Thank you, sir. Thank you. I am in your debt.”

“It seems your debt is extending to many,” Denis said in a dry voice. “But please, do what Captain Lacey asks of you. His intentions are usually benign, even if he is insistent.”

My annoyance returned. “He is obviously an honorable man,” I said, pointing my walking stick in Molodzinski’s direction. “He defended himself against a pack of criminals—very different from him striking down an innocent. You would do a kindness to leave him be.”

Denis regarded me stonily. “My business would be in pieces if I followed your precepts. Forgive me if I do not rush to obey you. Please, continue your errand here. I will deal with Mr. Molodzinski later. I cannot hope to prevail against your tenacity when you wish to discover answers.”

I was not flattered, but glad he would not hinder Molodzinski in responding to my questions.
 

Denis made no move to leave, however. He stood like a monolith while I turned back to Molodzinski and explained the circumstances with Hartman and his daughter.

Molodzinski lost his fearfulness of me as he listened, and his expression changed to one of sympathy.

“I can inquire, Captain. I laughed at you when I accused you of coming to me, one Jew to track down another, but it is true that our community in London is rather small. I do not know this man personally, but I know how to find others who will. I must warn you, not everyone will welcome an outsider asking questions. I am pleased I live in this country in this time, when we are not being expelled or imprisoned simply for being Jewish, but insults come readily to Gentiles, and we are not wholly embraced.”

“I do understand,” I said. “Though you might not think it. I have knowledge of what it is to be on the outside looking in. Lack of funds has a way of separating a man, even when others pretend it does not.”

Molodzinski looked surprised. “You live in a sumptuous enough house.” He hesitated. “Though so does the Prince of Wales, and he is up to his ears in debt.”

“I married well,” I said, my smile wry. “But my station in life is below my wife’s, so I am looked at askance.”

“True, wealth will ingratiate a man when all other factors about him would normally repulse.” Molodzinski shook his head. “That is the way of the world.”

He reiterated that he’d ask about Hartman for me, and send word to my rooms in Grimpen Lane. The interview was at an end.

I was reluctant to leave him alone with Denis, at Denis’s mercy. Though I did not believe Denis would allow my presence to stop him meting out punishment as he thought fit, he might at least hesitate.

Denis, however, took up the hat he’d left on a table and motioned me to leave with him. I thanked Molodzinski again, shook his hand, and left the office.

My hackney waited, with Brewster lounging against it, talking with the coachman. Brewster went at once to Denis when he stepped outside—they exchanged a few words I could not hear, then Brewster came back to the hackney, handed up coin, and dismissed the coach.
 

The hackney drove on, leaving me with Denis, as Denis’s coach pulled forward to retrieve him.

In a few minutes, I once more found myself inside Denis’s austere but elegant carriage, facing the man who controlled most of the criminal element in London.

“I will not apologize for defending Mr. Molodzinski,” I said before Denis could speak. “He was in an unfortunate situation, and you took advantage of him.”

“I did indeed,” Denis said without changing expression. “But I did not bring you with me to rebuke you. I want you to tell me about the attack on your son in the park.”

I started. “Why? Brewster must have reported it to you.”

“He did. He was quite angry about it. But I would like the matter described from your point of view.”

“I saw the man coming and thought nothing of it.” I related what had happened, ending with Peter’s assessment that the horseflesh was costly.

Denis tapped one finger to the gold head of his walking stick. “A member of the
haut ton
attempting to knock small boys from horses? This is a strange occurrence.”

“Hardly one for humor. If his sack had hit Peter, Peter might have been seriously hurt.”

“I was not laughing. I was remarking on the incongruity. Oddities interest me. You are correct that the place to start looking for the culprit is the horse. Even if the man did not own the horse, a groom or stable lad will remember him hiring it.”

“Possibly. I have already sent Bartholomew to the stables in and about Hyde Park to make inquiries. I have no doubt that he and his brother will quickly find something for me. It was a fine hunter, and fresh—the rider could not have ridden it far that day. Likely it was cared for nearby.”

Denis gave me a nod. “I agree with your logic.”

“May I ask why you are interested? Why should an attack on my stepson distress you?”

Denis moved his hand on the walking stick, his fingers caressed by his skin-tight kid gloves. “I have become quite protective of you. A blow to your beloved family would cripple you. That would lose me a valuable asset. Also, my enemies might attempt to reach me by using you.”

BOOK: The Thames River Murders
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