Seven Dials

chapter THREE
AFTER HER INDOOR DUTIES were completed, Gracie set out on her errands of the morning. It was a bright, mild day with only the slightest breeze, and she enjoyed walking, even in new boots. These were excellent ones, with black buttons, and heels that for the first time in her life made her over five feet tall.

She went briskly along Keppel Street and Store Street into the Tottenham Court Road, where she stopped at the fishmonger's and picked out some succulent-looking kippers, nice and fat, with a rich, smoky color. She did not trust the boy who brought them around on a barrow; he tended to stretch the truth a little regarding their freshness.

She had just come out onto the pavement again and was about to turn south towards the greengrocer's to get some plums, when she saw her friend Tilda Garvie, who was maid in a household a short distance away in Torrington Square. Tilda was a nice-looking girl, an inch or two taller than Gracie and a good deal plumper, which still left her becomingly slender. Usually she had a cheerfulness about her which made her agreeable company. However, today she walked past the flower girl without even a glance. Her face was set in lines of anxiety, and she seemed to be looking around her absentmindedly, as if not truly seeing what was there.

"Tilda!" Gracie called out.

Tilda stopped, swung to face Gracie and on recognizing her, her expression flooded with relief. She nearly bumped into a large woman with a shopping basket balanced on her hip and dragging an unwilling child with the other hand.

"Gracie!" Tilda gasped, just avoiding being mown down by the woman and not bothering to apologize for cutting across her path. "I'm so glad ter see you!"

"Wot's the matter?" Gracie asked, moving closer to the inside of the footpath and pulling Tilda out of the way. "Yer look like yer lost summink. D'yer drop yer purse?" It was the first and most natural thought. She had done that herself and still remembered the horror of it. That was nearly six shillings gone-a week's worth of food.

Tilda dismissed it with a shake of her head so slight it was barely a comment at all. "Can I talk to yer for a moment... please, Gracie? I'm that worried I dunno wot ter do. I was 'opin' I'd see yer. Ter be honest, that's why I come this way."

Gracie's concern was instant. All sorts of domestic possibilities flashed through her mind. The house in which Tilda worked was quite a large one, and there were several other servants. The first, most obvious troubles would be accusations of theft or one of the male staff's making improper demands. Gracie had never feared either of those herself, but she knew very well that it could happen. Worse still, of course, was the master of the house, making demands. Refusal and acceptance were both fraught with pitfalls. To be caught, and dismissed without a character reference, was only the lightest. One could easily be with child as well! Or accused by the mistress of all manner of wrongdoing.

Simple squabbles with other maids, lost trinkets, badly done jobs, the mistress's favorite ornament broken or dress scorched, were so simple as to be almost welcome.

"Wot's 'appened?" she said earnestly. " 'Ere, we've got time fer a cup o' tea. There's a place jus' 'round the corner. Come an' sit down an' tell me."

"I i'nt got money fer a cup o' tea right now." Tilda stood motionless on the pavement. "An' I think as it'd choke me any'ow."

Gracie began to appreciate that whatever troubled her, it was of a very serious order. "Can I 'elp?" she said simply. "Mrs. Pitt is ever so fair, an' she's clever as well."

Tilda frowned. "Well... it were Mr. Pitt as I were thinking of... if... I mean if..." She stopped, her face white, her eyes pleading.

"It's a crime?" Gracie said with a gulp.

Tears brimmed Tilda's eyes. "I dunno... not yet. Leastways... Oh, please Gawd, it ain't!"

Gracie took her by the arm and half dragged her along the pavement to be out of the way of bustling women using baskets almost like weapons. "Yer comin' with me ter get a cup o' tea," she ordered. "Summink 'ot inside yer'll 'elp. Then yer can tell me wot yer talkin' 'bout. 'Ere... pick yer feet up or yer'll fall flat on yer face over them cobbles, an' that won't 'elp no one."

Tilda forced herself to smile and quickened her pace to keep up. In the tea shop, Gracie informed the waitress exactly what they wanted, freezing the girl's complaints that it was too early, and sent her scurrying away to do as she was told.

"Now," she said when they were alone. "So wot's the matter then?"

"It's Martin," Tilda said huskily. "Me brother," she added before Gracie could misunderstand. " 'E's gone. 'E just in't there, an' 'e 'adn't told me nothin'. An' 'e wouldn't do that, 'cos me an' 'im is all we got. Our ma an' pa died wi' the cholera when I were six an' Martin were eight. We always looked out for each other. There in't no way as 'e'd go orff an' not tell me." She blinked rapidly, trying to control the tears, and failing. They slid more and more rapidly down the curve of her cheek, and without thinking she wiped them away with her cuff.

Gracie attempted to be practical and force herself to think clearly. "When did yer see 'im last, Tilda?"

"Three days ago," Tilda answered. "It were me day orff, an' 'is too. We 'ad 'ot pies from the man on the corner, an' walked in the park. The band were playin'. 'E said as 'e were goin' up Seven Dials. Only up an' back, like, not ter stay there!"

The waitress returned with a pot of tea and two hot scones. She glanced at Tilda's tearstained face and seemed about to say something, then changed her mind. Gracie thanked her and paid for the tea, leaving a couple of pennies for her trouble. Then she poured out both cups and waited until Tilda had sipped hers and taken a bite out of the buttered scone. She tried to collect her thoughts, and behave as she thought Pitt would have.

" 'Oo did yer speak to where 'e works?" she asked. "Where is it, anyway?"

"For Mr. Garrick," Tilda replied, putting the scone down. "Torrington Square, just off Gordon Square, it is. Not far."

" 'Oo did yer speak to?" Gracie repeated.

"Mr. Simms, the butler."

"Wot did 'e say, exact?"

"That Martin 'ad gone away an' 'e couldn't tell me where," Tilda replied, ignoring her tea now, her eyes fixed on Gracie. " 'E thought as I were walkin' out wif 'im. I said as 'e were me brother, an' it took me ages ter make 'im believe me. But me an' Martin looks like each other, so 'e understood in the end." She shook her head. "But 'e still wouldn't tell me where 'e'd gone. 'E said as no doubt Martin would let me know, but that in't right, Gracie. Yesterday was me birthday, an' Martin wouldn't never forget that unless summink was terrible wrong. 'E never 'as, not since I were little." She gulped and blinked, the tears running down her cheeks again. "Always gives me summink, even if it's only a ribbon or an 'andkerchief or like that. Reckoned it mattered more 'n Christmas, 'e said, because it were special ter me. Christmas is everyone's."

Gracie felt a sharp twist of anxiety. Maybe this was more than a domestic threat, ugly as they were. Perhaps it was something Pitt should know about. Except that he was not with the police anymore. And she did not really know what Special Branch did, except that it was secret, and she got to hear a great deal less about Pitt's work than she used to when it was the ordinary sort of crime that was written in the newspapers for anyone to read.

Whatever had happened to Martin, it was up to her to find out, at least for now. She took a sip of tea to give herself time to think.

"Did yer speak to anyone else 'ceptin' the butler?" she said finally.

Tilda nodded. "Yeah. I asked the bootboy, 'cos bootboys often gets ter see all sorts, and they're too cheeky, most of 'em, not ter tell yer. They don't get listened to much, so they got ter make up fer it when they can." The momentary humor vanished from her face. "But 'e said as Martin just disappeared sudden. One day 'e were there, just like usual, the next day 'e weren't."

"But 'e lives in, don't 'e?" Gracie said, puzzled.

"Yeah, course 'e does! 'E's Mr. Stephen Garrick's valet. Does everythin' for 'im, 'e does. Mr. Stephen swears by 'im."

Gracie took a deep breath. This was too serious for allowing kindness to overrule honesty. "Could Mr. Garrick 'ave lost his temper over summink and dismissed 'im, and Martin been too ashamed ter tell yer until 'e finds another position?" She hated suggesting such a thing, and she saw from the crumpled look in Tilda's face how much the idea hurt.

"No!" Tilda shook her head fiercely. "No! Martin wouldn't never do nothin' ter get 'isself dismissed. An' Mr. Garrick leans on 'im. I mean fer real, not jus' ter tie 'is cravats an' keep 'is clothes nice." Her hands were clenched, the buttered scones forgotten. " 'E looks after 'im when 'e drinks too much or gets sick, or does summink daft. Yer can't jus' find someone else ter do that fer yer in a moment, like. It's... it's loyalty." She stared at Gracie with bright, frightened eyes, pleading to be understood and believed that loyalty was too precious not to extend both ways. It deserved better than to be discarded simply because one had the power to do so.

Gracie had no such faith in the honor of employers. She had worked for the Pitts since she was thirteen and had no personal experience of anybody else, but she knew enough stories of others not to be so happily naive.

"Did yer speak ter Mr. Garrick 'isself?" she asked.

Tilda was startled. "No, o' course I din't! Cor, Gracie, you in't half got a cheek! 'Ow'd I get speakin' ter Mr. Garrick?" Her voice rose in amazement. "It took all the nerve I got ter go an' ask Mr. Simms, an' 'e looked at me like I'd overstepped meself. 'E'd 'alf a mind ter send me packin', till 'e realized Martin were me brother. Yer gotter respec' family, like. That's only decent."

"Well, don't worry," Gracie said with determination. She had made up her mind. Pitt might be too busy with Special Branch things, but Tellman was not. He used to be Pitt's sergeant at Bow Street, and was now promoted. He had been in love with Gracie for some time, even though he was only just admitting it to himself now, and that with deep reluctance. She would tell him, and he would be able to make the proper enquiries and solve the case. And it was a case, Gracie acknowledged that. "I'll get it done for yer," she added, smiling across at Tilda with assurance. "I know someone as'll look at it proper, an' find the truth."

Tilda relaxed at last, and very tentatively smiled back. "Can yer really? I thought if there was anyone, it'd be you. Thanks ever so... I dunno wot ter say, 'ceptin' I really am grateful to yer."

Gracie felt embarrassed, and afraid she had promised too much. Of course Tellman would do it, but the answer might not be one that would bring Tilda any happiness. "I in't done nuffink yet!" she said, looking down and concentrating on finishing her tea. "But we'll get it sorted. Now yer'd better tell me everythin' 'bout Martin, all where 'e's worked an' things like that." She had no pencil or paper with her, but she had only just recently learned to read and write, so her memory was long trained in accuracy, as it had needed to be.

Tilda began the account, remembering details from the same necessity. When she was finished they went outside into the busy street and parted, Tilda to continue her errands, her head higher, her step brisker than before, Gracie to return to Keppel Street and ask Charlotte if she might have the evening off in order to find Tellman.

It was granted without hesitation.

GRACIE WAS FORTUNATE at the second attempt. Tellman was not at the Bow Street station, but she found him two blocks away in a public house having a pint of ale with a constable with whom he had been working. She stood just inside the entrance, her feet on the trampled sawdust, the smell of beer in the air and the noise of men's voices and clinking glasses all around her.

She had to look for several moments before she saw Tellman tucked away in the farthest corner, his head bent, staring somberly into his glass. The young man opposite him regarded him with deference. Since Pitt's departure Tellman was a senior officer, although it still sat uneasily on him. He knew more than almost anyone else of the truth about the way Pitt had been plotted against, and who was responsible. He loathed the man who had replaced him, and more seriously than that, he also distrusted him. All his experience since Wetron's arrival had indicated that he had motives and ambitions that were far from the simple success of solving crime. It was even possible that Wetron aimed as high as taking over leadership of the terrible secret organization of the Inner Circle.

Gracie knew that both Mr. Pitt and Tellman feared that, but she had only overheard it and did not dare to speak of it openly to either of them. She looked across at Tellman now and wondered how heavily that weighed upon him. She could see in him none of the ease he had had when working with Pitt, even if he would never have admitted to it.

She made her way through the crowd towards him, elbowing her way between men all but oblivious of her, pushing and poking to make them step aside, and she was almost at Tellman's seat before he looked up and saw her. His face filled with alarm, as if she could only bring bad news.

"Gracie? What is it?" He rose to his feet automatically, but ignored his companion, not seeing any need to introduce them.

She had rather hoped to approach the subject obliquely, and that he would be pleased to see her, but she had to admit to herself that in the past she had only sought him out without invitation when she had needed his help. When it was purely personal she had waited for him to speak first. After all, to begin with she had been unwilling to offer him anything more than a rather impatient friendship. He was a dozen years older than she and firmly entrenched in his beliefs, which in most cases were contrary to hers. He passionately disapproved of being in service-it offended all his principles of social justice-whereas she saw it as an honorable way to earn a living and a very comfortable day-to-day existence. She felt no subservience and was impatient with his prickly and unrealistic pride.

She forced herself to be more polite now than she felt. She was speaking to him in front of his junior and she should treat him with respect.

"I come for yer advice," she said meekly. "If yer can spare me 'alf an hour or so."

He was startled by her unusual courtesy, and only after a moment realized it was for the constable's benefit. His lean face softened with an unusual touch of humor. "I'm sure I could do that. Is Mrs. Pitt all right?" It was not good manners that made him ask-he cared profoundly. Pitt and Charlotte were as close to him as anyone he knew. He was a stiff, proud, and lonely man, and friendship did not come easily to him. He had resented Pitt when they first met. Pitt had been promoted to a position Tellman felt was only suitable for gentlemen, or those who had served in the army or navy. The son of a gamekeeper had no qualifications for command, and for men like Tellman to be expected to call them "sir" and offer them the deference of position stuck in his throat. Pitt had won his respect only a step at a time, but once earned it was a loyalty as deep as a bond of blood.

"Well, this isn't a right place for you," Tellman said, regarding Gracie with a slight frown. "I'll walk you to the omnibus, and you can tell me what it's about." He turned to the constable. "See you in the morning, Hotchkiss."

Hotchkiss stood up obediently. "Yes, sir. Good night, sir. Good night, miss."

"Good night, Constable," Gracie replied, then turned to Tellman as he moved past her and led the way, parting the crowd for her. She followed him out of the door onto the pavement, where they were now alone. "It matters, or I wouldn't 'a bothered yer," she said gravely. "There's someone as is missing."

He offered her his arm, and impatiently she took it, then found to her surprise that it was rather pleasant. She noticed that he shortened his step to make it easier for her to match stride with him. She smiled, then realized he had seen it, and became instantly sober again. It would not do to let him know it mattered. "It's me friend, Tilda Garvie," she said in a businesslike tone. " 'Er brother Martin 'as gone from the 'ouse 'e works in. Said nothin' to 'er, nor to no one else, just gone. Three days now."

Tellman pursed his lips, his face dark, brows drawn together. He walked with his shoulders a little hunched as if his muscles were tight. It was a fine evening, but the lamps were lit and the wind gusting up from the river smelled damp. The street was quiet, just one carriage in the distance, turning the corner away from them, and in the other direction a couple of men arguing good-naturedly.

"People leave jobs," Tellman said cautiously. "More likely he was dismissed. Could be a lot of reasons, not necessarily his fault."

" 'E'd 'ave told 'er!" Gracie said quickly. "It were 'er birthday, an' 'e never sent 'er a card nor flowers nor nothin'."

"People forget birthdays," he dismissed it. "Even when there's nothing wrong, let alone if they're out of a job and a roof over their heads!" he argued, his voice impatient.

She knew he was angry with the injustice of the dependence, not with her, but it still irritated her, perhaps because she did not want it to be true, and there was a whisper of fear at the back of her mind. She was not prepared to hear a policeman's view of it.

" 'E's never forgotten 'er birthday before," she retorted, keeping up with him with an effort. He was unaware that he was walking more rapidly. "Never ever, since 'e were eight years old!" she added.

"Perhaps he'd never been thrown out of a job before," he pointed out.

"If 'e were thrown out, why didn't the butler say so?" she countered, still holding on to his arm.

"Probably because household matters like that were none of his business," he answered. "A good butler wouldn't discuss domestic unpleasantness with an outsider. Surely you know that even better than I do?" He shot a sideways glance at her, a very slight twist to his lips, as if it were a question. They had argued about the dependence of a servant upon pleasing a master or mistress, and how fragile was the safety of the warmth, the food, the roof over their heads.

"I know wot yer talkin' about!" Gracie said crossly, pulling her arm away from his. "An' I'm sick o' tellin' yer that it in't always like that! O' course there's bad 'ouses an' bad people in 'em. But there's good 'ouses too. Can yer see Mrs. Pitt ever puttin' me out inter the street 'cos I overslept or was cheeky an' answered back... or anythin' else, for that matter?" Her voice rang with challenge. "You daresay as yer could, an' I'll make yer wish yer'd never opened yer mouth!"

"Of course not!" he retorted, and stopping abruptly, pulled her over to the side of the pavement near the wall and away from the two men now walking towards them. "But that's different. If Martin left the Garrick house, then it was for a reason. He was obliged to or he chose to. Either way, it's not a police matter, unless the Garricks place a charge against him. And I imagine that's the last thing Tilda wants?"

"A charge o' wot?" she said furiously. " 'E in't done nothin'! 'E's just disappeared-don't you listen ter nothin' I say? Nobody knows where 'e is!"

"No," he corrected. "Tilda doesn't know where he is."

"The butler don't know neither!" she said exasperatedly. "Nor the bootboy!"

"The butler isn't telling Tilda, and why on earth should the bootboy know?" he said reasonably.

She was beginning to feel a kind of desperation. She did not want to quarrel with Tellman but she was on the brink of it and could not help herself. They were on the corner of the main thoroughfare now and the noise in the street rumbled past them, wheels, hooves, voices. People passed back and forth, one man so close as to brush Gracie's back. Tilda's fear had caught hold of her and she was losing her ability to think without panic overtaking her.

" 'Cos bootboys see an' 'ear lots o' things!" she snapped at him. "Don't yer learn nothin' questionin' people? You bin on crimes in big 'ouses often enough! Yer've listened ter Mr. Pitt, 'aven't yer? Does 'e ever ignore people just 'cos they work in the scullery or the pantry? People notice things, yer know; they got eyes an' ears!"

He kept his patience with an effort she could see even in the lamplight, and she knew he did it only because he cared for her. Somehow that made it more annoying because it was a moral pressure, a kind of obligation to respect him when inside she was bursting to shout.

"I know that, Gracie," he said levelly. "I've questioned plenty of servants myself. And the fact that the bootboy doesn't know there is anything wrong is very good evidence that there probably isn't. Martin might have been dismissed and left, and if that is so, maybe he didn't want his sister to hear about it until he found another place." He sounded eminently reasonable. "He's trying not to worry her... or perhaps he's ashamed? Maybe he was dismissed for something embarrassing, some kind of mistake. It would be only natural he wouldn't want his family to know about it."

"Then why don't 'e send 'er a card or a letter for 'er birthday from somewhere else?" she challenged, pulling farther away from him and staring up into his eyes. " 'E din't do that, so she's gonna worry twice as much!"

"If he lost his position, and his bed and board at the same time," he replied, keeping his voice unnaturally calm, "then I daresay he had more pressing things on his mind, like where to sleep and what to eat! He wouldn't have remembered what day it was."

"Then if 'e's in that much trouble she's right ter be worried-in't she?" she said triumphantly.

Tellman let out his breath in a long sigh. "Worried, yes, but calling in the police, definitely not."

Gracie clenched her fists by her sides in an effort to hang on to the last shred of her temper. "She in't callin' in the police, Samuel! She told me, an' I'm askin' you. You in't police, yer me friend. Leastways, I thought yer was. I'm askin' yer 'elp, not tryin' ter start a case."

"What do you expect me to do?" His voice rose in indignation at the sheer unreasonableness of it.

She bit back her response with a mighty effort and forced herself to smile at him with the utmost sweetness. "Thank yer," she said charmingly. "I knew yer'd 'elp, when yer understood. Yer could start by askin' Mr. Garrick 'isself where Martin is. Yer don't 'ave ter say why, o' course. Mebbe 'e were a witness?"

"To what?" His eyebrows shot up in disbelief.

She ignored it. "I dunno! Think o' summink!"

"I can't use police authority to go and question someone over something I invented!" He looked offended, as if his morality had been insulted.

"Oh, don' be so... so..." She was almost lost for words. She loved him as he was, stiff, awkward, full of indignation, covering his compassion with regulations and habit, the rigidity he had been taught, but sometimes he infuriated her beyond endurance, and this was one of those times. "Can't yer see beyond the end o' yer nose?" she demanded. "Sometimes I think yer brain is shut inside yer book o' rules! Can't yer see that lives, feelin's, wot's inside people's wot matters?" She drew in breath and went on. "People are 'eart an' blood, an'... an' mistakes an' things. An' dreams! Tilda needs ter find wot 'appened to 'im... an' that's real!"

His face hardened. He clung on to what he understood. "If you break the rules, in the end they'll break you," he said stubbornly, and in that instant she knew she had lost him. He had made a statement he could not go back on. He was right as he saw it, and she understood more than she could now admit. She had been unfair, forgetting he was working for Wetron now, not Pitt, and there would be no latitude granted him for anything. He had already risked his job once to save her and Charlotte and the children, and done it without thought of himself. Another day, when she was not so angry, and when it would not look like either apology or trying to win him back, she would tell him so. Just at the moment her thoughts were centered on Tilda and what had happened to her brother.

"Well, if yer won't 'elp 'er, I'll 'ave ter do it misself!" she said at last, swinging around to move a step away from him. She could not think of anything cutting and final to say, which was very frustrating. All she could do was stand and stare for a moment, as if she were about to deliver the final blow, then let out a sigh and leave.

"No, you won't!" Tellman said abruptly. "You'll do nothing of the sort!"

She spun around to face him again. "Don't you tell me wot ter do, Samuel Tellman! I'll do wot I 'ave ter, an' you don't 'ave nothin' ter say about it!" she shouted, but she felt so much better that he had responded.

"Gracie!" He took a long stride after her as if he would reach out and grasp her arm.

She shrugged exaggeratedly and did a little skip to elude him, and then walked as quickly as she could without looking back, mostly because she wanted to think he was staring after her, perhaps even following her, and she did not want to find out that he was not.

When she reached Keppel Street and went in through the scullery to the kitchen, she was still just clinging on to anger, but unhappiness had almost drowned it out. She had not handled the encounter with Tellman well. Even if she could not have persuaded him to investigate Martin Garvie's disappearance, and just possibly he had something of an honest reason for not doing so, at least she could have behaved so that they parted friends. Now she had no idea how to retrace it so she could speak openly to him next time they met. It was amazing how sharply that hurt her. She had not expected it to matter as deeply as it did. One day quite soon she was going to have to face the fact that she cared for him very much.

Fortunately there was no one else in the kitchen, so she could blow her nose and wash her face quickly, and then try to look as if nothing were wrong. She had the kettle on when Charlotte came in.

"Would yer like a cup o' tea?" she asked almost cheerfully.

"Yes, please," Charlotte accepted, in spite of the fact that it was only half past six. She sat down at the table and made herself comfortable. "What's wrong?" she asked, waiting motionlessly as if demanding an answer.

Gracie hesitated for a moment, debating whether to say that there was nothing wrong or to tell her at least part of it-the bit about Martin Garvie. She had not realized that Charlotte could read her so well. That too was a little disconcerting. And yet they had known each other for so long that if Charlotte had not ever hurt her, it would mean she did not care, and that would have been worse.

"Saw Tilda Garvie this mornin'," she replied, banging the lid onto the tea caddy unnecessarily hard and keeping her back to the table. "She in't seen 'er brother fer days, an' she's real worried summink's wrong."

"What sort of something?" Charlotte asked.

The kettle began to whistle and Gracie put her hand around the pot holder as she lifted it off the hob. She scalded the teapot, pouring the water down the sink, then put the leaves in and filled it from the kettle. She could no longer find any excuse for not sitting down, so she did so stiffly, avoiding meeting Charlotte's eyes.

" 'E in't livin' in the 'ouse in Torrington Square where 'e worked," she answered, "an' the butler says 'e don't work there no more, but 'e din't tell 'er wot 'appened or where 'e went." She had not intended to look at Charlotte, but suddenly the reality of Martin's situation outweighed her own pride. "An' if things was all right 'e wouldn't do that, 'cos they're real close," she went on hurriedly. "They got nob'dy else. Wotever'd 'appened, 'e'd 'a told 'er, 'specially since 'e missed 'er birthday, an' 'e in't never ever done that before."

Charlotte frowned. "What did he do at the house in Torrington Square?"

"Valet ter Mr. Stephen Garrick," Gracie replied immediately. " 'E weren't just a footman or the like. An' Tilda said Mr. Garrick relied on 'im. I know people can get throwed out easy enough if they do summink daft, or even if it jus' looks like they did, but why couldn't 'e 'a said summink ter Tilda? Just ter keep 'er from worryin'."

"I don't know," Charlotte said thoughtfully. She reached over and poured the tea for both of them, then replaced the pot on the trivet. "It does sound as if he was very distressed about something, or he would surely have told her he was moving. He may even have found a better position. Can Tilda read?"

Gracie looked up, startled.

"Well, it would be harder to send her a letter if she can't," Charlotte reasoned. "Although I suppose somebody would read it for her."

Gracie felt the sinking feeling inside her grow worse. She was hollow, and yet the thought of eating was repellent. She sipped her tea, and its hot sweetness slid down her throat and made no difference.

"What else?" Charlotte asked gently.

Gracie still hesitated. There was a kind of comfort in being so well understood, but she was still embarrassed to have been so incompetent in dealing with Tellman. It was made worse by the fact that she had always done it so well before. Charlotte would expect better of her than this. She would be disappointed in her. Women were supposed to be cleverer than she had been. She sipped her tea again. It was really too hot. She should have waited.

"Did you learn something else?" Charlotte pressed.

That was easy to answer. "Not really. Even when she told the butler as she was 'is sister, 'e din't tell 'er wot 'appened, nor where 'e'd gone."

Charlotte looked down at the table. "Mr. Pitt isn't in the police anymore. Perhaps we should ask Mr. Tellman and see if he can help."

The heat burned up Gracie's cheeks. There was no escape. "I already asked 'im," she said miserably, looking down at the table-top. " 'E says as there in't nothin' 'e can do, 'cos Martin's got a right ter come an' go without tellin' 'is sister. It in't no crime."

"Oh." Charlotte sat silently for several moments. Carefully she tried her tea and found it just cool enough to drink. "Then we'll have to do something ourselves," she said at last. "Tell me everything you know about Tilda and Martin, and about the Garrick house in Torrington Square."

Gracie felt like a lost sailor who finally sees land on the horizon. There was something they could do. Obediently she told Charlotte the facts of her acquaintance with Tilda, picking out what mattered: her honesty, her stubbornness, the memories of childhood she had spoken about, her dreams of her own family one day, and the things she had shared with her brother over the lonely years of growing up.

Charlotte listened without interrupting, and in the end nodded. "I think you are right to worry," she agreed. "We need to know where he is and if he is all right. And if he is without a position and is too embarrassed by that to have told his sister, then we must make sure she understands, and then if possible, help him to obtain something else. I suppose you have no idea if he is likely to have done something foolish?"

"I dunno," Gracie admitted. "Tilda wouldn't do nothin' daft, but that don't mean 'e's the same. She thinks 'e is-but then she would."

"It is very hard to think ill of our own," Charlotte agreed.

Gracie looked up at her, eyes wide. "What are we gonna do?"

"You are going to tell Tilda that we'll help," Charlotte answered. "I shall begin to make enquiries about the Garrick household. Stephen Garrick at least will know what happened, even if he does not know where Martin Garvie is right now."

"Thank yer," Gracie said very seriously. "Thank yer very much."

ON THE FOURTH DAY after the murder of Edwin Lovat was discovered, the newspapers openly demanded the arrest, at least for questioning, of Saville Ryerson. He was known to have been on the premises at the time, and the writer of the article did not need to do more than ask what business he would have had there to suggest the answer.

Pitt sat at the breakfast table, tight-lipped, his face pale. Charlotte did not make any comment or otherwise interrupt what was obviously a painful train of thought. The defense of Ryerson which Mr. Gladstone had commanded was becoming more and more difficult. She watched him discreetly, and wished there were some way to offer comfort. But if she were honest, she believed Ryerson was guilty, if not of the crime, then at least of attempting to conceal it. Had someone not called the police, he would have removed the body from where the murder took place and done all he could to obscure the evidence. That was a crime. No ability to solve the cotton industry problems in Manchester could justify that-in fact, there was no stretch of the imagination which could connect it at all with his keeping of a mistress in Eden Lodge. It was a private weakness, an indulgence for which he would now have to pay very heavily indeed.

She looked at the anxiety in Pitt's face and a wave of anger swept over her that he should be expected to carry the responsibility for rescuing a man from his own folly, and then blamed because he could not do what any fool could see was impossible. He was being coerced into trying to evade a truth which it was both his duty and his own moral need to expose. For years they had used him to do that; now they had forced him into the position of denying the very values which had made him honorable before.

He looked up quickly and caught her glance.

"What?" he asked.

She smiled. "Nothing. I'm going to see Emily this morning. I know Grandmama will be there, and I haven't really managed to speak to her without embarrassment ever since Mama learned about... what happened to her." She still found it uncomfortable to speak of... even to Pitt. "It is more than time I did so," she went on hastily. She had arranged the visit over the telephone the previous evening, after speaking with Gracie. Pitt had a telephone because of his professional need for it, and Emily had one because she could afford pretty well anything she cared for.

The shadow of a smile crossed Pitt's face for an instant. He was long acquainted with Charlotte's grandmother and knew her temper of old.

Charlotte said no more about it, and when Pitt left, without letting her know what he hoped to seek or to find that day, she went upstairs and changed into her best morning gown. She did not follow fashion-it was far beyond her financial means, the more so since Pitt had been demoted from being in charge of Bow Street to working for Special Branch-but a well-cut gown in a color that was flattering had a dignity no one could rob from her. She chose a warm, autumn shade to complement her auburn-toned hair and honey-fair complexion. The gown had not the current high-shouldered sleeves, but the almost nonexistent bustle was just right.

It was not an occasion for the omnibus, so she took the price of a hansom out of the housekeeping money, and arrived at Emily's opulent town house at quarter past ten.

She was shown in by a parlor maid who knew her well and conducted her immediately to Emily's boudoir-that private sitting room wealthy ladies kept for the entertaining of close friends.

Emily was waiting for her, dressed as always with the utmost elegance, in her favorite pale green which so suited her fair coloring. She stood up as soon as Charlotte was in the room, excitement in her face, her eyes bright. She came forward and gave Charlotte a quick kiss, then stood back. "So what has happened?" she demanded. "You said it was important. It sounds terribly heartless of me to put it into words, I know, when it was a real blow to Thomas, and so unjust, but I really mind his leaving Bow Street. I've no idea what cases he has now, but they all seem to be secret." She stepped back and waved to Charlotte to be seated in one of the soft, floral-fabric-covered chairs. "I'm bored to tears with society, and even politics seems terribly tedious at the moment," she went on, sweeping her skirts tidily and sitting down herself. "There isn't even a decent scandal, except the one about the Egyptian woman." She leaned forward, her face vivid. "Did you know that the newspapers are demanding that Saville Ryerson be arrested as well? Isn't that absurd?" Her eyes searched Charlotte's face questioningly. "I suppose Thomas would have been working on that if he were still at Bow Street. Perhaps it's just as well he isn't. I wouldn't like the untangling of that affair!"

"I'm afraid my case is very pedestrian," Charlotte said, trying to keep her face comparatively expressionless. She could not afford to be sidetracked now, even by the most colorful of scandals. She sat back in the chair. The room was gold and green and there were late yellow roses and earthy-smelling chrysanthemums in a dark green vase on the table. For an instant she was taken back to the house she had grown up in, the comfort and the ignorance of the shadows and poverty in the larger world beyond.

Then the moment passed.

"So what is it?" Emily asked, folding her hands in her lap and paying complete attention. "Give me something to occupy my mind with other than trivia. I am bored to tears with talk about things that don't matter." She smiled with faint self-mockery. "I am afraid my social shallowness is passing. Isn't that alarming? The pursuit of pleasure isn't fun anymore. It is like too much chocolate souffle, which a few years ago I wouldn't have believed possible."

"Then let me offer you something much more ordinary," Charlotte replied.

She was about to explain the situation when there was a sharp rap on the door, as with the head of a walking stick, and a moment later the door flew open and a short, fierce old woman stood on the threshold. She was dressed in plum and black, and her expression was one of undisguised outrage, although she did not seem to know whether to direct it at Emily or at Charlotte.

Perhaps it had been inevitable. Charlotte rose to her feet and with a mighty effort forced herself to smile. "Good morning, Grandmama," she said, going over to the old lady. "You look very well."

"Don't assume how I am, young woman!" the old lady snapped. "You haven't called on me in months! How could you know? You have no feelings, no sense of duty at all. Ever since you married that police person you have lost all sense of decency."

Charlotte's resolution to be polite died an instant death. "You have changed your mind, then!" she retorted.

The old lady was nonplussed. It annoyed her still more. "I don't know what you mean. Why can't you speak clearly? You used to be able to. It must be the company you keep." She glared at her other granddaughter. "Are you going to invite me to sit down, Emily? Or have you lost all your manners as well?"

"You are always welcome to sit down, Grandmama," Emily said with veiled patience. "Surely you know that?"

The old lady sat down heavily in the third chair, balancing her cane in front of her. She turned to Charlotte. "What do you mean, changed my mind? I don't change my mind!"

"You said I have lost my sense of decency," Charlotte replied.

"So you have!" the old lady said tartly. "No change in that!"

Charlotte smiled at her. "You used to say I never had any."

"Are you going to allow me to be insulted?" the old lady demanded of Emily.

"I think it is Charlotte who was insulted, Grandmama," Emily pointed out, but now there was a smile hovering around her lips and she was having trouble concealing it.

The old lady grunted. "Well, if she was insulted, no doubt she looked for it. Who insulted her? She mixes with a very low class of person. I daresay it is all she can aspire to. Comes of marrying beneath her. I always said it would lead to trouble. I told you-but would you listen to me? Of course not. Well, now you see what happens? Although what you expect Emily to do about it, I'm sure I don't know."

Charlotte started to laugh, and after a moment's hesitation Emily joined in.

The old lady had no idea what was funny, but she certainly was not going to admit it. She considered what to do for several seconds, then decided she had least to lose by joining in, which she did. It was a curious, rusty sound, one that even Emily, in whose house the old woman lived, had not heard in years.

She remained for another ten minutes or so, then in spite of the fact that she was desperately inquisitive as to why Charlotte had called, she dragged herself to her feet and stumped out. It was apparent that no one was going to tell her, and she would not sacrifice her dignity to ask.

As soon as the door was closed behind her, Emily leaned forward. "So?" she asked. "What is this more ordinary problem that has engaged you?"

"Gracie has a friend, Tilda Garvie," Charlotte began. "Her brother, Martin, is valet to Stephen Garrick, living in Torrington Square. Tilda and Martin are very close, being orphans since the ages of six and eight, respectively."

"Yes?" Emily's eyes were wide.

"Martin has not been seen for four days now, and according to Garrick's butler, is no longer in the house, but he would not tell Tilda where Martin has gone, nor why."

"A missing valet?" There was no inflection in Emily's voice to betray her emotions.

"A missing brother," Charlotte corrected. "More significant than his mere absence is the fact that it was over the time of Tilda's birthday, which he has never previously forgotten. If he had lost his position, and thus his lodging, even if the circumstances were embarrassing or disgraceful, surely he would have found a way to convey to her his whereabouts?"

"What do you suspect?" Emily frowned. "Have the Garricks reported him missing?"

"I don't know," Charlotte said impatiently. "I can hardly go to the nearest police station and ask them. But if they had, then why did they not tell Tilda so, just in case she knew where he was?"

"It would seem the intelligent thing to do," Emily agreed. "But people are not always as clever as you would suppose. The most surprising people lack ordinary sense. What other possibilities are there?" She held up her fingers. "He was dismissed for dishonesty? He ran off with a woman, one of the maids from another household? He ran off with someone's daughter, or worse, someone's wife? Or a prostitute?" She started on the other hand. "He is in debt and has to hide from his debtors? Or worst of all, he met with an accident, or was attacked on purpose, and is dead somewhere but has not been identified?"

Charlotte had already thought of most of those answers, especially the last. "Yes, I know," she said quietly. "I would like to find out which of them is the truth, for Tilda's sake... and Gracie's. I think she quarreled with Inspector Tellman over it because he said it wasn't a case, so he couldn't look into it."

"Inspector? Oh... yes." Emily's expression quickened with interest. "How is that romance going? Will she relent and marry him, do you think? What will you do without her? Look for a good maid already trained, or start again with another child? You can't! Can you?"

"I don't know whether she will or not," Charlotte said ruefully. "I rather think so... I hope so, because he is so much in love with her, and he is beginning to realize it slowly, and with great reluctance. And I have no idea what I shall do without her. I don't even want to think of it. I have had more changes than I wish to already."

Emily's sympathy was instant and genuine. "I know," she said softly. "I'm so sorry. It was much more fun in the old days, when we helped Thomas with his cases-our cases-wasn't it?"

Charlotte bit her lip, half to hide a smile, half so the sharpness of it would recall her to the present. "I need to find out all I can about Stephen Garrick," she said firmly. "Sufficient so I can either discover indirectly what happened to Martin Garvie or, if necessary, just ask him."

"I'll help you," Emily said without hesitation. "What do you know about the Garricks?"

"Nothing, except where they live, and even that only approximately."

Emily rose to her feet. "Then we need to begin by enquiring." She looked Charlotte up and down with more or less approval. "You are ready to go calling, except you will need a better hat. I'll get you one of mine. I'll be ready in fifteen minutes..." She reconsidered. "Or perhaps half an hour."

They set off actually almost an hour later in Emily's carriage, first to call upon a friend close enough so they could be fairly open in asking questions.

"No, he's not married," Mrs. Edsel said rather seriously. She was a pleasant, rather ordinary-looking woman, distinguished only by a lively expression and an unfortunate taste in earrings. "Is someone you know considering him?"

"I rather think so," Emily lied with practiced social ease. She was used to the accommodations of good manners. "Should she not?"

"Well, there's plenty of money, I believe." Mrs. Edsel leaned forward a little, her face eager. Gossip was food and drink to her, but she also genuinely wished to be helpful. "A very good family. His father, Ferdinand Garrick, is a highly influential man. Excellent military record, so my husband says."

"So why would his son not be a good match?" Emily asked innocently.

"Perhaps for the right woman, he might be." Mrs. Edsel remembered her social aspirations and became more circumspect.

"And for the wrong woman?" Charlotte could contain herself no longer.

Mrs. Edsel regarded her with a shadow of suspicion. She knew Emily, but Charlotte was a stranger, and neither her possible use nor her danger was known.

A shadow of warning crossed Emily's face, and of criticism for having interrupted.

There was no way to take it back. Charlotte made herself smile, and it felt a bit like the baring of teeth. "I am concerned for a friend," she said with perfect honesty. Despite their differing stations, Gracie was most certainly a friend; few others were as good.

Mrs. Edsel eased a fraction. "Is your friend young?" she enquired.

"Yes." Charlotte guessed this was the correct answer.

"Then I think she would be wiser to look elsewhere-unless she is very plain."

This time Charlotte held her tongue.

"What is his fault?" Emily asked with extraordinary boldness. "Does he have disreputable friends? Who might know him?"

"Oh, really..." Mrs. Edsel was now torn between anxiety at committing an irretrievable indiscretion, and a burning curiosity. "He belongs to the usual clubs, I've heard," she went on. That remark was surely safe enough.

"Does he?" Emily opened her blue eyes very wide. "I cannot recall my husband mentioning him. Perhaps I simply did not notice."

"I am sure he is a member of Whites," Mrs. Edsel assured her. "And that is just about the best."

"Indeed," Emily agreed.

"Anyone who is anyone..." Charlotte murmured sententiously.

Mrs. Edsel gave a little gasp, and then a giggle, quickly stifled. "To be honest, I really don't know. But my husband says he drinks a good deal more than he can hold... rather often. It is not a gross fault, I know, but I don't care for it myself. And he is somewhat morose of temperament. I find that most difficult. I prefer a man of reliable demeanor."

"So do I." Emily nodded, avoiding Charlotte's eyes in case she should laugh, knowing what a lie that was. It sounded unutterably boring.

"And I!" Charlotte added with feeling as Mrs. Edsel looked to her for approval. "Indeed, if you are going to spend some time with a person, it is essential. One cannot be forever wondering what to expect."

"You are quite right," Mrs. Edsel said with a smile. "I hope you do not think I am forward, but I would advise your friend most decidedly to wait a few months longer. Is it her first season?"

Charlotte and Emily said yes and no at the same moment, but Mrs. Edsel was looking at Charlotte.

For the next half hour or so they spoke agreeably of the difficulty of making a suitable marriage and how glad they all were to be fortunately placed already, but not yet faced with the duty of finding husbands for their daughters. Charlotte had to work very hard, scrambling in her memory for the right things to say. It was also a balancing act worthy of a circus performer not to give away Pitt's socially unacceptable occupation. However, possibly "Special Branch" would sound better than "policeman," but she was not supposed to speak of it. It hurt her pride to pretend complete ignorance, and in these enlightened days even Mrs. Edsel was startled at such feminine simplicity.

As soon as they were back in the carriage Emily burst into such laughter she gave herself hiccups. Charlotte did not know whether to laugh back or explode with temper.

"Laugh!" Emily commanded as the driver urged the horses forward and they proceeded towards the next appointment. "You were magnificent, and totally absurd! Thomas would never let you forget it, if he knew."

"Well, he doesn't know!" Charlotte said warningly.

Emily leaned comfortably against the padded back of the carriage seat, still smiling to herself. "I think you should tell him... except you probably couldn't do it well. I should do it, really."

"Emily!"

"Oh, please!" That was not a request so much as a remonstration for meanness of spirit. "I am sure he would appreciate a joke-and this really is one!"

Charlotte had to admit that was true. "Well, choose your time wisely. He has a miserable case at the moment."

"Can we help?" Emily said instantly, her attention totally serious again.

"No!" Charlotte replied firmly. "At least not yet. Anyway, we need to find Martin Garvie."

"We will," Emily assured her confidently. "We are going to luncheon with just the person. I arranged it while I was dressing."

THE PERSON PROVED to be a young protege of Emily's husband, Jack. He was confident, ambitious, and delighted to be taken to luncheon by his mentor's wife. And since her sister was present, it was as correct as could be.

To begin with, they conversed about all manner of things of general interest. It was acceptable to speak of the ugly situation in Manchester regarding the cotton workers, and from that everyone's mind moved quite naturally to the murder of Edwin Lovat, because of the connection with Ryerson, although no one actually spoke of it.

The waiter brought them the first course of their excellent luncheon, a delicate Belgian pate for Mr. Jamieson, a clear soup for Charlotte and Emily.

Emily did not waste any more time, knowing that Jamieson would have to return to his duties soon. She could trespass only so much.

"This is an enquiry for a very secret department of the government," Emily began shamelessly, having kicked Charlotte under the table to warn her to show no surprise, and certainly not to argue. "My sister"-she glanced at Charlotte-"has made me aware of a way in which I can help, in the utmost confidence, you understand?"

"Yes, Mrs. Radley," Jamieson said gravely.

"A young man's life may depend upon it," Emily warned. "In fact, he may already be dead, but we hope profoundly that he is not." She ignored his look of alarm. "Mr. Radley tells me that you are a member of White's. Is that correct?"

"Yes, yes I am. Surely there is no-"

"No, of course not," Emily assured him hastily. "There is no question of White's being involved." She leaned a little towards him, ignoring her soup, her face intent with concentration. "I had better be candid with you, Mr. Jamieson..."

He leaned forward also, his eyes wide. "I promise, Mrs. Radley, that I shall hold it in the most total confidence... from everyone."

"Thank you."

The waiter returned to take away their dishes and serve the entree-poached fish for the ladies, roast beef for Jamieson.

As soon as he had gone Charlotte drew in her breath, and felt Emily's foot tap her ankle. She winced very slightly.

"I believe a young man named Stephen Garrick could give us information which would help," she said.

Jamieson frowned, but he did not look as puzzled or as surprised as she would have expected. "I'm sorry to hear that," he said quietly. "We all knew there was something wrong."

"How did you know?" Charlotte urged, trying to suppress the eagerness in her voice, and the edge of fear she knew was there.

He looked at her frankly. He had wide, clear blue eyes. "He drank far too much for pleasure," he answered. "It was as if he were trying to drown out something inside himself." There was pity in his expression. "At first I thought it was just overindulgence, as anyone might, you know? Keeping up, not wanting to be the first to cry off. But then I began to realize it was more than that. It made him ill, but still he went on. And... he drank alone, as well as with company."

"I see," Emily acknowledged. "There is apparently something that causes him great pain. I presume from the fact that you do not mention it that you do not know what it is."

"No." He shrugged very slightly. "And honestly I don't know how I could find out. I haven't seen him for several days, and the last time I did, he was in no condition to answer anything sensibly. I... I'm sorry." It was not clear if his apology was for his inability, or for having spoken to them of such a distasteful subject.

"But you do know him?" Charlotte pressed. "I mean, you have his acquaintance?"

Jamieson looked doubtful, as if he sensed in advance what she would ask. "Yes," he admitted guardedly. "Er... not well. I'm not one of his..." He stopped.

"What?" Emily demanded.

Jamieson looked back at her. She sat straight-backed, like Great-Aunt Vespasia, smiling at him expectantly, her head beautifully poised.

"One of his circle," Jamieson finished unhappily.

"But you can enquire," Emily stated.

"Yes," he said reluctantly. "Yes, of course."

"Good." Emily was relentless. "There is great danger. Even a short time may be too late. Can you call upon him this evening?"

"Is it really... so..." Jamieson was not sure if he was excited or alarmed.

"Oh, yes," Emily assured him.

Jamieson swallowed a mouthful of beef and roast potato. "Very well. How shall I tell you what I learn?"

"Telephone," Emily said immediately. She pulled out a card from the tiny silver engraved case in her reticule. "My number is on it. Please do not speak to anyone but me... not anyone at all. Do you understand?"

"Yes, Mrs. Radley, of course."

CHARLOTTE THANKED EMILY with profound sincerity and accepted the offered ride home in the carriage. At half past eight, when she and Pitt were sitting in the parlor, the telephone rang. Pitt answered it.

"It is Emily, for you," he said from the doorway.

Charlotte went into the hall and took the instrument. "Yes?"

"Stephen Garrick is not at home." Emily's voice was strange and a little tinny over the wires. "No one has seen him for several days, and the butler says he could not inform Mr. Jamieson when he would return. Charlotte... it looks as if he has disappeared as well. What are we going to do?"

"I don't know." Charlotte found her hand shaking. "Not yet..."

"But we'll do something, won't we?" Emily said after a second. "It looks serious, doesn't it? I mean... more serious than a valet losing his job?"

"Yes," Charlotte said a little huskily. "Yes, it does."

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