176089.fb2 The body at the Tower - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 39

The body at the Tower - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 39

The footman licked his lips once, twice. Swallowed. Then said, "He ain't been himself, sir. Not since last night. And today he got a letter – round about noon, it'd be. And he's in his study, reading it, and he starts laughing. You heard it, sir – that high, loud laugh he was doing last night. And he's half-laughing, and half-crying, and Mrs Harkness here comes down to him and she asks what's wrong, and he says, 'Everything. Nothing. It is-'" The footman creased up his face, trying to recall. Eventually, he shook his head. "Don't rightly know what he said, sir – it were French, or something."

"Never mind that. What next?"

"And – and he says to Mrs Harkness, 'I can make this right. Just remember, my dear – I did this all for you.' And Mrs Harkness is asking what's the matter, and carrying on, like, but that's the last he says. And he picks up his hat and his walking-stick, and he walks out of the house. Just like that."

"He didn't say where he was going, or what he meant to do?"

"No, sir."

"In which direction did he walk?"

"South."

"You didn't follow him?"

The man shifted. "Mrs Harkness, she were screaming and carrying on, sir. We'd enough to do with her."

James nodded. "Very well. Does Mrs Harkness have a relation – a sister, perhaps – nearby who could come to help her?"

The footman nodded. "Mrs Phelps, sir. I'll go and fetch her this minute."

"Wait a moment. Stay with Mrs Harkness until the doctor comes, you and her maid both. Once the doctor's here, then fetch Mrs Phelps." The man nodded. He was accustomed to taking directions and, once instructed, showed something of a return to the footman's orderly manner. James turned to Mrs Harkness, who lay motionless and silent on the sofa. Her eyes were closed and she looked so still and calm James felt the need to touch her wrist. It was warm and her pulse, though rapid, was strong. "Madam. I'm going in search of your husband. I'll send word once I find him."

No response, not even a fluttering of the eyelids.

James's hat still hung neatly on a hook in the hall, and it seemed peculiar that it, of all things, was undisturbed and in the right place. Climbing back into the carriage, he touched his breast pocket and felt the reassuring presence of that foreign envelope. He didn't need to consider where Harkness might have gone in the seven hours he'd been absent. There was only one possible destination.

"Home, sir?" asked Barker, without much hope.

"No. St Stephen's Tower."

***

Jenkins was still suffering as a result of Keenan's thrashing: that was obvious to Mary, although he tried to deny it. The best pace he could manage was a steady walk that soon slowed to a hobble. It cost him enormous effort: he was sweating profusely, his complexion grey, trying to suppress a wince with each step.

"Almost there," said Mary encouragingly. "Aren't we?" While Jenkins hadn't asked how much she knew or why she was curious, it was still safest to play the role of sidekick for as long as she could.

He nodded grimly. "Just round the corner."

"Shall I go ahead and see? It's number nine, right?" This second visit to the Wicks was pure optimism on Mary's part. She doubted Reid was there, but for once she would be happy to be wrong.

He nodded. "Go on."

As she scanned the row of houses, a couple of curtains twitched: nosy neighbours, once again. But Wick's house had no curtains – and who washed curtains on a Sunday? – which gave the house an abandoned feel. The black crape bow was gone, its absence a vivid suggestion of how quickly a life could be forgotten.

"You moving in?"

Mary turned. A solemn, red-haired girl of about nine regarded her from the door of the house opposite. "Where?"

"There. Number nine."

"It's – empty?"

"They went this morning."

"Wasn't that quite sudden?"

"I seen them packing up, all night."

"Where did they go?"

She shrugged.

"Did the woman – Mrs Wick, that is – pack everything on her own? Or was there a man helping her?" There had to have been. Jane Wick was neither decisive nor quick-moving, by nature. Any sudden removal must have been at someone else's behest. The real question was, had Keenan or Reid moved the Wick family?

"Quinn! Quinn! What you doing?"

Both Mary and the girl jumped at this interruption: Peter Jenkins, of course, bearing down on them like a limping wolf. With a slight squeak of alarm, the girl promptly vanished into her house, the door thumping decisively behind her.

Mary sighed. "Jenkins."

"This ain't a time to muck about! Don't you understand?"

"I understand, Jenkins. That girl just told me that the Wicks moved out early this morning."

"That's rot! He'd have told me!"

Mary shrugged. "See for yourself. And after that, go back to your lodgings and see if your rent's been paid in advance, and how much."

Jenkins stared at her. "Why? What's it to you?"

She sighed. "If it's paid up, it means Reid knew he was going and he probably packed up the Wick family. If it's not paid up, it's likely Keenan got rid of them all, quick."

He stared at her, slow wonder blossoming in his face. "I – that – you – why, you ain't so stupid as you pretend!"

She half-smiled. "And when you've done that, come down to the building site. Hitch a ride on a cab, or something."

His eyes went even rounder. "Palace Yard?"

Mary nodded. "I've a feeling the real answer is there." Twenty-eight

Around Westminster the streets were dusky and deserted. There was little here on a Sunday to attract pleasure-seekers, and few residents to come and go. And in the unusual, magnified stillness of the place, the broad-shouldered man skulking in the shadows was highly noticeable. Mary stopped and tucked herself against a convenient pillar box the better to observe his progress. Yet she already knew where he was going.

The man was familiar – doubly so. That square head on those burly shoulders belonged to Keenan, she was certain. And not only that, but she now had an identity for the man who'd broken into the building site on Monday last. The man who'd rifled Harkness's office, chased her out into the street, and nearly caught her. He and Keenan were one and the same. And with that realization, she also understood why the theft hadn't been reported. If Harkness was working in cahoots with Keenan, it was part of their arrangement. If Harkness was trying to solve the problem of the site thefts, it was probably some sort of trap he'd laid. Either way, there was no use in involving the police. Not yet.

Mary watched, waiting for Keenan to plant his climbing-grip in the wooden fence. Tonight, however, he hesitated. Glanced about. Walked the length of the wooden fence with an air of suspicion. As he neared her hiding-spot not far from the corner, Mary readied herself to run. Her only chance of eluding Keenan was to gain a head start; large though he was, he was also swift. But he wasn't looking towards the street. His frown was concentrated on the fence – or rather, on something beyond. He turned back again, walked to the site entrance and examined the padlock. Then, with a quick glance over his shoulder, he simply lifted the latch and opened the gate.

Mary stared. He'd not used a key, which meant that the site was already unlocked. But that itself seemed impossible. Only Harkness – and perhaps the First Commissioner himself – would hold a key to the site. Unless…

The rumble of carriage wheels made her tense again. This time, however, the moment she recognized the driver, she relaxed. She couldn't say she was precisely glad to see Barker, but she was relieved not to be seeing someone else. The same was not true for him: as she stepped out of the shadow of the pillar box, his frown deepened until his eyes all but disappeared. The carriage rolled to a reluctant halt and he jumped down, nodding to her curtly. Unfolding the steps, he opened the door and offered his hand upwards with the solicitous gesture of a nurse to a child. "Mind your step, sir."