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A Stranger in Mayfair - Charles Finch [65]

By Root 856 0
to light the way between them, whispering, they went and lit the stove. Jane burrowed through the cabinets until she found a few bars of chocolate, brought back from Paris, and then looked in the iced crate below the cabinets to find the last of the day’s milk.

Meanwhile Lenox, taking a key from his pocket, opened the silver cabinet and took out that strange hybrid pot, with a short spout and a long wooden handle sticking out of its side (never its back), that it was customary to serve chocolate in. He poured the milk into a saucepan, and then they slowly melted the chocolate bars into it, one by one, until it was rich, dark, and fragrant. At the last he dropped a pinch of salt into the mixture and swirled it in.

“Isn’t this wonderful?” she whispered. “I forgot what it was like to sneak around—I used to be a terrible little thief as a child.”

“So did we all, I imagine. My father was in a fearful temper once when he couldn’t have cold steak and kidney pudding for breakfast, the day after we had it for lunch. I went down and ate it all. I was punished, though—I felt sick for two days, glutton that I was.”

“You devil!” She kissed him happily on the cheek.

When the chocolate was ready Lenox carefully poured it from the saucepan on the stovetop into the silver pot. Jane took two teacups down from the hutch by the stove, then two saucers, and, still laughing, they stepped quietly upstairs and back into the study.

Nothing, they both said after they had finished off the whole pot, had ever tasted better.

As he fell asleep a little while later, Lenox realized that for the first time in too long he felt content. Gradually he began to think about his day—his afternoon in Parliament, his morning at the boxing club, Collingwood’s confession, all in the drifting, cloudy way of half-consciousness.

What was missing, he knew, was a clear motive for Collingwood to kill Freddie Clarke. Would such an apparently genial soul—loved by Paul, Alfred, and Tiberius Starling—commit murder over a few coins? No. But then what could the real motive be?

The next morning he woke up and, just like that, he had it.

He jumped out of bed and dressed hurriedly, not bothering to shave or comb his hair. Soon he was at Dallington’s flat—a particularly eligible set of rooms in Belgravia. Lenox had never been there. There was only one servant, who looked at Lenox suspiciously.

“Lord Dallington often sleeps well beyond—”

“Get him. I’ll answer for it.”

In the event it took Dallington half an hour to appear in a candy-striped dressing gown, and even then he was groggy. He grabbed at a cup of coffee his valet offered him as if it were the elixir of immortality, and until half the cup was gone he held out a hand to prevent Lenox speaking.

“Well,” he said at last, “what in all of fiery hell could it be, to get me up so early?”

“Did you visit Collingwood?”

“I did. They wouldn’t let me in.”

“You have to bribe the guard. Didn’t you see? Well, never mind that—yesterday, you remember, you suggested that Paul Starling killed Freddie Clarke, didn’t you?”

“Yes, and you dismissed the idea.”

“I was wrong. Listen: Collingwood has only confessed to protect Paul Starling.”

Dallington looked skeptical. “Paul Starling killed Freddie Clarke?”

“I’m less sure of that, but I feel certain that Collingwood believes he did. Do you remember when Paul’s name came up at our meeting with him?”

Slowly, Dallington nodded. “I think I do. He said Paul didn’t have a key to the larder.”

“I remember his phrasing because I found it awkward at the time…he said, ‘He wasn’t involved.” I was too focused on the green butcher’s apron and knife to notice but I think you’ll agree it was an odd thing to say.”

Dallington, awake now, nodded. “So he’s facing the gallows to protect one of the family he serves. Bricker, my man, won’t even press my suits.”

“I don’t think he’s facing the gallows. I think he’ll wait until Paul is out of the country, then tell the truth.”

“What good does that do Paul, then? He can’t come back to Cambridge.”

“No, but he’ll be safe from hanging.”

“I’m confused

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