A Stranger in Mayfair - Charles Finch [69]
“Did you drink it all? In under ten minutes?”
“Oh, bother it,” said Dallington and stepped into the carriage. “If you have time, let’s go see Clarke’s mother again.”
She was still at the Tilton Hotel in Hammersmith; unfortunately she was now in a bad way. With the passing of time her stern resolve to stay until her child’s murderer was found had changed into a mother’s grieving dissolution. She smelled of gin, and wept twice in their presence.
“Have you spoken to any of Frederick’s friends?” asked Lenox.
“No, no—the poor boy!”
“Did he mention a friend—a butcher?”
“A butcher? He never would have associated with that kind—the poor boy!”
And so forth.
“Don’t feel guilty,” Dallington told her just before they left. “It’s not your fault.”
“He needed someone. A real father would have protected him,” she said. “That’s what he needed—he should have had a real father. Ludovic—Mr. Starling—he could have been that, when I entrusted my poor Freddie with him. Or at least a friend. It’s not right to leave a boy alone in a city like this. I should have been here—I should have come down from Cambridge more often…”
And fresh tears.
When they finally managed to elicit her opinion on Collingwood’s confession, all she could say was that it shouldn’t have happened—that someone should have protected her only son.
The two detectives left dispirited. They had tried to give her some solace by speaking in euphemism about death and afterlife, but she would receive none.
“I must go home now,” said Lenox.
“What can I do?”
“You could try Fowler again.”
“Very well.” Dallington smiled. “And thanks for waking me up, even though it seemed like a cruel thing to do at the time.”
When he arrived back in Hampden Lane, starving and feeling just marginally more intelligent about the whole messy Starling question, the house looked somehow brighter to him. Its matched and yet strangely mismatched facade, only partially a house still—it needed to be lived in longer—finally gave him a feeling of contentment.
Inside, all was in confusion. Footmen were moving furniture to and fro, the door to the servants’ quarters downstairs was swung wide open into the front hall, and over it all Kirk was presiding, harassed.
“Are we being evicted?” asked Lenox.
“No, sir, not to my understanding.”
“It was a joke—a poor one, I’m afraid. What’s the row?”
“I see now, sir—very good—ha, ha. If your question refers to the activity in the house, this is the standard preparation for one of Lady Lenox’s Tuesday evening parties.”
That explained it. “Does she always go to such lengths?”
From the front stairway Lady Jane’s voice called out, “Charles, are you there? Leave Kirk alone, the poor dear has a great deal to do.”
“There you are,” said Lenox, finding her as she trotted back up the stairs. “Can’t you stop to say hello?”
“I wish I could! But I want this evening to be memorable—your first days in Parliament, you know!”
“I forgot all about it. Will there be any dratted soul I can talk to there?” said Lenox moodily.
“Oh, yes, you and Edmund can sit in the corner and grumble together while the adults make conversation.”
She turned as she reached their bedroom, and her warm smile showed she was teasing; a perfunctory kiss and she had gone to her changing room. “Toto may come!” she called as she walked.
Lenox, who was nearly hit by a passing bookcase, beat a rapid retreat to his study. On the desk there was a stack of blue books that needed his attention. Leaning back in his chair, his feet propped up on the ledge of the tall window that looked over Hampden Lane, he picked one up. “Railroad and Waterway Taxation,” it was called. There was a note in Graham’s surprisingly messy, quick script (he was so fastidious in other ways) that read, Many important men are interested in this subject. Please study carefully.
With a sigh Lenox turned to the first page and started to read.
Chapter Thirty-Five
Kirk might not have known all of Lenox’s idiosyncrasies, but there