Treason at Lisson Grove - Anne Perry [138]
“Of course it has,” Pitt agreed. “But Gower worked with me, and I reported to Narraway.”
“That’s the way it looked to all of us,” Stoker agreed. “But it can’t be what it was. I’ll get his records from the officer who keeps all the personal stuff. We’ll have to know who he worked with before you. You don’t happen to know, do you?”
“I know what he said,” Pitt replied with a twisted smile. “I’d like to know rather more than that. I think we’d better take as close a look as we can at everyone.”
They spent the rest of the day going through all the records they could find going back a year or more, having to be discreet as to why.
“What are you looking for, sir?” one man asked helpfully. “Perhaps I can find it. I know the records pretty well.”
Pitt had his answer prepared. “It’s a pretty serious thing that we were caught out by Narraway,” he replied grimly. “I want to be sure, beyond any doubt at all, that there’s nothing else of that kind, in fact nothing at all that can catch us out again.”
The man swallowed, his eyes wide. “There won’t be, sir.”
“That’s what we thought before,” Pitt told him. “I don’t want to leave it to trust—I want to know.”
“Yes, sir. Of course, sir. Can I help … or …” He bit his lip. “I see, sir. Of course you can’t trust any of us.”
Pitt gave him a bleak smile. “I don’t mind your help, Wilson. I need to trust all of you, and equally you need to trust me. It was Narraway who embezzled the money, after all, not one of the juniors here. But I have to know who helped him, if anyone, and who else might have had similar ideas.”
Wilson straightened up. “Yes, sir. Is anyone else allowed to know?”
“Not at the moment.” Pitt was taking a chance, but time was growing short, and if he caught Wilson in a lie, it would at least tell him something. In fact perhaps fear would be a better ally than discretion, as long as that too was used secretly.
He loathed this. At least in the police he had always known that his colleagues were on the same side as he. He had not realized then how infinitely valuable that was. He had taken it for granted.
By the middle of the afternoon, they had found the connection between Gower and Austwick. They discovered it more by luck than deduction.
“Here,” Stoker held out a piece of paper with a note scrawled across the bottom.
Pitt read it. It was a memorandum of one man, written to himself, saying that he must see Austwick at a gentlemen’s club, and report a fact to him.
“Does this matter?” he asked, puzzled. “It’s nothing to do with socialists or any kind of violence or change, it’s just an observation of someone that turned out to be irrelevant.”
“Yes, sir,” Stoker agreed. “But it’s this.” He handed another note with something written on the bottom in the same hand.
Gave the message on Hibbert to Gower to pass on to Austwick at the Hyde Club. Matter settled.
The place was a small, very select gentlemen’s club in the West End of London. He looked up at Stoker. “How the devil did Gower get to be a member of the Hyde Club?”
“I looked at that, sir. Austwick recommended him. And that means that he must know him pretty well.”
“Then we’ll look a lot more closely at all the cases Gower’s worked on, and Austwick as well,” Pitt replied.
“But we already know they’re connected,” Stoker pointed out.
“And who else?” Pitt asked. “There are more than two of them. But with this we’ve got a better place to start. Keep working. We can’t afford even one oversight.”
Silently Stoker obeyed. He concentrated on Gower while Pitt looked at every record he could find of Austwick.
By nine o’clock in the evening they were both exhausted. Pitt’s head thumped and his eyes felt hot and gritty. He knew Stoker must feel the same. There was little time left.
Pitt put down the piece of paper he had been reading until the writing on it had blurred in front of his vision.
“Any conclusions?” he asked.
“Some of these letters, sir, make me think Sir Gerald Croxdale was just about on to him. He was pretty close to putting it together,” Stoker replied.