Twenty-three
HAWKER PICKED UP HIS RAZOR. IN THE MIRROR over the
dresser, he looked back at himself with hard, steady eyes. A
killer’s eyes.
“She’s alive for the next little while.” Alive.
Exhausted. Sleeping. Just sleeping. Felicity was watching
her.
He’d never got into the habit of using a brush to
put soap on his face. Just lathered up between his palms.
“Let’s say there’s two groups. One of them goes
poking knives into various Frenchmen. The other is trying to gut
Justine. Both of them are mad at me and both have some of my knives
handy.” He shook his head. “Not likely.”
No argument from the mirror.
He tried the razor along the hair on his arm.
Nicely sharp. He did like a good edge on his steel. Swish his hands
in the basin. Pull his skin taut with his thumb and shave the right
side. No hurry.
Wipe soap off the razor on a towel. Rinse it in the
basin. “Not two groups, then. One. They go after the Frenchmen to
frame me. They go after Justine because it’ll hurt me.”
Finish the right side. Wipe the razor down again.
“They know me fairly well.”
Now for the left side. “But it’s easier to shoot me
one balmy evening. Who’s going to take the time and trouble to be
that convoluted and that patient? Who hates me that much?”
One name came to mind.
Shaving’s a meditative business. He did the short,
careful strokes under the chin. Always a tricky part.
Wipe the final soap off the razor. Wash the
blade.
“Try this. Say Justine’s been collecting my knives
for a while. She kills a pair of Frenchmen, planning to lay it on
me.” Dry the blade with the clean corner of the towel. “Before she
dispatches another hapless French cove, one of her confederates
gets peevish and pokes the knife into her.”
Fold the razor. Lay it down beside the bowl. Take a
new towel and wash his face. “That gives us one group, with
infighting. And Justine behind everything.”
Toss the towel away with the other one.
A long time ago, he’d thought it was special
between him and Owl. They were friends, right to the heart. Being
enemies didn’t change that. Even when he was staggering around,
half dead, with her bullet in his shoulder, he kept thinking they
were friends.
His eyes looked back at him, particularly bleak
this morning. “Owl won’t stop, you know. She never gives up. If
she’s behind this, I’ll wake up one morning with my throat slit.”
He fingered his throat. “Because I’m still a damn fool when it
comes to that woman.”
No answer to that either.
He strapped on the arm sheath, settled his shoulder
harness, checked the knives, and wished he was out in the field
where he might get to use them. He was in the mood to confront
somebody a good deal more dangerous than Lord Cummings, Head of
Military Intelligence.
WHEN Hawker walked into his office, he saw that
Cummings had taken a place behind the desk. He was sitting in
Hawker’s chair.
He’d never decided whether Lord Cummings played the
fool on purpose, or if it just came naturally to him. He looked the
part of an aristocrat. He was straight-backed and silver-haired,
sporting a long, thin, supercilious nose. He sat behind the desk,
looking distinguished, pretending to be absorbed in the newspaper
he’d picked up. He’d brought along his cur dog, Colonel Reams, who
did not look distinguished.
Felicity leaned against the wall just inside the
door of his office, keeping a gimlet eye on the visitors. She
muttered, “About time,” as he passed.
He barely moved his lips. “You felt it quite
necessary to put them in here?”
“You said to be polite.”
“Not that polite.”
She’d let Military Intelligence invade his office
just to see what they wanted to get into. And to annoy him. He gave
her a “we’ll talk about this later” look and motioned her
out.
Back when Adrian Hawkhurst was still Hawker the
Hand, stealing for a living and associating with questionable
companions—in the flower of his youth, as it were—he’d walked into
many an alley to find an enemy sitting in ambush. This felt the
same. It was enough to make a man nostalgic.
Cummings had settled his arse into the carved oak
chair that belonged to the Head of Service. It was black with age,
worn smooth by the behinds of twenty-nine men who’d been Head of
the British Intelligence Service. It dated back to the time of Good
Queen Bess. To Walsingham, who’d founded the Service.
It’s mine now.
Cummings didn’t do anything by accident. He wanted
anger. Now, why did Cummings want him angry? Dealing with Military
Intelligence just drove the humdrum out of the morning.
Reams stood to the side of the office, a
thick-bodied, red-faced bulldog of a man. His hands were gripped
together behind his back and he sneered at the map on the wall. He
wore scarlet regimentals, as usual, though he didn’t have any
particular right to a Guards uniform. One of Military
Intelligence’s little fictions. No battlefields for the
colonel.
Reams looked particularly self-satisfied this
morning. Possibly he felt he’d done something clever. He was
probably wrong.
The map held a hundred numbered and colored pins,
set from Dublin to Dubrovnik and points east, as far as India. His
agents. Austrian, Russian, and French agents. Trouble spots.
Nothing Military Intelligence would make head nor tail of.
“The lumpy yellow shape off to the right is
Austria,” he said helpfully. “The square blue one is France.” He
jostled the colonel off balance as he strolled past.
“Watch it, you—” A glance from Cummings, and Reams
swallowed the rest of his comment.
Cummings took his time folding the newspaper. He
tossed it on the desk, toppling a pile of unopened letters into a
stack of reports, making a point, doling out his second nicely
graded insult of the morning. He’d got them in before they
exchanged a word. “Good. You’re here.”
“A pleasure to see you, Cummings. As always.”
“You haven’t answered my messages.”
“How careless of me.” There’d be notes from
Military Intelligence somewhere in that pile on his desk. How wise
of everyone to ignore them. “The press of work . . .”
“I don’t have time to wait on your convenience.”
Cummings tapped his fingers impatiently on the arm of the chair.
The hand rests were carved wolf heads, snarling.
British Service wolves. Not Military Intelligence.
He knew just how they felt. He wouldn’t mind snarling
himself.
“Always so awkward to settle upon another man’s
convenience. And you’ve come all the way across town to do it.” He
skirted around the desk and sat on the edge of it, chummily next to
Cummings, his boot heel hooked on to a drawer pull. He showed his
teeth, copying the wolf heads.
Cummings slid back in the chair, harrumphing. “I
mean to say . . .”
Let us loom over the man. I get so few
opportunities to loom. “Why don’t you tell me what we can do
for Military Intelligence today.”
In Cummings’s world, men in authority sat at desks
and gave orders. Inferiors stood at attention. Sitting down meant
you had power.
In the rookeries of East London, men in authority
kicked you in the guts to drive home the salient points of their
discourse. Sitting down just put you closer to somebody’s
boot.
In his office, the rules of Whitechapel
applied.
Cummings had propped his cane against the wall. He
reached out and put it between them, the ivory head clutched in his
hand. “I say . . .”
“Yes?” For two days he’d lived on coffee and anger
and watched Owl fight for her life. When he looked down at
Cummings, he let some of that show in his eyes.
Cummings cleared his throat. “Mean to say . . . you
should speak to that girl of yours, Hawkhurst. Damned if you
shouldn’t. She left me standing on the steps ten minutes before she
opened. She was blasted impertinent. Wouldn’t leave the room when I
ordered her to.”
You do like to order my people around, don’t
you?
“She talked back to me.” Cummings sucked his lip in
and out, deploring the situation.
“We all have that problem.”
“I suppose you keep her around because she’s a
toothsome little thing. You have a reputation for liking the
ladies, Hawkhurst. You have that reputation.”
“Do I?”
The cane jiggled nervously in Cummings’s hold.
There was a blade hidden inside. Anyone would know that from the
way Cummings carried it, even without the wide gold rim that
circled the head. Hardware like that meant a cane dagger.
A rich man’s trinket. A short dagger, with no hilt
but that little hexagonal rim. Good for one sneaky, unexpected
strike. Useless in a fight.
Cummings fingered it as if it were a favored piece
of his anatomy. “I envy you Service Johnnies sometimes. Pretty
petticoats stashed away at headquarters. Drinking coffee on the Via
Whatever-o in Rome. Jaunting off to the opera in Vienna. No real
work for you, now that the war is over. Nothing to do but write up
reports and shoot them off to the Prime Minister.”
“We keep busy in our own modest way.”
It wasn’t the British Service out of work. It was
Military Intelligence. When the last of the occupation army pulled
out of France, Military Intelligence went with them. Cummings was
reduced to spying on Englishmen, playing informer and agent
provocateur to discontented Yorkshire weavers. Intercepting the
mail of liberal politicians, hoping to find something treasonous.
Harassing purveyors of naughty etchings in Soho.
Military Intelligence was being whipped through the
newspapers as the “secret police” of England. It wasn’t just the
radical press that said it was time to close them down.
His lordship liked to see himself as the spider in
the center of a vast web of international intrigue. Now the only
agents in the field in Europe were British Service. Cummings spied
on the British Service, fishing for minnows to carry back to the
Prime Minister, Liverpool. Always gratifying to be the object of
interest.
“But you haven’t told me what brings you to Meeks
Street.” He hitched himself more at ease on the desk and let his
boot swing right next to his lordship’s immaculate, buff-colored
trousers. Cummings couldn’t get to his feet without scrambling like
a crab, losing dignity. “Not that we aren’t delighted to—”
Doyle came in, with no sound to announce him.
Silent as the grave, Doyle, when he wanted to be. He said,
“Cummings,” being blunt to the point of rudeness. Then he gave a
respectful, “Sir,” in Hawker’s direction.
That was Doyle propping up the fiction that Adrian
ran the place. Listen to Doyle, and anybody’d think Adrian
Hawkhurst was somebody important. Somebody an earl’s son deferred
to as a matter of course.
“Join us. Cummings is about to reveal why he’s
graced me with his presence today. I’m . . . what’s the word I
want?”
“Intrigued.”
“Exactly. I knew you would have the mot juste in
your pocket. I am intrigued.”
The wide chair pulled up on the other side of the
desk was Doyle’s. It was big enough to hold him. In the years Doyle
had been reporting to Heads of Section—five of them now—the chair
had taken on his shape and something of his character. It was not
unknown for new Heads of Section to sit at the desk and hold
conferences with the empty chair, asking themselves what Doyle
would advise in a particularly sticky situation.
Doyle sat down, playing Lord Markham to the hilt,
showing off the Eton and Cambridge and the estate in Oxfordshire.
He’d changed into a suit of gentleman’s clothes. Nothing fancy,
because you didn’t decorate a man like Doyle. Understated. It
wasn’t what he wore that made him look like Lord Markham. It was
the hundred subtle little gestures and flickers of expression that
did it. Right now he was applying a nicely graded aristocratic
disdain when his eyes landed on Reams.
Doyle had unassailable credentials. Adrian
Hawkhurt’s were more . . . imaginative. One popular theory was that
Tsar Paul got him on an English noblewoman. Then there was the
rumor he was a Hapsburg, exiled for doing something too disgraceful
for even the Austrian nobility.
A soft grinding noise. That was the cane twisting
into the rug. Cummings said, “I’ll get to the point then. You
brought a woman here, injured. Do you know she’s a notorious spy?
She’s a French émigré we’ve been keeping an eye on for years. A
shopkeeper in Exeter Street.”
Justine would smile, being called a shopkeeper.
Hadn’t Napoleon called the English a nation of shopkeepers? He
glanced at Doyle. “Notorious spy? That does sound familiar. We have
one of those tucked away upstairs, don’t we?”
Reams snarled, “For God’s sake, man. You have blood
on your front door.”
“How biblical of us.”
“She was attacked in the square,” Doyle said. “It’s
been reported to the magistrate.”
“Sneak thieves. They’re everywhere. I didn’t know
street crime in the capital fell under your jurisdiction.” He
watched Cummings.
Who seemed angrier than he should be. Why was that?
“She’s alive? She’ll recover?”
“Yes.”
“Did she see who attacked her? Can she identify
him?”
“No.” He didn’t expand.
“Well, then. Well.” Cummings gathered in his cane,
gripped the head of it in both hands. Awkward because he was
crowded in, he scrambled to his feet. “These things get
exaggerated. Rumor said she was at death’s door. Heh. Death’s door
is the door to Meeks Street. Amusing, that.”
“Diverting.”
On his feet, Cummings began a fussy pacing back and
forth, flourishing his cane. Reams glowered from the sideline.
Cummings huffed and hemmed. At last he came out with, “There’s
something you should know.”
“Tell me.” Maybe he was about to find out why
Cummings was in his office.
“Private, really. You want Markham to leave. Don’t
want to say anything about this in front of him.”
“There’s nothing he can’t hear.”
Cummings shrugged. “You may wish you’d chosen
privacy.”
Another trip across the office. “There have been a
pair of murders in London. Frenchmen. Antoine Morreau, bookseller.
Pierre Richelet, publican in Soho. Both stabbed. They passed
themselves off as Royalist émigrés. In fact, they were French
secret agents.”
Cummings was pleased with himself. He knew
something more. He was enjoying himself too much to just say it
right out loud.
“Police Secrète.” Reams pronounced it like an
Englishman. “Both of them.”
Doyle rearranged himself. The chair creaked. “How
long have you known about them?”
“Does it matter?” Reams demanded.
“If they were killed because Military Intelligence
let something slip, it matters.”
“We don’t leak information.” Reams shifted on his
feet, a bantam bull, pawing the ground. “You can damn well—”
“Reams got a letter.” He didn’t have to tell Doyle
this. It was obvious. “An anonymous letter. Probably yesterday.
They didn’t know before that, or they would have pulled them in to
harass.”
Reams’s face turned red.
“Their real names,” Cummings said, mellifluous and
superior, “were Gravois and Patelin. They were senior officers of
the Secret Police under Robespierre. I’m sure you’ll find them
somewhere in your records.”
He didn’t have to search the records. Those two, he
remembered. The Tuteurs of the Coach House. He’d very nearly met
them one night when he was young enough to be an idiot.
Reams subsided against the wall, muttering, “Don’t
know why there’s Frenchies everywhere. They have their own
country.”
“We took the matter to Bow Street.” Cummings nodded
to Reams. “Tell them.”
“When we got the let—” Colonel Reams rubbed across
the buttons on his coat, shining them up. “When we connected those
two murders, I went to Bow Street. Tied the cases together for
them, you might say.” He let the pause drag out, enjoying himself.
“They’d spotted some similarities. What they don’t understand at
Bow Street, though, is intelligence.”
So many things one could say. So tempting. But he
let the colonel wind to his conclusion.
“They were both stabbed,” Reams said. “They were
goddamned French émigrés. Dead ones now. The knives were left
sticking in their gut where they fell.”
Almost poetic, the colonel.
“I asked to see the evidence boxes.” Cummings
tucked his cane under his elbow, getting ready to leave. He’d done
what he came for. “The murder weapons were flat, black throwing
knives of a most distinctive design. I recognized them at once, of
course. A British agent used knives like that in France during the
war. A rather infamous agent.”
“The Black Hawk.” Reams laughed. “They had your
initials on them, Hawkhurst. I told Bow Street they’re
yours.”