They directed the carriage to Church Lane, and were there only a few minutes later — luckily the horses had been warmed already, from their evening exercise. The house was dim.
“Does the footman you met live in?” asked Lenox.
“I don’t know,” said Oates, and thumped the door with his nightstick. “That should rouse him if he does.”
There were no footsteps inside, and the doors were locked. Oates, tapping his nose, went to work on the lock with a small metal rod he took from his pocket, and soon had the door open.
“It’s an interesting brand of police work,” said Lenox, disconcerted.
“If he killed Weston it’s better than he deserves.”
They went inside. The rooms already looked as if they had been vacant for months, drop cloths on the furniture and over the paintings, that peculiar stillness of an unlit and uninhabited house. Each man took a candlestick and lit a candle, and they started their way into the place.
The lower floor revealed nothing to them, despite an extended survey of it, and finally Lenox, with a mixture of compunction and determination, suggested they seek out the sleeping quarters. They went upstairs.
These rooms, too, were disappointing. One of them quite evidently belonged to Mrs. Musgrave — its wardrobe full of women’s clothes, its dresser scattered with bottles of scent and old scraps of ribbon — but whatever evidence it might have offered of her daily life beyond these objects had already been scrubbed away.
It was Oates, to his credit, who remembered that they ought to look in the basement. They went down the narrow staircase with careful steps, Lenox for his part made slightly uneasy by the dark, the close walls.
“How many servants did Musgrave have?” he asked, in part to break up the eerie silence.
“At least four,” said Oates. He seemed more sober now. “Here are their bedrooms. Shall we look in them?”
“Yes, certainly.”
The servants’ bedrooms were to the left of the stairwell, down a thin hallway, while the enormous kitchen, dominated by a vast oven, was off to the right. They turned left, tipping their own candles to spark the candles in sconces along the walls, providing further light.
These rooms, too, were cleansed of any sign of their former occupants, though Lenox and Oates inspected them all carefully, ultimately finding a few small pictures, a child’s toy, and a great deal of bed linen. It wasn’t much help.
“The kitchen,” said Lenox.
The pantry was still full — and here, at last, he found something. Oates was sifting through stacks of plates on the other side of the room, and Lenox called him back.
“This was next to the tea chest,” he said.
“What is it?”
Lenox held up a small cloth bag. Written on a tag, hanging from its drawstring, was Mrs. Musgrave’s sugar, one teaspoon to be included with her morning pot of tea.
“Her sugar?” asked Oates.
“Yet here is a fat jar of sugar, as you can see,” said Lenox, gesturing toward the open cupboard.
They both stared at the bag for a moment, indecisively, until Oates, too quickly for Lenox to object, dipped a finger in and tasted the bag’s contents.
“Not sugar,” he said shortly. There was a pitcher of water standing nearby, and he swirled his mouth and spat into the sink. “Bitter.”
Lenox nodded. He drew the bag’s string tight and put it in his jacket pocket. “We shall have to see what it is, then. Dr. Eastwood might help us. Certainly my friend McConnell could. In fact I may send a little of the powder to each of them.”
“I hope Cat’s life isn’t in danger,” said Oates. “Such a pretty girl, she was.”
Energized by their discovery, Lenox and Oates continued to look as closely through the kitchen and the rooms around it — the servants’ dining room, the washing room — as they had upstairs. It must have been ninety minutes they had been here now, perhaps longer. They traced each other’s footsteps to double their work.
Nothing new came up, however, for all their looking.
“Shall we leave, then?” asked Oates.
Lenox looked around. “Have we looked everywhere?”
Oates pointed at a bucket of slop underneath the sink, old carrot peelings and the like, and said, smiling wearily, “Not in there.”
Lenox sighed. “Perhaps we should, just to be thorough. It’s as good a hiding place as any. Will you start on it? Don’t worry, I’ll do the other bucket in a moment.”
“I suppose,” he said. “This stuff’s only fit to give to pigs anyhow.”
As Oates dug into the slop, Lenox closed the cabinets he had opened, then began to extinguish the candles in the hallway.
He heard a yelp from behind him. Oates. He ran back toward the kitchen.
“What is it?” Lenox asked him.
Oates was standing over the bucket of compost, his hands filthy; in one of them he was holding something. It was too dim, with the candles gone, to tell what.
Oates had inspected it over his own flame. His eyes were wide. “It’s a knife,” he reported. “I nicked myself. And I think where there’s older blood on it, too, sir.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
Lenox quickly took the knife, laying it in a white handkerchief. “Well done,” he said, “very well done.”
Both men peered down toward the object, dipping their candles better to illuminate it. “Is it the murder weapon?” asked Oates.
“Wash your hands and we’ll take it back to the station,” said Lenox.
Fifteen minutes later they were there. In the station were bright lamps, of long residence it would appear from the greasy black circles that had formed on the ceiling above them. Now they could inspect the knife more minutely.
Its smooth, nonserrated blade was perhaps four or five inches long, its haft about the same. Lenox asked for a tape measure to be sure. Yes; it was just a shade over five inches long, the blade. Which meant that it conformed to the description Dr. Eastwood had offered of the weapon that had killed the young police constable.
“Let’s have a look at the bucket,” said Lenox.
Oates had carried the slop bucket with them from Musgrave’s, and now he tipped it over and spread its contents thinly upon a long table, which the two men had covered with old newspapers. Wearing white cloth gloves, he and Lenox went through the mess.
They were looking for anything maroon and sticky, at the detective’s suggestion, for that was what covered the blade, and Lenox wanted to be sure that it wasn’t beet juice, colored meringue, discarded grapes, anything of that nature. Satisfyingly, none of the slop bucket’s contents, not its potato eyes, not its cauliflower stalks, looked likely to produce a red liquid.
“I think it is blood,” said Lenox at last, as he and Oates cleaned up.
“Have you seen blood on a knife before?”
“I have. Have you?”
“No. It’s what I imagine it would look like, though.”
“Quite.”
With a faintly chastened feeling they went back to the knife.
“I don’t like to look at it,” said Oates.
Lenox’s face was pensive. “What I cannot figure is why a man of military self-possession, or even a man of rudimentary intelligence, would have left the knife behind. Why not take it with him?”
“Fear of it being found among his possessions, I suppose?”
“Why not wash it, then!” said Lenox. “Why not wash it and leave it in with the other knives? He might have called for hot water at any time and attracted far less notice than his presence in the kitchens would have.”
“For that matter, why not leave it with the body?”
Lenox shook his head. “No, I believe such a knife might have been traced back to his kitchen, if it is part of a set. We will have to see about that. Although it may be that we are getting ahead of ourselves. Perhaps it was used to dress a chicken or a pheasant, after all. It’s the correct size for the job.”