“You aren’t in any condition to walk the streets. This is winter, and London is damp, cold. You could find yourself ill again. Pneumonia can come back.”
“It behooves you to help me. The sooner the better.”
I made up my mind. “I’ll take you to a place I know that fits your description. It may be the wrong place. But it’s somewhere to start.”
“Fair enough.”
I had bought a razor for him while I was out, and he used it, ridding himself of the dark beard and, with it, some of the sinister expression that I hadn’t seen while nursing him. I’d kept him reasonably well shaven then because of the need to wash his face after his fearsome coughing fits.
We left the flat together. I expected-dreaded-Mrs. Hennessey popping out her door and asking who my young man was.
An escaped murderer, Mrs. Hennessey. My father will be horrified.
But she didn’t come out her door, and then we were in the street.
London in winter is cold. The damp from the Thames pervades the city, and the wind seems to sweep down the long streets without hindrance, as if blowing across Arctic ice floes. A bitter and penetrating cold, the sort that makes life miserable for those who live here.
We found a cab in the next street, and I gave the driver the only address I could think of, the one that Mrs. Clayton had mentioned in her enthusiastic account of nearly visiting London. But would Peregrine know it now? Would he recognize the square or the houses?
We said very little to each other-from the time we left my flat, our conversation had been limited to necessities. I could feel his presence beside me, determined, and surely dangerous if crossed.
We got down by Carroll Square. In the center of it, the garden was winter bleak, trees that blossomed in spring showing bare branches to the steel gray sky, and the earth of flower beds looking like the burrows of fat, invisible animals. I began to walk along the street, looking up at the houses as we passed.
I could see Number 17 now, across from the southern gate into the square. It was a handsome house, white with black shutters, and there were two small evergreens in pots on either side of the black door. I looked across to the other side of the square. Number 17 was almost a mirror image of the house directly opposite, across the garden. In place of the ornamental pots, there were decorative mock wrought-iron balconies at the first-floor windows and railings at the shallow steps to the door.
I didn’t draw attention to either house but watched Peregrine as he gazed from one to the next. Let any flicker of memory be his and not a reflection of my knowledge. But I thought perhaps this was where the murder had occurred, and wondered what might be stirring in Peregrine’s mind.
Peregrine looked about him with a frown on his face. “The trees in the square are different-”
“It was probably early autumn, when the trees were in leaf.”
“Yes. Of course.”
There was no one about at the moment, and we had the street to ourselves.
We strolled around the square as he sought to find something familiar.
“I don’t think this is the right place,” he murmured to himself. And then as we went around for a second time, he said, “I should be in an upstairs bedroom looking out. At this level, nothing is the same…”
“I don’t think we would be welcomed-”
“No.”
We had come back to Number 17. Peregrine stopped to gaze up at the chimney pots of the house across the square.
A constable strolled into Carroll Square and came toward us. I could feel the tension that gripped Peregrine Graham at the sight of him.
Did he have that pistol with him? My throat was suddenly dry.
Peregrine said under his breath, “If you do anything to attract that policeman’s attention, I’ll kill him.” There was no emotion in his voice. I believed him.
We walked on, two people enjoying a companionable silence. I could feel the smile plastered on my face begin to crack from the strain of keeping it in place. But the constable looked at us anyway. I realized that I was a respectably dressed young woman, while the man at my side was wearing a suit that didn’t fit him and his face was still pale, with dark circles under his eyes.
Oh, my God. Does he look like a convict-or someone just escaped from an asylum?
Or will he pass for a wounded soldier in civilian clothes he’s outgrown?
The constable walked on, in spite of the second glance he’d given Peregrine. I started to breathe again.
“If we’re to promenade around London like this, you must have decent clothes,” I said, my voice angrier than I’d intended. But I could see again in my mind’s eye how that constable had stared, and if he’d stopped us, it didn’t bear thinking of.
Peregrine turned to me, amusement in his eyes. “You don’t care for the good doctor’s taste in clothes?”
I retorted, “If you attract attention to yourself because you don’t appear to belong in a neighborhood like this one, it won’t be my fault.”
He looked down at his clothing. I don’t believe he’d given a single thought to his appearance, except for the beard.
“I have told you. I have no money. There’s nothing to be done about it. Can we go into the square? It has benches. I need to sit down.”
“Only the residents have a key to the gates.”
“Ah.” He did look exhausted. “All right, I want-” He stopped. The sun had come out from behind a cloud, and suddenly the windows on the far side of the square were lit as if from within by the golden light. “Look!” His exhaustion vanished in his excitement. “I remember now. That chimney pot, the one on the left side-see, there’s a missing tile, and when the sunlight hits it just so, the shadow resembles a small dog.”
I couldn’t see it. But he crossed to the square, the better to see Number 17 and stare up at its windows, as if expecting to find himself at fourteen gazing down, then he positioned himself on the walk, and turned toward the house opposite.
“They’ve painted the door a dark green, but it was black once. As were the shutters. But, by God, this is the right street!”
“There must be others just like this one.”
“No, I’d stake my life on this.”
Across the square, the constable stopped to speak to a housemaid just coming up from the tradesmen’s entrance. Then he turned our way and began to stroll back toward us, as if he hadn’t a care in the world.
“Come away, Peregrine, please! We’ve loitered here long enough. Please, before that constable catches us up.”
Peregrine seemed not to hear me, his mind on something else. Then he turned, took my arm, and we walked on, toward the corner. I wanted to hurry, to look back over my shoulder, but I dared not draw attention to us again. At the corner we turned away from Carroll Square, and I felt my heart begin to beat normally again.
Peregrine’s grip on my arm tightened until his fingers felt like they were bruising the skin. “How did you know?” he asked. “Who told you where to find that house again?”
Surprised by the unexpected attack, I said, “It was Mrs. Clayton-”
“I don’t remember anyone of that name. You’re lying.”
“No, truly, I’m not.”
“Did you live here before, is that it? Is that why you came to visit the Grahams? I asked you if you were Arthur’s wife. You told me he was dead. Why were you in Owlhurst?”
“Peregrine. Mr. Graham. I was the nursing sister with Arthur when he died onboard Britannic. I came to visit Mrs. Graham, to-to talk to her about the day Arthur died. He had asked me to. It was his dying wish.”
“He wouldn’t have asked you to come to Owlhurst. Unless there was more to your relationship than nurse and patient.”
“You aren’t required to judge any relationship of mine,” I retorted coldly. “I’m helping you because you are here, you are armed, and I have no choice.”