“Jenny Rogers heard first and left a note at my club.”
“Did she give you any other details?”
“No.”
“You say he confessed to killing Clarke-what about stabbing Ludo?”
“I assumed that went along with it.”
Lenox was silent, thinking, for a moment. “Who knows. Incidentally, they’re sending your admirer-Paul-out of the country for a year. Just like that.”
“How did you hear of this?”
Lenox recounted the story of his afternoon: Elizabeth Starling’s fearfulness, Tiberius’s surreptitious aid, Paul’s forlorn face in the window. “Why lie to me? What could she possibly gain by that?” He looked up at the clock on the wall. “I should be at the House already,” he said. “Will you give me a lift in a taxi down there? That way we can speak a little longer. Just give me a moment to gather my things.”
As they rode down toward Parliament, Dallington suggested an idea. “What if Paul Starling killed Freddie Clarke?”
“What evidence is there of that?”
“No evidence, to speak of, but it would explain why he’s leaving the country.”
“So he also attacked his own father and framed Collingwood, whom he passionately defended to me? I don’t think so. On top of that his spirits were awfully high at our dinner there, weren’t they? He hardly seemed to have something so great on his conscience as murder.”
“Not all men have consciences,” retorted Dallington.
“I don’t believe it. Still, you’re quite right to interrogate the decision by Ludo and Elizabeth. Here’s a thought-what if Paul knows something about the murder?”
“To protect Collingwood?”
“Or indeed to protect Ludo. Has anyone’s behavior through this entire mess been stranger?”
“He would hardly give his own father to the police.”
“You may be right there.”
“Besides, as always,” said Dallington, “there’s the question of the attack on Ludo. What are we to believe: that Ludo killed Freddie Clarke and then was attacked by random chance in the same alleyway?”
Lenox, with a defeated sigh, looked out through the window. “What do we know?” he said at length. “We know that Paul Collingwood, a butler, killed a footman working under him-possibly to protect his own job. We know that subsequently someone, perhaps Collingwood, attacked Ludo Starling-but for reasons that are dark to us. The problem is there’s no internal logic to any of these actions. Clarke saw Collingwood nick a few coins, and that’s why he’s dead? And then why attack Ludo?”
“Perhaps it’s the work of a madman, and we’re looking at it all wrong.”
“Maybe, maybe…”
“Here we are.”
“You’ll go speak with Collingwood?” said Lenox.
“Directly. Good luck in there,” he added, nodding to the Members’ Entrance.
Lenox stepped out of the cab. It was turning into a wet, cold day, and the falling rain managed to shiver into his collar before he got inside.
Once there, he saw the milling mass of Members he had expected. Before he entered the fray he decided to go up a back staircase to his office and find Graham, to discover what his progress had been on the water issue.
His tiny, drafty office was open, and entering he saw that Frabbs was at one of the two clerk’s desks, his tie loosened and his face cheery.
“Lenox, my dear sir!” he said, lurching up from his seat. “Shake my hand, you old stiff!”
“Excuse me?” said Lenox incredulously.
Just at that moment Graham darted out of the inner office. “Hello, sir,” he said. “Unfortunately I stood the young gentleman a glass of wine for lunch-in celebration, as it were-and he seems still to be feeling the effects.”
Frabbs grinned and appeared to wobble on his feet.
“We’ll spare him a flogging, then,” said Lenox. “Graham, come into my office for a moment, will you?”
“Of course, sir. I was just putting the new blue books on your desk.”
It was dim, the small mullioned window all but lightless; even on a sunny day it wasn’t very bright. “Is he doing well?” asked Lenox.
“He’s only fifteen, sir, and as a result is somewhat inexperienced as a clerk. But I can attest that he’s extremely quick-witted, a fast learner.”
“Well; as long as you don’t give him any more wine we’ll keep him on, then. Really I wanted to hear about your work here.”
Graham looked grave. “Unfortunately there seems to be very little sentiment in favor of the idea of a new water system in East London, sir. Nearly all of the numerous people I’ve spoken to on the subject pointed to the great planning and expense that went into Mr. Bazalgette’s new system.”
“What about the flaw in it, though? The risk of a new cholera epidemic?”
“To a man they have responded with the observation that the new coverage of London is an improvement, and that further changes would be both costly and difficult to win support for on the floor of the House.”
Lenox laughed bitterly. “In short, I arrive here too late.”
“For this issue, sir, I fear that may be true.”
“Did nobody grasp the gravity of our position? One case of cholera in Bethnal Green and people in Piccadilly could be dead tomorrow!”
“Some think that possibility remote, and if I may speak openly, I agree. Houses in the more affluent sections of London are well enough ventilated, and the new water system is well designed enough, that West London would likely be safe.”
“Then what about the poor souls on the other side of the city!”
Graham looked troubled but offered nothing except “I’m sorry to have failed, sir.”
Lenox moved over to the window and put his palm against its glass, cool from the rain. “It’s not your fault.” He turned. “Did nobody agree to approach the leadership with me?”
“Your brother, Mr. Lenox. And-well-” Graham looked doubtful. “Mr. Blanchett expressed some interest in the idea.”
“Just my brother, then.”
“Yes, sir.”
Blanchett was the House eccentric, a mining baron who thought England should be a strict monarchy and therefore refused to vote. He belonged to no party and supported only ideas that would prove the government’s past foolishness. It was a bad sign that he liked Lenox’s idea.
“I’m going to go down, then,” said Lenox. “I know a hundred men in this building. One or two of them must listen, mustn’t they?”
“Yes, sir,” said Graham loyally, though Lenox could see he didn’t believe it at all.
Downstairs Lenox didn’t speak to any of those hundred men; instead he found his brother, who was only there, rather than in the back rooms with the cabinet, preparing for the debate, because he wanted to see Charles on his first true day in Parliament.
“There you are,” said Sir Edmund. “Why do you look as if you swallowed a fly?”
“Graham says there’s no hope.”
“The water supply? No-no, I wouldn’t have thought so. You must wait, Charles. Wait a year or two, until you have more friends and allies here. Or, though I don’t like to say it, wait until there’s a bit of cholera about and people are walking through Hyde Park with handkerchiefs over their noses again.”
“You were right all along-I know that, now.”
“Come, let’s go into the chamber. The session will begin soon. You must start planning your first speech, at least.”
Chapter Thirty-Two
Lenox didn’t get home until past two in the morning, only about half an hour after the session had finished. To his surprise and pleasure, he found Lady Jane waiting up for him.
“My wife,” he said, and smiled at her with tired eyes.
She stood up and without speaking gave him a fierce hug, clutching him tightly to her, face buried in his chest. When she looked up at him it was with tears in her eyes. “Since we returned from our honeymoon everything has been…wrong.” Gesturing at the hallways she said, “Even our houses don’t feel right together yet.”
“I think perhaps it takes time, Jane. We’re not used to being married yet. On the Continent it was all somehow unreal-somehow child’s play. Now we’re back to real life.”