‘I’m going to keep courting her,’ Lister said with certainty.
Nottingham pursed his lips, then said, ‘Since you’re here, let’s get some work from you. That girl, Fanny, definitely lives on the other side of the river. She’s most likely with another lass and a man with a limp. Take a couple of the men and ask around.’
‘We’ve tried that,’ Rob objected. ‘I could help look for James.’
The Constable shook his head. ‘I need someone on this. Try again. Someone over there has to know her.’
‘What about Wendell?’
‘We’ll have him sooner or later. The word’s out that he killed his sister. No one’s going to come to his aid.’
‘We should be the ones looking for him.’
‘Aye, you’re probably right,’ the Constable said wearily. ‘But we have a child to find, and the child snatcher, as well as Wendell. I don’t have enough men for all that.’
Sedgwick opened the door and walked in, his hair wild, looking as though he hadn’t rested long.
‘Lizzie told me. I wanted to go straight out, but she made me rest a little more.’
‘You know she was doing the right thing,’ Nottingham told him. ‘She’s got a good head on her shoulders, that lass.’
‘Mebbe. I just felt I should be there, I should be the one to find him.’
‘I’ve had the men searching.’
‘Thank you, boss.’
‘Go and look for him, John. At least we know now that he wasn’t taken.’
‘That’s one weight lifted.’ He looked up, eyes red from tiredness and pain. ‘But it still doesn’t bring him home though, does it?’
‘He’s out there and we’ll find him,’ the Constable assured him. ‘Go on, get looking. And Rob, take Holden and one of the others and start asking more questions.’
A little more time, he thought. That was all it would take. Someone was bound to know Fanny, especially if she was with the others. James would turn up when his belly was empty or fear overcame him. And Wendell would find soon enough that he had nowhere to go.
Patience, he told himself. He just needed to let things run their course. Another day, two at most, and all this would be over. He poured more ale, draining the jug. In a few minutes he’d go next door to the White Swan and have them refill it.
As he sat back to drink one of the clerks from the Moot Hall ducked into the jail. ‘The mayor wants you,’ he said, then left again.
Nottingham sighed, finished the mug and stood. He retied his stock, half-heartedly brushing at the dirt on his coat and his hose. He knew he looked a tatterdemalion, unkempt as any scare-the-crow in the fields, but he was past caring. He’d been working for more hours than he cared to count, with who knew how many more to come. People would have to take him as he was.
At the Moot Hall he knocked on the dark, heavy door and entered. John Douglas was at his desk, his face bleak and unshaven, looking up as the Constable entered.
‘Do you have anything good to tell me?’ he asked.
‘We know my deputy’s son wasn’t snatched,’ Nottingham answered as he sat.
The mayor nodded his approval. ‘That’s something. Any word on him?’
‘We’re still looking.’
‘People are talking, Richard. Two lads gone in just a few days.’
‘They’re different cases. You know that.’
‘But they don’t,’ Douglas said with emphasis. ‘And I can’t tell them.’
‘No.’ The Constable rubbed at his eyes, trying to push out the gritty feeling behind them.
‘What about the other things?’
‘Very soon,’ he promised.
‘You’re sure?’ the mayor asked.
‘Yes.’
‘That’s good enough for me.’ As the Constable stood, Douglas added, ‘Richard, go home and sleep.’
‘There’s too much to do.’
‘It’s an order,’ the mayor said firmly. ‘You look like you need rest more than anything, man. You said you trust your men, let them look after things for a few hours.’
‘I will.’
Douglas was right, he knew that. He was too tired to think properly, his body ached, but he hated to ask his men to do things he couldn’t do himself. Around him, Leeds was busy, the crowds on Briggate, the wheels of the carts pushing up on to the pavements as the axles creaked, the sound of laughter and arguments spilling from the dram shops.
He turned on to Kirkgate and kept walking past the jail. This time he’d give in.
Mary was in the garden, working with her fingers to pull the weeds around the plants. When she looked up and caught him watching her, he saw emotions flicker across her face, fear, joy, surprise.
‘I’ve been sent home to sleep,’ he said with a smile.
‘About time, too,’ she told him. ‘Have you eaten?’
‘Sleep first,’ he said.
But in bed, rest refused to come easily. Even with the shutters closed light still leaked into the room, along with the clacking sounds of the loom, loud and constant next door. He kept thinking of things he should have done, orders he should have given. Finally he drifted away, diving through troublesome dreams.
He woke as Mary opened the door, and rolled on to his back.
‘Do you feel any better?’ she asked as she sat and rubbed the back of his hand.
‘A little.’ He ran a hand through his hair, pushing the fringe off his forehead. ‘How long did I sleep.’
‘Five hours.’ She smiled. ‘I thought I’d wake you before Emily came home. It’ll be all clatter and din then. There’s some meat and ale for you downstairs.’
‘Thank you,’ he said.
She bent and kissed him lightly on the lips. ‘Now you’d best get yourself up. You’ll be going back to the jail?’
‘I have to.’
He took off the shirt and washed himself, the cold water fresh and wonderful on his skin, removing the worst of the dirt and sweat. Once he felt clean he found fresh clothes, old breeches tight on his waist, the jacket and shirt mended often but still too good to sell.
He ate in the kitchen, telling Mary about James, teeth tearing at the old beef and washing it down, hungrier than he’d realized.
‘Rob said Emily told him she won’t marry anyone.’
Mary raised her eyebrows. ‘Maybe she’ll change her mind in time.’
‘You know what she’s like. She might not.’
‘What’s he going to do?’
‘He says he’ll keep courting her,’ Nottingham said. ‘He doesn’t want to marry anyone else.’
Mary shook her head. ‘I hope it’s worth it in the end.’
‘So do I.’ He wiped the plate clean with some bread. ‘I’d better go back.’
‘Don’t be gone all night, Richard,’ she told him.
‘I won’t unless I have to. If the others are out I will be, too.’
She brushed something invisible from the old, faded material of his waistcoat.
‘You’ve done more than anyone who works for you,’ she chided.
‘And it needs to stay that way,’ he said with a smile. He kissed her forehead. ‘I love you.’
John Sedgwick had moved the men out past New Mill and the Upper Tenters, into the woods the spread out from the Aire. The word that James had been seen the morning before had made his heart rise. Just knowing he hadn’t been taken by the child snatcher gave him hope.
Now, out here, all that had evaporated like a puddle in the sun. All the terror had returned. Anything could have happened to the boy. He could have slipped into the river and drowned, he could have injured himself somewhere. There were dangers in every step. Time was passing and he was growing more frantic.
‘Have you looked over there?’ he asked urgently, pointing to a copse just up the hill. The man shook his head. ‘Go ahead and search it.’ He tramped on through the undergrowth, ignoring the sharp edges of stalk and brambles that sliced at his breeches and hose.
Suddenly he stopped, raising his hand to halt the others.