“You cankerous, flea-infested, mocking dog! See who nurses you the next time you are brought home with a broken head, you ungrateful, prating wretch!”
“Ah, well, thus am I justly chastised,” Smythe replied, hanging his head in mock shame. “Ungrateful wretch I am, indeed. I am a rude fellow. You may beat me. Here, let me find a stick…”
“Oh, cease your foolishness,” Shakespeare said, with a snort. “Come along, let us go and question Master Leonardo’s servants.”
The household servant who opened the door to them had the look of a man whose future was uncertain. Tall, thin, and balding, with wisps of white hair sticking out in all directions, as if he habitually ran his hands through what little of it was left, he reminded Smythe of a horse that had been spooked.
“Dear me, more visitors and more inquiries,” he said, anxiously. “I really do not know what I should do. The master of the house is cruelly slain, the mistress is not present and is grieving in seclusion, and it simply is not right to have people coming to the house and asking questions, searching through everything…”
“Your concern for your master’s house and goods is very commendable,” said Shakespeare. “We are here merely to ask some questions of you and the other servants on behalf of your mistress and your master’s business associate, Henry Darcie. But tell us, first, who else has spoken with you? Someone has been here to search the house?”
“Aye, and he, too, claims to have had business dealings with poor Master Leonardo.”
Smythe frowned. “Who was he? Did he give you his name? Can you describe him?”
“You may see him for yourself,” the servant said. “He is within.”
Shakespeare and Smythe exchanged glances, then quickly pushed past the distraught servant and entered the house. They saw two female servants in their aprons standing near the stairs, huddled together like frightened chickens in a corner of the coop, and at once they could hear the sounds of someone rummaging about upstairs. As they exchanged glances once again, they heard a loud crash, as if something heavy had been overturned.
“This time, I have brought my sword,” said Smythe, drawing it from its scabbard.
“I shall be right behind you,” Shakespeare said.
“With what, your quill?”
In response, Shakespeare pulled out a knife from inside his boot, a bone-handled stiletto with a six-inch blade.
“Good Lord!” said Smythe. “Where did you get that?”
“I brought it from the Theatre,” Shakespeare said.
“Do you know how to use that thing?”
“I understand one pokes at people with it,” Shakespeare replied, wryly. “I have done some fencing on the stage, you know.”
“On the stage,” repeated Smythe, rolling his eyes. “God help us. Just keep behind me.”
“Precisely where I had intended to remain,” Shakespeare replied.
They went up the steps cautiously, with Smythe leading the way. The rummaging noises grew louder as they drew closer. Someone was ransacking the house, and from the sound of it, being none too gentle about it.
“Be careful, Will,” said Smythe, when they reached the top of the stairs.
“You be careful,” Shakespeare replied. “If anything should happen to you, I would be next.”
“Your concern for my safety is touching,” Smythe said with a grimace. He reached out and placed his hand on a door that stood slightly ajar. The noise was coming from within. “Get ready…”
He shoved the door open hard, slamming it against the wall, and came into the room fast, his sword held out before him. The man ransacking the room spun around, immediately drawing his own blade.
“Tuck!”
Smythe’s eyes grew wide. “Ben! What the devil are you doing here?”
Dickens lowered his sword, then sheathed it as he spoke. “I might well ask you the same thing,” he replied. He glanced over Smythe’s shoulder. “Is that you, Will?”
“ ‘Allo, Ben,” said Shakespeare, coming into the room sheepishly after having peeked around the corner.
Smythe sheathed his blade, as well. “We came to question Master Leonardo’s servants, to see what we could learn about what had transpired here the night that he was killed.” He looked around. “God’s body, Ben! You have bloody well torn the place apart! What in Heaven’s name are you searching for?”
Dickens shook his head, looking around helplessly. “ ‘Twas not me, Tuck. I came to look for something… anything… that could help Corwin prove his innocence, but the house had already been ransacked when I got here.”
“Did you find anything?” asked Shakespeare.
Dickens shook his head in frustration. “Nothing. Save only that there seems to be no money left anywhere in the house.”
“He may have had it all cubbyholed away somewhere,” said Smythe.
“If he did, then I cannot find it,” Dickens replied. “And I have looked everywhere. But I tell you, there is not a tuppence nor a halfpenny in this house. Not anywhere. It must have all been stolen.”
“Did you question the servants?” Smythe asked.
“Aye, I have already spoken with them. They swear that they did not ransack the house. They have no idea where Leonardo kept his money. They are worried. They say that they have not received their wages, but despite their claim that they have not even ventured upstairs since the crime, I suspect they have already looked through everything.”
“You think they might have taken it?” asked Shakespeare.
Dickens shook his head. “I cannot say. I would have thought that if there was money in the house for them to take, they would have found it and absconded with it. Then they would be far away by now. Instead, they are still here; there is little in the larder, and they do not even seem to know where their next meal is going to come from.” He shook his head again. “Methinks that there was nothing here for them to find.”
“Perhaps he had his money deposited with some merchant banker,” suggested Shakespeare.
Dickens shook his head again. “I had thought the same, but then there would have been letters of credit, or else bills of exchange, and I have discovered none. I thought perhaps that he might have devised some clever hiding place in which to store such things, but if so, then I have failed to nose it out.” He sighed with exasperation as he looked around at the mess. “ ‘Tis a mystery to me, I tell you. Leonardo was a wealthy man, and yet, there is not one coin to be found in this entire house. If his money was not stolen, then where is it?”
Shakespeare scratched his chin. “A thought occurs to me,” he said, “and yet, I hesitate to speak it for fear that it might give offense.”
Dickens glanced at him. “Go on, Will. Be forthright. Say what is on your mind.”
Shakespeare cleared his throat. “Well… if there were such documents as letters of credit or bills of exchange, do you suppose that Corwin could have taken them?”
For a moment, Dickens did not speak. The corners of his mouth drew tight. “After he murdered Leonardo, do you mean to say?”
Shakespeare cleared his throat once more. “To find the truth, must not one consider all the possibilities?”
Dickens stared him down.
“Ben,” said Smythe, placatingly, “we know that Corwin is your friend and that you are loyal to him. But if we do not ask these questions, others shall. Corwin has already been arrested. Soon he shall be tried. He is in dire straits and your loyalty, however honorable or well-intentioned, cannot help him now. Only our diligence and perseverence in searching out the truth can be of any aid to him. And if he is truly innocent, then the truth shall set him free.”