‘You said she was abducted,’ put in the Professor. ‘Now you imply she is with Lassiter of her own will?’
‘He’s a Devil of persuasion, to make a woman refuse an Elder of the Church and run off with a damned Gentile. She has no mind of her own, like all women, and cannot fully be blamed for her sins...’
If Drebber had a horde of wives around the house and still believed that, he was either very privileged or very unobservant.
‘Still, she must be brought to heel. Though the girl will do as well. A warm body must be taken back to Utah, to come into an inheritance.’
‘Cottonwoods,’ said Moriarty. ‘The ranch, the outlying farms, the cattle, the racehorses and, thanks to those inconveniently-upheld claims, the fabulous gold-mines of Surprise Valley.’
‘The Withersteen property, indeed. When it was willed to her by her father, a great man, it was on the understanding she would become the wife of Elder Tull, and Cottonwoods would come into the Church. Were it not for this Lassiter, that would have been the situation.’
Profits, not parsons, were behind this.
‘The Withersteen property will come to the girl, Fay, upon the death of the adoptive mother?’
‘That is the case.’
‘One or other of the females must be alive?’
‘Indeed so.’
‘Which would you prefer? The woman or the girl?’
‘Jane Withersteen is the more steeped in sin, so there would be a certain justice...’
‘...if she were topped too,’ I finished his thought.
Elder Drebber wasn’t comfortable with that, but nodded.
‘Are these three going by their own names?’
‘They are not,’ said Drebber, happier to condemn enemies than contemplate his own schemes against them. ‘This Lassiter has steeped his women in falsehood, making them bear repeated false witness, over and over. That such crimes should go unpunished is an offence to God Himself...’
‘Yes, yes, yes,’ I said. ‘But what names are they using, and where do they live?’
Drebber was tugged out of his tirade, and thought hard.
‘I caught only the false name of Little Fay. The Withersteen woman called her “Rache”, doubtless a diminutive for the godly name “Rachel”...’
‘Didn’t you think to tail these, ah, varmints, to their lair?’
Drebber was offended. ‘Lassiter is the best tracker the South West has ever birthed. Including Apaches. If I dogged him, he’d be on me faster’n a rattler on a coon.’
The Elder’s vocabulary was mixed. Most of the time, he remembered to sound like a preacher working up a lather against sin and sodomy. When excited, he sprinkled in terms which showed him up for — in picturesque ‘Wild West’ terms — a back-shooting, claim-jumping, cow-rustling, waterhole-poisoning, horse-thieving, side-winding owlhoot son-of-a-bitch.
‘Surely he thinks he’s safe here and will be off his guard?’
‘You don’t know Lassiter.’
‘No, and, sadly for us all, neither do you. At least, you don’t know where he hangs his hat.’
Drebber was deflated.
Moriarty said ‘Mr and Mrs James Lassiter and their daughter Fay currently reside at The Laurels, Streatham Hill Road, under the names Jonathan, Helen and Rachel Laurence.’
Drebber and I looked at the Professor. He had enjoyed showing off.
Even Stangerson clapped a hand to his sweaty forehead.
‘Considering there’s a fabulous gold mine at issue, I consider fifty thousand a fair price for contriving the death of Mr Laurence,’ said Moriarty, as if putting a price on a fish supper. ‘With an equal sum for his lady wife.’
Drebber nodded again, once. ‘The girl comes with the package?’
‘I think a further hundred thousand for her safekeeping, to be redeemed when we give her over into the charge of your church.’
‘Another hundred thousand pounds?’
‘Guineas, Elder Drebber.’
He thought about it, swallowed, and stuck out his paw.
‘Deal, Professor...’
Moriarty regarded the American’s hand. He turned and Mrs Halifax was beside him with a salver bearing a document.
‘Such matters aren’t settled with a handshake, Elder Drebber. Here is a contract, suitably circumlocutionary as to the nature of the services Colonel Moran will be performing, but meticulously exact in detailing payments entailed and the strict schedule upon which monies are to be transferred. It’s legally binding, for what that’s worth, but a contract with us is enforceable under what you have referred to as a Higher Law...’
The Professor stood by a lectern, which bore an open, explicitly-illustrated volume of the sort found in establishments like Mrs Halifax’s for occasions when inspiration flags. He unrolled the document over a coloured plate, then plucked a pen from an inkwell and presented it to Drebber.
The Elder made a pretence of reading the rubric and signed.
Professor Moriarty pressed a signet-ring to the paper, impressing a stylised M below Drebber’s dripping scrawl.
The document was whisked away.
‘Good day, Elder Drebber.’
Moriarty dismissed the client, who backed out of the room.
‘What are you waiting for?’ I said to Stangerson, who stuck on the hat he had been fiddling with and scarpered.
One of the girls giggled at his departure, then remembered herself and pretended it was a hiccough. She paled under her rouge at the Professor’s sidelong glance.
‘Colonel Moran, have you given any thought to hunting a Lassiter?’
IV
A JUNGLE IS A JUNGLE, even if it’s in Streatham and is made up of villas named after shrubs.
In my coat-pocket I had my Webley.
If I were one of those cowboys, I’d have notched the barrel after killing Kali’s Kitten. Then again, even if I only counted white men and tigers, I didn’t own any guns with a barrels long enough to keep score. A gentleman doesn’t need to list his accomplishments or his debts, since there are always clerks to keep tally. I might not have turned out to be a pukka gent, but I was flogged and fagged at Eton beside future cabinet ministers and archbishops, and some skins you never shed.
It was bloody cold, as usual in London. Not raining, no fog — which is to say, no handy cover of darkness — but the ground chill rose through my boots and a nasty wind whipped my face like wet pampas grass.
The only people outside this afternoon were hurrying about their business with scarves around their ears, obviously part of the landscape. I had decided to toddle down and poke around, as a preliminary to the business in hand. Call it a recce.
Before setting out, I’d had the benefit of a lecture from the Professor. He had devoted a great deal of thought to murder. He could have written the Baedeker’s or Bradshaw’s of the subject. It would probably have to be published anonymously — A Complete Guide to Murder, by ‘A Distinguished Theorist’ — and then be liable to seizure or suppression by the philistines of Scotland Yard.
‘Of course, Moran, murder is the easiest of all crimes, if murder is all one has in mind. One simply presents one’s card at the door of the intended victim, is ushered into his sitting room and blows his or, in these enlightened times her, brains out with a revolver. If one has omitted to bring along a firearm, a poker or candlestick will serve. Physiologically, it is not difficult to kill another person, to perform outrages upon a human corpus which will render it a human corpse. Strictly speaking, this is a successful murder. Of course, then comes the second, far more challenging part of the equation: getting away with it.’
I’d been stationed across the road from The Laurels for a quarter of an hour, concealed behind bushes, before I noticed I was in Streatham Hill Rise not Streatham Hill Road. This was another Laurels, with another set of residents. This was a boarding house for genteel folk of a certain age. I was annoyed enough, with myself and the locality, to consider potting the landlady just for the practice.