Thompson spread his hands. "Perhaps the other speculation is correct, that she met her end elsewhere and was brought to the gardens. Her husband would know the gardens and know they would be empty at that time of day."
"Or it is the lover," Sir Montague broke in. "Perhaps she wanted to end the association and return to her husband's affections. In a crime like this, it is often one or the other, the husband or the lover. We only need discover which one."
"But in this case," I said, "both the lover and the husband claim to have been in places with plenty of witnesses at the time of the crime. Mr. Chapman in Middle Temple Hall, and Lord Barbury at White's."
"We will certainly ascertain that," Sir Montague said. "But we have yet to establish the involvement of a third party."
"What is your interest?" I asked Sir Montague. "Whitechapel is a long way from Bow Street or even Blackfriar's Bridge."
Sir Montague shrugged, but I saw his hint of smile. "I simply take an interest. And when I heard your name crop up, that interest increased." He exchanged a look with Thompson. "That and the fact that The Glass House might be involved."
"Which lays near Whitechapel," I said.
"It is a house I would like to shut down. Rumors of what goes on there are disquieting, but rumor is not evidence. Whoever owns the house is very powerful. Whenever a magistrate moves to close it, that magistrate suddenly backs off very quietly."
His statement made me pause. I knew a man powerful enough to send magistrates scuttling away when he wished. He was a man called James Denis, and he had his finger in many a soiled pie. If Denis owned The Glass House, I could understand why Sir Montague wanted it closed, and also understand his difficulty in doing so.
"Only the very wealthy and important are let through the doors," Sir Montague said. "It is not like a brothel or even a gambling den that my patrollers can infiltrate. Vice for the upper classes often stays hidden."
I knew the truth of that. "My friend Mr. Grenville tells me that the places the fashionable frequent change rapidly. If you wait, interest will die, and the fashionable will go elsewhere."
Sir Montague's look was shrewd. "I do not want to wait that long. This house has fascinated for a while now and shows no sign of abating. My men cannot go there, and neither can I. While my knighthood might get me through the door, I am too well known as a meddling magistrate." His eyes twinkled. Sir Montague was also hugely rotund, though his legs were thin, a profile that many would remember. "But you, Captain Lacey, have the correct social standing and connections."
I’d suspected he'd get to that. Sir Montague could not enter the realm of the aristocrat, but Lucius Grenville could. And Lucius Grenville could take me with him, as he'd already offered to.
I supposed Sir Montague expected me to protest. Grenville was ready to let me use my connection with him to enter, but I was not certain how happy he would be when he learned that I wanted to not only to investigate Peaches' murder but to spy on Grenville's own cronies.
However, Sir Montague did not know how much I would welcome any opportunity to thwart James Denis. I despised the man, and would happily get in the way of anything he did.
I gave Sir Montague a quiet nod. "Of course. What would you like me to do?"
"Have you ever thought of going into law, Bartholomew?" I asked the next morning. Bartholomew, towering six feet and more with golden blond hair and a youthful face for his nineteen years, stopped in the act of refilling my cup.
"Can't say I ever did, sir. I mean to be a valet." He poured the thick, black coffee, its steam bathing my nose in heady aroma. "Or a Runner. A chap needs learning to go to law."
"He apprentices," I said, lifting my cup. The coffee burned my tongue, but I swallowed it down. "He apprentices to a barrister and learns the art of prosecuting in court."
If I had stayed at Cambridge and finished instead of following Colonel Brandon off to the Thirty-Fifth Light Dragoons, I likely would have found my way to one of the Temples or Lincoln's or Gray's Inn to learn to practice at the bar. My father had been pressing me that direction, not to mention to marry a young lady for her fortune. Twenty years old and arrogant, I had told my father to go to the devil.
He’d shouted at me for days, and I had shouted back. Grown man though I was, he’d still been fond of beating me across the backside with his stout cane whenever he could reach me. I’d felt the brunt of that cane most of my life. I’d witnessed many a flogging in my Army life, but no soldier had ever beaten another with the vicious thoroughness of my father.
"I need an excuse to go poking about the Middle Temple," I said. "You could put on a suit and pretend you are looking to apprentice to a barrister. You are about the right age."
Bartholomew grinned. "Any of that lot will peg me for a slavey right off, I open my mouth."
"Then keep it closed." I chewed through another hunk of Mrs. Beltan's cheapest bread and downed the coffee. "Stay behind me and look shy. I'll be your uncle or some such, happy to be getting you off my hands."
His smile widened. "I'm your man, sir."
Bartholomew was as fascinated as Grenville by the fact that I investigated things. His last adventure with me had resulted in him receiving two bullets in his arm and leg, but that fact had not dimmed his interest. Bartholomew had recovered with the exuberance of youth and didn’t even sport a limp.
Unlike myself. I had received a nasty knee injury courtesy of French soldiers on the Peninsula and had to lean on a walking stick. The stick sported a sharp sword within it, which had come in handy more than once since my return to London and civilian life.
When Bartholomew was ready, we departed. As I closed my door, I was surprised by the sight of Marianne Simmons coming up the steps. She wore yellow straw bonnet tied with a green ribbon that made her girlish face more fetching than ever. Marianne scowled when she saw me, golden brows drawn over eyes of cornflower blue.
"Where the devil have you been?" I asked, startled into rudeness. She'd been away longer than usual, and Peaches' death had worried me.
Marianne’s scowl deepened. "None of your business, Lacey." She paused halfway to her floor to glower down at me. "None of his either."
She did not mean Bartholomew, who hovered behind me. She meant Grenville, who'd taken an interest in Marianne and twice given her money, asking for nothing in return.
I did not pursue it. Marianne was correct-what she got up to when she was far from here was none of my business. I shut my door but did not lock it. "There's half a loaf of bread on my table. Take it if you want it."
She gave me a freezing look. "I do not need your leavings."
I shrugged but still did not lock the door. I followed Bartholomew down the stairs, hearing Marianne ascend to her own rooms behind us. I had no doubt that when I returned the bread would be gone.
Bartholomew and I set off along the Strand through Temple Bar to Fleet Street, then walked south, down Middle Temple Lane, which bisected the Middle and Inner Temples. The environs of the two Temples overlapped somewhat, with buildings belonging to Middle Temple straying into the areas of the Inner Temple.
I led Bartholomew past the courts and chambers and toward the hall and gardens.
Bartholomew wore the plain suit in which he visited his mother, and he slowed his exuberant stride for my slower one. His suit was cheap, though not shabby, but it did not matter. The middle-class men and young gentlemen who apprenticed here did not always come from families of wealth.
Pupils fluttered about the lanes and gardens like students anywhere-some with the frightened but determined looks of young men resolute to prove they were good at something; some with the superior looks of those who already knew they were good; some with the devil-may-care looks of young men who lived for larks, studies getting done when they got done. At Cambridge, I, unfortunately, had been a member of the latter group.