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“Were just a girl and her mum. She looked the right size for the clothes, though the frock she had on weren’t nothing to speak of. Family resemblance; had to be mother and daughter. Girl looked about twelve, her mum…It’s hard to tell in Whitechapel.”

“She was from Whitechapel?”

“Didn’t say that. I assumed. They was pretty draggle-tailed. Came in late yesterday and mum seemed nervous. Didn’t speak English much. She wore a ’kerchief round her head. I didn’t know about the sailor suit then or I’d a turned her down, but it is a beauty. Gave her a bob for it.”

“Do you remember a name?” Barker growled. He was still balanced on the balls of his feet, as solid as if he were cemented there.

The man was quiet a moment. He closed his eyes. “Yer. She called her by an odd name, the mum did. What was it? Orma? Una? No, it was Ona, I think. The girl had stepped over to look at that booth there selling ribbons, and her mum cracked the whip hard. ‘Ona, come, child.’”

“That’s all you can recall?” Barker demanded, looking as menacing as only he can.

“That’s the lot, Push. Honest.”

Barker stood then, slowly straightening his knees.

“You’re taking the clothes I shelled out for and not leaving a penny, aren’t you?” Perkins demanded of the inspector.

“Any time you want to visit them, you can see them in A Division,” Swanson replied.

“Like I’m gonna go to the Yard voluntarily,” the vendor grumbled.

“How long was your time?” Barker asked.

“Five years hard in Princetown for ’sault. Thought he was a bloke what owed me money. How was I to know he were a solicitor?”

By now the two women were dancing about behind us. Barker instructed me to give them each sixpence to send them on their way. They shot off like horses at Ascot. Finally, he had me pass a shilling to Mr. Perkins.

“You’re a gentleman, sir!” Perkins said. “Thank ye.”

“What you are,” Swanson corrected as he bent down to pick up the clothing, “is a soft touch.”

“‘Rob not the poor because he is poor,’” Barker quoted.

“I’ll see you two gentlemen again,” Swanson continued. “The commissioner will want to see these.” He disappeared down the lane, or almost. Being a head taller than most, we watched his bowler hat bob through the knots of shoppers.

“We must work a little harder to stay ahead of Donald Swanson,” the Guv said.

“He has informants.”

“Aye. Canny ones. Let us hurry.”

“Why bother?” I asked. “It seems certain now that Gwendolyn DeVere is dead.”

“Why do you say that?”

“Her clothes were right there. You’re not going to find two outfits by Rowes of Bond Street for sale in the East End, and I think it unlikely she is alive somewhere unclothed.”

“Perhaps, but we have a name at least. Ona. I believe it is Lithuanian.”

“Jewish?” We were in the heart of the Jewish quarter. In fact, we were surrounded by hoardings in Yiddish.

The minute we were away from the watchful eye of Inspector Donald Swanson, I pulled out my notebook and began flipping pages.

“Ona, Ona, Ona,” I repeated until I finally saw the name. “Miss Hill said she was the only girl Miss DeVere would speak to in the Green.”

“I believe we should speak to Miss Bellovich and her mother.”

“Perhaps. Let us return to the Charity Organization Society.”

“But, sir, it is Sunday. Surely they will be closed.”

“They have a smaller group of women working on Sunday, headed by Miss Levy. As she is Jewish, it is not her Sabbath and she can tend to the unfortunates who need aid when the society would otherwise be closed.”

We caught a cab back toward Bethnal Green. Once inside the C.O.S., Barker walked up to the attractive but tart Miss Levy and asked to speak to her privately.

Amy Levy looked hard at him, trying to come up with a reason to refuse, but finally stepped outside with us.

“What can I do for you, Mr. Barker?”

“Miss Levy, I would like to say a given name to you and perhaps you can supply a surname in return. Are you agreeable?”

She nodded hesitantly.

“The name is Ona.”

“Yes,” came the immediate response. “Ona Bell. Actually, it is Ona Bellovich. She was one of our charity cases here, along with her mother, Svetlana, when they first arrived in England six months ago. Ona was friendly with Gwendolyn, though I cannot say it was much reciprocated. She is a sweet girl. She acts as interpreter for her mother, who speaks mostly Yiddish. But how have you come across her name? Surely the Belloviches have not done anything criminal.”

“Perish the thought, Miss Levy. As enquiry agents, we must track down all leads in an investigation. Her name came up this morning. Perhaps she spoke to Gwendolyn the day of her disappearance. Is it possible that the charity might have their present address?”

Miss Levy held back. “You merely wish to question her, do you not?”

“Of course. Does Mrs. Bellovich have a husband or male relative I might speak to first?”

“No, the two are alone in England. Her husband paid their passage but has been unsuccessful so far in gathering enough to follow.”

“I see. And the address?”

She demurred another moment, but finally came to a decision in Barker’s favor. “Wait here. I shall look up her file and bring it to you.”

She disappeared into the building while we stood on the pavement and watched traffic on Green Street and Globe Road. It was a warm day, warm enough to be uncomfortable in my cutaway. As usual, the building was lined with applicants using the walls for support, as if they had been glued there as ornamentation.

Miss Levy soon returned and pressed a note into Barker’s hand. There was a bloom in her olive cheeks. If I had known how many attractive girls the charities employed, I might have become a socialist long ago.

“Thank you,” Barker said gruffly.

“You will be gentle, won’t you?” Amy Levy asked.

“I am a professional, Miss Levy. Leave it to me.” We raised our hats and left her standing there looking pensive.

“They live in Cheshire Street,” Barker said, thrusting the note in his pocket. “Now, here is what I want you to do. When we get inside, stand in front of the door and hold your stick in front of you. I want you to do your best to look as imposing as possible.”

“That does not sound gentle to me,” I said.

“I made no such promise to Miss Levy, if you will recall, lad. This woman and child may be the only people who can lead us to Gwendolyn DeVere, but I fear they shall not give information to us voluntarily. They are Lithuanian, and as such have been subjected to raids by Cossacks and secret police their entire lives. They will not trust us, no matter what inducements we may give.”

“How shall we get the information, then?” I asked.

“By giving them what they expect. We must frighten them into giving us the information.”

Cyrus Barker smote the rickety door of a squalid tenement in Cheshire Street. His cane, like my own, was malacca with a brass head. Malacca cane is very flexible, and with the weighted head it provides a hard thump, whether on a wooden door or a human skull.

The door was jumping on its hinges, in danger of falling in, but still nobody answered our summons. It wasn’t hard to picture Barker as some sort of secret police officer or Russian Cossack. All he needed was a fur hat. Granted, England didn’t have secret police, but I’m sure fear of authority had been instilled in them since birth.

Finally, a shrill, quavering voice came from inside and the door opened to reveal a wide-eyed woman of about five and thirty, in a smocked dress with a kerchief tied around her head. Barker pushed his way in, speaking what I assumed was Yiddish. I followed Barker’s instructions, closing the door and standing in front of it, my cane held horizontally and a fierce expression on my face. I don’t think that I was going to frighten anyone, but I didn’t need to. Barker was doing an excellent job of that all by himself.