I went directly to regimental headquarters, as I had been instructed to do. There I asked for the colonel but was shunted off to one of his adjutants. He — a Lieutenant Tabor — reminded me a bit of Lieutenant Thomas Churchill of the Guards, with whom Sir John had previously had some dealings; both Tabor and Churchill had the same round, pink cheeks, the same arrogant manner. The adjutant pulled the letter from my hand in a needlessly rough manner when it was offered and ripped it open, destroying the seal altogether. His eyes sped over the page. I had no idea of the letter’s contents, for Mr. Marsden had taken it down from Sir John’s dictation. I found myself hoping that Lieutenant Tabor were a poor reader that I might catch him muttering the words aloud to himself. But, alas, no: He was as skilled and silent as any — and far better a reader than most.
When he raised his eyes from the letter and began speaking, it was as if he were dictating a reply himself and fully expected me to play the role of amanuensis.
“You may tell your magistrate fella that we are aware of the situation. The colonel gives his assurances that the small force your Sir John requests will be present when and where he wishes them. I shall command it myself.”
This was all very interesting to me. I wished greatly I might have the letter back that I might read it and discover what small force Sir John had requested and for what purpose.
“Lieutenant,” said I, “there is, I believe, room at the bottom of the letter for you to write your reply. Would you care to do that, sir?”
“By no means. There will eventually be a file begun on this matter — if the provost marshal has not begun one already. I shall need the original that copies may be made.” He then gave me a rather doubtful look. “But perhaps you will have some difficulty remembering the reply I have given you. I daresay you don’t seem to me to look particularly bright.”
His nose seemed to wrinkle a bit as he regarded me, as if he had just noticed what a stupid-looking fellow I was. That irked me somewhat. I had no wish to seem stupid to anyone.
“I believe I shall have no difficulty with it,” said I. And so saying, I repeated to him what he had said, word for word.
“Yes, well, that will do, I suppose.” He looked me up and down. “You may go now.”
That I did — and gladly, executing a volte-face surely as smart as any soldier in his regiment could do — at least to my mind it was so. I marched out of his small office and kept right on marching until I made my exit through the Thames Street gate.
Then, after making my detour toward Grub Street, where I found the book by Elizabeth Rowe, I went as swiftly as those winding streets permitted to Drury Lane and Mr. Donnelly’s surgery. Though not early, there were as yet no patients in the waiting room. He, himself, answered my knock upon the door and welcomed me inside.
“You’ll not have to wait,” said he. “I’ve just finished writing the report. The apothecary’s boy has gone off to fetch the mortuary wagon.”
“She will be given a church burial?”
“Sir John said he would get Trezavant to pay for a proper funeral, even if he had to squeeze the price of it from him.”
“Surely Trezavant can afford it,” said I.
“Living in such a house as that? Of course he can.” He hesitated, then asked: “Would you like to see her?”
I gave that only brief consideration. “No, I think not,” said I. “You see, sir, I knew her.”
“That does make a difference, doesn’t it? But… well, just give me a moment, I’ll bring you my report.”
He left me then and passed through the door into the next room. He could not have slept much the previous night; having performed his postmortem examination and written his report would have taken him hours. Yet he looked none the worse for it. I suspected that his years as a surgeon in the Royal Navy had prepared him for work in less-than-ideal situations. He always seemed to have a store of energy upon which to draw in emergencies. And what surprised me far more — he was of a remarkable and consistent good humor.
As he came forth from the next room, I caught a glimpse of a sheet-covered form lying upon the examination table. Poor Jenny Crocker, thought I, life did not offer her many possibilities, nor did she live long enough to pursue even one of them.
Mr. Donnelly waved his report in my direction. “It’s all about as you might suppose,” said he. “Time of death, approximately ten o’clock. Cause of death, a deep wound to the throat, which severed the jugular vein and the carotid artery. The attack was probably from the rear. Probable weapon, a long knife or short sword. And so on.”
“Would there have been much pain?” I asked.
“I doubt it. The shock would have blocked feeling of any kind. Death would not have been instantaneous, though it could not have taken long to come — no, not long at all. Still, it was an ugly sort of death, particularly for one so young and pretty.”
I took the report from Mr. Donnelly, tucked it away, and made ready to depart. He put his hand to my shoulder and walked with me the few steps to the door opening onto the hall.
“There was one more thing, Jeremy. It’s in the report, so I might just as well mention it.”
“Oh? What was that, sir?”
“The girl was pregnant- — less than three months gone, I’d say, but pregnant, nevertheless.” He looked at me curiously, and then said, “You didn’t… ? You’re not… ?”
“Uh, no sir, I had only known her about a week.”
“Ah, well then …”
“Yes sir, goodbye sir.” I left, greatly embarrassed.
And so I returned to Number 4 Bow Street, saw proof of Annie’s departure, and then sought out Sir John in his chambers. I told him of my delivery of the letter to the Tower and what had transpired there. In general, he seemed satisfied with Lieutenant Tabor’s assurance that a small force of mounted Carabineers would be made available to the magistrate, and that the lieutenant himself would command the force.
“He agreed then to the time and place I stipulated?” Sir John asked me.
“He did, sir.”
“Well then, we must put our faith in him. What else have you for me?”
“Mr. Donnelly’s postmortem report on Jenny Crocker.”
At that, Sir John sighed so deeply that it sounded near to a moan. “Well, read it me. We may as well know all that he can tell us.”
I took the report from my pocket and began reading it aloud as Sir John sat at his desk, hands folded before him, giving it his full attention. I had always been impressed by Mr. Donnelly’s powers of concision. Though somewhat more detailed in description and presentation, the points he covered in the report were roughly the same ones he had made to me as we talked in his surgery. And just as before, the last of them had to do with Crocker’s pregnancy.
Sir John shifted in his seat and leaned forward, indicating to me at least his keen interest in this new matter. When I had done, he leaned back and rubbed his chin a bit in concentration.
“Well,” said he at last, “this is quite interesting. This puts a somewhat different complexion on matters, does it not?”
“How is that, sir?”
“Why, the unmarried woman who finds herself with child is, in most cases, simply the victim of him who has put her in that state. There are exceptions, however. When a woman is bold enough, she may seek payments of money for her and for her unborn child from the father — or from the putative father. She threatens him with disclosure should he refuse to pay up. Men who are in a sensitive position — married, members of the clergy, others who do not wish a scandal of that sort for whatever reason — are particularly vulnerable.”
“But sir, that is blackmail, plain and simple.”
“Indeed it is, Jeremy. In many cases, however, some might say that it is justifiable blackmail, for after all, who will take care of the unwed mother and her babe if she does not take care of herself?”
“Even so/’ said I.
“Even so,” said Sir John, “it is a way fraught with peril. You�
��ll recall that I said that the woman who attempted such a maneuver would have to be bold. That is because there are three courses of action open to the male victim of blackmail.”
“Oh? Not merely two?”
“Pay up, you mean, or face disclosure?”
“That’s right, sir.”
“No, there is a third course. There is always danger that the intended victim may turn on the blackmailer and murder her, or have her murdered.”
“Do you believe that to be the case in this instance?”
“Not necessarily. I say merely that it is a possibility we must now consider — one among others. But let me put it to you, Jeremy: Do you think this girl, this Jenny Crocker, would be capable of blackmail?”
I gave that a bit of thought, remembering her rather odd relationship with Arthur Robb, the late butler of the Trezavant house. But after all, I told myself, to go from that relatively innocent practice to blackmail was indeed a very great jump. And so, having thought, I gave Sir John a most judicious answer. “Perhaps,” said I.
“Ah, thank you, Jeremy. I do like a firm opinion firmly stated.”
“Well, I … I …”
“Never mind. It was wrong of me to ask. I would not want you to cast a stone at one who could not defend herself.”
Not wishing to end our interview on that rather sour note, I ransacked my brain for some bit of information which might interest him, some triviality to do with the continuing investigation, but all that occurred to me was what I had heard the night before from Mr. Donnelly regarding Zondervan, the Dutch trader.
I put it to him rather casually, for that, no doubt, was all that it deserved. “Oh, by the bye, Sir John,” said I, rising to leave, “did Mr. Donnelly tell you of his dinner at Lord Mansfield’s residence and who it was he met there?”
“No, who was it, pray tell?” He seemed to have little interest in the matter. “Some duke or earl, I presume.”
“By no means. It was that man Zondervan, who lives in St. James Street.”
The change in Sir John was immediate and most impressive. He threw himself forward with such force that he seemed almost to be jumping across the desk at me.
“Tell me that again, Jeremy. Zondervan was at Lord Mansfield’s last night?”
“Well, yes sir, but…”
“Perhaps you’d better give me the entire story.”
Since I knew not what part of it he was interested in, I was obliged to do as he suggested and tell it all, as Mr. Donnelly had told me. And so that is what I did.
When I had done, Sir John sat thinking for a good long moment, saying nothing, merely fidgeting with the wedding ring on his finger. I thought, perhaps, that I had bored him so with my inexpert telling, that his mind had wandered off to more engaging matters. In that case, I decided it might be best to beat a hasty retreat.
“Will that be all, sir?” I asked.
“All for the present,” said he, “but I should like to meet your Mr. Zondervan. He might have some interesting things to tell us. Why don’t you call upon him and invite him here that I might speak with him.”
“What if he does not wish to come, or puts me off to another day? “
“Then you must do as you did with Mr. Burnham.”
“And what did I with him, sir?” “You persuaded him.”
Having no idea how I might go about that and feeling a certain trepidation, I brought myself to the Zondervan residence in St. James Street early in the afternoon; Sir John had requested that I bring him by just following that day’s session of his Magistrate’s Court. What was I to do? How was I to persuade him?
I thumped upon the door with the great hammer-shaped doorknocker hung in the very middle of it. The butler came — the same butler who had twice admitted me when I had come in search of Collier. He frowned at me, not inhospitably, but as one might frown in concentration. Then, of a sudden, did he smile in recognition.
“Now I remember you,” said he. “You’re the young fellow came investigating for the Bow Street Court, are you not?”
“So I am,” said I. “And I’ve need to talk with your master today.”
“My master? You mean, Mr. Zondervan? Why, he has just returned from Holland. He was not even present at the time of that robbery.”
“There has been another since then,” said I, “and in any case, I am not come to interrogate him, nor would I presume to.”
“Oh/’ said the butler. “What then?”
“I have an invitation to offer him.”
“Give it me, and I shall deliver it.”
(All butlers are the same.)
“I am to present it in person.”
“Yes … well … indeed.” At least I had succeeded in perplexing the fellow. “All right, come inside and stay here at the door. I shall go and discuss the matter with Mr. Zondervan.”
I did as he said and saw him disappear down the long central corridor. As I did, I became aware of a hum of activity throughout the house. Voices, footsteps, even a bit of hammering and sawing sounded from deep within the place. Might it have been upstairs or down? In truth, I could not tell.
I had not long to wait, for the butler quickly reappeared. I could not tell from his expression if I were to leave or be conducted into his master’s exalted presence, for he wore, as near as I could tell, no expression whatsoever. He stopped a modest distance from me.
“If you will follow me, please.”
That I did, and gladly. He moved along at a good pace, yet I had no real difficulty in keeping up. Remaining a few steps behind as I did, I was able to look right and left into the rooms as we passed them by. I know not quite how to express this, but an air of departure, of sudden change, seemed to have settled over the place. At first it seemed that there was naught which seemed truly different, except for cloths thrown over the damask-covered furniture in one room. But in another, there was something truly astonishing: that was the room wherein Mr. Zondervan’s collection of paintings had been hung. The door stood open (which, I had been given to understand, was quite rare), and the afternoon sun poured in through the windows, lighting walls that were altogether empty. The room, which but a week ago was crowded with canvases, was now quite bare of them.
Could it be? I wished to stop and go inside the room to give it a thorough examination — but of course, I could not. I glanced back over my shoulder and gave a swift count to the rooms we had passed — yes, as I thought, there were three that side of the hall, which made this the fourth, which fitted my memory exactly. Yet perhaps my memory played me false.
“Young man, this way please.” It was the butler, standing before the door opposite the empty picture gallery. I had wandered past him as I stared.
This was quite embarrassing. Nevertheless, I was determined to find out more.
“The paintings,” I whispered to the butler, as I pointed at the room across the hall, “what happened to them?”
“They’ve been moved,” said he, his face quite like that of a statue. “Spring cleaning, you know.” And then, with a slight bow — hardly more than a nod of his head — he indicated the open door, and I proceeded into the room.
Mr. Zondervan was not quite what I expected. Mr. Gabriel Donnelly had told me what a remarkably entertaining man he was, and I had heard his great booming laugh, and so I believe that I thought to find a proper Dutchman of the sort frequently caricatured; which is to say, I looked for one who was fat, blustering, and jolly. What I found instead was a man of near six feet in height, slender, and handsome both in his features and in his bearing. He looked, in short, as every Englishman hopes to look. He stood next the fireplace, his elbow upon the mantelpiece, examining a vase of delicate porcelain, which, to me at least, appeared to be of Chinese origin. It looked quite like that one which Thomas Roundtree had stolen from Lord Mansfield’s house and thereby brought such misery upon himself.
Mr. Zondervan looked up, took my measure, and surprised me by offering me a bow of an impressive depth; I could do naught but
return the salutation.
“I like your manners, young sir,” said he intelligibly enough, though with a bit of an accent. “Come over here, let me show you this vase.”
I came forward (noticing as I did that the butler remained standing in the doorway) and looked with some interest at the object in Mr. Zondervan’s hands. He surprised me a second time by handing it to me.
“You will be careful of it, of course,” said he. It was in the nature of an order. “You are no doubt surprised at its lightness.”
And indeed I was careful, though I was not surprised at its negligible weight. In that way, as in nearly every other, it was a duplicate of that which belonged to Lord Mansfield. It differed only in the design or picture which it bore upon its side. Whereas the one I held presented a noblewoman gesturing in a pacifying manner, the other, as I recalled, offered a dragon in an unusual pacified posture — head down, its scaly feet stretched out before it in an attitude of obeisance. No doubt it illustrated some tale well-known to the Chinese.
“Yes,” said I, “it is wonderfully light. Even more impressive is its beauty.” I offered the vase back to him.
“Ah, a true connoisseur,” said he, taking it.
“I am flattered.”
“You should be. I am the greatest of connoisseurs. For me to name you as one also puts you in truly exalted company.”
At that, he erupted into laughter. I do not believe that he thought it such a great witticism. Perhaps he wished only to signal to me that it was indeed a witticism and not spoken in earnest. When at last his fit of laughter subsided, he placed the revered object upon the mantel and studied it for a moment.
“This vase has a mate. Did you know that?”
I had vowed to myself that I would plead ignorance in this matter — and I kept my pledge. “Why no,” said I, “have you seen it? How do you know that this mate exists?”
“I held it in my hands last night.” He shrugged. “But even before that, I knew that this mate existed, that it had to exist.”
“Oh? How is that, sir?”
“Well, you see, there is a Chinese proverb — is that the word, ‘proverb’?”
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