Circle of Shadows
Page 7
He felt a touch on his sleeve and found Florian had reached forward to place a hand on him. His face was terribly earnest. ‘Oh, but there is! There is a purpose, a great purpose.’ He withdrew his hand, and it seemed to Pegel that the room suddenly became a little colder. ‘You must have been wondering why that man attacked me; you have been terribly good by not asking.’
Pegel gave a little attention to the fire. ‘Not my concern, Florian. Don’t want to intrude.’
The young voice became firm. ‘It would give me great pleasure to talk on these matters. Before I do though, I must ask you, Jacob Pegel, to swear to keep secret what I reveal to you, by everything you hold dear. I don’t want to sound like an idiot, but it is terribly important.’
‘I’ll swear if you like,’ Pegel smiled. ‘Don’t worry, Florian. I know how to keep a secret.’
II.6
THE SISTERS LEFT THE palace and entered the gardens that lay to the north of the house. Harriet looked over her shoulder. This side of the building was painted pink and white. Huge windows glittered down over them. Directly behind the palace was an artificial lake, large enough to boat on, with another central fountain. Beyond it reared an artificial waterfall and it was guarded by a series of marble heroes and Graces. The high hedgerows behind the statuary were cut into doorways.
Harriet still thought Rachel’s colour high and her eyes over-bright, so at first she simply told all the news she could think of from Hartswood, then the news of their friends elsewhere.
‘So Crowther’s nephew has a son?’ Rachel asked. ‘How was Sophia’s confinement?’
‘Sophia seems to have managed very well once she was able to find an accoucheur that Crowther did not think a fool. She is comfortably established in Bath, though I suspect she finds it a little lonely. Did you receive my letter about the Almshouses I plan to have built in the village?’
‘Yes, while we were in Berlin. We were pleased to hear that you had …’ Her sentence trailed away.
‘… found some occupation other than the investigation of murder?’ Harriet said a trifle dryly. ‘Well, you cannot blame me for involving myself on this occasion.’
Rachel blushed. ‘I know how it must seem to you, given I have been so opposed to you and Crowther helping others, then to be in so much need of you myself. Perhaps there is some justice in it.’
Harriet came to a halt and turned her sister towards her.
‘Rachel, never say that. There is no justice in this.’ She felt herself watched suddenly and looked about. There were a number of other finely dressed ladies and gentlemen in the garden wandering alone or in small groups. She felt their casual glances touch her and lowered her voice. ‘You do not think I have come here to crow over you? You cannot.’
‘No, Harry, of course not, but I have said such things to you in the past. You would have the right.’ Then Rachel seemed to become aware of the looks of the strangers around the lake. ‘This place! They have nothing to do but study each other. Come, this way.’
She led Harriet through one of the arches in the hedge and Harriet found herself in a small garden room: it contained a number of flower-beds and stone benches, the pathways between them mosaiced with chips of red porphyry and quartz. Rachel, it seemed, was not disposed to linger, but led her through another arch into another such miniature garden, this one with the centrepiece of an ornamental bird-bath, where one of Titan’s handmaidens eternally poured water from a conch for the palace sparrows to wash.
‘Rachel, if you leave me now, I shall be lost for ever.’
Her sister tilted her head to press her cheek briefly against Harriet’s shoulder. ‘I have spent the last forty days wandering through here.’
‘Like Christ in the wilderness?’
‘My feelings have been hardly Christ-like, and this is an unusual wilderness. Wait until you see the place I am taking you to.’
‘The air is doing you good. You sound more like yourself. Now tell me frankly, do you think you are with child?’
‘I knew you would realise at once. I was horribly sick this morning, so I suspect so.’
‘You must take care of yourself, Rachel. And we must get you home to Caveley.’
‘But Caveley is not my home any more. I know that’s not what you meant exactly, Harry, and just hearing you say it, part of me is sad that Caveley isn’t home any more, but it’s not, not now I am married.’ She lifted her hands as if to examine the wedding ring on her finger, then dropped them again. ‘Have I mentioned that I am terribly, terribly glad that you are here?’
‘You have.’
While Harriet was in the gardens with her sister and Graves was making the acquaintance of Chancellor Swann, Crowther found himself at leisure to arrange his room to his liking and read those documents provided by the District Officer that he had not yet been at liberty to peruse. His respect for Mr von Krall continued to grow. In England he had found, to his cost, that justice was administrated in an arbitrary manner by unimpressive men. What they could not understand made them angry, so they cast about for a solution, and when they had fixed on one, rigorously ignored any contrary evidence presented to them, locking their fleshy jaws remorselessly around the first explanation available.
Things seemed different here. No matter how convinced the authorities were of Daniel’s guilt, no short-cuts had been taken. No half-measures pursued. Pages and pages of transcript had been collected, every word spoken by Daniel, by the haberdasher, by anyone who had conversation with Lady Martesen that evening, or with Clode. It seemed the lady had become detached from her party a little earlier than Daniel. She had not been seen at the ball at all, though no one had thought at that point to be concerned. Crowther put another page down, not convinced he was learning anything very material to the case in hand, but with a growing sense of admiration for Krall and for Maulberg. When he heard a knock at his door, he half-expected to see the District Officer, but instead there was a gentleman hovering in the doorway of about his own age, and dressed in the splendid green and gold of the soldiers who had accompanied them from the border. Though this gentleman had a great deal more braid about him.
They made their bows. ‘Forgive the disturbance,’ the military man said in English. He was a vigorous-looking specimen, and showed no sign Crowther could see of the usual dissipation that seemed to come to military men. His skin was clear and his eye sharp. ‘I am Colonel Padfield, and you are Mr Crowther, of course.’
The man had a trace of a West Country burr lingering on his tongue. ‘I am glad to meet you, Colonel Padfield. Mrs Clode has told us of your kindness. I am afraid she and Mrs Westerman are in the gardens at the moment.’
‘No matter. I shall have the pleasure of making Mrs Westerman’s acquaintance this evening, but I was wondering if I might have a moment of your time.’
Crowther nodded and gestured to the chair by the fire, but Colonel Padfield preferred to stand.
‘Ticklish times,’ he said, after a considerable pause.
‘Are they?’ Crowther said, and put his fingertips together.
‘Indeed they are, Mr Crowther. You know the Duke’s bride is to arrive here in four days’ time. There are any number of court entertainments planned. Dinners. Concerts. Hunts. Maulberg wishes to make you welcome, of course …’
‘But perhaps Maulberg wishes we would not make ourselves too obvious?’
‘You have it,’ Colonel Padfield said with a cautious smile.
Crowther rather liked the Colonel’s face. It was as weathered as a sailor’s with the bright eyes of a man used to looking far into the distance. He looked, in spite of the braid, more like a prosperous farmer than a functionary of the court.
‘May I ask, Colonel, how you came to be in Maulberg? And in the employ of the Duke?’
Colonel Padfield rapped his fingers on the mantelpiece. ‘I stand out a little among all this magnificence, don’t I?’ Crowther found the steady brown eyes were examining him carefully. Then the man seemed to reach some decision and nodd
ed to himself. ‘I was in the Fifth Regiment of Foot. Fought in America. My family spent their last penny to get me my Colours, but once the fighting was done, I found England had little use for my skills. I was recruited in London to drill the Duke’s troops – been here near two years now.’
Crowther wondered if he had offended the man. ‘I hope you forgive my curiosity, Colonel.’
Padfield shook his head. ‘Nothing to forgive, Mr Crowther. Only it seems to me that here, no one asks a question or answers it without calculation, some hidden reasons of their own. I have grown suspicious of my own shadow.’
‘Your military concerns mean you spend a lot of time at court?’
‘They shouldn’t, but the Duke has taken a liking to me, it seems, so I have been forced to turn courtier. However, I have no complaint. He rewards his friends handsomely and I was lucky enough to marry a clever woman. She keeps an eye on the politics for me.’
His face softened as he spoke of his wife. Crowther looked away and tugged at his cuff.
‘And as I seem to be interrogating you, Colonel, may I ask your opinion of the case of Mr Clode? Rachel tells us there is a distressing lack of other suspects.’
Padfield straightened. It was lucky for him that his back was so broad; so much braid on a smaller man would have made him ridiculous.
‘I like Mr and Mrs Clode, but I am certain some madness took him at the Carnival and that he killed Lady Martesen. I hope you may throw up enough smoke and dust to confuse the authorities and steal him away back to England, but be careful. Lady Martesen was a favourite here, and no one will thank you for helping her killer to escape justice.’ The evenness of his tone made the verdict all the more damning. ‘You will be presented to the Duke this evening, and are invited to sup with the company. But after that … You have been provided with your own private dining room.’
‘We may have to ask some uncomfortable questions.’
‘Then, Mr Crowther, you may have to face some uncomfortable answers. If you require anything, you may send for me.’
He bowed and left Crowther to his papers and his thoughts.
Harriet came to a sudden halt and looked about her. ‘Good Lord,’ she said. She was apparently standing in the main square of a village. Or rather it seemed to be the drawing of a village square such as one might find in a child’s storybook. A well stood in the centre, complete with its own pitched slate roof. Elaborate wooden carvings of fruits and vines supported it. Four double-storeyed houses stood, neat sentinels at the compass points, facing the well. There was something wrong about them, something, for all their solidity, that looked false. Their half-timbering was too exact, their paint too neat and the signs that hung from them rather too extravagant in their metalwork curls. The balconies on each house were elaborately carved and lined with flower baskets. Harriet realised with a start that she was looking at a very expensive version of rural simplicity. She turned about. The square was surrounded by a mature copse through which she had just walked with Rachel. It hid the buildings from the palace, and the palace from the buildings. It was certainly impressive, but there hung over it the strange air of falseness such as a dream takes on just before a sleeper wakes.
‘The Duke developed a great passion for the rural some years ago,’ Rachel said, watching her sister’s confusion. ‘The courtiers would dress in peasant costumes and play skittles while the Duke poured beer. Then he learned that the Prince of Condé had created a larger village complete with a working mill on his estate, and this lost its appeal. He started work on his theatre to the west and these houses became workshops for some of the artists he keeps about the court.’
‘They do not appear to be neglected.’
‘He treats the artists he persuades here very well. And pays them large retainers just to live here. There is a portrait artist living there.’ She pointed to the north. ‘And in the east cottage lives a man called Julius, famous for his fine metalwork.’
Harriet shook her head. ‘How are we ever to make sense of such a place?’
Rachel hung her head. ‘Harry, I know I have said terrible things in the past about your actions …’
‘Rachel, we’ve spoken about this.’
‘We have, but I must say this, so do listen. You have a talent, Harry, for asking the right questions. And you read people the way Jocasta Bligh reads those cards of hers.’
‘I am so often wrong,’ Harriet said quietly.
‘And so often right. Please do not lose your nerve now, Harry. Don’t be blinded by all this glitter and show. They are still people under the powder and lace.’
The sound of a door opening came from their right and to her great surprise Harriet saw Michaels appear in his shirt-sleeves with his jacket over his arm.
‘Thought I heard yabbering out here.’
Harriet grinned, and Rachel dropped her sister’s arm and ran towards him.
‘Oh, Michaels!’ She stood on her tip-toes to kiss his cheek. ‘I heard you had come!’
He blushed and patted her shoulder. ‘There, Mrs Rachel. Wanted to get them to you safe.’
Harriet stepped forward. ‘Thank goodness. I thought they had stolen you away. You have found a bed here?’
‘I came to a friendly understanding with the head footman.’ He turned to Rachel again. ‘You’re not eating enough, girlie. I like your friends though, my neighbours.’
‘They are kind, aren’t they?’ She raised her voice. ‘Mr Al-Said? Mr Sami? I have brought my sister to you as promised!’
The door of the southern building was opened and a man also in shirt-sleeves emerged and approached them with his hands outstretched. ‘Mrs Clode! I am so happy you are come. If you did not visit us, we would think ourselves lost in the wilds.’
‘Harriet, this is Mr Adnan Al-Said. Mr Al-Said, this is my sister, Mrs Westerman.’
Harriet curtseyed and the gentleman bowed, still smiling. He had the same dark complexion as the Duke’s Turkish Hussars, though none of their bristling moustaches. He moved easily and there were laughter lines around his large dark eyes. Harriet guessed he was around forty, but there was something very youthful in his manner. He looked like the sort of man who found his life interesting.
‘I am delighted to meet you, Mrs Westerman.’
‘You speak excellent English, Mr Al-Said,’ she said.
‘But of course, I learned much of my trade in London in the workshop of James Cox. My brother and I have worked all over the continent in the last ten years. A man such as myself must be a linguist to sell to the limited number who can afford what we offer.’
The name of Cox sounded vaguely familiar to Harriet, something she had read in a newspaper. ‘What is your trade, sir? Rachel has refused to tell me anything on our way here, other than how helpful you have been to her.’
Al-Said smiled with genuine delight. ‘Come in and drink some tea with my brother and I, Mrs Westerman, and you shall see all. We are makers of automata. Come. Take some relief from your worries and see our work.’
‘I would be delighted. Michaels?’
He shook his head, smiling. ‘I’ve already seen the wonders. I aim to wash and sleep. You know where I am if you have need of me.’ He turned to Rachel again. ‘I am glad to see you, Mrs Clode. We will get you and your fella out of here safe if I have to tear down their castle with my bare hands.’
II.7
PEGEL AND FLORIAN HAD been debating for some hours. They agreed, repeatedly and with frequent examples, that society was viciously unfair and it was obscene that so much wealth should be enjoyed by the privileged when others went hungry. There followed an hour on Rousseau and his Discourse on Inequality. Pegel wondered how often young men had debated such matters in attic rooms, heated up by wine and the flourishes of their own rhetoric.
‘You are lucky,’ Florian said, leaning forward, then twitching as his side ached. ‘It is much better to have been born poor. You are an honest man. My birth, the fortune I am to inherit, makes it so much harder to be honest.’
Pegel almost choked on his wine. ‘Give it to me then! You have a try at being poor. There have been times I haven’t had the blunt to feed myself. Nothing makes a man dishonest quicker than that.’
‘I did not mean to offend.’
‘You can either hand over your wealth, or promise not to say such stupid things. Choice is yours.’
Florian smiled a little reluctantly. ‘I shan’t hand it over just yet, Jacob. I mean to make use of it.’
‘I’d make use of it,’ Pegel said, drawing up his knees. ‘Steak every day and my own horse. No more hired nags. He can have steak every day too.’ He pressed his cheek onto his knees, feeling the rough texture of the material. ‘That might not be good for him. He can have his hay on a silver platter instead. He shall be very beautiful and I shall call him Philippe.’
‘No, I shall use it for the greater good. There are ways, Jacob. Things can change.’
‘No, they can’t.’
‘But listen—’
Pegel suddenly jumped to his feet. ‘I cannot listen any more without some food and more wine.’ He put his hand out. ‘Give me a Thaler and watch the fire.’
Frenzel rolled his eyes, but handed over the coin quickly enough. Pegel swung on his coat on his way to the door.
‘Jacob?’
‘What is it? A minute more and I die of thirst. Or starve.’
He turned back. Florian seemed very slight curled up on the settee. He glanced at Pegel then back at his glass. ‘Do you think those men might have followed us here?’
‘No.’ Pegel paused. ‘Tell you what. Key’s on the table beside you. Lock yourself in while I’m gone. When I come back I’ll knock three then two then one – all right, Florian?’
Frenzel swallowed and nodded and Pegel slammed the door to behind him and headed down his rickety staircase whistling.
The two gentlemen were waiting opposite the bottom of the stairs. He walked west twenty yards and turned down a side-street then waited for them to catch him up.