Garden of Lies
Slater barely spoke to her on the way back to her house. He was not unfriendly, she concluded, merely preoccupied. He watched the street through the window for most of the journey and when they finally arrived, he walked her to her front door and saw her safely into the hall with barely a word.
“Good night, Ursula,” he said. “I will speak with you tomorrow.”
“Right,” she said, trying for an equally casual farewell.
She stepped back into the hall and closed the door. It was only then that it dawned on her that Slater had other plans for the evening. Intuition warned her about the nature of those plans.
She drew a sharp breath, whirled around and yanked open the door.
“Slater,” she hissed.
He was at the foot of the steps, heading toward the carriage. He stopped and half turned back.
“What is it?” he asked patiently.
“For heaven’s sake, promise me that you will be careful.”
In the light of the streetlamp she could see that he was smiling. He looked pleased.
“You really are concerned about me,” he said. “But there is no need. I have had some experience in this sort of thing. I have not spent the past few years working on my knitting.”
“Just . . . be careful. And when it’s over let me know that you are safe.”
“You’ll be in bed.”
“No,” she said. “I will be watching from my bedroom window. I expect you to stop in the street at least long enough to let me know that all is well.”
She closed the door before he could say anything else.
EIGHTEEN
Roxton had cheated him out of everything that should have come to him and now he had lost what little he had left.
Hurley stared at the cards on the table. He was ruined.
“I’ll have the money for you by the end of the week,” he said.
Thurston smiled his thin, humorless smile. He watched Hurley through a haze of smoke.
“That’s what you said the last time we played, Hurley. I’m not sure I can rely upon your word. So, as a convenience to us both, I’ll send a man around in the morning to collect my winnings.”
He sounded bored.
Hurley lurched to his feet. “I said the end of the week, damn you. I have to make arrangements.”
“You mean you have to find a way to convince your stepdaughter to get the money from the trustee of her children’s fortune.” Thurston scooped up the cards with a practiced movement of one long-fingered hand. “I suggest you get busy. From what I hear, Roxton is not inclined to indulge you. Takes after his father in that regard.”
“Damn you, I told you I’d get the money. Give me at least two days.”
Thurston appeared to consider that closely for a moment. Then he shrugged.
“Very well, you’ve got two days,” he said. “But just to be clear—if you don’t come up with the money that you owe me, my men will pay you a visit.”
Hurley’s heart pounded. His palms went cold. A visit from Thurston’s enforcers meant a severe beating. Everyone in the room knew it.
Hurley turned without a word and crossed the card room, heading for the door.
Outside in the chill night air he stopped, trying to think. He would have to go to Judith’s house and make her get him the money. She cared about her sons. If he grabbed one of them she would make Roxton pay whatever it took to get him back.
The only problem with the plan was that Roxton was a mystery. There were rumors about him. He might be deranged. One never knew what a madman would do.
Thurston, however, was not a mystery. He was a dangerous man with a reputation in the hells.
When a man found himself caught between two devils, he had no choice but to go with the one he knew and understood—the one most certain to be an immediate threat. In this case that was Thurston.
He started along the street, hoping to find a hansom. Two men approached out of the fog. The first one wore a long black coat that swept out like dark wings around his boots. The collar was pulled up high around his face. When he moved through the glare of the streetlamp the light glinted on his spectacles. His companion was a giant of a man.
Hurley dismissed the man with the glasses immediately. It was the giant who worried him. He started to move to the side of the walkway, giving the big man and his associate some room.
The one with the spectacles spoke.
“Good evening, Hurley. I was told I might find you outside this hell tonight. I don’t believe we’ve met. Slater Roxton.”
Hurley froze. He’d been drinking for most of the night and his mind was somewhat fuzzy. It took him a moment to realize what was happening. So this was Roxton.
Hurley experienced a surge of relief. The bastard did not appear either mad or dangerous. He looked like a scholar. Nothing like his father, at all. The big man was evidently a servant.
“What the devil do you want, Roxton?” Hurley asked.
“I came here tonight to say farewell to you,” Slater said.
“I’m not going anywhere.”
“You will be leaving on a ship bound for Australia early tomorrow morning. Your passage is paid. One way. You will not be returning. Mr. Griffith, here, has your ticket. He will see you safely to your lodgings tonight and assist you with your packing. Once I receive word that you are actually in Australia, I will send you a small financial stake to help you get started in your new life. After that you will be on your own.”
“You really are mad,” Hurley said. “I’m not leaving London.”
“The choice to go or stay is yours, of course.”
“Damned right it is.”
“I would point out that, while your creditors have some interest in keeping you alive, at least as long as they believe that you might be able to get some money out of the Roxton estate, I have no such interest. Indeed, I find you a great inconvenience.”
“Are you threatening me?”
“No, Hurley, I am giving you my solemn promise that if you are not on that ship to Australia tomorrow morning you will not have to concern yourself with the payment of your outstanding debts. You will have . . . other problems.”
“You bastard. That money should have been mine. I’m Judith’s father. I have every right to control the income from the Roxton estate.”
“My father left strict instructions in his will. You are not to receive a penny from the estate. Therefore, I am using my own money to finance your passage to Australia. One way or another you will disappear from all our lives tomorrow, Hurley. If you do not board that ship in the morning they will pull your body out of the river tomorrow night.”
Hurley struggled for words. “No. No.”
Slater looked at the giant. “Mr. Griffith, please see Mr. Hurley to his residence and stay with him until he boards the ship.”
“Yes, sir,” Griffith said.
“You can’t do this,” Hurley yelped. “You really are mad.”
Slater removed his glasses with a world-weary motion of one hand and looked at Hurley. He did not speak. There was no need. In that moment Hurley knew that of the two devils, this was the one he feared the most.
Slater put on his glasses, turned and walked away into the night.
NINETEEN
He took a hansom back to Ursula’s house because Griffith needed the carriage to transport Hurley and his trunks to the docks.
She was where she had promised to be, watching the street from an upstairs window. A candle set on the windowsill burned low. There was just enough light to show him that Ursula was wearing a wrapper. Her hair was in a single braid that hung down over one shoulder.
At the sight of her the remnants of the cold, battle-ready tension inside him were instantly transformed into another kind of readiness—the sort that burned. The fierce need caught him by surprise.
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He got down from the cab, intending to go up the front steps. She would open the door for him and he would carry her upstairs to bed.
But Ursula opened the window and leaned out.
“You are all right?” she demanded.
“I’m fine,” he assured her.
“Excellent. In that case, good night, sir.”
She closed the window with a bang and drew the blinds shut.
The message could not have been more clear.
Stifling a groan, Slater got back into the hansom.
TWENTY
The following morning Ursula got out of a cab, paid the driver and walked briskly through the fog. From time to time she glanced down at the address she had transcribed from Anne’s stenography notes. The cab driver had been very helpful but she was starting to wonder if he had made a mistake. Stiggs Lane appeared to be fronted by largely abandoned, boarded-up buildings. The livery stable one street away was the only active business in the vicinity.
But just as she was about to turn around she saw the sign over Number 5. Rosemont’s Perfumes and Soaps.
The shop was hardly inviting. In spite of the shadows and the damp fog, there was no welcoming light behind the dark, grimy windows. The adjacent buildings were empty. The unmistakable scents of the livery stable in the next street drifted on the damp air. All in all, it was an odd location for a perfume and soap business, Ursula thought.
She stopped in front of the door and checked the address she had deciphered in Anne’s notebook. There was no mistake. She took a closer look at the handful of items on display in the front window. There was a small scattering of porcelain and glass perfume bottles, each one decorated with roses. The design was identical to the one on the empty perfume bottle that she had found in Anne’s house. Everything in the window was shrouded with a thick film of dust.
Tentatively she tried the doorknob and was somewhat surprised when it turned in her hand. A bell shivered and chimed when she entered the shop. She was assaulted by an unpleasant mix of chemical fumes strong enough to make her breath catch in her throat. Hastily she covered her nose and mouth with one gloved hand and looked around. There was no one behind the sales counter.
“Who’s there?”
The voice—thin, high, and tight with anxiety—emanated from behind a partially closed door. The speaker could have been either male or female.
“I’ve come to inquire about your perfumes,” Ursula said, intuitively trying to reassure the person behind the door. “A friend of mine has some that she said she obtained from this shop. I am interested in purchasing a bottle for myself.”
There was a great deal of nervous dithering on the other side of the door before a man edged nervously out of the back room. He was as thin as his voice, small and jittery. A few wisps of graying brown hair were plastered across the top of his head. A pair of spectacles framed his pale eyes. He wore a stained leather apron and leather gloves.
He regarded Ursula with a mix of suspicion and anxiety.
“Mr. Rosemont?” She employed the calm, confident, you-can-trust-me voice she usually reserved for clients who wished to hire a secretary for the purpose of taking down confidential information.
“I’m Rosemont,” he said. He removed his gloves and shoved them into one of the pockets of his apron. “You say a friend sent you?”
“That is correct.” Ursula crossed the room to the counter. “Miss Clifton.”
For the moment she wanted Rosemont to think that Anne was still alive. There was no reason that he would be aware that was not true. There had been no notice in the press. Women who lacked family or connections died every day in London, leaving behind very little evidence of their existence.
“I don’t remember a customer by that name,” Rosemont said quickly—too quickly, perhaps.
“Are you quite certain?” Ursula pressed.
“Positive.” Rosemont started to retreat behind the door. “If you don’t mind, I’m rather busy.”
Ursula opened her satchel and took out the perfume bottle that had belonged to Anne. She placed it on the counter.
Rosemont stared at the bottle. He looked horrified.
“Where did you get that?” he demanded.
“In my friend’s house. Miss Clifton has disappeared. I am trying to find her.”
“Disappeared? Disappeared?” Rosemont’s voice rose to a squeak. “See here, that’s no business of mine. I can’t possibly help you.”
“I am trying to reconstruct her comings and goings in the days just before she vanished. According to her appointment calendar she called in at this shop on a number of occasions during the past year—including last week.”
“I told you, I don’t remember a Miss Clifton.”
This was not going well, Ursula thought. She had come here for information but it was starting to look as if she would leave no wiser than when she had entered the shop.
She could not afford a significant bribe and something told her that Rosemont would not be persuaded by a small offering—assuming he could be convinced to talk in the first place.
“How odd that you would not remember such a loyal customer,” she said.
Rosemont stiffened. “I beg your pardon.”
“Allow me to refresh your memory.”
Ursula reached back into her satchel and took out the paper on which she had transcribed several brief passages from Anne’s notebook. Rosemont watched in mounting panic as she unfolded the paper and smoothed it flat on the counter with one gloved hand.
“What is that?” he yelped.
“A record of some of her recent visits to your shop. They began about eight months ago and continued on a twice-monthly basis right up until last Wednesday. Oh, wait, I do believe that if we examine the dates more closely we see that in recent months she began stopping in more frequently.” Ursula shook her head, seemingly mystified. “It’s very odd, isn’t it?”
Rosemont glared at her. “I see nothing odd about it.”
“I do. You see, I happen to know that Anne earned a respectable living from her secretarial work. Nevertheless, I cannot imagine that she was able to purchase so much expensive perfume. And such a great quantity of it. I wonder what she did with all that fragrance. She certainly did not give any to me or her colleagues at the agency.”
Rosemont stared at the damning sheet of paper. Then he collected himself.
“Let me check my journal of receipts and transactions,” he said brusquely. “Wait here, I’ll be right back.”
She had won. Rosemont was backing down.
Cheered by the success, she gave him a cool, benign smile. “I’ll come with you, if you don’t mind. I wouldn’t want you slipping out the back door before you tell me what you and Anne were about with all those perfume sales.”
Rosemont drew himself up, momentarily projecting an air of defiance. Then his shoulders collapsed and he gave a heavy sigh.
“Very well, come with me if you must,” he said. “I will show you my records. But I must tell you that I have absolutely no idea why Miss Clifton purchased such a great quantity of perfume.”
He turned and disappeared into the back room.
Ursula whisked up her skirts. Satchel in hand, she hurried around the end of the counter.
“Did she come to your shop so frequently because she was in the habit of meeting someone here, Mr. Rosemont?” she asked. “If that is the case it is very important that you tell me the name of the individual. Perhaps you were bribed to remain silent or perhaps you simply feel you owe her some loyalty. But as her employer and her friend, I can assure you that there is no longer any reason to protect Anne.”
She stopped short just inside the doorway. The front of the shop was steeped in gloom but the back room was drenched in even deeper shadows. The chemical odors were stronger in that room.
There we
re none of the things one expected to see in the back of a perfume shop. No bundles of dried herbs and flowers dangling from the ceiling. No jars of fragrant oils. No containers of orange peels or bottles of cinnamon and vanilla beans.
Instead, there was a shipping crate.
The lid was open, revealing a number of neatly packaged bags inside. Beneath the thick chemical fumes she detected a dark, slightly acrid, strongly herbal note. The odor was coming from the wooden crate.
When her eyes adjusted to the low light she noticed two bookcases against one wall. They were crammed with leather-bound volumes. Herbals and other books of botanical lore, she concluded.
She looked around, searching for Rosemont. He had vanished through a door set between the bookcases. Alarmed that he was trying to escape, she hurried to follow him.
“Mr. Rosemont?”
“In here,” he called from the next room. “Come along, I’ve got my journal ready for you to examine. Kindly be quick about it. The sooner you vacate the premises, the better, as far as I’m concerned.”
She went to the doorway between the bookcases and found herself looking into a shuttered room lit by gas lamps. The windows were covered with thick boards that had been nailed to the walls. She could see two workbenches littered with chemistry apparatus—glass beakers, flasks, scales and a burner. An exceptionally well-equipped stillroom, she thought. Rosemont evidently took a very modern, very scientific approach to the ancient art of perfume making.
“Welcome to my laboratory, madam,” Rosemont said. He stood near a small writing desk where a large notebook was open. He still sounded nervous but his voice was steadier now—the tone of a man who has made a decision and is determined to see it through. “This journal contains a record of the transactions that interest you.”
She walked across the room and looked down at the book. The pages were covered with dates, amounts and quantities. She leaned over a little, trying to decipher the cramped handwriting.
“Can you please point out the entry that shows Miss Clifton’s most recent visit to your shop?” she asked. “I don’t have time to read through all of your notes.”