Chapter 19

At five minutes after ten, Sebastian stood near the gates of the Carlton House Gardens and watched as the French clerk, Camille Bondurant, strode purposefully up the Mall, his arms swinging, his features wearing the blank expression of a man whose thoughts are far, far away. He wore a heavy, drab greatcoat with a thick scarf knit of shockingly blue wool wrapped around his throat; his exhalations left little white puffs in the cold air that drifted away into nothing.

Once a long sweep of crushed shells where the kings of England were fond of playing a French game called palle maille, the Mall lay to the north of St. James’s Park. A broad gravel walkway planted with rows of lime and elm, it was mirrored on the far side of the park by what was known as Birdcage Walk. Due to its proximity to the Gifford Arms, Birdcage Walk would have seemed the more logical choice for a resident of the inn in search of exercise. But that walkway had a reputation that must have inspired Bondurant to avoid it.

“Bracing day for a walk,” said Sebastian, falling into step beside him.

The Frenchman cast Sebastian a quick glance and kept walking. He was a tall, cadaverously thin man with greasy black hair and a rawboned face. His eyes were nearly lashless and squinted, either from habit or in an effort to see Sebastian more clearly. “Do I know you?” he asked, his English guttural and heavily accented.

“I was at Damion Pelletan’s funeral.”

“I do not recall seeing you.”

“Probably because you were reading,” said Sebastian pleasantly.

The clerk drew up and swung to face him. “What do you want from me?”

“You do realize that Pelletan was murdered, don’t you?”

“Of course I realize it! What do you take me for? A fool?”

“Do you know why he was killed?”

“Because he was unwise enough to venture into a dangerous section of an unfamiliar city at night? Because he was French? Because someone took exception to the cut of his coat? How should I know? And I fail to see how it is any of your affair anyway.”

“Had he quarreled with anyone recently?”

“Pelletan? With whom would he quarrel? The man had no opinions on anything of importance that I could discern. Try to engage him in a discussion of Rousseau or Montesquieu, and all he would do is laugh and say that the philosophical speculations of dead men were of no interest to him.”

“So what did interest him?”

“The sick-especially the poor ones.” Bondurant’s face twisted with contempt. “He could become quite maudlin.”

“You’re not fond of philanthropy, I take it?”

“No, I am not. The sooner the poor are allowed to die off, the better for society. Why encourage them to procreate?”

“Kings and emperors need to get their soldiers from somewhere,” said Sebastian.

“True. The lower orders are at least good for cannon fodder.”

“Something the Emperor Napoleon seems to go through at an astonishing rate.”

Bondurant pursed his large mouth into a terse expression. “What has any of this to do with me?”

“You know of no one who would want to kill Pelletan?”

“I believe I already answered that question.” He tightened his scarf around his neck. “Now you must excuse me. You have interrupted my constitutional.”

And he strode off, arms swinging, head down, as if battling a strong wind or reading a book that was no longer there.

• • •

Sebastian’s next stop was the Sultan’s Rest, a coffeehouse on Dartmouth Street popular with the military men of the area.

He found the comfortable, oak-paneled room thick with tobacco smoke and filled with red-coated officers all talking and laughing at once.

The French colonel, Foucher, sat by himself in one corner, inconspicuous in his dark coat and modest cravat. His head was bent over a newspaper opened on the table before him; a cup of coffee rested at his elbow. But Sebastian knew by a certain subtle alertness about his person that the Frenchman’s attention was focused more on the conversations swirling around him than on the page before him.

Working his way across the crowded room, Sebastian pulled out the chair opposite the colonel. “Mind if I have a seat?”

The colonel looked up, his hazel eyes blinking several times. “Would it stop you if I did?” he asked, leaning back in his own chair as Sebastian sat down.

The Frenchman was tall and well built, although illness and injury had left him thin and his face sallow. Sebastian could see scattered strands of white in his sandy hair and thick mustache; lines dug deep by weather and endured pain fanned the skin beside his eyes.

Sebastian cast a significant glance around the crowded room. “Popular place.”

“It is, is it not?”

“I assume that’s why you come here?”

A slow gleam of amusement warmed the other man’s gaze. “I find I enjoy the company of military men, whatever their uniform.”

“I hear you were in Russia.”

“Yes.”

“There aren’t many who staggered out of that fiasco alive. With the exception of Napoleon himself, of course.”

“No.”

Sebastian rested his forearms on the tabletop and leaned into them. “Let’s get over rough ground as quickly as possible, shall we? I know why Vaundreuil is here. What I don’t know is why someone would stab Damion Pelletan in the back and cut out his heart. The most obvious reason would be to disrupt your mission. The mutilation of the corpse seems rather macabre, but it could be a subtle warning directed at Monsieur Vaundreuil, who I understand suffers from a heart condition.”

The colonel took a slow sip of his coffee and said nothing.

“Then again,” said Sebastian, “Pelletan could have been killed because he had in some way become a threat to the success of your mission.”

“Is that why you are here? Because you consider me a reasonable suspect?”

“You don’t think you should be?”

Foucher eased one thumb and forefinger down over his flaring mustache. “If he had simply been killed, I could see that, yes. But the very flamboyance of his murder tends to work against such an argument, does it not?”

“It does. Unless the killer were fueled by anger or the kind of bloodlust one sometimes sees on the battlefield.” Sebastian let his gaze drift around the noisy room. “We’ve both known men who enjoy mutilating the bodies of their fallen enemies.”

Again the colonel sipped his coffee and remained silent.

Sebastian said, “There is of course a third possibility: that Pelletan was killed for personal reasons. It’s unlikely, given that he was only in London for three weeks. But it is still an option.”

The French colonel reached for his cup again with a care that suggested his lingering injury might be to his right arm or shoulder. “You know about the woman, I assume?”

Sebastian watched the other man’s face, but Foucher was very good at giving nothing away. “What woman?”

“The wife of some duke-or perhaps it is the son of a duke.”

“You mean Lord Peter Radcliff?”

“Yes, that is it; his wife is very beautiful. So you do know her?”

“Yes.”

The Frenchman drained his coffee and set it aside. “The husbands of beautiful women are frequently subject to passionate fits of jealousy; jealousy and possessiveness. If you seek a personal motive, that might be a good place to start, yes? Particularly given the removal of Pelletan’s heart.”

“Did you know that Pelletan was killed on the twentieth anniversary of the execution of Louis XVI?”

“No, I did not. You believe that to be significant?”

“Rather a coincidence if it is not, wouldn’t you agree?”

The colonel wiped his mustache again and rose to his feet. “Life is full of coincidences.”

He started to turn.

Sebastian stopped him by saying, “Why do you think Ambrose LaChapelle attended Pelletan’s funeral mass?”

“Perhaps you should ask him,” said the colonel.

Then he pushed his way through the laughing, jostling crowd, a tall, erect man with the bearing of a military officer surrounded by his nation’s enemies.

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