CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT

He went on deck for a breath of fresh air now, his mind still worrying the same few details. When he reached the quarterdeck he was pleased to see that above, on the poop deck, Lieutenant Lee was pointing toward the sails and talking animatedly with Teddy Lenox. The boy was looking grave and nodding. It was what he needed, thought Lenox, to learn his craft, to take his mind away from Martin and Halifax.

Then he ventured slightly closer, preparing to join the conversation. But as his foot was on the first step the wind died, and he heard Lee’s drawl very clearly. The lieutenant said, “I swear her legs must have been taller than you, too, the vixenish little morsel.”

“Goodness,” said Teddy, his voice rich with trust and interest.

Hastily Lenox stepped back toward the railing. Well, there were all sorts of education, he supposed. Better to leave Teddy alone. If the gun room didn’t corrupt the lad, surely Lee wouldn’t. And then, they had talked of women, of maids and ladies, when he was a boy at school.

After he had taken several turns on the quarterdeck and filled his lungs with the fresh, saline air, Lenox went down to his cabin. McEwan was seated on his stool, munching on something loud, and polishing Lenox’s brown boots with intense concentration.

“Oh, sir,” he said, rising, crumbs flying from his mouth.

“Charming,” said Lenox.

McEwan smiled. “Sorry, sir.”

“Not at all. Could you find me something to eat? A sandwich would do.”

“Of course, Mr. Lenox.”

“And then I shall need several hours undisturbed.”

“Yes, sir. I shall leave your boots till then.”

Lenox had decided that he would decode the Alpha document that he had received from Edmund on the docks in Plymouth. If he left the case for an hour or two he might find it looked different upon his return.

As he reached for the document, which lay on his desk, Lenox brushed a letter onto the floor. Picking it up he saw that it was one Jane had sent with him, a sweet, short, and loving note. He unfolded it and read it over again, and felt his heart become very full. The air of menace on the Lucy hadn’t affected him enormously—he was used to it, from his days as a detective—but reading the letter he thought of all he had to live for, his wife, his child, the house on Hampden Lane, the two dogs Jane had given him three years before, Bear and Rabbit, one golden, one black. A domestic life. With a flash of insight he saw that while he thought he had been giving up the drama and danger of detection for his seat in Parliament, perhaps in fact it had been his love, his soon-to-be family, for which he had sacrificed his old life. The thought made him feel homesick.

There was a knock on the door, and McEwan squeezed in with a plate full of roast beef sandwiches with a dollop of Fortnum’s horseradish, courtesy of Jane’s hamper, and a great pile of cold roasted potatoes, sea salted and studded with twigs of sage and rosemary.

“Do you want a fork for the potatoes, sir?” McEwan asked.

“No, I can eat them with my fingers if you fetch me a napkin. Many a time in my bachelor days I ate worse with my hands.”

“Very good, sir.”

“I’ll take some ketchup, too, from the small white pot. Dickens recommends it with breaded lamb chops, you know, but I prefer it on roasted potatoes.”

“Right away, Mr. Lenox. Any wine?”

“A half bottle of the Burgundy—why not?”

He ate happily, and with great care not to spill on the papers began to decipher the list of his official duties in Egypt.

These were both relatively straightforward and, in the customs they involved, inordinately complex. For example, on his first day in the country he was scheduled to take a tour of the Suez Canal. Simple enough, and yet the list of things he could not mention—the slave deaths during its construction, the new and crippling taxes levied on every poor soul in the country, even the word “Ethiopia,” for Egypt was engaged in a futile war there—was daunting. The financial situation was so bad that the current Parliament had debated long and hard sending an envoy to the country to inquire into the state of affairs, and many held the opinion that national bankruptcy was inevitable.

The great sultan, whom Lenox would meet once, was called Ismail the Magnificent, and he too was a compromised figure: He lived in unimaginable opulence, and in many ways had made Egypt the most advanced country outside of Europe, and yet his vast public expenditures had made him profoundly reliant on help from France and England, among other countries.

As he read through his instructions, Lenox rather began to wish he had brought a secretary after all. By rights he might have had two, as many men in government did when they traveled, but he had known the Lucy to be a small ship, and besides that hadn’t wanted to pull his own closest confidant and personal secretary, his former butler Graham, away from London. With good reason, he thought. There was a story Lenox had heard as a boy of the great orator Cicero leaving Rome to administer a colony for several years; when he returned he walked into the Senate and said to the first man he met, “I’m back!” To which the man replied, “Where did you go?” Lenox was out of sight, but Graham might keep him in the minds of the men in Parliament.

If he couldn’t have Graham, he decided, he didn’t need anyone. The ship would provide a steward. Now, though, faced with this forbidding list of duties, he regretted the decision. Hopefully the English consular staff in Port Said would be competent.

He was reading about one of his final appointments several hours later. Apparently the wali prided himself on his commitment to the scientific methods of Western Europe.

It was then, with the murders far, far from his mind, that the pieces jumbled together once more and fell into their places, as neatly as pegs into holes.

He thought he knew who had killed Halifax and Martin. He stood up.

“McEwan!” he called out excitedly. “Find me Captain Billings!”

“Right away, sir,” called out the steward.

Lenox left his cabin and strode toward the hatchway that would take him on deck, hoping he might find Billings sooner than McEwan, and arrange a meeting of the officers. It would take a bit of stagecraft, to be sure. He needed a few hours to plan it. Maybe longer; better make it tomorrow, perhaps, in the forenoon.

McEwan bumped into him coming down the hatchway. “He is working, he says, sir, but will attend you in fifteen minutes in the captain’s dining room.”

“Excellent. Listen, I may want to go to the crow’s nest again. Could you accompany me there, in half an hour, say, after I meet Billings? I trust you more than Andersen.”

“Oh, with great pleasure. Will that be all?”

“Yes,” said Lenox, suddenly distracted.

“Sir? Are you all right?”

“Fine, fine. Meet me on deck then.”

“Yes, sir.”

There was one snag that Lenox could see, something from the captain’s log. Before he looked into that, though, he took the silence of the wardroom to steal into an officer’s cabin.

There he found what he had needed. Verification.

Then, all action, he went to the gun room. Only Pimples was there. (Lenox noticed a faint sallowness to the boy’s face that he had not perceived before. A remnant of his illness, perhaps.)

“Do you know where Teddy is?” he asked.

“He should be back any moment.”

Indeed, he opened the door to the gun room, his face full of excitement—perhaps to relate Lee’s story to Pimples—not a few seconds later.

“Oh! Uncle!”

“Teddy, may I have a private word?”

“Here, you may be alone,” said Pimples. “I need to be on deck anyhow.”

“Thank you.”

When they were alone, Lenox sat down. “Teddy, you told me that on your first night aboard the Lucy you were badly ill. Isn’t that so?”

Teddy’s eyes were hooded with caution. “Yes, I suppose. Why?”

“You must answer me truthfully: Did Mr. Carrow send you below deck to sleep it off?”

“No,” said Teddy stoutly.

But his face told a different story. “You never saw Halifax’s body, did you? I read in the captain’s log that a sick midshipman on his first night was sent below. On a different voyage.”

“I never went down!”

“Teddy. It’s I, your uncle. Think of your father.”

The internal struggle played out on the midshipman’s face, but before long he relented. “Well, fine. But Mr. Carrow made me promise not to tell! Said he’d been ill, too, and I could tuck down in the hallway, so the other mids wouldn’t laugh at me.”

“Mr. Carrow said that?”

“You won’t tell, Uncle Charles?”

“Thank you for being honest. I must leave you now.”

So. A new fact. He could use it. He left the gun room and went off to meet Billings, his mind racing, adding bits and pieces of what he had seen in the last week—but not truly seen, at the time—all of which confirmed his suspicions.


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