CHAPTER SEVEN

Later that evening Lenox was glad of the roast chicken, potatoes, and peas he had eaten at home that afternoon, because during the debate there was only time for a biscuit and a glass of port in the Members’ Bar, during a ten-minute recess. It was a heated session. In the end it was nearly two o’clock in the morning when the Artisans’ and Labourers’ Dwellings Improvement Act passed, a strange hybrid object that belonged in the affection of neither party wholly but had enough disjointed support between the two that it became the law of England. When the tide had finally turned, Disraeli gave Lenox, his chief ally among the liberals, a grave nod from across the aisle. It was a gesture few saw but that seemed to Lenox to imply much: thanks, future favors asked and given, even friendship. Compromise received a bad character from some men in the House, the look had said; but not from either of them.

He went to bed utterly spent and permitted himself the luxury of sleeping until nine. When he woke he put on his warm dressing gown — there was a chill outside that morning, the sunlight hard and frosty — and took his cup of coffee in the armchair near the high windows in their bedroom, where he could watch from three stories up the hum of Hampden Lane. Across the street at the booksellers was the oysterman, selling three for a farthing, or six with bread and butter for two farthings, and passing him on the street were any variety of urgent gentlemen. It was a peaceful thing to watch them from a still place, warm and rested.

Kirk came in with a note at twenty past the hour. It was from McConnell. The evening before, Lenox had found a moment to invite the doctor to lunch the next day, but it appeared that his friend had to decline.

Dear Charles,

Unfortunately I’m committed to lunch at the Surgeons’ this afternoon, but what do you say to our meeting tomorrow instead? I can come to the Athenaeum at one o’clock if you’re free then. Best to Jane and Sophia.

Thos. McConnell

Even a detective so far out of practice as Lenox was capable of stopping into the Surgeons’ Club and asking at the front desk whether Dr. McConnell was there. At two o’clock, after a leisurely morning of work at Parliament, that was what he did, though he felt rather shabby for it.

“He is not in at the moment, sir,” said the dignified gatekeeper of the place. Portraits lined the walls of this entranceway, where in one corner a man struggled into a pair of galoshes.

“Was he in earlier this afternoon?”

“No, sir. We have not seen him this week past, sir.”

“Ah. I must have misread his message.”

“Would you like to leave a note for him, sir?”

“Thank you, no,” said Lenox.

So. McConnell had deceived him.

He hadn’t liked to involve his carriage driver in this expedition, and so as he came out again onto Portugal Street — the club was just near the Royal College of Surgeons — he hailed a passing omnibus, its driver, in his accustomed white top hat, deigning to pull his horses very nearly to a stop. (Some drivers refused to stop for anything less than a marquess. Their discrimination against the working class was what had made the underground so popular.) It was westbound, at any rate. He stepped into the small, airless chamber and sat upon one of its two benches, which was lined with indigo velvet. Opposite him were two women discussing the bill Parliament had passed.

“Shameful how they coddle them.”

“Mm.”

“I had thought more highly of Disraeli.”

Lenox smiled faintly, avoiding their eyes. You couldn’t please everyone, he supposed. When the omnibus had traveled two miles down the Strand he got off, leaving them with an amicable nod.

At the end of the Strand was Pall Mall, of course — and that was just a turning away from White’s. He hadn’t planned to look in for Archie Godwin, but he decided now that Graham could spare him for another twenty minutes.

White’s was a club Lenox rather disliked, the playground of young lords who made outlandish bets and drank themselves to foolishness. (In 1816 the Regency buck Lord Alvanley had bet a friend three thousand pounds that one raindrop would reach the bottom of a bow window before another. By 1823 he had been forced to sell his family’s ancient lands, a surprise to nobody.) It was a beautiful building nevertheless, alabaster and intricately carved, a less hieratically inclined cousin to Westminster Abbey, with a black wrought-iron fence in front.

“I’m looking for Archibald Godwin,” Lenox said to the bowler-hatted porter at the front door.

“Not in,” said the porter, not unkindly.

“Was he here earlier this morning, or yesterday afternoon?”

The porter laughed. “Not unless you count December last. That was when I saw him most recent.”

“Not since then?” Lenox asked, with raised eyebrows.

“No, sir.”

“Hm. Strange.”

“Not particular, if you consider he lives in Hampshire.”

“Does he, though?”

“Has since I’ve known him,” said the porter. He touched his hat. “Good day.”

Of course, Who’s Who had said that Godwin lived in Hampshire. Why was he in London? If he hadn’t so much as visited his club, why would Godwin give his address as White’s?

The last question at least had an answer, perhaps — he might have been hoping to put Lenox off. The young man was plainly a member, and correspondence sent to the club would reach him, eventually but not too quickly. By giving Lenox this address Godwin had discharged his minimal responsibility to another gentleman while managing to discourage further contact.

Lenox walked down Cleveland Row and into Green Park, until he was in sight of the brick face of Buckingham Palace. The flag was up, which meant the Queen was in residence. A bobby passed by with his usual equipment, a truncheon, a rattle, and a lamp. That rattle had come in handy to Lenox many times, when he and a bobby on the trail of a murderer or thief had found themselves in an unpleasant situation, for its noise brought every constable on a neighboring beat instantly to hand.

Once a clever criminal he had known, Jonathan Spender, had put the fact to his own use; he had obtained one of the rattles and paid a street boy a shilling to shake it on a crowded corner. As the bobbies came flying toward the boy, Spender was calmly robbing the suddenly unwatched row houses of Eaton Square.

The thought of Spender’s subterfuge drew Lenox to a stop. He frowned, realizing he should have asked the porter one further question. Was it worth turning back? He consulted his pocket watch and found that it was already past three o’clock. Really he ought to have been down at the Commons, but he couldn’t resist.

The porter didn’t seem especially surprised to see him again. “Still no sign of Mr. Godwin,” he reported with a smile.

“May I ask you a question about him?”

For the first time the friendliness left the porter’s face. It was well enough to say whether or not a member was in, and perhaps to let slip the last time he had been in — but to offer any more would encroach upon the privacy of a selective establishment’s members. “Well?” he asked.

“This Godwin, I only met him once. He is a tall, fair-haired gentlemen, rather slim, no?”

The porter shook his head. “Are you after some mischief, sir?”

Lenox handed over his card. It was like all gentlemen’s cards — his name in the center, address in the lower left, the club he frequented most often in the lower right — but it happened to say that he was a Junior Lord of the Treasury and give his address as Parliament. “We share a mutual acquaintance, a young woman,” he said.

“I’m not sure you do, respectfully, sir,” said the porter, handing the card back with a slight and reverent incline of his head. “Mr. Godwin is a round gentleman a shade under five foot, and by every account I’ve heard he has been bald since he was seventeen.”

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