Chapter Seven
Christopher Redmayne was momentarily stopped in his tracks, not knowing whether to go to the aid of the victim or to pursue the man who had shot him. He soon made his decision. Sir Julius was flailing about in the water, clearly in difficulty but very much alive. Sheathing his sword, Christopher ran down to the stream and plunged straight in, wading swiftly across to him.
'I'm coming, Sir Julius,' he called.
'Get me out of here!' spluttered the other.
'Are you hurt?'
'I can't swim.'
When Christopher reached him, he took him hold of his shoulders but Sir Julius let out a grunt of pain and put a protective hand to his left arm. Seeing where the wound was, Christopher instead grasped him around the waist and pulled him towards the bank. Others came running to help. Having heard the shot, the coachman and the footman darted through the trees and made for the stream. Christopher was glad of their assistance. Between them, they hauled Sir Julius on to the bank and laid him gently on the grass.
The musket ball had grazed his upper arm, tearing his sleeve and the shirt beneath it, and producing a spurt of blood. Stung by the shot, Sir Julius was more alarmed by the fact that he had gone under the water for a few seconds. He was sodden from head to foot and he twitched on the ground like a giant fish caught in a net. Christopher insisted on easing off the coat so that he could examine the wound. When he saw that it was a deep gash, and that no bone had been shattered, he removed his own coat. He tore a long strip from his shirt, using it to bind the wound and stem the flow of blood.
'What happened?' asked Sir Julius, still dazed by it all.
'Someone fired at you,' said Christopher.
'Who was the devil?'
'That's what I hope to find out.'
Satisfied that Sir Julius was now safe, Christopher hared across the grass towards the spinney and vanished into the trees. His sword was back in his hand and he did not mind that he was dripping wet to the waist. He blamed himself for being caught off guard. Determined to make amends, he searched the spinney thoroughly, using his sword to push back shrubs and bushes. But the attacker had fled. As he came out of the trees on the other side, Christopher found a set of hoof prints gouged in the earth, suggesting a speedy departure. The man could be half a mile away by now.
Filled with remorse, he trudged back towards the others, fearing how Susan Cheever would react when she learned what had happened to her father. Christopher had not forewarned her of the danger that Sir Julius faced and that was certain to horrify her. There would be fierce recriminations. It was only by luck that Sir Julius had not been killed. In responding to Christopher’s yell, he had turned almost simultaneously as the shot was fired. That sudden movement had saved his life but it was no use pointing that out to his younger daughter. She would want to know why Christopher had not confided in her beforehand so that she could have insisted her father take more care on the journey.
Sir Julius was sitting up as Christopher approached.
Any sign of the villain?'
'None,' replied Christopher. 'He got clean away.'
'A pox on him! Look at me,' said Sir Julius, indignantly. 'I was almost drowned, my arm is on fire, my coat has been ruined, and my pipe has floated off downstream.'
'It could have been worse, Sir Julius. Someone tried to kill you. It's only by the grace of God that you are not making the rest of the journey beside Mr Everett.'
'Do you think I don't know that? Get me up.'
Are you sure that you can stand?'
'Of course, man. It's only a flesh wound. I've had far worse.'
Taking care not to touch the injured arm, Christopher lifted him to his feet with the help of the coachman. Water was still dripping copiously from Sir Julius. He let out a snort of disgust.
'Thank heaven I have some fresh apparel with me!'
'It might be better if you changed in private,' advised Christopher.
'I was not intending to strip naked in front of an audience.' 'What I meant is that Mrs Polegate and her children would be shocked if they learned what had happened. To spare them any further distress, it might be politic to say nothing.'
'I agree.' Sir Julius glanced at the other men. 'Not a word of this, do you understand?' Both gave a nod of assent. 'We'll give out that I fell in the river by accident and that Mr Redmayne rescued me. Now - fetch some blankets from the inn. Nobody should see us in this state.'
The coachman and the footman went off. Sheathing his sword, Christopher glanced towards the spinney Unbeknown to them, they had been followed. When they stopped at the inn, someone had worked his way around them then lurked in the trees ahead on the off-chance that his target would come into view. Christopher had one tiny consolation. Sir Julius would no longer be able to deny that he was in jeopardy. It was, however, certainly not the time to emphasize that point.
'How do you feel now, Sir Julius?' he inquired.
'Very wet.'
'What about your arm?'
'It hurts like blazes,' said Sir Julius, 'but that's the least of my worries. My main concern is for Hester Polegate and the boys.'
'Why?'
'I'm a marked man, Christopher. The rogue who failed to kill me will surely try again. As long as they travel with me, Hester and her sons are imperilled. I'm knowingly putting them at risk.'
'There's no need to feel guilty, Sir Julius.'
'How can I help it?'
'By remembering the man in the trees.'
'What do you mean?'
'His shot knocked you off your feet and into the stream,' said Christopher. 'From where he was standing, it must have looked as if he'd killed you. That's why he made such a rapid escape. You can forget about him altogether now. He's riding back to London to tell his paymaster that Sir Julius Cheever is dead.'
Because the man was a Member of Parliament, involved in the government of the nation, Jonathan Bale had assumed that he would have a distinguished address in London. This was not the case at all. When the House of Commons was sitting, and his presence was required in the capital, Lewis Bircroft, who hailed from Norfolk, lodged with friends in their modest house in Coleman Street. Bale had an immediate affinity with the district. In earlier days, the place had been a well-known stronghold of Puritanism.
He was admitted to the house by its owner and asked to wait in the little parlour while Bircroft was summoned. It was some time before the man actually appeared because he had some difficulty descending the staircase. Expecting someone with an air of authority about him, Bale was surprised to meet a short, stooping, emaciated old man with tufts of grey hair sprouting above a prominent forehead like patches of grass on a cliff top. There was a hunted look in Bircroft s eyes and his face was lined with concern. Using a walking stick, he also held his neck at an unusual angle as if it had been twisted out of shape.
Bale introduced himself and explained that he had been to the Parliament House to discover where Bircroft was staying in London. He apologised for calling but said that it was necessary to do so. The other man was extremely wary.
'What do you want with me, Constable?' he asked.
'A few minutes of your time, sir.'
'Then I must sit down.'
'Of course, Mr Bircroft.'
'Bear with me.'
What was a simple movement for Bale was a more complicated exercise for the other man. Shuffling to a chair, he lowered himself with agonising slowness on to it, his limbs poking out at odd angles as he settled down. He was clearly in constant pain. Sitting opposite him. Bale felt sorry for the man. However, he had been sent to get information and did not wish to leave without it.
'Do you know a man named Bernard Everett?' said Bale.
'Yes, he lives near Cambridge.'
'Not any more, I'm afraid. He died some days ago.'
'Dear me!' exclaimed Bircroft. 'What a terrible shame! Bernard was about to join us in the Parliament House. I only arrived here yesterday so I was quite unaware of this news. Had he been ill for long?'
'It was not a natural death, Mr Bircroft. He was murdered.'
The old man gurgled and looked as if he were on the point of having a seizure. Bale had to wait a long while before Bircroft felt able to continue. The visitor explained what had happened in Knightrider Street and how he had become part of the hue and cry that had been set up.
'I'll not abide it, Mr Bircroft,' he said, grimly. 'I'll not have people shot dead in Baynard's Castle ward. However much time and effort it takes, we'll find this villain and see him hang.'
'I admire your commitment, Mr Bale, but I fail to see how I can be of any assistance to you. I did not know Bernard Everett well.'
'But you were a close friend of Sir Julius Cheever.'
'I was,' confessed Bircroft:, 'at one time.'
'Are you no longer associated with him?'
'Only in the loosest way.'
'I believe that you and he shared so many common objectives,' said Bale. 'May I ask why the two of you fell out?'
Bircroft looked away. 'That's a private matter.'
'You were wont to visit his house.'
'Yes, I was.'
'Did you lose faith in your ideals?'
'No!' retorted Bircroft. 'I would never do that and I find your question offensive. I repudiate nothing.' He was trembling with passion. 'Do you know where you are, Mr Bale?'
'Yes, sir - in Coleman Street.'
'And are you aware of its reputation?'
'Of course, Mr Bircroft. I rejoice in its Puritan values.'
'In 1642, when the King's father was on the throne, he sought to silence opposition in parliament by arresting five of its leaders. Those men - Pym, Hampton, Hesilrige, Holies and Strode - had to flee for their lives. They hid here in Coleman Street. A week later, they were able to return in triumph to Westminster.'
'I'm familiar with the story, sir.' 'Then do not accuse me of lacking ideals. I stay in this part of the city because this is where I belong, politically and in every other sense. I may not have the same strength to champion my beliefs in the House of Commons, but I can work by other means to achieve my ends. I write pamphlets, I speak to clubs in private, I disseminate ideas.'
'Yet you withdrew from the group that is led by Sir Julius.'
'I admit it freely.'
'And another man who fell away was Mr Manville.'
'Arthur had his own reasons.'
'Was it because he had his nose slit?' said Bale, repeating the question he had read in Christopher's letter. 'And were you, in turn, frightened away by the men who attacked you with cudgels?'
Bircroft shuddered as harrowing memories flooded back. Two hideous minutes in an alleyway had left his body permanently distorted and he would never be able to walk properly again. Yet he tried to cling on to a shred of dignity.
'Violence will never change my fundamental ideals.'
'But it can stop you expressing them.'
'I was foolish,' claimed Bircroft. 'When I walked through Covent Garden that day, I did not keep my wits about me. Those bullies fell on me because I was an easy prey. Once they'd knocked me senseless, they stole my purse and made off. Anyone else who'd been alone in that alleyway would have suffered the same fate.'
'So you did not see the beating as a kind of warning?'
'No, Mr Bale.'
'What about the attack on Mr Manville?'
'Ask him about that,' said Bircroft:, knuckles tightening on his walking stick. 'Arthur was too reckless. He courted a particular lady even though she was married. Her husband learned of it. I think that he paid for the disfigurement.'
'Is that what Mr Manville thinks?'
'Yes.'
'And was the husband in question a politician, by any chance?'
'What difference does that make?'
'Was he, Mr Bircroft?' pressed Bale.
The old man shifted uneasily in his chair. 'Yes,' he said.
'But not of your persuasion?'
'Good Lord - no!'
'So it could have been an attack on a political opponent?'
'Why are you bothering me with these questions?'
'Because we see a link here,' said Bale.
'Between what?'
'All three of you, sir.'
'I do not follow.'
'You, Mr Manville and Mr Everett,' said the constable. 'It's too much of a coincidence. One by one, Sir Julius Cheever's supporters have been whittled away. Mr Manville does not speak in parliament any more, you are in no condition to do so, and Mr Everett was never even allowed to take his seat. The same person is behind all these outrages. You must have some idea who he might be.'
Lewis Bircroft tried to summon up a look of defiance but it simply would not come. Instead, his body drooped, his face crumpled and tears began to roll slowly down his cheeks.
Brilliana Serle was an enterprising woman. Failing to get what she felt was adequate cooperation from her sister, she decided to take matters into her own hands. Accordingly, she and her husband set off in their coach to find out what they could about the Redmayne family. Susan had been so reticent about Christopher's brother that her suspicions had been aroused. Truth needed to be sought. While Brilliana was in high spirits, her husband was having doubts about the expedition.
'Would it not be better to wait until Christopher returns?' he said.
'No, Lancelot.'
'But it would be quite improper of us to arrive on his brothers doorstep without the courtesy of a warning.'
'We do not have to enter the building,' she explained. 'I merely wish to see it from outside. A house can tell one so much about its owner and I would like to learn all that I can about Henry Redmayne.' 'What if Susan were to find out what we've done?'
'Then we'll deny it hotly.'
'But that would be a deception.'
'It would be a white lie and therefore of no consequence,' she said, flicking away his objection with a peremptory gesture. 'We are acting in my sister's best interests, Lancelot. Keep that in mind.'
'Yes, Brilliana.'
'If I knew where Mrs Kitson lived, I'd suggest that we perused her residence in passing as well.'
'That would be quite wrong,' he argued. 'We are not spies.'
'We are intelligencers for our family, and that entitles us to take whatever steps we decide.'
'Whatever steps you decide, I fancy.'
'Someone has to make the decisions.'
Their coach was part of the traffic that rattled along the Strand but it soon swung left into Bedford Street, a wide thoroughfare with handsome buildings on either side. The coachman drove up to the end of the street then stopped so that its occupants could alight. Taking her husband's arm, Brilliana strolled back down the street with him until she found the house that she was after. They paused in order to appraise it. Henry Redmayne's home was a tall, elegant, stone-built structure with a pleasing symmetry and a good location. Well outside the reach of the Great Fire, it had sustained none of the damage that afflicted most of the city. Over the years, it had weathered well.
Serle felt embarrassed to be staring at someone else's house but his wife wanted to see her fill. She ran her eyes over every inch of the building before she gave her verdict.
'It's the home of a gentleman,' she announced.
'May we return to the coach now, Brilliana?'
'Though it's in need of repair in one or two places.'
'We are not surveyors, my dear,' he said, trying to lead her away. 'Now that you have satisfied your curiosity, let us withdraw.'
The clatter of hooves made them turn towards the Strand and they saw a horseman approaching at a canter. He reined in his mount only yards away from them.
'Why are you peering at my house?' he inquired, eyeing them with faint suspicion. 'Do you have business here?'
'Am I speaking to Henry Redmayne?' said Brilliana.
'You are.'
'I see little resemblance to your brother.'
'You are acquainted with Christopher?'
'My name is Brilliana Serle,' she said, 'and this is my husband, Lancelot. We are staying in London at the home of my father, Sir Julius Cheever. I believe that you've met my sister.'
'Briefly.' Henry dismounted and doffed his hat with a flourish. 'I'm pleased to meet you, Mrs Serle - and you, sir.' His gaze remained on Brilliana. 'I can see a clear likeness to Susan.'
'In character,' Serle volunteered, 'they are poles apart.'
'And rightly so. It would not do if sisters were exactly the same, and I think it imperative for a man to be as different from his brother as he can possibly contrive. Variety is needed in a family - don't you agree, Mrs Serle?'
'I do, Mr Redmayne,' she said, studying him shrewdly.
'You work at the Navy Office, I hear,' said Serle.
'I've just returned from there,' said Henry, sparing him no more than a glance. 'When one lives on an island, as we do, the maintenance of a strong navy is vital. I'm proud to assist in that important mission.'
'Then I commend you, sir.'
Henry did not even hear him. He was too busy contemplating Brilliana, noting how irresistibly fetching she looked in a dress of blue and gold, colours that enhanced her beauty. For his part, Henry wore less flamboyant apparel than was usual but he was still a model of ostentation beside the more soberly attired Lancelot Serle. His dark periwig threw the paleness of his face into relief. Brilliana accorded him the same close scrutiny as the house. Older than his brother, his features were sharper, more mature and, in her opinion, far more interesting. It was a face that, self-evidently, had seen a great deal of life and it somehow gave her an unexpected thrill.
'What brought you to London?' said Henry.
'News of that foul murder in Knightrider Street,' she replied. 'My father was inadvertently caught up in it.'
'So was my brother.'
'We know.'
'As a matter of fact, I was able to furnish him with information that may in time lead to an arrest. I have many friends in the political arena,' he went on, airily, 'and my attendance at court has widened my circle even more. Christopher often trades on my knowledge of the great and good of England.'
Brilliana was intrigued. 'You belong to the court?'
'His Majesty has been kind enough to include me among his many acquaintances. We have always been on excellent terms.'
'You hear that, Lancelot?'
'What, my dear?' said Serle.
'Mr Redmayne moves in high places. It's the sort of thing that you should be doing.' She turned back to Henry. 'My husband has ambitions to enter parliament. To move in court circles as well would be an even greater achievement.'
'But well outside my reach, Brilliana.'
'I disagree.'
'What would your father say? You know his opinion of monarchy.'
'I'm only concerned with my opinion,' she said, proudly, 'and I'm an admirer of His Majesty. What do you think, Mr Redmayne? Would it be possible for someone like my husband to enter the portals of the Palace?'
'If he were introduced by the right person,' replied Henry, unable to keep his eyes off her. 'But why are we discussing such * lofty subjects out here in the street? Since you have taken an interest in my house, perhaps you would like to see its interior as well. It would be an honour to welcome you as my guest.' He and Brilliana exchanged a prolonged smile. Henry then remembered that someone else was there. His head swung round to Serle. 'And you, too, sir. Pray, follow me.'
Accustomed to rising early, Christopher Redmayne was up not long after dawn to wash, shave and eat his breakfast. The funeral was to be held in the parish church of a village some four miles south-east of Cambridge. Since there was no room at the Everett household for either of them, Christopher and Sir Julius were staying at an inn nearby. The injury sustained by the latter had been concealed from everyone else, though Sir Julius had taken the precaution of finding a local doctor who had examined and dressed the wound for him. Since the old man's enemies would presume that he was dead, Christopher felt that his companion was out of immediate danger. That encouraged him to slip quietly away from the inn while Sir Julius was still snoring contentedly in his bed as he dreamed of Dorothy Kitson.
Cambridge looked majestic in the early morning light, a seat of learning that was also a display of architectural excellence over the centuries. Christopher found it breathtaking. He knew Oxford well but this was his first visit to its rival in the fens. Peterhouse, the oldest college, had been founded in 1280 and by the time of the Reformation, fourteen more colleges had been added. But it was not only the university that defined the town. Churches, chapels, halls, houses, civic buildings and extensive parks made their contribution, and the River Cam was an ever- present landmark. Christopher felt that he was stepping back in time to a more scholarly era when men were untroubled by the religious and political upheavals that had shaken the Stuart dynasty to its foundations.
Permitting himself only a few hours, he did not waste a second of it. He went everywhere, saw everything and drank it in like fine wine. As a practising architect, he never travelled without his sketchbook and it came out of his saddlebag as soon as he arrived. Any feature that caught his eye was duly recorded, more for its own intrinsic worth than because he could ever make use of it in his own work. He savoured the talents of stonemasons, wood carvers, blacksmiths, tapestry-makers, glaziers and carpenters. He marvelled at the minds of the master builders who had conceived the various edifices.
Most of all, he loved the higgledy-piggledy nature of the town, its narrow, twisting, cobbled streets, its jumbled confusion, its pervading sense of improvisation. And there at the heart of it, reminding him that this was somewhere to live, eat and drink as well as to study, was a thriving marketplace, filled with noise, smells and all the paraphernalia of commerce. By the time that he had completed his tour of Cambridge, his sketchbook was brimming with memories and his heart was pounding at the thought of belonging to a profession with such a noble heritage. Christopher had only come to the funeral in order to protect Sir Julius Cheever. Three hours in the university town was a more than ample reward for the vicissitudes of the journey.
Jonathan Bale had just left his house when he saw someone coming down Addle Hill, waving a piece of paper in his hand like a flag. It was Patrick McCoy and his face was glowing with excitement.
'It was my idea, Mr Bale,' he bragged. 'It was my idea.'
'What was, Patrick?'
'This.'
He thrust the paper into Bale's hands. The constable looked down at a rough portrait in charcoal of a man's face. Bridget McCoy was only an innkeeper but she had a good eye and a deft hand. The picture was striking. She had put enough detail and character into it to make it more than a crude sketch. The broken nose dominated but she had also recalled the man's large ears and the mole on his right cheek. Within her strict limitations, she had brought him to life again.
'That's him,' said Patrick.
'So I see.'
'I know who to look for now.'
'Does your mother think it's a fair likeness?'
'Yes, Mr Bale. She spent hours over it. Mother must have done five or six drawings before she was happy. This is the man,' he said, jabbing a finger at the portrait. 'This is the killer.'
'Then his face ought to be on some handbills.'
'There's no need for that.'
'I could go straight to the printer's now.'
'No,' protested the youth. 'That would be unfair.'
'Unfair?'
'He's ours, Mr Bale. We don't want anyone else to catch him.'
'Someone might identify him from this,' said Bale. 'They could tell us where we could find Mr Field.'
'But we know where to find him.'
'Do we, Patrick?'
'Yes, at Leadenhall Market.'
'That may just have been a chance visit on his part.'
'It wasn't,' said Patrick. 'I know it for sure. He'll be there again one day. All we have to do is to wait and watch.'
'I can't spend every morning in Leadenhall Street.'
'I'll do it for you, Mr Bale.'
'No, lad.'
'It will be a test for me.'
'Test?'
'I can show you how good a constable I can be. Let me be your lookout, Mr Bale. Let me work with you.'
'Tom Warburton does that.'
'I'm stronger than Mr Warburton. I'm younger and faster.'
'That's true,' said Bale, 'but you don't have Tom's experience. We know how dangerous Mr Field is. He may well go abroad armed. Tom and I know how to overpower such a man.'
'So do I.'
'No, Patrick. This man is no reeling drunk at the Saracen's Head. You can't just grab him. He's a killer. He needs to be stalked.'
'Then let me stalk him.'
'Leave him to us. We know what to do.'
'But I want to help,' insisted Patrick.
'You already have helped, lad.' Bale held up the drawing. 'If this really was your idea, then you deserve praise. It shows that you can think like a constable even if you're not old enough to be one yet.'
'I will be old enough one day.'
'Go back to your mother and thank her from me.' He patted the youth on the shoulder. 'And tell her that she has a very clever son.'
The funeral took place late that afternoon. Customarily, funerals tended to be held in the evenings when light was falling and it was a common complaint that undertakers only encouraged the practice so that they could increase their profits by providing the candles. It was Bernard Everett's widow who decided to have her husband buried at the earliest opportunity so that it could remain essentially a private affair. Since he represented the county in parliament, Everett was known far and wide and, had all his friends and acquaintances come to mourn him, the funeral would have been so well-attended that the widow could not have coped. A service of remembrance for a much larger gathering could be held at a later date. What Rosalind Everett required now was a swift, simple ceremony.
Christopher Redmayne stayed on the fringe of the event. He was invited into the house for drinks before the funeral and introduced to the various family members. The chief mourners wore black attire and the hearse, in which the coffin was draped in black, had black horses with black plumes to pull it. The service was both moving and disquieting. Though the priest heaped fulsome praise on Bernard Everett, his words brought little solace. Instead of thinking about his life, the congregation was preoccupied with the manner of his death. The widow bore up well throughout and it was Hester Polegate who collapsed in tears. She was taken aside and soothed by her husband, the London vintner.
Everyone returned to the house for refreshments after the service but Christopher and Sir Julius soon took their leave so that they could travel at least part of the way back to London by nightfall. Since the Polegate family elected to remain at the Everett house for a few days, the coach only had one occupant on the return journey. Christopher was delighted when Sir Julius invited the architect to join him. With his horse tethered to the rear of the vehicle, Christopher sat opposite the other man as they drove towards London. From the time when they had first arrived, he had taken care not even to mention the attack upon Sir Julius. The subject now had to be discussed and it was the man himself who broached it.
'I must tender my apologies, Christopher,' he said.
'There's no need for that, Sir Julius.'
'There's every need. I was rude, inconsiderate and stupid.'
'I felt that I had to warn you,' said Christopher.
'You were so wise to do so. And how did I respond? Was I grateful that you had such concern for my safety? Was I glad that you had taken the trouble to inquire about political colleagues of mine who had suffered for their ideals? No,' admitted Sir Julius. 'I was too busy pretending that it could never happen to me.'
'And now?'
'I know better, Christopher.'
'Mr Everett died in your place. The shot was intended for you.'
'I accept that.'
'What happened by that stream proves it.'
'Indubitably,' said Sir Julius. 'Every time I feel a twinge in my left arm, I'm reminded of the incident. Zounds! Though he failed to kill me, I could easily have drowned in that water, had you not pulled me out. Ugh!' he went on, grimacing. 'I can still taste the stuff. I must have drunk a gallon of it as I went under.'
'As long as you take full precautions in future,' urged Christopher.
'Oh, I will, I will.'
'Go out as little as possible.'
'I must to the Parliament House when the session opens.'
'From what Susan tells me, Sir Julius, your own home is a veritable Parliament House. It's a pity you cannot conduct business there, well away from danger.'
'I'm not afraid, Christopher. I need to be seen. I have to show my enemies that I'm not put to flight by a stray musket ball.'
'They'll have a shock when they realise you are still alive.'
'I'll give them even more shocks when they're unmasked!'
'Go armed at all times,' advised Christopher.
'I do.'
'I see no weapon about you.'
'Stand up.'
'What?'
'Get to your feet so that you may raise the seat.'
Christopher obeyed the order and lifted the cushioned seat. Lying beneath it was a blunderbuss and a supply of powder and ammunition.
'I keep it loaded,' said Sir Julius. 'It's a great persuader if any highwayman should deign to stop us. Lower it down.' Christopher did so and resumed his seat. 'What I'll not do again is to be caught out in the open, alone and unguarded.'
'That's music to my ears.'
The old man leaned forward. 'I value your discretion.'
'Discretion?'
'Susan was told nothing of your fears. Otherwise, she'd have done her best to stop me going to Cambridge. Thank you, Christopher.'
'I did not wish to alarm her.'
'You spared her much anguish.'
'I'll be blamed for doing that, Sir Julius. When she hears about the attack on you, Susan will be very angry with me.'
Sir Julius grinned. 'My daughter will be more than angry. She has Cheever blood in her veins. You concealed something from her that she had a right to know. Susan will want you hanged, drawn and quartered.'
'I'm not looking forward to telling her.'
'Then why do so?'
'Something as important as this cannot be hidden.'
'Yes, it can,' said Sir Julius, indicating his left arm. 'My sleeve will cover the wound and Susan will be none the wiser.'
'But what if she should learn the truth by other means?'
'What other means? The coachman and the footman have been sworn to secrecy. The only other person who knows about the attack was the man who fired that musket, and he's unlikely to tell her. No,' Sir Julius went on, 'we must conspire together for her peace of mind. Why cause her unnecessary upset? There's no way that Susan will ever find out that her father's life is in danger.'
Lancelot Serle was too honest a man to nurse a guilty secret for long. After a day of brooding, and in spite of warnings from his wife, he blurted it out over supper that evening.
'We met Christopher's brother yesterday,' he volunteered.
'Did you?' Susan was astonished. 'Why did you not say so when you returned from your drive?'
'Because it was only a casual encounter,' said Brilliana, shooting her husband a venomous look, 'and hardly worth mentioning.'
'Where did this encounter take place?'
'Outside his house.'
'And inside, Brilliana,' said Serle, determined to make a clean breast of it. 'We went to Bedford Street to look at his house from outside when Mr Redmayne came riding home.'
'It was a happy accident,' said Brilliana.
'I call it bare-faced audacity,' cried Susan, looking across the table at her sister. 'Whatever possessed you to go near Henry's house?'
'We were only acting on your account.'
'I did so with great reluctance,' said Serle.
'Keep out of this, Lancelot,' advised his wife in a tone of voice that suggested he would be severely reprimanded later on. 'You've already said too much.'
'I'm glad that Lancelot spoke,' Susan continued, her anger rising. 'It's bad enough that you should do such a thing. Hiding your treachery from me only makes it worse.'
'No treachery was involved, Susan.'
'You went there behind my back.'
'Only because you'd never have sanctioned a visit.'
'I'd have resisted the notion with every breath in my body.'
'When you spoke about Henry Redmayne,' said Brilliana, 'I felt that you were hiding something and I wanted to know what it was. A first step was to look at the house where he lived.'
Serle nodded. 'We were doing that when the gentleman rode up.' He caught another glare from his wife. 'You tell it, Brilliana.'
'As it was,' continued his wife, 'Mr Redmayne - Henry - was kind enough to invite us in so that we could see the inside of the house. In fact, we stayed there for some time.'
'Talking about me, I suppose?' said Susan, clearly upset.
'Your name did come into the conversation.'
'Brilliana, this is quite unforgivable! How dare you intrude into my private life? Even by your standards, this is shameful behaviour.'
'My standards have always been impeccably high.' 'Well, they sank to the depths yesterday.'
'I was acting on your behalf, Susan. Don't you understand that? If we are to be more closely allied to the Redmayne family, it behoves me to find out more about it.'
'And where is your next port of call?' asked her sister with biting sarcasm. 'Do you intend to bang on the doors of Gloucester cathedral and demand to see the dean?'
'No. Henry is much more entertaining company.'
'Though I deplore his taste in art,' Serle put in.
'I found it rather diverting.'
'Brilliana, how can you say such a thing?' He turned to Susan. 'The first thing you see as you enter the hall is a depiction of a Roman orgy, and there's hardly a room where naked females do not adorn the walls. They are painted with great cunning, I grant you, but are they suitable for public exhibition?'
'You are too narrow-minded, Lancelot.'
'Would you hang such obscenities in our home?'
'That's neither here nor there,' said Susan, irritably. 'The simple fact is that you should never have gone anywhere near Bedford Street. As for being invited into the house so that you could discuss my private affairs, that was unpardonable.'
'But we learned something of importance about Father.'
'It was the reason why I had to speak out,' said Serle. 'Since you actually share the house with Sir Julius, it would be wholly unfair to keep it from you a moment longer. The wonder is that you did not hear it from Christopher.'
'Hear what?' asked Susan.
'Henry Redmayne has been advising his brother with regard to the murder investigation.'
'Yes,' said Brilliana, admiringly. 'Henry is remarkable. He knows everyone in London who is worth knowing, from His Majesty downwards. After the tragedy in Knightrider Street, he had a visit from his brother. Christopher asked him about any enemies that Bernard Everett might have in parliament.'
'Mr Everett had not even taken his seat.'
'Exactly - that was why Christopher was so puzzled by the murder. His worst suspicions were confirmed by Henry and by
Members of Parliament introduced to him by his brother.'
Susan was perplexed. 'Christopher told me of no suspicions.'
'Well, he certainly entertained them,' said Brilliana, 'and with justification. Henry confirmed what his younger brother feared. Bernard Everett was mistaken for someone else and died in his place. There's not a shadow of doubt about it. That man was hired to kill Father.'