Death in the Devil's Acre tp-7 Read online

Page 3


  In the evening when Pitt came home, Charlotte was waiting for him. She had read the newspapers thoroughly because the appalling corpse had been discovered in Pitt’s area; she knew it was quite likely that the call he had received before dawn that morning had to do with the murder.

  Of course the case was not one in which she would be able to give any help, unfortunately. She was ready for the challenge, even the danger of another investigation, but the man had been found in a location she knew nothing whatsoever about, except by repute. And Lambert Gardens, where apparently he had lived, was not part of her family’s social circle, so she could offer no assistance there either.

  Still, perhaps if he was prepared to discuss it with her, she could at least use her wits. She had not been unskilled at divining motives in the past, and the nature of human beings had much in common whatever the circumstances.

  She hurried to meet her husband as soon as she heard the front door close, even before Gracie could get there. She took his coat, hung it up to dry, and then turned immediately to kiss him. His face felt cold. She knew he must be tired; it was over twelve hours since he had left, without breakfast. Her senses told her to restrain her curiosity at least until he had finished supper. She led the way into the parlor and talked about nothing of consequence while Pitt thawed out in front of the fire until Gracie served the meal.

  By nine o’clock she considered that tact had been paid more than its due. “The constable who came for you this morning,” she began. “Was that because of the corpse in the Devil’s Acre?”

  A trace of bleak humor flickered across his face. When Charlotte tried being subtle with him, he usually saw through it, so she had abandoned the effort. Anyhow, she had not had time to prepare and approach the whole subject in a more devious fashion.

  “Yes,” he said guardedly. “But Lambert Gardens, which is where he lived, is not your family’s social circle. There is nothing you can do to help.”

  She was not tactically inept. “No, of course not,” she said. “But it is impossible not to be interested. The newspapers are full of it this evening.”

  He pulled a face.

  She changed her line of attack. “Do be careful, Thomas. It sounds as if there is some dreadful madman loose. I mean, it isn’t a sane sort of crime, is it? What do you suppose a man like Dr. Pinchin was doing in the Devil’s Acre anyway? Did he have a practice there? The newspapers said he was a very respectable man.” She was not entirely convinced; she had known plenty of “respectable” people herself. All the adjective really meant was that they were either clever enough or fortunate enough to have maintained an excellent facade. Behind it there might be anything at all.

  Pitt smiled, his eyes uncomfortably clear. “Thank you, my dear, but you have no need to be anxious for me. I don’t expect to prowl the Acre alone. I shall be in no danger from madmen.”

  She debated whether to be hurt and pretend he had misunderstood her, but decided rapidly that it would not work. “Of course not,” she said. “Perhaps I was being silly. I dare say Dr. Pinchin was not nearly as respectable as the newspapers suggested. After all, they would have to be very careful of what they said, and the poor man is only just dead.” She looked up, wide-eyed and totally candid. “Did he have a family?”

  “Charlotte!”

  “Yes, Thomas?”

  He let out his breath in a sigh. “This is not a case you can involve yourself in. Dr. Pinchin was not the only victim-he was the second that we know of, and whatever is going on, it has its cause in the Devil’s Acre. The other body was found there, too. It is not a domestic crime, Charlotte. It does not involve the sort of motives you are good at.”

  She ignored the compliment. “Another one? I didn’t know that! The newspapers didn’t say anything. Are you keeping it secret? Who was it?”

  There was a momentary flash of irritation in his face. Charlotte was not sure whether it was directed at her or at circumstances.

  Pitt waited several seconds before he answered, and when he did there was resignation in his voice. “Actually, it was someone you have already met.”

  Shock tingled through her, not unmixed with a sense of excitement that she was ashamed of the instant after she felt it.

  “I’ve met?” she repeated incredulously.

  “Do you remember General Balantyne-in Callander Square?”

  The excitement turned to horror so intense it almost made her sick. The room swam and she thought she was going to faint. To imagine the general, with his fierce, inarticulate pride, his loneliness, his veneration of duty-how could he have descended to the Devil’s Acre to die not in service or battle but exposed in such a horrible manner.

  “Charlotte!”

  Surely there must be some way it could be kept quiet? It was the last way on earth such a man deserved to die!

  “Charlotte!” Pitt’s voice cut through her thoughts.

  She looked up.

  “It wasn’t Balantyne!” he said sharply. “It was his old footman, Max-do you remember Max?”

  Of course! How could she have been so ridiculous? She took a deep gulp of air. “Max-yes, of course I remember Max. Perfectly odious. He always gave me the feeling that when he looked at me he could see through my clothes.”

  Pitt’s face dropped in alarm, then changed to a wide-eyed amusement. “How graphic! I had no idea you were so perceptive.”

  She felt herself coloring. She had not meant to let him know she understood that look so well, especially in the eyes of a footman. She ought not have!

  “Well …” She attempted an explanation, and gave it up.

  He waited, but Charlotte refused to dig herself in any more deeply. “What was Max doing in the Devil’s Acre?” she asked. “I didn’t think people in that sort of area had footmen.”

  “They don’t. He was keeping a brothel-in fact, more than one.”

  She maintained her composure. Over the years Charlotte had had cause, one way or another, to learn quite a lot about poverty and the prostitution of both adults and children.

  “Oh.” She remembered Max’s dark face, with its hooded eyelids and heavy, sensuous mouth. He had always given her an acute consciousness of physical power, of an appetite that was his servant as well as his master. “I should imagine he would do that sort of thing rather well.”

  Pitt looked at her with surprise.

  “I mean-” she started, then changed her mind. Why should she explain? She may not know as much as he did, but she was not a total innocent! “In that case, he must have had rather a lot of enemies,” she continued reasonably. “If he had several establishments, then he was doing very well-and I imagine in that sort of trade people are not very scrupulous about how they dispose of competition.”

  “Not very,” he agreed with an expression that showed such a mixture of feelings she found it quite unreadable.

  “Perhaps Dr. Pinchin kept a brothel as well,” she suggested. “Sometimes very respectable people own property in places like that, you know?”

  “Yes, I do know,” he said dryly.

  She caught his glance. “Of course you know. I’m sorry.”

  “There’s nothing you can do in this case, Charlotte. It isn’t your world.”

  “No, of course not,” she said obediently. At this point it would not be to her advantage to pursue the matter, because she could think of no argument to put forward. “I don’t really know anything about the Devil’s Acre.”

  Nevertheless, the following morning as soon as Pitt was out of the house, Charlotte began making arrangements to be absent for most of the day. Gracie, who far preferred to look after children than blacken the stove, polish the passage floor, or scrub the doorstep, greeted Charlotte’s instructions with enthusiasm-and a tacit promise of silence. She knew a conspiracy when she met it, even if she did not entirely approve. A lady’s curiosity ought to be restricted to other people’s romances, who was wearing what, and how much it cost-and even then she should always keep her dignity. If a gentleman was mur
dered, that was one thing-but not a doctor who practiced in the Devil’s Acre and was obviously no better than he should be! Grade had heard about places like that-and people!

  Charlotte had said she was going to see her sister Emily, but Gracie had her own ideas of what that was for! She knew perfectly well that Lady Ashworth was not above a good deal of meddling in shocking affairs herself.

  “Yes, ma’am.” She bobbed a neat curtsy. “I ’ope as you’ll ’ave a nice day, ma’am. An’ come ’ome safe.”

  “Of course I’ll come home safely!” Charlotte switched her skirt past a chair and accepted her coat from Gracie’s outstretched hands. “I’m only going to Paragon Walk.”

  “Yes, ma’am, I’m sure.”

  Charlotte gave her a sidewise look, but apparently considered she had already said enough about discretion. Anything more might only make Grade’s suspicions worse.

  “What shall I say to the master, ma’am?” Gracie asked.

  “Nothing. I shall be home long before then. In fact, if Lady Ashworth has an engagement, I may even be home by luncheon.” And with that she swept out the door, down the front step, and went briskly toward the corner where the public omnibus stopped.

  Paragon Walk was classically elegant in the winter sun. Charlotte walked smartly along the footpath and up the smooth carriageway to Emily’s front door. The footman opened it before she had reached up for the bellpull. Naturally, in a well-ordered house the pantry would look out onto the drive and guests would be anticipated.

  “Good morning, Mrs. Pitt,” he said courteously.

  “Good morning, Albert,” she replied with satisfaction, accepting his tacit invitation and stepping inside. It was a very comfortable feeling to be recognized so easily. It gave her the temporary illusion of belonging to this world again.

  “Lady Ashworth is writing letters,” he said almost conversationally as he walked ahead of her across the large hall. On its walls were the Ashworth family portraits stretching back to the days of ruffled collars and Elizabethan pantaloons, with gorgeous slashes of color. “But I am sure she will be pleased to see you.”

  Charlotte, knowing how Emily disliked letter-writing, was also sure. And she would be even more pleased when she heard Charlotte’s extraordinary piece of news.

  The footman opened the morning-room door. “Mrs. Pitt, m’lady,” he said.

  Emily stood up, pushing her pen and papers away before Charlotte was even through the door. She was not quite as tall as Charlotte, and had fairer hair that turned to curls with a softness Charlotte had envied all her life. She came forward and hugged Charlotte impulsively, her face alight with pleasure.

  “How delightful of you to come! I’m bored to pieces with letters. They are all to George’s cousins, and I can’t bear any of them. Really, you know, the young girls out this Season seem to be even sillier than last year. And heaven knows they were light-witted enough! I refuse to think what next year will be like! How are you?” She stood back and surveyed Charlotte critically. “You look far too healthy to be in the least fashionable. You should appear delicate, like a lily, not some great bursting rose! That is the thing these days. And don’t you know that it is vulgar to look so excited? Whatever has happened? If you don’t tell me, I shall-” A suitable chastisement eluded her; she went over to the comfortable chair in front of the fire and curled up in it.

  Charlotte joined her on the sofa opposite, feeling warm, comfortable, and smug. “Do you remember the murders in Callander Square?” she began.

  Emily sat up a little straighter, her eyes bright. “Don’t be idiotic! Whoever forgets a murder? Why? Has there been another?”

  “Do you remember that dreadful footman, Max?”

  “Vaguely. Why? Charlotte, for goodness’ sake stop being so obscure! What on earth are you talking about?”

  “Did you read of the murder of Dr. Hubert Pinchin in the newspapers yesterday, or this morning?”

  “No, of course not.” Emily was on the edge of her seat now, her back ramrod stiff. “You know George doesn’t give me anything but the society pages. Who is Hubert Pinchin, and what has it to do with that unpleasant footman? Really, you can be extremely irritating!”

  Charlotte settled more deeply into the cushions and recounted everything she knew.

  Emily clenched her hands, crushing the shell-pink silk of her dress. “Oh dear-how very disgusting! But I never liked that man,” she added frankly. “He left the Balantynes, didn’t he-before the end of that affair, anyway?”

  “Yes. It seems he became very successful as a procurer of women.”

  Emily winced. “Then perhaps it was rather suitable that he was found in a gutter. And by a prostitute. Do you suppose God has a sense of humor? Or would that be blasphemous?”

  “He created man,” Charlotte answered. “He must at the very least have a pronounced sense of the absurd. The newspapers say that Dr. Pinchin was perfectly respectable.”

  “Then what was he doing in the Devil’s Acre? Did he take charity cases or something of the sort?”

  “I don’t know. I expect Thomas will find out.”

  “Well, any man of quality who wanted to pick up a loose woman for the evening would go to a music hall, or the Haymarket. He wouldn’t go to some dangerous slum like the Devil’s Acre.”

  Charlotte felt a little crushed. The mystery was fast dissolving in front of her. “Perhaps the women in the Haymarket were too expensive. If Max kept a brothel, there must be customers in the Devil’s Acre! If Dr. Pinchin was one of them-”

  “Why kill him?” Emily interrupted with an irritating display of reason. “Nobody but an idiot kills his own customers.”

  “Maybe his wife did.”

  Emily raised her eyebrows. “In the Devil’s Acre?”

  “Not personally, stupid! She may have hired someone. You would have to hate a person very much and in a particular sort of way to do that to him.”

  Emily’s face lost its spark of amusement. “Of course you would. But, my dear, all sorts of men use loose women from time to time, and as long as they do it discreetly, a wife with any sense at all does not inquire into it. If a man does not offer explanations of where he has been, for the sake of one’s own happiness it is wiser not to press for them.”

  Charlotte could think of no reply that was not either painful or naive. People must deal with their own truths as they were able.

  Emily’s mind was on a different train. “Fancy that dreadful footman turning up again. He always made me uncomfortable. I wonder who provided the money for him to set up a brothel? I mean who owned the property and paid for an establishment? Perhaps it was Dr. Pinchin.”

  But a far uglier thought forced itself into Charlotte’s mind, linked with memories of the Balantyne house, murder and fear in the past, and Max’s sudden, silent departure.

  “Yes,” she agreed abruptly. “Yes, that may very well be so. I dare say Thomas will discover that.”

  Emily gave her a narrow look, a flicker of suspicion, but she did not pursue it. “Will you stay for luncheon?”

  As Charlotte was preparing for her visit with Emily, Pitt alighted from his cab and walked up to the front door of number 23 Lambert Gardens. It was a high house with a handsome frontage, though today, of course, the curtains were drawn and there was black crepe on the windows and a wreath on the door. The whole effect was one of a curious blindness.

  There was no point in putting it off; he lifted his hand and knocked on the door. It was several minutes before an unhappy-looking footman opened it. Death in the house made him awkward; he had no idea how much grief he was expected to show, especially in these grotesque circumstances. Maybe he ought to pretend to ignore it. After all, what could he possibly say? The kitchenmaid had already given notice, and he was considering doing the same.

  He did not recognize Pitt. “Mrs. Pinchin is not receiving callers,” he said hastily. “But if you care to leave your card, I am sure she will accept your condolences.”

  “I am Thomas
Pitt, from the police,” Pitt explained. “I do convey my sympathy to Mrs. Pinchin, of course, but I am afraid it is necessary that I also speak with her.”

  The footman was painfully undecided about which of his duties was paramount: on the one hand, preserving the sanctity of mourning from such a crass invasion by a person of this sort, or, on the other hand, his undoubted allegiance to the majesty of the Law.

  “Perhaps if you call the butler?” Pitt suggested tactfully. “And permit me not to wait upon the step while you do so. We do not wish to attract the attention and the gossip of the neighbors’ maids and bootboys.”

  The footman’s face was almost comical with relief. It was the perfect solution. Gossip would be inevitable, but he had no intention of being blamed for adding to it.

  “Oh-yes, sir-yes-I’ll do that. If you come this way, sir.” He led Pitt across the hall, which was filled with a faint odor as if none of the doors had been opened for days. The mirrors were black-draped like the windows. There was an arrangement of lilies in a pedestal vase; they looked artificial, though they were in fact real, and undoubtedly extremely expensive at this time of year.

  The footman left Pitt in a room with a black-leaded grate and no fire. It was dark behind the drawn blinds, and it seemed as if the whole household were determined that even if the corpse of the master could not lie in his own home, they would order their domestic arrangements to imitate the chill of the grave.

  It was only a few moments before Mr. Mullen, the butler, arrived, his thinning, sandy hair brushed neatly back and his face determined. “I am sorry, Mr. Pitt.” He shook his head. “I’m afraid it will be another half hour before Mrs. Pinchin is able to receive you. Perhaps you would like a dish of tea while you wait? It is a very inclement day.”

  Pitt felt warmer already. He had respect for this man; he knew his job and seemed to perform it with more than ordinary skill.

  “I would indeed, Mr. Mullen, thank you. And if your duties permit, perhaps a little of your time?”

 

    The face of a stranger Read onlineThe face of a strangerTriple Jeopardy Read onlineTriple JeopardyA Question of Betrayal Read onlineA Question of BetrayalA Christmas Gathering Read onlineA Christmas GatheringDeath in Focus Read onlineDeath in FocusA Christmas Resolution Read onlineA Christmas ResolutionA Christmas Journey Read onlineA Christmas JourneyA Christmas Garland: A Novel Read onlineA Christmas Garland: A NovelAnne Perry's Christmas Vigil Read onlineAnne Perry's Christmas VigilA Sunless Sea wm-18 Read onlineA Sunless Sea wm-18The Whitechapel Conspiracy Read onlineThe Whitechapel ConspiracyLong Spoon Lane: A Charlotte and Thomas Pitt Novel Read onlineLong Spoon Lane: A Charlotte and Thomas Pitt NovelA Christmas Hope Read onlineA Christmas HopeThe Hyde Park Headsman Read onlineThe Hyde Park HeadsmanAnne Perry's Silent Nights Read onlineAnne Perry's Silent NightsA Christmas Message Read onlineA Christmas MessageA Christmas Hope: A Novel Read onlineA Christmas Hope: A NovelHyde Park Headsman Read onlineHyde Park HeadsmanNo Graves As Yet wwi-1 Read onlineNo Graves As Yet wwi-1The Sins of the Wolf Read onlineThe Sins of the WolfBlood on the Water Read onlineBlood on the WaterHighgate Rise Read onlineHighgate RiseA Christmas Revelation Read onlineA Christmas RevelationCater Street Hangman tp-1 Read onlineCater Street Hangman tp-1Cain His Brother Read onlineCain His BrotherA Breach of Promise Read onlineA Breach of PromiseRevenge in a Cold River Read onlineRevenge in a Cold RiverMidnight at Marble Arch tp-28 Read onlineMidnight at Marble Arch tp-28Shoulder the Sky wwi-2 Read onlineShoulder the Sky wwi-2The Shifting Tide Read onlineThe Shifting TideSilence in Hanover Close tp-9 Read onlineSilence in Hanover Close tp-9Long Spoon Lane Read onlineLong Spoon LaneThe Silent Cry Read onlineThe Silent CryWeighed in the Balance Read onlineWeighed in the BalanceSilence in Hanover Close Read onlineSilence in Hanover CloseDark Assassin Read onlineDark AssassinAshworth Hall Read onlineAshworth HallA Sudden, Fearful Death Read onlineA Sudden, Fearful DeathTwenty-One Days Read onlineTwenty-One DaysBethlehem Road Read onlineBethlehem RoadBuckingham Palace Gardens Read onlineBuckingham Palace GardensA Christmas Promise Read onlineA Christmas PromiseExecution Dock Read onlineExecution DockThe William Monk Mysteries Read onlineThe William Monk MysteriesAt Some Disputed Barricade wwi-4 Read onlineAt Some Disputed Barricade wwi-4Angels in the Gloom wwi-3 Read onlineAngels in the Gloom wwi-3Cardington Crescent tp-8 Read onlineCardington Crescent tp-8Dark Tide Rising Read onlineDark Tide RisingCallander Square Read onlineCallander SquareA Christmas Beginning c-5 Read onlineA Christmas Beginning c-5One Thing More Read onlineOne Thing MoreAn Anne Perry Christmas: Two Holiday Novels Read onlineAn Anne Perry Christmas: Two Holiday NovelsA Christmas Journey c-1 Read onlineA Christmas Journey c-1Treason at Lisson Grove: A Charlotte and Thomas Pitt Novel Read onlineTreason at Lisson Grove: A Charlotte and Thomas Pitt NovelResurrection Row Read onlineResurrection RowA Christmas Beginning Read onlineA Christmas BeginningTreason at Lisson Grove Read onlineTreason at Lisson GroveMurder on the Serpentine Read onlineMurder on the SerpentineResurrection Row tp-4 Read onlineResurrection Row tp-4We Shall Not Sleep Read onlineWe Shall Not SleepBedford Square tp-19 Read onlineBedford Square tp-19The Angel Court Affair Read onlineThe Angel Court AffairBlind Justice wm-19 Read onlineBlind Justice wm-19Farriers' Lane Read onlineFarriers' LaneA Christmas Return Read onlineA Christmas ReturnA Christmas Guest Read onlineA Christmas GuestWhitechapel Conspiracy Read onlineWhitechapel ConspiracyThe Twisted Root Read onlineThe Twisted RootA Dangerous Mourning Read onlineA Dangerous MourningBelgrave Square Read onlineBelgrave SquareFuneral in Blue wm-12 Read onlineFuneral in Blue wm-12Slaves of Obsession wm-11 Read onlineSlaves of Obsession wm-11Tathea Read onlineTatheaShoulder the Sky Read onlineShoulder the SkyA Christmas Secret cn-4 Read onlineA Christmas Secret cn-4The Shifting Tide wm-14 Read onlineThe Shifting Tide wm-14Death On Blackheath (Thomas Pitt 29) Read onlineDeath On Blackheath (Thomas Pitt 29)Defend and Betray Read onlineDefend and BetrayMidnight at Marble Arch Read onlineMidnight at Marble ArchRutland Place tp-5 Read onlineRutland Place tp-5Dorchester Terrace Read onlineDorchester TerraceBlind Justice Read onlineBlind JusticeA Christmas Visitor Read onlineA Christmas VisitorAngels in the Gloom Read onlineAngels in the GloomThe Scroll b-1 Read onlineThe Scroll b-1Dorchester Terrace tp-27 Read onlineDorchester Terrace tp-27Paragon Walk tp-3 Read onlineParagon Walk tp-3A Christmas Secret Read onlineA Christmas SecretA Christmas Garland Read onlineA Christmas GarlandA Christmas Grace Read onlineA Christmas GraceDeath in the Devil's Acre Read onlineDeath in the Devil's AcreBetrayal at Lisson Grove Read onlineBetrayal at Lisson GroveCome Armageddon Read onlineCome ArmageddonTraitors Gate tp-15 Read onlineTraitors Gate tp-15Cater Street Hangman Read onlineCater Street HangmanAcceptable Loss wm-17 Read onlineAcceptable Loss wm-17A Christmas Homecoming Read onlineA Christmas HomecomingDeath in the Devil's Acre tp-7 Read onlineDeath in the Devil's Acre tp-7A Christmas Grace c-6 Read onlineA Christmas Grace c-6Scroll Read onlineScrollCardington Crescent Read onlineCardington CrescentSlaves of Obsession Read onlineSlaves of ObsessionAnne Perry's Silent Nights: Two Victorian Christmas Mysteries Read onlineAnne Perry's Silent Nights: Two Victorian Christmas MysteriesThe One Thing More Read onlineThe One Thing MoreNo Graves As Yet Read onlineNo Graves As YetPentecost Alley Read onlinePentecost AlleyThe Sheen on the Silk Read onlineThe Sheen on the SilkSeven Dials Read onlineSeven DialsBrunswick Gardens Read onlineBrunswick GardensParagon Walk Read onlineParagon WalkBedford Square Read onlineBedford SquarePentecost Alley tp-16 Read onlinePentecost Alley tp-16A Christmas Odyssey cn-8 Read onlineA Christmas Odyssey cn-8Highgate Rise tp-11 Read onlineHighgate Rise tp-11Anne Perry's Christmas Mysteries Read onlineAnne Perry's Christmas MysteriesA Christmas Odyssey Read onlineA Christmas OdysseyAcceptable Loss: A William Monk Novel Read onlineAcceptable Loss: A William Monk NovelDeath On Blackheath tp-29 Read onlineDeath On Blackheath tp-29Betrayal at Lisson Grove tp-26 Read onlineBetrayal at Lisson Grove tp-26Half Moon Street Read onlineHalf Moon StreetA New York Christmas (Christmas Novellas 12) Read onlineA New York Christmas (Christmas Novellas 12)The Twisted Root wm-10 Read onlineThe Twisted Root wm-10Half Moon Street tp-20 Read onlineHalf Moon Street tp-20Traitors Gate Read onlineTraitors GateCallander Square tp-2 Read onlineCallander Square tp-2The Sheen of the Silk Read onlineThe Sheen of the SilkSouthampton Row Read onlineSouthampton RowA Christmas Guest c-3 Read onlineA Christmas Guest c-3Death on Blackheath Read onlineDeath on BlackheathBlind Justice: A William Monk Novel Read onlineBlind Justice: A William Monk NovelThe Scroll Read onlineThe ScrollA Sunless Sea Read onlineA Sunless SeaBuckingham Palace Gardens tp-25 Read onlineBuckingham Palace Gardens tp-25Funeral in Blue Read onlineFuneral in BlueAcceptable Loss Read onlineAcceptable LossAnne Perry's Christmas Mysteries: Two Holiday Novels Read onlineAnne Perry's Christmas Mysteries: Two Holiday Novels