Authors: Cora Harrison
The drawing was of someone hanging from a gallows. But this time the drawing was carefully done in jet-black ink. And the swinging figure was not a boy, but a man with a heavy beard, dressed in pantaloons and a frock coat.
Under it were letters, printed in rough capitals, by someone who had barely learnt to write and still could not spell.
MSTR LMO
âEL MORE, get it? Mr Elmore!' said Alfie as Jack stared at it in a puzzled way.
So Mary Robinson
had
visited the Ragged School that night.
âAny work for two strong boys?' asked Alfie, approaching a man who was shouting orders at the building site.
âThe cart's coming, Mr Shawcross, and they haven't finished loading the second one,' shouted a worker from the top of the platform.
Mr Shawcross gave Alfie and Jack a quick up-and-down look and then nodded. âTwo pence an hour to load the carts, half an hour off for dinner. We have two carts and the second one has to be ready when the horse comes back with the empty one.'
âWe'd work for two-pence-halfpenny an hour
each,' said Alfie in a businesslike way. âHow many hours?'
âEight hours, make it three shillings, then, for the two of you. Take it or leave it.'
Alfie shrugged. The pay wasn't great, but it wasn't bad and three shillings at the end of the day would be useful for the rent. And they might find out something useful too.
âWe'll take it,' he said.
The work was boring and dirty, loading the broken timber and crumbling plaster on to the carts, with occasional breaks to sprinkle water when the dust of the plaster was choking everyone, but the men were cheerful and friendly.
âYou won't know this place in a couple of months,' said one of them to Alfie. âMr Lambert will clear the whole of this place and then build some posh new houses here. He's been waiting for ages to do this.'
âWhat stopped him?' asked Alfie. They had a five-minute break where the men could have a drink of small ale to get the dust out of their throats. Alfie took a swig from the jug, passed it over to Jack, and turned back to the man. He remembered Mr Lambert the property developer from the time he went to get the clay, that terrible evening the school burned down, so
he was interested in the news.
âThat place over there.' The builder nodded towards the burned-out remains of the Ragged School. âNo point in building posh houses with a place like that across the road. They had to get rid of that, first.'
They had to get rid of that, first.
The words echoed in Alfie's mind while he bent and picked up timbers, swung them on to the cart, bent and lifted again and again. Perhaps he had been wrong. Perhaps it hadn't been an act of revenge by Mary Robinson, or Joseph Bishop, or Thomas Orrack. Perhaps it had just been a way for Daniel Elmore to get rid of his brother. Perhaps money was behind it all, not revenge.
Now that the rich goldsmith was dead, Daniel Elmore would not only get his father's wealth, he would also be his brother's heir. The burned-out school building was worth nothing, but, if Mr Lambert would pay any money for the land it had stood on, this piece of Streatham Street would bring Daniel Elmore quite a sum. Now that he had time to think, Alfie began to suspect why Daniel Elmore had been so keen to hand over two ragged boys to the police. He could not have seriously thought that they had anything to do with the death of his father.
âYour leg all right now?' queried Jack.
âYes, much better,' said Alfie, realising that he hadn't even thought about it for hours. âJust thinking about something.'
At that moment there was a diversion. The piebald horse that drew the carts was young and mettlesome. From time to time, he seemed to get tired of the monotony â as soon as he arrived back with an empty cart, another full one was harnessed to him. Now he reared up and tried to shake off the cart. The driver, standing by his side, holding the bridle, gave him a vicious cut with his whip and the horse reared up again, his teeth snapping angrily and his hoofs flailing the air until he had knocked the man to the ground.
Jack acted fast. In a second, he had fearlessly leaped to the horse's side and grabbed the reins, hauling the animal to one side before the iron shoes could trample the man on the ground.
âGood boy, good boy,' soothed Jack, stroking the piebald animal and gently scratching behind his ears. âEasy now, easy,' he whisperered, and the horse turned his head and looked down at the boy almost as though he understood what was being said to him. Quickly Jack jumped on to the cart and shook the reins, saying calmly, âMove on.' The horse moved a few paces and
then stopped on command and Jack climbed down.
âHe'll be all right now,' he said and held the bridle while Alfie piled on the last few pieces of timber.
âWhy don't you drive him this time?' said Mr Shawcross to Jack. âIt'll give the driver ten minutes' rest; that was a nasty fall. Your mate here can manage on his own until you come back. Not many lads would be as good as you with a horse like that.'
Across the road was a small fat man. Alfie recognised him immediately. It was Mr Lambert â a friendly fellow, he remembered.
But with him was Daniel Elmore.
And they had both turned.
And both had started to walk across the road towards him.
Alfie looked around him in desperation. Where could he hide? Then he took a deep breath and steadied himself. Now was his chance. He could not worry about himself. He would never get such a good chance again.
The two gentlemen were obviously coming over to the demolition site. Mr Shawcross, the foreman, was greeting them and had already signalled to the men on the platform to stop work.
Alfie looked around for some place to hide. And then he stopped. This time Daniel Elmore wore
boots! He had to seize this opportunity. There was no clay around, but the ground was heaped up with crumbling plaster. Rapidly Alfie seized a broom, swept the large pieces of plaster to one side and put them into the cart. But he made sure to leave a good, thick coating of plaster dust on the pathway into the demolition site.
âWe're getting on very well, here, sir,' Mr Shawcross was saying. âWe should be finished by the end of the week.'
âI'll have another job for you then.' Mr Lambert was smiling in a satisfied sort of way, his round face creased with good humour and his boot idly tracing patterns in the plaster dust. âMr Elmore, Mr Daniel Elmore, is now the owner of the property across the road. We have agreed terms for it, so the site will have to be cleared as soon as possible.'
âWhat do you think of that, men?' shouted Mr Shawcross cheerfully. âAnother week's work for you all!'
There was a huge cheer at that from the men on top of the scaffolding. Mr Lambert and Mr Elmore looked up, smiling broadly at the men's enthusiasm. While their attention was on the men, Alfie dipped the water container into the water barrel and carefully sprinkled
the plaster dust â just enough to dampen it down. Then he quickly took himself off and crouched down behind the waiting cart. He dared not let Daniel Elmore have sight of him. Mr Shawcross wouldn't miss Alfie for a few minutes.
âYou might think of investing in some of this property,' Mr Lambert was saying in a low voice as the two men walked down the pathway through the site. âYou can see that we have space here for a good, wide road with blocks of houses on either side.'
Alfie watched them from between the wheels of the cart and was relieved to see that they did not return by the same way, but turned and went along the back of the property.
âWhere did you go?' asked Jack when he got back.
Alfie did not answer; he was busy pulling and nudging the cart. The wheels were large and it was almost empty, so it was an easy matter to manoeuvre it above the footsteps in the plaster dust. Plaster dried quickly, he knew that, but it needed protecting in the meantime.
By the time the cart was full and the horse hitched up to it, the boot marks in the plaster had dried. Alfie stared down at them. He had watched carefully. Mr Lambert had walked beside the scaffolding and
Mr Elmore had walked by his side.
But would they match the clay footprint back at the cellar?
âYou gave me a fright!' gasped Sarah.
âThought you'd never come! It's getting late and I want you to look at something.' Alfie sounded impatient. He had been waiting for quite some time outside the railings of the big house in Bloomsbury where Sarah worked. He had a sack in his hand with something heavy at the bottom of it. Sarah looked puzzled, but walked on rapidly. It would do her no good to be seen hanging around on the pavement outside the house with a ragged boy and a large tousled dog.
âI just wanted to make sure that I didn't miss you.' Alfie's voice was apologetic. He understood Sarah's worries. âI wanted to catch you because the light goes early these days.' He cast a worried look upwards. The fog was coming back again. Soon it would blanket everything and it would be impossible for Sarah to see what he wanted her to see. âThis way,' he said, crossing the road before she could say any more.
Sarah followed him. She knew from the expression on Alfie's face that it was something serious. She was
not surprised when he turned to go down Streatham Street. But she was surprised to see what had happened to the street itself.
âThey are knocking down all the houses, and they'll be clearing what's left of the Ragged School next week.' Alfie waved his hand around and then stopped. They were too late. The fog had thickened and it was too dark and murky now to see what he needed to show. He bit his lip in annoyance. The plaster was too fragile to lift and it was only a miracle that he had managed to keep the marks intact through the day.
âWait here, Mutsy, stay with Sarah.' In a moment he was gone, limping down the street, before Sarah could say anything.
The Cock & Pye public house was already doing a good business. Alfie could hear singing and drunken shouts from inside. He approached it cautiously, keeping close to the wall and looking around him continuously. It was an old building, though in better repair than the houses on Streatham Street. There were no gas lamps on this side of St Giles so the Cock & Pye had large pitch torches stuck into iron holders on its outside wall. Alfie sidled up to one of them, then quickly seized the torch and returned to Sarah as fast as he could.
âI had awful trouble keeping this safe all day,' he said as soon as he joined her. He lowered the torch to show a large rotten piece of timber, carefully propped up on a couple of small pieces of wood so that it did not touch the ground. Alfie handed the torch to Sarah and lifted off the timber.
âFootprints,' said Sarah. She looked at him with instant understanding.
Alfie nodded. âMr Daniel Elmore, the brother of our Mr Elmore, and the property developer, Mr Lambert, they both walked along here this afternoon. But wait, I have something else to show you.'
He fumbled in the sack and drew out the piece of clay that had come from the cupboard floor in the Ragged School.
It only took Sarah a few seconds of looking from the baked clay to the footprints in the fragile plaster to make up her mind.
âThat one,' she said pointing. âThat's the one. It's the exact match. Look at the way the heel is worn down on the outer edge. Do you remember what Sammy said about the villain perhaps leaning more heavily on that side?'
âThat's right â he does limp a bit.' Alfie's face was expressionless.
âMr Daniel Elmore? You didn't tell me that! You didn't say anything about him limping!'
Alfie looked at her. âThat's right,' he said. âI was just over there,' he continued, pointing to a place just behind where Sarah stood. âI was hiding under the cart and I watched them walk down there. Mr Lambert walked on that side, just by the scaffolding, and Mr Elmore walked beside him.'