Alton allowed himself a smile.
“I'll warrant more than two.”
“Two in whom I am interested. Brothers: William and Bertram Jacobs.”
“William and Bertram. I know. Three years apiece. Accomplices of Bland. What do you want, Professor?”
“They have to come out. I am under an obligation to their mother.”
Alton sighed, worry running small furrows across his brow, as if some invisible tiny harrow had been dragged suddenly and deeply over the flesh.
“You know the 'Steel, Professor. It will be like getting gold from a matchgirl.⦔
“And you are under an obligation to me, Alton. In this instance we have to get gold from a matchgirl. With your help it is possible.”
Alton turned down the corners of his mouth.
“They are both in the Misdemeanor Prison, what used to be the female ward. It is close there.”
“And you fear the hue and cry?”
“If they can be got out at all, there will be trouble. Investigation. The governor rules the warders and turnkeys with almost the same severity as the prisoners. If two are missing⦔
“What if they are not missing?”
“That is not possible.”
“Trust me, friend Alton. All things are possible, believe me. The Jacobs boys can be out and in at the same time, with your help and some silence.” He treated the turnkey to one of his rare and thin smiles. “Listen, and then give me your advice.”
For a full hour the two men continued their conversation, pausing only when a waiter came into the room to replenish the brandy glasses. They spoke in low tones, an earnest urgency reflected in their faces. Alton nodded a great deal, and when their talk was over, they were both smiling.
On their way out, Moriarty and Alton had to walk through the main room downstairs. Now it was filled with diners and people meeting for an evening of convivial conversation, wit and champagne; the chandeliers threw off a sparkle and glitter that seemed almost to be reflections of the company, the elegant clothes of the women and the impeccable dress of the men complementing the furbishings of the room.
A small stir appeared to be taking place near the main doors. Moriarty could see a plump, portly man in his early forties talking to the manager. The man had a somewhat foppish appearance, made more obvious by his thick sensual lips and pasty complexion. Moriarty recognized him at once, for his name was a household word in that spring of 1894. He was accompanied by two slightly younger men, and, as Moriarty passed them, he heard the portly, affected one say to the manager, “If he does arrive, tell him that Oscar has gone to the Cadogan Hotel.”
Moriarty and Alton passed through the doors and into the bustle of Piccadilly.
Jonas Fray and Walter Roach were both big men, made in the mold Moriarty liked to have around him. But they were fickle men, men who ran with hares and hunted with hounds, men whose greed outstripped fear, hoisting them to the power-ridden euphoria in which they bathed, fondly believing they were outside the lawâof the criminal jungle as well as that of the land.
It was in just such a state of mind that they left The Nun's Head, on the lip of Whitechapel, just off the Commercial Road, early that evening. They had spent the late afternoon together with a number of like villains, planning, and to some extent celebrating the news concerning Colonel Moran. There had been ten of them in all, including their undisputed leader and his lieutenantâMichael Green, otherwise Michael the Peg, and Peter Butler, known as Peter the Butler or Lord Peter.
Both of these men were desperate, ambitious, ruthless and full of a guile and cunning that marked them as born leaders of the criminal fraternity. For more than a year now they had worked stealthily toward building up an organization, which they fondly believed would eventually rival Moriarty's network at the height of its powers. Yet it spoke much for the loyalty of Moriarty's family that so far not a whisper had reached them concerning the return of the Professor to his old domain. The mood during the afternoon had been jovial, luxurious even, Colonel Moran's arrest on the previous day having given all of them a sense of victory, a preliminary round won in the battle for domination.
Michael the Peg had lounged in a big, if somewhat tattered, leather armchair in the large chamber above the taproom of The Nun's Head, his heels resting on the table around which his trusted men sat, tankards and glasses in front of them.
The Peg was a small man, compact, with muscular shoulders and a face that looked as though it had been flattened by some maniac wielding a plank; the nose flared like that of a mongoloid, his skin a yellowish sallow tinge. These distinctive features could be attributed to a chance parenthoodâthe mating of a young dockside whore and a Chinese deckhand, on account of which Michael Green's early days had been colored by a background of poverty, lies, drunkenness, brutality and every unspeakable crime in the calendar of knavery. From the moment he could walk, Green had been forced to fight for himself, to think and act with speed, to face threat with threat, to cheat and steal until it had become second nature. His training ground centered on the streets of London, with occasional sorties into the country for the purpose of theft; and in these dealings he had, through the years, made a reputation as a skilled and vicious manâhis nickname reflecting the considerable talent he had developed in the matter of disguise.
Peter Butler was of different ilk, for he had come to villainy by a more circumlocutory route. Born of countryfolk in the village of Lavenham in Suffolkâa clutch of Tudor houses whose inhabitants still lived out their time in feudal termsâButler had entered the service of a local landowner at the age of ten and risen through the varied strata of pantry boy and scullion to second footman by the time he was seventeen.
At eighteen, Butler had gone with his employers to London for the Season, and it was there that he first met up with what was euphemistically termed “bad company”âin this case the Swell Mob, who in turn introduced him to some of the best cracksmen in the business. They were all men who knew how to exploit a trusted servantâfor Peter had certainly been that. In a few short months the young footman found himself on the periphery of robbery and violence, knowing that he was an important lynchpin, in that he was supplying information regarding the movements of fashionable society: the houses that were empty in the monkery, the jewels that were left in London houses on nights when their owners were out at soirées and balls.
By the end of that Season, the young man's whole way of life had changed; he became suspect and was forced to leave service and live among his newfound cronies in the great St. Giles Rookeryâthe so-called Holy Land of passages, slums and filth that was the hiding place of so many criminals in the mid-century, straddling, as it did, New Oxford Street, and stretching from Great Russell Street to St. Giles High Street.
It was there that Peter Butler's reputation grew. His slight but accurate knowledge of society and the ways of the great houses began to pay off. He could pass with ease as a trusted servant and later, as his abilities developed, as a young country gentleman in town for a spree: hence, the nicknames that came to be part of his stock-in-tradeâPeter the Butler, and Lord Peter.
In the late 1880's Butler had met Green, and at the meeting, on a well-planned robbery in Hertfordshire, both men immediately recognized each other's potential, sharing, as they did, ambitions to be leaders of an élite criminal society. It was not a unique fusion of evil, rather something that has happened many times among that antisocial element who live outside the law, and will doubtless happen many times again before Earth runs out its course.
Over a period of two and a half years Green and Butler managed to build up a ferocious if small, band of hardened criminals; yet they were not able to move into the area of power they most lusted afterâthe world of large pickings and large-scale manipulation that drew the best, the toughest, into its web. True, they were able to control a number of tradesmen in the East End; they ran about a hundred street women (soldiers' and sailors' girls mainly), and a couple of houses that attracted a handful of middle-class clients. But real control was denied them, for that regal land was well under the dominant heel of Professor Moriarty, and both the Peg and Lord Peter had enough sense not to cross such a dangerous pathâuntil news spread of the Professor's untimely death.
Even then they had the prudence to bide their time for the better part of a year before taking positive action; they passed the months by sniffing out the power structure of what remained of Moriarty's family, testing its strength, gleaning every useful piece of information, examining the best strategy of infiltration.
When the moment was ripe, they started the seduction of Fray and Roachâthe first pair of weak links, malcontents who, once Moriarty's iron control was removed and superseded by Moran's uncertain hand, were open to all manner of pressures, briberies and promises.
“Colonel Moran is a soak who cares only for himself and the gaming rooms,” the Peg told them. “The Professor was a living lesson to us all. Nobody will see his like again.”
Fray nodded, while Roach mumbled something about Moran not having the respect of those who had once counted themselves as part of Moriarty's family.
“No respect and no fear.”
The Peg made no bones about the strength of fear as a weapon to gain both respect and control. He had long held a most healthy fear of Moriarty, and now that the evil genius had disappeared, his imagination roamed around the pleasant dream of replacing the Professor as the man most likely to draw out that respect and fear once accorded to Moriarty.
“You would both do better with me now,” he announced boldly.
Fray looked uncertain. Roach shuffled his feet.
“There's still much loyalty among the Moriarty people.” His eyes did not meet the Peg's. “Anyone who joined you now might risk much.”
“And anyone who is offered a place with me now and does not take advantage might risk more.”
The two men again shuffled, their eyes meeting for a momentâa flashing signal of danger. The edge of Michael Green's voice betrayed his potential: less subtle than Moriarty's overt evil, but forceful and frightening nevertheless. Greed, power and fear fused in the men's minds, and from that moment there was little doubt about their allegiance.
Fray and Roach became the hard core of Michael the Peg's organization, and during the weeks that followed he began to attract or terrorize othersânot men who had been firmly planted within Moriarty's band, but fringe bullies, bludgers, mutchers (that verminous class who stole from drunks), palmers, toolers and the regular assortment of criminal dregs.
Green's and Butler's operations started in a small way, putting the age-old pressures on lusheries, which, through Moran's bad husbandry, were not being covered by Moriarty people: small burglaries, fencing, and a dozen other rackets.
*
They also began to control a string of whores operating on the fringes of Moriarty's area, and within the year there was at least one house in the West End catering to a better class of trade.
At the meeting during the afternoon of Colonel Moran's death, Green and Butler had both been in an ecstatic mood, for they were able to announce to their lieutenants that yet another house had been procured, this time in St. James, and after much negotiation arrangements were now complete for the shipping in of a number of country-bred girls ripe for breaking and training in the arts of select whoredom. The handful of men who were privy to Green's and Butler's methods became elated at this news. After all, they knew who would be required to do the breaking, and to men as degraded as Fray and Roach there was no better sport than separating a young, prime, country dumpling from her virginity.
There was also a pair of robberies planned, so both the former Moriarty men moved through the dingy streets with their hearts light. They did not see the beggar in the shadows near to The Nun's Head nor did they hear his soft whistle. They padded on their way, slightly fuddled with the heavy drinking, unaware that the whistle had set a small boy running hard through the streets, as though his very life were in jeopardy.
They had no cause for concern when they came upon the small and foxy Ember loitering at a streetcorner.
“Well, Jonas and Walter. It's been a long time. Where've you been hiding yourselves? Somewhere safe and far away from the law?”
Ember's eyes, as always, never ceased to flick back and forth as though trying to penetrate every shadow of the night.
Neither man feared Ember.
“Now, doesn't that take the Huntley.” Fray grinned. “Our little old mate Ember.”
“How goes it with you, Ember?” Roach towered over him in a menacing attitude.
“We heard your guv'nor got hisself removed this afternoon, Ember. Got hisself taken out of the parish.”
Ember nodded and looked mournful.
“You lot're not in luck,” Roach crowed. “What with the Professor leavin' you all in the lurch, and now the dear departed colonelâbut then he wasn't much of a gaffer, the colonel.”
“Not up to the Professor,” said Ember quietly. “That's why the Professor had him done.”
For a few seconds the significance of the remark did not penetrate. Fray sniggered.
“The Professor? What you bloody meanâ¦?”
They had not heard the quartet of punishers come up silently behind them.
“The Professor wishes to see you both,” continued Ember, still calm.
Roach, always the quicker of the pair, sensed danger, his face registering bewilderment, like a man who has been hit hard and suddenly. He wheeled around too late, and a fist caught the side of his jaw, sending him down like a felled log.
Fray hesitated for the fast bat of an eye before trying to take to his heels. Ember simply stuck out his leg and the big man tripped, sprawling headlong, the breath knocked out of him, giving enough time for two of the punishers to lift and render him insensible with a quick blow on the back of the neck.