Where Shadows Dance (17 page)

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Authors: C.S. Harris

BOOK: Where Shadows Dance
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“Jackson!” shouted the first man.
“Your friend was stupid,” hissed Sebastian. Tightening his grasp on the man’s coat, he pushed the ruffian back against the rough brick wall and shoved the hot muzzle of the gun up under the man’s chin. “Let’s hope you’re smarter.”
The smell of sizzling flesh filled the air and the man yelped, his eyes going wide.
“I want to know two things,” said Sebastian, pulling back the second hammer. “Where is my tiger, and who sent you?”
The man licked his lips, his eyes darting toward the darkened entrance of the storehouse. “He’s in there! He’s not hurt. I swear it!”
“You’d best hope for your own sake that he is not.” His finger on the trigger, one hand still fisted in the man’s coat, Sebastian hauled him toward the open doorway. “You first.”
Yanking him up short, Sebastian paused in the entrance to give his eyes time to adjust to the gloom. A vast cavernous space with a brick floor, the storeroom was filled with piles of crates and barrels and one small wriggling boy lying just to the right of the entrance.
It was Tom, his hands and feet bound, his mouth pried apart by a gag, his eyes open and alert. Sebastian felt a rush of relief, followed by a renewed upsurge of rage.
“Here’s what we’re going to do,” Sebastian told the hireling, dragging him over to the wide-eyed tiger. “You’re going to kneel right here”—he shoved the man to his knees—“and you’re going to hold yourself very, very still. Do anything stupid and you’re dead. Understand?”
The man nodded, his jaw set hard.
Hunkering down beside Tom, Sebastian transferred the gun to his left hand. Keeping the barrel trained on the man, he eased the knife from his boot. Quickly but carefully, he sawed through the ropes binding the lad’s wrists. He was setting to work on the bindings at the boy’s ankles when Tom yanked the gag from his mouth and yelled,
ʺLook out!ʺ
Chapter 27
S
ebastian saw the man lunge up, the gleam of a knife blade in his hand.
Pivoting, Sebastian fired the remaining barrel of his pistol into the man’s chest.
Within the confines of the warehouse, the report was deafening, the air filling with the stench of burnt powder. The man flopped backward, twitched once, then lay still.
“Gor,” said Tom on an exhalation of breath.
Sebastian went to rest his fingers against the man’s neck.
“Is he dead?” whispered Tom, struggling to sit up.
Rather than answer, Sebastian went to help the boy to his feet. Then he held him by the shoulders a moment longer than was strictly necessary, his gaze on the lad’s pale, freckled face. “Are you all right?”
“Aye, gov’nor. They just roughed me up a bit. It was you they was lookin’ to kill.”
“They knew my name?” Sebastian caught the tiger’s cap up off the brick floor and handed it to him.
“Aye. Who ye reckon set them on ye?” asked Tom, using the cap to whack the dust off his coat and breeches as he followed Sebastian out into the shadow-filled street.
“I’m not sure. But after we talk to the local magistrate, I think Mr. Jasper Cox has some explaining to do.”
 
 
It was some hours later when he came upon Jasper Cox in the Cockpit Royal on Birdcage Walk, on the south side of St. James’s Park.
The air in the small, theaterlike building was thick with the smell of dust and sweaty men and blood. Pushing through the outer ring of rougher men standing tightly packed around the curving walls, Sebastian found Cox sitting in the first tier of benches.
“Personally, I favor the black-gray,” said Sebastian, squeezing in between Cox and a man in a drab coat who obligingly shifted over to make room for him. “How about you?”
Cox nodded to the bird being taken out of its bag by a whipthin, sharp-nosed cocker. “My money’s on the red pyle. Look at that size and girth.”
Sebastian watched the setters move toward the stage in the center of the pit. Above them blazed a huge chandelier, its myriad flames adding to the heat of the close-packed room. “There’s no doubt his spurs are long and sharp,” said Sebastian.
Cox turned his head to give Sebastian a long, considering look. “I hear you think Alexander Ross’s death was a murder.”
“It was murder,” said Sebastian, his gaze still on the stage below. “I assume by now that you’ve also heard of the death of one of your agents, an American by the name of Ezekiel Kincaid.”
“I have. But I’ll be damned if I see what the devil one has to do with the other.”
“They both died on the same night. Did you know?”
“No, I did not. Yet what is that to the point?”
“You don’t find it ... suggestive?”
“Of what? Men die in London all the time.”
“True.” Sebastian watched the two birds ogle each other. “How well did you know Mr. Kincaid?”
Cox frowned. “Not well. He may have been in my employ, but I’d met him only a few times.”
“I understand he had just arrived from America.”
“That’s right.”
“In fact, his ship docked the very morning he died.”
“Had it? I’m afraid I don’t recall. It may seem significant to you, but my company deals with many such transactions on a daily basis. My personal involvement is minimal.”
“That’s unfortunate, because I was hoping you could enlighten me on something. You see, as I understand it, the
Baltimore Mary
dropped anchor and unloaded her cargo in near record time. She was supposed to undergo some repairs and negotiate a new cargo for the return journey. Instead, she weighed anchor and set sail just days later, leaving Mr. Kincaid behind.”
“Yes, well; he was dead, wasn’t he?”
“True. But the
Baltimore Mary
didn’t know that. Or at least, I get the impression they didn’t, since they seem to have made every effort to find him and nearly missed the tide waiting for him.”
Jasper Cox narrowed his eyes against the haze as the birds circled each other in the ring below. “I really don’t see what any of this has to do with me.”
On the stage before them, the black-gray cock rushed in, feathers flying as the birds struck and slashed. The red pyle reeled back, bleeding.
Sebastian said, “Don’t you? The thing is, you see, the only link I can find between Ezekiel Kincaid and Alexander Ross is you.”
“You’re assuming there is a link.”
“Oh, there’s a link, all right.”
“I’ll be damned if I see it.”
The red pyle was down, dazed. Sebastian said, “Can you think of anyone who might have wanted to see Ross dead?”
Cox kept his gaze on the stage. His bird was finished. After a moment, he said, “Actually ...” Then he shook his head. “No, it’s absurd to even think of it.”
“Think of what?”
Cox cast a quick glance around, then leaned in closer and dropped his voice. “I heard a rumor—don’t ask me who from, because I won’t tell you. But there are whispers that Yasmina Ramadani—the wife of the Turkish Ambassador—has made several conquests amongst the members of the diplomatic community, and that Ross was one of her paramours.”
Sebastian studied the man’s fleshy, sweaty face. It was the most preposterous suggestion he’d heard yet. “Are you seriously suggesting that Alexander Ross was conducting an illicit affair with the wife of the Turkish Ambassador?” Such an activity would have gone beyond mere folly and indiscretion to careen straight into the realm of the suicidal.
Cox shrugged. “She is a very beautiful woman.”
“You’ve seen her?”
“Oh, yes. She appears often in the park. She’s not as retiring as you might suppose, given her position. I understand she’s Greek. A Christian, in fact; from Corinth.”
“And it didn’t trouble you that your sister’s fiancé was rumored to be involved with another man’s wife?”
“Of course it troubled me. But I only just heard it, and before I had the opportunity to confront Ross with the accusation, he died. What was the point then in pursuing the matter further? Sabrina is cut up enough about his death as it is, poor girl. Leave her with her image of a noble beloved brought too early to his grave. Why tarnish the sweetness of her memories?”
“Why indeed?” said Sebastian dryly. “Although I fail to see how the Turkish Ambassador’s wife could possibly have anything to do with Mr. Ezekiel Kincaid.”
“You’re the one who keeps insisting there’s some link between Kincaid and Ross. Not I.”
“So you’re suggesting—what? That the Turkish Ambassador killed Ross in a fit of jealousy?”
“It’s possible, isn’t it?”
Sebastian huffed an incredulous laugh and pushed to his feet. “Incidentally, where were you the night Ross died?”
“Good God. You think I remember?”
“Are you saying you don’t?”
Angry color flared in the other man’s cheeks. “As a matter of fact, I do. I was attending a dinner at the home of the Lord Mayor, in Lombard Street.”
“That should be easy enough to verify.”
“Please,” snapped Cox. “Be my guest.”
 
 
Leaving the cockpit, Sebastian turned to stroll along Birdcage Walk, his gaze drifting out over the darkened park beside him.
His first inclination had been to dismiss out of hand the suggestion that Alexander Ross had taken the Turkish Ambassador’s wife as his lover. Everything Sebastian had learned about Ross—his honor, his integrity—argued against it. And yet ...
And yet, Sebastian had known otherwise honorable men who took mistresses. Hadn’t the Earl of Hendon himself fathered Kat Boleyn by an actress he had in keeping? And then there was the legendary behavior of Sebastian’s own beautiful, faithless mother.
But he jerked his mind away from that.
There was no denying that for a woman of Yasmina Ramadani’s position and culture to welcome another man’s advances would be dangerous; if Yasmina and Ross had in truth become lovers, then both had knowingly courted death. Was it improbable? Yes. But they would hardly have been the first to count the world well lost for love.
Sebastian’s thoughts kept circling back to the inescapable fact that Cox’s rumor fit rather tidily with what Sebastian had already been told.
Something
had obviously caused enmity between Ross and the Turkish Ambassador. Something Ross had preferred not to disclose to his Russian friend.
In the end, Sebastian decided that until he knew for certain what that “something” was, it behooved him to keep an open mind.
Arriving back at Brook Street, he found a scrawled note from Paul Gibson that read simply,
Complications.
The word was heavily underscored.
Throwing down a quick glass of wine, Sebastian called for his curricle to be brought round. Then he set off once more for Tower Hill.
Chapter 28
S
ebastian was raising his fist to knock on Gibson’s door when it opened to emit Mrs. Federico. She came bustling out, her shawl pulled up over her head against the cool breeze that had kicked up after dusk. Her habitual scowl was, if anything, fiercer than ever.
“The goings-on we’ve had here today!” she exclaimed, glaring at him. “I meant to be out of here hours ago, and more’s the pity that I wasn’t.
Havy cavy
, that’s what I call them people. Havy cavy!” She tied the ends of her shawl in a knot and stomped off down the hill without looking back.
Letting himself in, Sebastian found Gibson sprawled in one of the ancient cracked-leather armchairs beside the parlor hearth, a brandy in one hand, the stump of his bad leg propped up on a stool.
“No, don’t get up,” Sebastian said when his friend struggled to do so.
Gibson sat back with a grunt. “Is that god-awful woman finally gone?”
“She is.” Sebastian went to pour himself a glass of wine from the carafe near the window. “What havy-cavy ‘goings-on’ have you been subjecting poor Mrs. Federico to now?”
“Poor Mrs. Federico, indeed,” said Gibson. “I’ve had Jumpin’ Jack here today, is all.”
“Came to collect the body, did he?”
“Uh . . . no.”
Sebastian swung to face him. “No?”
“There’s a wee catch, you see. Someone has set a guard over their loved one’s new grave in St. George’s burial ground.”
Sebastian came to sit in the chair on the opposite side of the empty fireplace. “Well, that’s the devil’s own luck.” He thought for a moment, then said, “Can we bribe the guard? I mean, it’s not like we’re wanting to steal—”
Gibson shook his head. “Jumpin’ Jack looked into that. Seems the fellow’s a high stickler. Some old Quaker or some such thing.” He sighed. “The irony is, we came so close. The girl’s body was held for more than two weeks in a funerary chapel before interment, which means it’s so far gone, there’s not much danger of anyone stealing it at this point. They’ve only paid the guard for two nights, and tonight is the last night.”
“So what’s the problem? The exhumation isn’t scheduled until Monday.”
“Jumpin’ Jack leaves for Brighton tomorrow. It’s his annual holiday.”
Sebastian choked on his wine. “What the hell? He can’t delay his departure for one more day?”
“Monday is his daughter Sarah’s birthday. He says they always spend her birthday at the seashore, and he’s not going to disappoint her.”
“Not even for two hundred pounds?”
“I offered him three hundred. He says he wouldn’t do it even for a thousand pounds.” Gibson drained his glass. “Do you have any idea how much money a good resurrection man can pull in over the course of a year? I wouldn’t be surprised if Jumpin’ Jack is worth considerably more than Dr. Astley ʹHave You Read My Article?’ Cooper.”
“Bloody hell,” said Sebastian, pushing up to refill their glasses.
“He did offer to find someone to go along with him tonight and kosh the guard over the head,” Gibson said. “He wasn’t willing to do it personally, mind—not being a violent man himself. But he figured he could look the other way while someone else did it.”

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