82

April gave way to May. I remained at Mrs Jem’s house in Gaunt-court. I earned enough for my keep and a little more. I should have been happy, for a great fear had been lifted from me, but I was not.

I dined once or twice with Mr Rowsell who thought he might be able to put me forward for a clerkship with a friend of his. It would be respectable employment, with the hope of something better in the long run. I saw Salutation Harmwell on several occasions – we would stroll through the parks and watch the world go by, neither of us feeling the need to speak very much.

It was Harmwell who told me that Mr Carswall’s life was no longer despaired of. But the old man had not recovered the use of his limbs, and he was still unable to speak. His physicians believed it probable that the apoplexy had affected his mind as well as his body.

“He has become a great baby now,” Harmwell said. “He does nothing but lie in his bedchamber. Everything is done for him.”

“And Miss Carswall’s marriage?”

The Negro shrugged. “She and Sir George are still willing, but it is now a question of settlements and of who is to assume the direction of Mr Carswall’s affairs. A matter for the lawyers, in other words. So in the meantime Miss Carswall and Mrs Frant remain with the old man in Margaret-street. Though how long that will last for I cannot tell.” He hesitated and added, “Mrs Kerridge tells me that Captain Ruispidge is in town and has called on several occasions.”

The world knew nothing of what had transpired in that tumbledown farmhouse beyond Kilburn. It was given out that Mr Carswall had hired a gig and taken Mr Noak to view the building land nearby, as a prospect for a joint investment. Mr Carswall had been taken ill on the way, and the two gentlemen had found shelter in the farmhouse. No one questioned this story. No one had any reason to do so.

Early in May, Mr Noak invited me to dine with him in Fleet-street, at the Bolt-in-Tun. We ate a frugal meal of mutton chops and caper sauce, washed down with thin claret. Mr Noak looked careworn.

“There is no news of the man Poe,” he said abruptly as he pushed aside his empty plate. “I have had a constant watch on the premises in Queen-street and instituted other inquiries. The place is in great confusion – the bailiffs have been in. But the man himself has vanished. I suspect he has fled abroad.”

“What of the stolen bills?”

“I have found no trace of them. We must presume that Poe took them with him. None has been presented for payment since the one in Riga earlier this year. I am tolerably certain how that was managed, by the way. Carswall has – or had – a man of business in Paris. He has a clerk named Froment: and it was a Monsieur Froment who passed the bill to the notary in Brussels, who then passed it on to the others whom I had already traced. But of course Poe does not have the advantage of Carswall’s commercial connections on the Continent. That is –” He leaned across the table and said in a low, urgent tone, “You are perfectly convinced as to the identity of the man in Kilburn?”

“Yes, sir.” I was saddened by the desperation I detected in his voice. “There is no possible doubt. The man I talked to was David Poe, not Henry Frant.”

Noak leaned back against the settle. “It is a thousand pities you allowed him to escape.”

I smiled, affecting a nonchalance I did not feel. “He tricked me, sir. But perhaps it is for the best. What matters, surely, is that the finger I was encouraged to find in the satchel had been removed from the hand of the corpse of his father-in-law. There can be no doubt about that. In that case, it was simply designed to throw me off the scent, to make me believe it possible that the corpse in Wellington-terrace was not that of Henry Frant. But of course it was.”

“I wish I had brought Frant to the gallows as he deserved,” Noak said after a silence. “I shall regret it always. My son’s murderer unpunished.”

I repressed a shudder. “If you had seen Mr Frant’s body, sir, you might not think him unpunished. All in all, he did not have a happy ending. He had been reduced to a bankrupt, an embezzler in fear of the gallows: and then, at the last, he lived to see his schemes confounded, and when he died he was beaten to a pulp. No, he did not die an easy death.”

Noak sniffed. He took up a toothpick and toyed with it for a moment. Then he sighed. “Carswall, too: I do not think I can touch him.”

“Surely Providence has already judged him? He is living imprisoned in his own body, and under sentence of death.”

Mr Noak did not reply. He summoned the waiter and paid our reckoning, carefully counting out the coins. I thought I had angered him. As we were walking out into the Strand, however, he stopped and touched my arm.

“Mr Shield, I am sensible of the great service you have done me. The matter has not turned out exactly as I would have wished, but I have achieved most of what I set out to do, one way or the other. I shall return to America in a week or two. And what do you intend to do with your life?”

“I do not yet know, sir.”

“You cannot afford to leave the decision too long. You are a young man of parts, and if you should find yourself in the United States, I may be able to put you in the way of something. I will write to you before we sail, and give you my direction.”

I bowed and began to thank him. But he turned on his heel and without even a handshake walked rapidly away. In a moment he was lost to sight among the crowds.