Detective-Inspector William Bristow was a large boned man of medium height and middle age. He had spent twenty-five years in the Force - excepting, of course, for four years in Flanders - and those years were beginning to show in the grey of his grizzled hair and the lines in the corners of his eyes. Apart from those two signs he might have been twenty-eight, not forty-eight. His back was as straight as a rod, his stomach flat, his biceps passably hard, even when relaxed, and his eyes, flinty grey beneath almost white brows, were as keen and shrewd as ever. His lips smiled less often, perhaps, but his eyes laughed more.
At times he was called the Philosopher, because he appeared to let nothing worry him. At other times he was called the Posh William, because he dressed fastidiously, and wore a buttonhole on every possible occasion. At other times still he was called the Mug, because every Commissioner selected him for the most difficult, tiring, intricate, and unlikely problems. The imagination of his fellow-officers - and subordinates - at Scotland Yard was not, then, as fertile nor as subtle as it might have been.
There was one compensation, however. Certain members of the fraternity that takes its pleasures and earns its living at the expense of more orderly members of society revealed greater subtlety by calling him Old Bill.
It might have been possible for them to have selected a man more antithetical of Bairnsfather’s creation, but few people would have believed it. Bristow’s face was square, tight-skinned, and alert, while his moustache was a neat military-cum-Colman attachment. Bristow fingered it a great deal, as though endeavouring to remove the yellow stains of nicotine that soiled the greyness of it. By habit he smoked cigarettes heavily, drank beer a little and spirits usually by invitation, and shaved night and morning when the trials of his job permitted. The thirty-seven housewives who lived in Gretham Street, Chelsea - excluding his own wife - believed that he was a commercial traveller. He had two sons approaching maturity and a daughter of fifteen. Perhaps one of the most significant things about him was that he adored his wife.
One morning in the August of I936 Old Bill walked rapidly along Mile End Road, acknowledging an occasional friendly grin from the enemy who were at times his friends, frowning, wishing for winter - or at least for a temperature below seventy-five degrees - and confounding the Dowager Countess of Kenton.
The Countess had lost an emerald brooch valued at seven hundred and fifty pounds. That had been on the Monday, three days before this visit of the Inspector’s to Limehouse. At ten o’clock on the night of the loss she had telephoned Scotland Yard to lodge her complaint, and, allowing for the six hours she apparently slept at night, she had telephoned Scotland Yard every other hour afterwards.
The theft had been a neat one, but not exceptionally clever. During a dance - the Dowager had an unattached daughter - the lights had been cut off for thirty seconds, and the brooch had been snatched from the Dowager’s corsage. Before she had stopped screaming the lights had been switched on again, whereat she had fainted, and no one had kept a cool head in the ensuing confusion.
A ladder leading to the windows at the rear of No. 7 Portland Square revealed the means of ingress, an unconscious housekeeper near the electric main switch - which in turn was near the window - revealed the burglar’s preparedness to use violence, and the fact that no one of the party had switched the light on again proved the raider, who must have done it himself, to have been of unusual daring and nerve.
The detective liked nerve, and, knowing that the housekeeper was not badly hurt, was amused. On the third day he disliked the Dowager so much that he was disappointed when Levy Schmidt, a pawnbroker in the Mile End Road, telephoned him to say that a client had tried to pass the Kenton brooch. That is to say, the human element in the detective was disappointed; the official element was pleased.
Bristow turned into the small, ill-lit shop and stood waiting amidst a row of second-hand dresses, a soiled heap of more intimate garments, a collection of cheap clocks, vases, and ornaments. After a few minutes Levy limped into his cubicle, saw his visitor, and lifted his scraggy old hands in dismay.
“Vy, Misther Bristhow, tho thorry, tho thorry! Vy didn’t you come in the private entranth, Misther Bristhow? Come thith vay, thith vay, and mind the stheps - vun - two - three - - ”
Bristow followed the Jew into the grimy parlour at the rear of the pawnshop, and marvelled to himself that a man as rich as Levy Schmidt could live in such filth. He shrugged the thought away. Levy had a perfect right to handle his own money and affairs as he liked; and Levy, moreover, was a valuable informant.
The parlour was as gloomy as it was dismal, despite the brilliance of the sun outside. It was heaped with more second-hand clothes, odd articles of furniture, crockery, and cutlery. Nothing that could be pawned was missing. Mile End patronised Levy frequently and exhaustively from sheer necessity.
“Now vot, Misther Bristhow - thit down, pleath - can I do for you? Can it be - ”
“What a lot more you’d say if you didn’t talk so much!” said Bristow cheerfully. “The Kenton brooch, Levy. You’ve got it?”
Levy nodded. His dirty, scrawny face was lined with years, and his brown, hooded eyes gleamed as he regarded the detective with satisfaction. He turned away and limped towards a square steel safe in the corner of the parlour.
“Vy yeth, Misther Bristhow, vould you pelieve it, I forgot? Mind you,” the pawnbroker added hastily, “I voth forthed to pay ten poundth for it, Inthpector; he vould not leave it viddout a pit of money. You come back ven I haff more in the thafe, I thaid, and he promithed he vould, Inthpector - just vun minute more. Hey! The Kenton brooch, hey!”
Bristow took the bauble in his fingers and peered at it. The lambent green fires in the stones greeted even the dim light of the shop parlour. Bristow pulled a photograph from his pocket and compared it with the jewel in his hand. It was the genuine Kenton brooch he was prepared to swear.
He slipped it into his pocket, wrapped in tissue-paper, and nodded at the Jew.
“That’s it,” he said. “Now who was the man? Know him?”
“Never thet eyeth on him before in me life, misther!”
“What did he look like?”
“Vell - it’th dark in the thop, Inthpector. Tall and dark and vot you might call viciouth, hey? Not a nithe man to know, hey? And his coat-collar voth turned up - like thith.” Levy put his scrawny hand behind his neck and hunched his shoulders expressively.
“Coat or overcoat?” asked Bristow.
“Overcoat, and a day like thith!” Levy lifted his hands to the ceiling. “Vy, didn’t it thout thuthpithion?”
“Why didn’t you telephone for a couple of policemen?” asked the Inspector a little irritably.
“Vell” - Levy shrugged his shoulders until the miscellaneous collection inside the pocket of his once black, now green coat jingled together - “vot could an old man like me do, Inthpector? Get the brooch, I thaid - that wath the firtht thing. And then telephone you, hey?
Not by a word or sign did Levy betray that he knew more than he said. True, he had given the only description of the visitor he possessed; but Levy had no love for the police, and he had a great love for jewels of the quality of the Kenton stone. Between him and the visitor who had brought the jewel there had passed a conversation that Bristow would have given a lot to have heard.
“I’m not grumbling,” the Inspector said, knowing that if he grumbled he would get little or no information. “What was his voice like?”
“Not a nithe voith,” said old Levy. “Hard, misther, vid the corner-mouth talk, hey?”
“Hm,” said Bristow, and his mind worked automatically.
“An old lag, but not a Londoner, or he’d know Levy. The light business shows his nerve, and he’ll probably be known in the Midlands or up north. Broke, or he wouldn’t have taken ten pounds and an excuse for the brooch. He won’t come back, of course.”
“Where’s the ticket he signed?” asked the Inspector.
“Vy, yeth, I forgot, vould you pelieve it? Vun moment, Misther Inthpector, vun - ”
The old Jew’s voice quavered away as he waddled out of the parlour towards the shop. Bristow could hear him pulling out a drawer beneath the counter, and heard him muttering to himself. Bristow scowled, trying to sort the thing out in his mind. Levy should have held the man somehow, he told himself
“Here ve are, here ve are,” said Levy, limping down the stairs into the parlour. “Vunny kind of name, Misther Inthpector.”
Bristow took it, and looked casually at the signature, little dreaming how often he was to look on the name and curse it. His attention tightened, however, when he saw that the signature was little more than a series of block letters joined together; it suggested illiteracy or cunning - or both.
“Hm,” he muttered, “T. Baron. What strikes you as funny about that, you old gas-bag?”
“Vell,” muttered Levy, “vell - high and mighty, vot? Hey! Just a minute, misther, the thop - ”
Bristow nodded as he heard footsteps in the shop beyond. He waited for two or three minutes, with growing impatience. Levy was muttering, and the other voice, low-pitched and harsh, was travelling into the parlour, the tone, not the words, being distinguishable. Levy was haggling, and the other was losing his temper. Bristow started to frown. His frown deepened as he heard a shuffle of footsteps and a rapped: “No, you don’t. Stay there!”
Bristow stopped scowling. He stood up slowly and fingered the steel of the handcuffs in his pocket. It was absurd, of course, but the probability remained that the would-have-been pawner of the Kenton brooch had returned. Bristow knew that the gods were generous at times, and a fool was born every minute.
Keeping close to the row of clothes in the passage, and out of sight of the men in the shop, he went up the stairs.
He saw the man suddenly, and grinned. Levy’s description had been brief but good. Tall, dark-skinned, with a tweed cap pulled low over his eyes, reaching almost to the bridge of his nose, and the collar of a dilapidated rainproof coat turned up above his chin, the thief of the Kenton brooch - providing the case was as plain as it appeared to be - was staring at Levy, who was crouching back against the wall behind the desk. Bristow could just see the tip of Levy’s nose and forelock of white, greasy hair.
I tell you, Levy was muttering, “that vot I thay ith . . .”
“Can that!” snapped the man in the tweed cap. And then, without the slightest change of expression in his voice, he said, “Bristow, come out of there!”
The silence in the pawnshop could be felt. Bristow himself felt as if he had been punched in the stomach; his wits were wool-gathering, his legs and arms felt weak. He could just hear the soft breathing of the Jew and the ticking of half a dozen clocks.
“Levy,” said the man in the tweed cap, breaking the silence harshly, “you’ve split to the narks enough, I reckon. Are you religious?”
Levy muttered something deep in his throat. The detective felt a peculiar tightening of the muscles at the pit of his stomach, and a coldness seemed to have spread through the shop, despite the heat of the day. He shivered.
“Because,” went on the man in the tweed cap, “unless Bristow decides to come into sight you’re going on a long, long journey. So - ”
Bristow swallowed a lump in his throat and moved forward. Levy was shivering against the wall, and the man in the tweed cap was holding something in his right hand, holding it loosely and pointing it towards the policeman; he seemed to ignore Levy.
“You’ll get a heavier sentence for this,” said Bristow, keeping his voice steady. “Put that gun away and - ”
The man lifted the gun. For a moment Bristow’s eyes narrowed, but his coldness increased. It all happened in a fraction of a second. Bristow had just time to think in a queer, hazy way of death . . .
Then something sweet and sickly came through the shop, something that made Bristow gasp and choke and stagger back. He recognised the fumes of ether gas as he heard the thief laugh, a harsh, unpleasant sound that grated, and saw old Levy drop to the floor, falling as though in slow motion on the screen. The Jew’s hand clawed the air, his mouth was twisted open. A vague shape loomed in front of Bristow’s eyes, and he struggled for a moment in an effort to regain his feet. Then the darkness swallowed him.
The man in the tweed cap ran through the unconscious detective’s pockets quickly, found the Kenton brooch and stuffed it into his own pocket, and then hurried out of the shop, his shoulders hunched and his head buried in the collar of a frayed mackintosh.
And a little later John Mannering chuckled to himself.
As Bristow’s sergeant told him some time later, the detective and the pawnbroker might have been on the floor of the shop for hours but for the arrival of a woman who wanted to pledge a pair of boots. She saw the two bodies, and, not being used to such evidence of violence, even in the East End, screamed and rushed into the street, where she was caught and interrogated by a placid policeman a few minutes later.
The policeman investigated, and then started to get things moving; he recognised the Inspector, and knew the slightest error would earn him a sharp rap over the knuckles. Consequently Bristow was revived without loss of time, and the policeman was relieved to find his superior was not seriously gassed.
“Baron!” muttered a sick and furious Detective Inspector Bristow some two hours later. “Baron! It’ll be a long time before I forget that name, blast him. Did you find anything, Tanker?”
Sergeant Jacob Tring of the plain-clothes force, known as Tanker because of his slow, ponderous, yet remarkably successful progress in his work, shook his head and regarded the pale face of his chief stolidly.
“Not a thing. Levy was out as much as you’ and if it hadn’t been for that old woman who went in to pop a pair of boots you might have been there for hours. I shouldn’t smoke just yet, chief,” Tanker went on. “The innards are made for some things and not for others.”
“You go to hell!” said Bristow snappily. “Well, we know something now. Send a call through for the Baron - T. Baron - to every station; get that pawn ticket run over for fingerprints - ”
“There ain’t no pawn-ticket,” said Tanker. He brightened perceptibly as he made the statement, for he was a man cheered by bad news and depressed by good tidings. “He took it.”
Bristow stared and then swallowed hard. His brow was black, and he started to speak in a way that Tanker had rarely heard before.
“One day I’ll - ” he growled; and then suddenly and absurdly he laughed.
It was a remarkable thing to do, but Tanker had known his superior for a long time, and was prepared for anything. The sergeant shrugged his shoulders and looked out of the window of Bristow’s small office at the Yard. A tall, lanky, doleful-looking man was the sergeant, dressed in shiny blue serge, patched but well-polished boots, and, even in the office, a bowler hat two sizes too large for him. Tanker’s hat was an institution at the Yard. Bristow was still laughing, and his assistant decided that there was such a thing as too much of a joke. He grunted.
“Levy said you’d got the brooch in your pocket, chief, so we had a look. Nowt, of course. We tested’ everything in the pockets for prints, but there was none of them there, either.”
“Next time you want to look in my pockets,” said Bristow, checking his laughter, “wait until I’m awake. Has her ladyship been through this morning yet?” “Twice”, ‘said Tanker.
The smile left Bristow’s face, and he frowned. The cool effrontery of the trick had appealed, suddenly and unfailingly, to his sense of humour, but the task of making a report to the effect that he had actually had possession of the Kenton brooch sobered him. If the Dowager learned that she would cause a great deal of bother and annoyance. He grew brisk.
“Well,” he said, “what are you standing there for, Tanker?” (Only Superintendents and higher officials called Sergeant Jacob Tring by his real name.) “Get that call out, man.”
The sergeant hurried out of the room, and for a while Bristow brooded alone. Then he took a deep breath and left his office for that of Superintendent Lynch. He found the Superintendent in, and made his report verbatim. Lynch, large, red-faced, placid, and cheerful, grinned slowly.
“Caught for a sucker, Bristow,” he said; “but what’d he stage a show like that for, I wonder?”
“If I knew,” muttered Bristow, “I - ”
“Ever seen the man before, or anything like him?” asked Lynch, who rarely wasted time, especially at the start of a case.
“You’ll find a dozen in any high street east of London.”
“Eyes? Complexion? Hair?”
“Eyes and hair covered, complexion dark.”
Harsh. I’d recognise it if I ever heard it again.”
“There seems to be a meaning behind that,” said Lynch placidly. “What is it, Bill?”
“He disguised his voice as easily as he did his handwriting,” said Bristow, “and he took them both away with him when he went.”
“Naturally,” said Lynch. “You don’t seem quite at your best, Bill. What did you say he called himself?”
“Baron. T. Baron,” said Bristow.
There was a sudden tightening of the lines at the Superintendent’s eyes, and a sudden pursing of his generous lips. Bristow frowned.
Lynch did not speak at once, but his brooding eyes contemplated the Inspector for several seconds.
“Now that,” he said at last, “is a very funny thing.”
“Levy thought so too,” said Bristow.
“But he wasn’t thinking what I’m thinking,” said Lynch slowly. “Are you feeling all right?”
Old Bill’s smile returned to his lips and eyes. He needed no telling that there was an idea at the back of Lynch’s mind, and he had a great regard for the Superintendent’s ideas.
“Ye-es. Injured more in the pride than the abdomen. Why?”
Lynch stood up and picked his hat from the peg on the door, placed his thumb and forefinger behind Bristow’s neck, and urged the detective into the passage. As they walked along - the Big and Little of It, according to those members of society who had thought of calling Bristow Old Bill - Lynch was saying, in his curiously gentle voice: “It’s a funny thing, a very funny thing, Bill, that we pulled Charlie Dray inside this morning for trying to pass some of the stones from the Kia bracelet. You’ve heard of the Kia bracelet, Bill?”
“Ye-es,” said Bristow, and then racked his brains. He did not recall the circumstances of the affair, although the name was familiar enough.
“Removed, so cleverly removed,” said Lynch, who had a bad habit of trying to be lyrical, “from Mrs Chunnley at the Pertland House Ball last February. Now we come to think of it, the lights went out, Mrs Chunnley felt the bracelet slip from her wrist, and, sesame, the lights came on again.”
“I gather,” said Bristow, “that you think there’s a connection between the Kia bracelet and the Kenton brooch?”
“How liberally you were endowed, Bill, with the power of reasoning! Yes, I do. Now we come to think of it - I’m generous, Bill, and include you - the two jobs were as near identical as any we’re likely to come across.”
“That’s true enough,” admitted Bristow, frowning.
“Thank you,” said Superintendent Lynch with heavy wit. “Now we go back to Charlie Dray - he’s at Bow Street, time being - who was trying to pass some of the stones from the Kia bracelet this morning. He said a thing that makes Mr Baron sound very funny.”
“Well,” said Bristow, when they had tucked themselves into a taxi - Lynch was notoriously lazy - and were humming towards Bow Street, “what about Dray’s story?”
“Will you keep quiet a minute?” demanded Lynch testily.
Bristow grinned and was silent. Lynch said nothing more until they were confronting Charlie Dray in the charge-room at Bow Street some twenty minutes later.
Charlie Dray was a weedy, pale-faced, ginger-haired man who had once earned fame as a cracksman of exceptional ability. No lock had been too cunning for his art, and only a domestic quarrel had led to his undoing, for Charlie had been shopped for nearly being unfaithful. After fives years’ penance he had forsworn married life and his profession, and he earned a living by selling lozenges to football crowds during the winter and ice-cream to race crowds during the summer. Not once during the three years of his freedom had he trespassed against the law, so far as Superintendent Lynch knew. Yet that morning . . .
“Charlie,” said Lynch gently, “I’ve no wish to see you in uniform again, so I want you to spill your story again, and fully, to Old Bill and me. Don’t laugh, Charlie!”
Dray chuckled; his good humour was notorious.
“You will have yours, woncha - little joke I mean? Now, listen, if I strike me dead I speak the truth - ”
“Pardon?” said Lynch politely.
Charlie guffawed. “But, joking apart, sir, wot I told you was the truth nothing but, strike me, Superintendent. Bloke comes to me a month ago and says, ‘Charlie, I’ve heard it said you know something about locks.’ ‘Then,’ says I, ‘you looked up an out-o’-date reference book, mister. ‘Now,’ says he, ‘I wouldn’t disturb your morals - ‘”
“Did he say morals, Charlie?” asked Lynch severely.
“Did I tell you I was telling you the truth nothing but?” demanded Charlie aggrievedly. “Morals he says, and morals I says, because, if you look at it that way, sir, it’s a laugh. Howso. ‘- For anything in the world,’ he says, ‘but I’ve just bought a lot of old safes, and some of ‘em are locked, and I want to open them.’ ‘On the level? ‘asks I.’ If so I’ll do ‘em.’ ‘On the level,’ says he, so we goes along to a place in Brick Street - ”
“Can you remember the place?” said Lynch.
“Eyes shut and three parts over,” said Charlie, “and the Izzy who was selling him the safes.’There they are, he says, ‘so you can see I’ve bought ‘em. Now I’m going to take them, and you, to a little place in Lambeth, and you can open them for me.’”
“And you can remember the Lambeth place?” asked Lynch.
“Would I recognise my mother? Sir, we went there, and I opened the safes, and then he takes the locks out - ”
“Out?” echoed Bill Bristow, who had been listening with an increasing sense of wonder and perturbation.
“I can see,” said Charlie, with dignity, “that you ain’t used to assorting with gentlemen, Inspector. Yes. They were his property, weren’t they, and he could do what he liked. ‘How’d you do it? ‘he says, and I shows him, and he tries it a bit himself, and one way and another he picks it up pretty quick.”
“Meaning,” said Bristow heavily, “that you taught him how to pick locks, did you?”
Charlie Dray’s eyes were pools of innocence.
“His own locks, Mr. Bristow.”
“What kind?” asked Lynch.
“Well,” said Charlie cheerfully, “there was a pretty good selection. Eight, I think. There was a Chubb Major and a Yale 20 and half a dozen combinations. He was a dab at ‘em by the time we’d finished. Howso. Two quid, he gives me, and them little things you lifted this morning, Mr Lynch.”
“He gave them to you?” asked Lynch.
Charlie sniffed, but there was a crafty glint in his eyes.
“On the up-and-up and the nothing but, mister. A present, he said, and may there be many more! Now ‘ow was I to know - ’ow was any honest man to know - ”
“Charlie,” said Lynch gently, “you’re a goddamned liar, and if you don’t know what that means you ought to.”
The little man’s eyes narrowed.
“S’elp me,” he muttered uneasily, “I never lifted ‘em, mister. I ain’t done a job since I came out.”
“Seven years,” said Lynch dreamily, “for the Kia bracelet. You wouldn’t get off with anything less. But I’d do what I could for you, Charlie, if you’ll take us to the place where he bought the safes and the place where you unlocked them for him.
“Now, listen,” said Charlie Dray earnestly, “I’d do that fer a friend like you any day, Mr Lynch.”
Lynch turned to a local sergeant, an interested and amused spectator.
“Let me have a man, will you,” he said, “to tote this along with us?” As the man turned Lynch grinned at Bristow. “See what I’m driving at?” he asked.
Bristow nodded, and took a case from his pocket.
“Smoke? If you’ve done what you always do - left the thing that matters out - ” he said, “the name of Charlie’s friend was Baron.”
“So logical,” sighed Lynch, “you ought to have been a Frenchman. Ta. Give Charlie one, Bill; give Charlie one.
Several hours later a weary Bristow and a worn-out Lynch returned to Scotland Yard. The temperature during the afternoon had topped the eighty mark, and both men were hot, dusty, thirsty, and disappointed. Charlie Dray’s story had been substantiated - up to a point. The second-hand-safe dealer had certainly sold the safes to a Mr T. Baron, whose description tallied with that of the man in the tweed cap at Levy’s shop. The office building where the safes had been unlocked and the lessons in lock-breaking had been given was in the hands of house-breakers, and the firm of agents which had let the rooms to the man Baron remembered the man well, but only by name. All the business had been done by post and telephone.
“And Charlie Dray,” mused Lynch, “either can’t or won’t remember much about Baron’s face. Hm. Y’know, Bill, I don’t believe in hunches, but I’ve a nasty tickle in the diaphragm over this bloke Baron. He’s cool. He’s clever. He’s well educated”
“But yet he sounded” Bristow hesitated and shrugged. “His voice was - ”
“You’re not well,” said Lynch gently. “His voice and his handwriting were disguised. Out of your own mouth, Bill.”
Bristow thought, but he did not say what he thought, and it did not altogether concern Mr Baron.
John Mannering told himself that he had every reason to be satisfied with the way things were going. The comparative failure of the raid on the Fauntley strong room was a thing of the past now, and the thefts of the Kia bracelet and the Kenton bauble had been perfectly managed; others, too, had gone through as easily, and if occasionally he felt the pricking of conscience at the fact that he was robbing men and women whose company and trust he enjoyed he forced it away from him. The risks he stood more than made up for the way in which he was playing his double role.
Certainly he did not feel the slightest awkwardness when he met and talked with the Dowager Countess of Kenton; in fact, he told himself that he had given the Dowager such grounds for complaint and discussion that she was in his debt.
At one of the Fauntley dinner-parties - growing larger and more comprehensive week by week - Lady Kenton spied him, unaccompanied, and buttonholed him. There was nothing she liked better than an attentive male audience, and Mannering was perfect in that respect. His smile as he approached her made her forget her loss, but she remembered it before long.
“And these policemen,” she mourned, “they’re so helpless, Mr Mannering. That man Bristow - I’m convinced he said something under his breath when I saw him this evening.”
“It wouldn’t surprise me,” admitted Mannering, smiling, “but he’s probably doing his best. He’s after a clever rogue, and - ”
“Clever!” snorted Lady Kenton. “Clever! A sneaking, cowardly cat-burglar who robs a poor, helpless woman! Clever! The scoundrel! If I could only find him, Mr Mannering, I’d - I’d . . .”
“Cocktail, m’lady?” said her ladyship’s footman. “Dinner in half an hour, m’lady.”
Lady Kenton lifted her glass to Mannering, and told herself that he had quite the most fascinating smile she had ever seen. What a lucky girl Lorna Fauntley was, if Lorna only knew it!
Lorna moved from a small group of people gathered round the television set in the corner of the room; her dark hair was still a little unruly, her eyes were still mutinous and still probing, although they cleared as she reached the Dowager and Mannering.
“I was just saying . . .” began the Dowager.
“I believe with a little prompting I could almost guess,” laughed Lorna. “It’ll be something to do with a burglary”
Lady Kenton looked offended. John Mannering laughed, until the Dowager’s frown cleared. Lorna squeezed the older woman’s hand and accepted a cocktail.