He flipped open the folder, uncapped his fountain pen and began to sign the letters, his eyes running swiftly over the contents of each. Lydia waited, standing by the door.
“Do sit down, Mrs. Langstone. I wanted a word with you.” He scrawled his signature, blotted it and moved on to the next letter. “With reference to our earlier conversation, I intend to write to Mr. Langstone over the weekend, according to your instructions.” He looked up, peering at her with watery eyes. “After due consideration, I think it would be better for all concerned if it were not generally known that I am acting for you, particularly in this office. One wouldn’t want to encourage tittle-tattle during office hours, or to bring undesirable attention to the firm. But I have a small private practice which I run from home. Of course, some publicity will be inevitable in the long run, if the affair proceeds to its conclusion. But we need not anticipate it unnecessarily.”
“I’m still rather concerned about the cost, sir.”
He nodded. “I’m glad to hear of it. Money matters, Mrs. Langstone, as I’m sure you’ve noticed. We shall move cautiously. As we were saying earlier, since you’re the injured party, I see no reason why Mr. Langstone shouldn’t pay any costs incurred. On top of that, we shall ask him to settle an annuity on you. We shall also need to take into account anything of material value that you’ve brought into the marriage.”
“He spent all that long ago,” Lydia said, and was surprised to hear the bitterness in her voice.
“It would be very helpful if you would let me have a note of the details as far as you are able. Let me have it tomorrow morning. If there was any formal arrangement, I imagine a solicitor was involved-perhaps Lord Cassington’s family solicitor? It would be helpful to know. Copies of any documents relating to the settlement would be invaluable. In the meantime, I shall write to Mr. Langstone. You must give me his address tomorrow as well. He should receive the letter on Monday.”
“Thank you.”
Mr. Shires sighed. “Don’t get your hopes too high, Mrs. Langstone. We have a long way to go.”
Lydia spent the rest of the afternoon in a daze. At last it seemed possible that there might one day be an end to all this uncertainty-and to the poverty too. It was reassuring that she had an ally in the shape of Mr. Shires. She didn’t much like the man but she had no reason to doubt his professional competence. His personal probity was another matter-she remembered that odd snatch of telephone conversation she had overheard between him and Serridge. There was nothing to show that either Serridge or Miss Penhow had ever been a client of Shires and Trimble. But they might be Mr. Shires’ private clients, and in that case their names would not feature in Mr. Reynolds’ files.
At the end of the day Lydia and Miss Tuffley went downstairs together. Miss Tuffley paused in the hall to light a cigarette before venturing outside. Lydia asked if she had any plans for the weekend.
“Not really. I’ll probably go to the pictures on Saturday afternoon. Do you ever go to the pictures?”
“Occasionally.”
“You can tag along sometimes if you want.” Miss Tuffley lowered her head over the match. “It’s not much fun going by yourself, is it? Just let me know.”
“Yes, thank you.”
Miss Tuffley opened the front door and led the way down the steps. It had started to rain. Rory Wentwood was waiting outside under an umbrella. He raised his cap when he saw them.
“Good afternoon, Mrs. Langstone,” he said.
Miss Tuffley nudged Lydia. “You lucky thing. They’re all after you, aren’t they? It’s not fair. Can’t you spare one for me?”
She squealed with laughter and waved to them both. She set off along the pavement toward Holborn, swaying on her high heels and leaving behind her a sweetly entangled smell of Wood-bines and cheap scent.
“There’s so much we need to talk about,” Lydia said quietly to Rory as they were walking toward the gate to Bleeding Heart Square.
“I know. And I’ve got a favor to ask. Are you busy this evening?”
“Not particularly. Why?”
“Because I wondered if you’d be kind enough to-” He broke off as the wicket gate opened, revealing Malcolm Fimberry framed in the doorway between Rosington Place and Bleeding Heart Square.
“Mrs. Langstone! Good evening.” Fimberry beamed at her and then added with less enthusiasm, “Hello, Wentwood.”
Rory nodded to him.
Fimberry stayed where he was, blocking their way. “I promised to show you something of the chapel, Mrs. Langstone. If you’ve got five minutes to spare, I can promise you won’t regret it.”
“Some other time, perhaps-I have one or two things to do.”
“Just for a couple of minutes? You see, because of the meeting tomorrow, Father Bertram has entrusted me with the key of the Ossuary. He can’t be there tomorrow himself, you see-there’s a diocesan committee at Westminster, so he’s asked me to liaise with Sir Rex in his place.” He took off his rain-flecked pince-nez and polished them on his tie. “It’s a very good opportunity to see the encaustic tiles. I probably won’t have a chance to show you tomorrow-these meetings can be a little hectic, and I shall have to be on hand to help.”
“It’s very kind of you, Mr. Fimberry, but I’m-”
“We’d love to,” Rory interrupted. “Thank you so much.”
“Oh,” said Fimberry, disconcerted. He added gloomily, “Well, yes, I suppose the more the merrier.”
Lydia glanced at Rory’s face. She felt his touch on her arm and wondered why this was important to him. “All right. If it really won’t take long.”
“Follow me.”
He set off toward the chapel. Rory mouthed “Thank you” to Lydia. Fimberry held open the door in the little forecourt in front of the east wall of the chapel. It led into a flagged corridor running the length of the building and sparsely lit with electric wall lights.
“This way,” Fimberry said. “This is all that remains of the cloister, by the way. Sadly altered, of course.”
On the left was a row of windows looking out into darkness; on the right was the south wall of the chapel, a patchwork of masonry studded with blocked openings. The place smelled damp. Lydia watched Fimberry’s shadow flickering first in front and then behind him, along the wall and along the floor, but never in one place for long and never quite where you expected it to be. In the gloom at the end of the corridor a flight of stone steps rose up to the entrance of St. Tumwulf’s Chapel.
Fimberry glanced back at them. “We’ll save the chapel itself for another day, Mrs. Langstone. There is so much to see, and so little time!”
“Sorry about this,” Rory murmured behind her. “I’ll explain.”
“This is the undercroft,” Fimberry said, waving to a door set three steps down from the floor level of the cloister.
“May we see in there too?” Rory said, darting down the steps and trying the latch. The latch lifted and the door opened.
“Very well. But mind the steps, Mrs. Langstone, they can be treacherous. Just a moment-I’ll turn on the lights.”
A line of bare light bulbs came to life, revealing the stark outlines of a long, low whitewashed room bisected on its east-west axis by a row of wooden posts.
“Victorian,” Fimberry said dismissively. “The interior had to be almost entirely refurbished when the Church bought St. Tumwulf’s in the eighteen seventies.”
Lydia looked around. Rows of chairs and benches had been set out. Near the door were tables holding crockery and urns. At the east end, five high-backed chairs stood behind a table on a low platform.
“It looks as if the Inquisition will soon be in session,” Rory said.
“Sir Rex and his people made the arrangements. Well, there’s not much to see here. Shall we move on to the Ossuary?”
“Does Father Bertram let the undercroft to anyone who asks?”
“Oh no.” Fimberry looked shocked. “That wouldn’t be appropriate. One couldn’t have atheists here, for example, or communists or people of that sort.”