“He’s coming,” I told my employer. “He’s finishing a game. It shouldn’t take long.”
“I don’t have time for games,” Barker grumbled.
“I could go back, knock over the table, and drag him in here, if you prefer,” I replied.
“That won’t be necessary. Forgive my ill humor. I’ve got a lot on my mind at the moment.”
There was a squeak of the outer door and a feel of pressure changing in the hermetically sealed room as Pollock Forbes entered. He has a reputation as a genial young man, but for once, he showed his edge.
“Cyrus, this is most irregular,” he complained. “You know Mr. Llewelyn is not a member. You’re breaking protocol.”
“I’m sorry, Pollock, special circumstances warrant. I didn’t want the lad in the street revealing my presence to all and sundry.”
“That’s quite a costume you’re wearing today. I suppose I should be glad you didn’t come through the dining room. I hear you’re in a spot of trouble.”
“I am,” Barker admitted. “The banks have frozen my assets, and my home and offices are no longer safe. Sebastian Nightwine is in town, which cannot be a coincidence. Oh, and Scotland Yard is hunting me. I understand there is a price on my head. Did you know Scotland Yard suspects me in the murder of Lord Clayton?”
“I understand there was an eyewitness who claims he saw the two of you argue two nights ago. It was Clayton’s son, Gerald.”
“He’s lying. Clayton and I spoke amicably and parted the best of friends.”
“A knife was found on Lord Clayton’s body, along with one of your sharpened coins.”
“Anyone can leave behind a knife. It proves nothing.”
“I’m sorry, Cyrus, but it was not an anonymous weapon. It was a dagger about nine inches long and had your name and crest imprinted on the blade, a rampant lion.”
The Guv suddenly launched himself off the marble bench and began pacing about the room. Forbes and I looked at each other, startled. Coming up to a wall, he smote it with the palm of his hand, producing another echo in the chamber.
“It is my own fault,” he growled. “When Nightwine was in London two years ago, I pressed a knife blade into his front door as a warning. Evidently, he took it with him as a souvenir.”
“That wasn’t very wise,” Forbes said. “Is that the only knife you’ve ever given away?”
“I’m not in the habit of giving them as gifts, if that is what you mean. It was a warning, and now he has used it against me. I should have known better than to let my emotions get the best of me.”
“What can I do for you?” Pollock Forbes asked, always practical. “How are you fixed?”
“We’ll make do,” my employer said. I was certain he hadn’t the slightest idea how little money was in his wallet, which was just under five pounds. What he meant was that whatever situation in which we found ourselves, we would make do.
“Do you need a place to stay? I’ve got a few rooms outside of London where I can tuck you away.”
“No, thank you. I don’t wish to put you in the position where you can be blamed for helping me.”
The remark or the feelings behind it set Forbes coughing. He was slowly losing a battle with tuberculosis. He sat down on a bench, choking into a handkerchief, and when the spasm was over, stuffed the silk into his breast pocket until he needed it again. Since I had known him he had stopped wearing white shirts, which collected the fine spray of bloody droplets. The one he wore now was a dark gray.
“What do you need, then?” he asked weakly.
“Information. Inspector Poole told me Nightwine’s been given diplomatic status. I want to know why and how, and by whom. What is he here for beyond causing me trouble? He arrived from Calcutta two days ago aboard the SS Rangoon.”
“Have you any idea where he was before that?”
“He tends to travel about a good deal, but his favorite location is along the border between Nepal and Tibet. His father explored the area years ago.”
“His father was Sir Elias Nightwine, the explorer?”
“Aye,” Barker said. “Sir Elias tutored him himself and took him along on his expeditions. You’ll recall he was an extreme social Darwinist and raised his son on the principle of survival of the fittest. Some might say he raised a monster with no interest or compassion for anyone except himself.”
“Expeditions,” Pollock repeated. He never committed anything to paper, but stored everything in that well-ordered brain of his.
“You recall something?” Barker asked.
“I’ve got a fellow in the Foreign Office. There was a meeting there yesterday, very sub rosa. He was not allowed to attend but took a pencil to a notepad, scribbling to see what had been written on the sheet before it. Someone had written ‘Shambhala Expedition.’ That’s in Tibet, isn’t it?”
“It is, as I recall. It’s some sort of mythical city.”
“Does it have any significance in relation to Nightwine?”
“It might. Tibet has always held a strange fascination for Sebastian. Foreigners are forbidden to set so much as a foot in the country, which makes him want to go there all the more. I think his sudden arrival and this meeting is too much of a coincidence. If you would, concentrate your efforts in learning about this so-called expedition.”
“I was going to, anyway. It sounds intriguing.”
“Knowing Nightwine, there is intrigue and to spare.”
Forbes frowned. “You called him Sebastian a minute ago. Do you know each other?”
Barker’s mouth went grim. “Too well, if anything.”
“I’ll ask around for you, then,” Forbes said. “While you’re here, may I at least feed the two of you? There’s no telling when your next meal will be. We keep a table by the kitchen for bailiffs. Some of our regulars are, alas, insolvent, generally writers and painters. I assure you the food is no different at that table than at any other here.”
I was certain Barker would refuse. He always had in the past. We had come here at least once a month in the two years I’d worked for him, and yet never had I tasted anything but the coffee mocha. To my surprise Barker accepted, perhaps only to spite me.
At the bailiff’s table one is given no choice as to the menu, but the food is plentiful and it is free, as long as one has a purpose in being there. We began with turtle soup, then turbot, beef cutlets in brown sauce with roasted potatoes, haricots verts, apples in brandy, and a salad. It was a welcome change after several meals of hard, dry rice.
“You’re eating very sparingly, sir,” I noted. “Are you feeling well?”
“Never better. I have allowed this town and its rich food to add some poundage to my frame. I think it best under my current circumstances to subtract them. It would be best,” the Guv went on, “if you did not mention our having dined here to Etienne. He and Mr. Nicholson, who owns this establishment, are the bitterest of enemies.”
I lifted a forkful of roasted apples braised in brandy and thought of Barker’s cook and his hot temper which could be kindled by the slightest spark.
“Why am I not surprised?”
Once we were outside again and walking through Soho, I turned to my employer. “May I ask you something?”
“You may,” he said cautiously. “I cannot promise I shall answer.”