After my introduction to Mrs. Tolliver, which I acknowledged with a polite bow, I announced that Sir John and Mr. Tolliver had concluded their conversation.
“You see?” said Lady Fielding to her as she rose. “It lasted no time at all. Jack simply wanted to talk to him. I do hope you can come sometime and visit the Magdalene Home soon. We’re so proud of our work there.”
Mrs. Tolliver, who in Constable Langford’s just estimation was pleasant-looking, rather than pretty, smiled gratefully. “Perhaps a Sunday. I’ve said I would help in the stall during the week, at least for a little while.”
“Perhaps a Sunday then.”
There were further urgings and thanks until at last she made for the door. I volunteered to show her down, for the stairs were dark and steep.
She left on her husband’s arm, twittering happily at Lady Fielding’s kindness to her. Constable Langford followed, struggling under the weight of the larger of the two portmanteaus.
When he heard the door slam after them. Sir John turned to Constable Baker and me and said with obvious annoyance: “He is the most disputatious fellow ever I met. Should have been a lawyer, I daresay. Still, I could not lock him up in the strong room simply because of that, now, could I?”
Next day it was made plain that despite the fact that Sir John had sent Mr. Tolliver on his way, he had not completely surrendered his suspicions. In the morning, he invited me down to his chambers and asked me to reread to him the letter which had brought Mr. Tolliver to Bristol. It was a rather prim response to his advert (“object: marriage”) which he had placed in the Bristol Shipping News, precisely the sort one might expect from a respectable widow in slightly straitened circumstances. She was frank to say she had not much to offer as a fortune but she did have something. Since the death of her husband, a shipping clerk, two years past, she had managed to support herself as dressmaker to some of the fashionable ladies of the town. She had no children, as both of hers had died in the smallpox which took her husband. She was not young but neither was she old and had no reason to believe she was barren. Although she, too, was interested in marrying again, she would not consider it without some period of acquaintance. If Mr. Tolliver were willing to come and stay a decent length of time, he might come ahead and present himself. There were many inns and lodging houses in the town of Bristol, it being a great seaport. She signed the letter, “Respectfully yours,” rather than in some more ornate or personal manner.
“I see nothing wrong in this. Sir John.”
“No, but just see when the letter is dated — a full ten days before the Tribble murder — no, eleven. It does not take so long for a letter to reach London — two days, three at the most. His explanation for this discrepancy is that his bride carried the letter about near a week before posting it, so unsure was she that she wished to engage in this venture. He claims to have found it under his door when he reached his dwelling after my interview with him at the scene of the Darby homicide. He said he was so eager to get on to Bristol that he gave no thought to his responsibilities to me but packed his portmanteau in a great hurry and caught the night coach to Bristol at ten.”
“But I fail to see — ”
“Don’t you? If he had indeed caught the night coach, that would have put him on the road at the time of the Tribble murder. Note that his landlord said he left in the direction of Covent Garden. The coach house lies in the opposite direction — but King Street is on the way to Covent Garden, and King Street is where the Tribble woman was murdered and so horribly butchered. Now do you see?”
“Well, yes, but did Mr. Donnelly not put the time of her death hours later than ten o’clock?”
“Exactly! He must have left for Bristol next day in the morning.”
I sighed. It seemed unusual for Sir John to build so ingenious a construction of supposition and contingency. Yet was his ingenuity perhaps bom of desperation? I knew him to be in profound anxiety that the second murderer be apprehended before he could kill again.
“And so, sir, by your way of thinking, Mr. Tolliver’s guilt or innocence hinges upon whether or not he took the night coach to Bristol or traveled next day.”
“That may be putting it a bit strong, but if he did not take the night coach, as he says, then I would have good reason to suspect him instead of reaching as I am now. If I catch him in a lie, I will have the truth out of him.”
“How do you propose to do that. Sir John?”
“I have thought of another likely flaw in his story. Tell me, have you been by his stall since his disappearance?”
“Yes sir, as you directed — though, I confess, not lately.”
“But you market nearby at the other stalls for vegetables?”
“No, I buy generally from those closer by.”
“Well, I wish you to go there to his stall and give it a good sniff. If he left in a great hurry, as he says, there would have been meat left inside, all locked up, and it would rot and raise a great stink. There would be complaints. If there is no bad odor, then I have found another discrepancy. I will have Mr. Fuller take him round to the coach house, and let Mr. Tolliver prove that he rode that night coach.”
“But — ”
“No, Jeremy, do as I say. I know your liking for the fellow, but it is just on seven. He is not likely to be about. He will be lolling in bed with his new wife. All you need do is go to his stall and take a good sniff.”
I was off then to perform another task which I found disagreeable. It had been given me, and I would perform it, though not without misgivings. I hurried across Covent Garden, there being little in the way of a crowd to impede my way. The stalls and carts from which the fruits and vegetables would be sold that day were being prepared and arranged for the flood of buyers who would soon fill the immense empty space. There was a good deal of loud talk between competitors, most of it of the bantering sort. The street merchants filled their pushcarts and barrows and argued with their suppliers. Thus did the Garden come alive in hoots and shouts.
Mr. Tolliver’s stall was at the far end near Henrietta Street, where it was that he had hailed Mr. Bailey and me and informed us of the body he had found in the passage. I had visited it few times since his departure for Bristol and first on an errand I had also found disagreeable. It was as I had seen it then, shut tight and padlocked. I went round it carefully, using my nose freely, sniffing about like some hunting dog on a trail. And indeed I felt rather foolish doing so, particularly as I noticed I had caught the eye of the unpleasant woman who sold vegetables from the stall next his.
“Here, you,” yelled she most rudely, “what’re you about? If you’re thinkin’ of grabbin’ that stall for your own, it ain’t available. Him what rents it has gone off, but he’ll be back. You can be sure.”
Clearly, she had no memory of me from our earlier conversation. Just as clearly she took me for a possible competitor and wished to keep me away.
“You misunderstand,” said I. “I come from the Beak on Bow Street. Have there been any unpleasant smells issuing from this stall?”
‘^Smells?” said she suspiciously. ”What kind?”
Having cited the magistrate as my authority, I made to use it: “Just answer the question, madam.”
“No smells,” said she. “He’s a butcher, he is, though why he ain’t in Smithfield with the rest of them I don’t know. The truth is, it smells better with him gone than it did when he was here.”
That, of course, according to Sir John’s reasoning, was disappointing news for me. I thanked her and turned away. Yet as I did, whom should I spy but Mr. Tolliver himself coming my way. He had also seen me; in fact, he gave a careless wave. There was no pretending I had not seen him. I went forward with a greeting, not knowing what else I might do — or more I could say.