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“Yes, vampires. I hunt for bandits, and you hunt for vampires.”

I pictured Knifing hacking with an ax at the locked doors of my black bookcase. I couldn’t quite visualize it; the investigator’s tight-fitting suits left him with an insufficient range of motion to undertake such a task. I blinked, took the flask back, and had another drink. Then I pictured Angus breaking open the cabinet while Knifing watched. “You searched my rooms, I gather?”

“In fact, we did not,” Angus said. “Knifing said you were innocent, so he wasn’t interested at all in the contents of your residence. Dingle didn’t look around much either, though Knifing said he should have, if he believed you to be guilty.”

“How did you know about the vampire books, then?”

“Violet Tower kept a diary. She thought about you quite a bit, and I have to say, she was concerned by your fixations. Mr. Knifing and I know all about the vampires. And about your father.”

“Of course you do. Remind me never again to share a confidence with a woman.”

“I haven’t caught any bandits,” he said. “Do you suppose you’ll catch a vampire?”

He gave me his flask again, and I had another drink. “It’s not the catching that matters,” I said. “Only the hunting.”

“But do you really believe in such creatures?”

“I don’t know,” I said. “I try to. I like being the man who believes.”

He let a long silence pass between us, and then he sighed loudly. “I had a daughter-I mean, I still have a daughter, but I had another daughter, Iris. My oldest,” he said. “She was lovely to look at, and I don’t just say that as her father. Everyone thought so.” When he spoke, his eyes did not meet mine, for his attention was focused someplace beyond me, off toward the horizon, or into the past.

I looked critically at his rough, leathery features; at his round and ample gut. His misshapen nose and lumpy cheeks reminded me of the bulges and protuberances one might find on a large, strange potato.

“You seem surprised my daughter was beautiful,” Angus said. “But I was quite handsome before I ruined my face with drink and my body with food and sloth. You’ll not keep your own fine features for long if you continue to live the way you live.”

“The way I live, I don’t expect to need them for long,” I said, and since I was still holding the flask, I drank from it again. He gestured toward me, and I handed it back to him.

“As I said, my daughter was very beautiful, and the men from the College started noticing her once she was around thirteen or fourteen. Of course, the rarefied university sort would never marry a girl with a father like me, no matter how pretty she was.”

I rubbed gingerly at my bruised wrists. “What is your trade, Angus, when you aren’t hunting bandits or guarding murder scenes?”

“I’m a carpenter,” he said.

“So, you build houses and things?”

“No, I’m more of a craftsman. I make furniture. Chairs and bed-frames and tables. Plain ones, mostly, for ordinary folk. But I’ve got a bit of a talent for delicate carving. My hand is quite steady when I’m sober, and I’ve been known to make some fine pieces. The university commissioned some chairs from me a few years ago. In fact, I saw one of them in your parlor. How did it end up there?”

“Did you make my dining room table?” I asked, ignoring his question.

“I did. You came into my workshop yourself and bought it, when you first moved to Cambridge. You told me who you were and where to send it, and you said Mr. Hanson out of London would see to my payment, though the bill remained in arrears for quite some time.”

If he’d made my table, he’d certainly made the identical one at which the corpse of Jerome Tower had been seated. Angus had probably also carved the bedpost we’d found Violet’s corpse hanging from. This was, at the very least, a strange coincidence. Knifing had hinted that the table was significant, and he’d joked that he might arrest the constable. Maybe he knew something I didn’t.

Angus spent his nights patrolling the streets of Cambridge. He was obsessed, apparently, with his lovely daughter, of whom he spoke in the past tense. Maybe I was sitting in the dirt, drinking with a lunatic; a man driven to madness and violence by grief over some past loss. It did not seem far-fetched at all to me, after the bloody events of that evening, to think that Angus might have murdered Felicity.

He’d been the first to happen upon the corpses of Dingle and the carriage driver, and he’d figured out where to look for the coach. If he wasn’t the one who’d shot them, it was a stroke of excellent luck that he’d chosen this night to patrol this highway; there were several roads heading out of Cambridge in different directions. The buffoonish constable had, just by happenstance, wandered down the right road, and discovered the corpses of two murder victims, who some mysterious marksman had cut down with two impossible shots.

I feared the whisky he’d given me was poison, but he’d drunk from the flask himself, so that seemed unlikely. It could be that he intended to strangle or smother or beat me to death, and then claim he’d found me dead in the wreckage when Knifing arrived. Under normal circumstances, I could have fought him off, for though he was heavier than I, he was quite unfit. But I was hurt, and I didn’t know how much my wounds might impair me if I had to defend myself. I tried to rise, and found my limbs unsteady.

“Are you going somewhere?” Angus asked.

“I’m in quite a bit of pain,” I said, slumping back to the ground.

“Have this for it,” Angus said, and handed me the flask again. I hesitated for a moment, and then I drained the last of the warm backwash. It was thin and tasted metallic. I returned the empty vessel to its owner.

“Tell me about your daughter,” I said. It seemed best to keep him talking, since I was in no condition to fight or flee.

“Oh, Iris. Yes, quite pretty, she was. Caught a lot of lecherous glances from the undergraduates, and a few from the Fellows as well. I was worried for her. I protected her as best I could, but those men had seen a lot of the world, and that made them alluring to a young girl. There was one, though, a lad called Mr. Quincy Hawthorne, who was kind enough. He saw that Iris was from a family of decent people, and ceased his lewd advances. Acted real proper. Of course, like I said, the College men are all destined for better matches than town girls. Mr. Hawthorne was the younger child of Lord Teddington, which made him the next in line until his brother’s wife birthed a son. So he was obliged to marry a proper lady. But he had a friend in London he thought might be a smart match for my daughter, a fellow named Chester Marigold. Marigold was common folk, but his father was a merchant of some sort, who’d been in business with Teddington, and the children had played together from a young age. Young Mr. Hawthorne wrote Chester a letter and drew a picture of Iris. A real likeness; quite a talented young man, that Mr. Hawthorne was. Anyway, Chester wrote back from London, and shortly thereafter, I exchanged correspondence with his father. The Marigolds seemed to be nice people, and Chester was awfully keen on the drawing, so we began to make arrangements. My wife, Maisey, was so pleased. The Marigolds weren’t wellborn, you understand, but they’d made good. They moved in a better circle. The marriage would have been a step up for my daughter. A rosy future.”

“I’ve got an idea of where this is going,” I said.

“Yes, but just let me tell it,” said Angus.

“All right.”

“Maisey hired a carriage and set out for London. The driver was an older gent. He seemed amiable enough, but a bit infirm. He had one guard who rode along with him. Portly fellow, as I remember.”

“They never got there, did they?”

“I didn’t know nothing had gone wrong until eight days later, when I received a message from Mr. Marigold inquiring as to why they’d not arrived. I organized a search party and scouted the highway. We didn’t have nobody like Mr. Knifing helping us, but I was touched that Mr. Quincy Hawthorne and some of the other young men from the College volunteered. On the third day of looking, I made inquiries at a house twenty-odd miles out of town. The farmer there had spotted smoke rising from a disused tract of land. We looked around there, and found the wheel-tracks in the grass, leading off the road. The wreck of the carriage was hidden in the woods.”