“Dummolard was stabbed today,” the Guv said flatly. The day’s events had scraped off his veneer of civility and left the more elemental Barker showing.
“Who was it? Any idea?”
“It was the Sicilians. Etienne received a Black Hand letter.”
“Is there any chance it is the Camorra instead of mafiusi?”
“None,” Barker said. “The Serafinis have been assassinated also. Gigliotti is considering retribution.”
“Is that all?”
“No, actually. Sir Alan Bledsoe, director of the East and West India Docks, was murdered, in what Gigliotti claims is a Sicilian method. The initial signs seem to point toward a group of mafiusi moving into the area.”
“Do you have any idea who is in charge?”
“Not yet.”
“Oh, come now, Cyrus,” Forbes said. “You know how Black Hand notes work. Sometimes it is a Camorra gang, sometimes Sicilian or some other Italian secret society. Sometimes it’s not even Italian in origin. It could be Irish or even English. We have our own underworld. I work with a delicate system of checks and balances. I cannot move without certainty.”
Barker lifted his glass of champagne and downed it without savoring it. He wiped his mustache with a thumb and shook his head. “It’s the Sicilians, I’m sure of it.”
“What if you’re wrong?”
“If I’m wrong, a few Sicilians will be sent back to Palermo needlessly. But if I’m right and we do nothing, more people will die.”
“It’s all circumstantial,” Forbes said guardedly.
“You’re speaking like a solicitor, Pollock. This is not like you. I’m going to track down these Sicilians. Will you assist me?”
“I’m sorry, but I cannot.”
“Cannot or will not?”
“It amounts to the same thing, doesn’t it?”
“Can you give me a reason why you should not help bring down a gang that is a danger to our way of life?” my employer said coolly.
“You’re the professional reasoner here. I’m certain you can work it through yourself.”
“You will not help me?” the Guv repeated.
“I’m afraid my hands are tied,” Forbes answered.
“What about Nicols? He is a Frenchman in Soho, like Etienne. His life could be in danger, as well. Don’t you see that?”
“He is a lodge brother, and under our protection, but thank you for the warning.”
Barker sat immobile for a moment, puzzling it out. Obviously, he’d come expecting support. “You’re leaving me to fall back upon my own resources,” he said sternly.
“I wish there was another way. I’m sorry, Cyrus.”
“Very well, if you won’t help, I’ll do it my way. You leave me no alternative.”
“You’re going to cut up rough about this, aren’t you?” Forbes asked.
Barker stood. “As rough as it takes. If I’m left out in the cold on my own, then I needn’t take anyone’s feelings into consideration. Also, if I end up dead over this, it won’t be because of anything I’ve left undone. Come, Thomas.”
The Guv stalked out, leaving me to follow. These were matters too deep for me. It was all insinuation and vague pronouns. “We.” “They.” I didn’t care for the talk about ending up dead. Surely it wouldn’t come to that.
Coming to Glasshouse Street, the Guv headed south, striding purposefully but to no apparent end. I’m not even certain he knew where he was going, like an engine off its tracks, barreling ahead until it ran out of steam. Eventually he came to a stop at a park in Leicester Square. He sat down with his long limbs stretched out in front of him, crossed at the ankle, a hazard to passing pedestrians, and did not move for a quarter hour.
As I said, I knew Barker better now, after nearly a year and a half in his employ, and I understood that there was nothing to do but to leave him alone. I crossed the street and looked through the windows of a shop that was to let. Poole and a few others of his former students had been after the Guv to rent a gymnasium and start teaching physical culture classes again. More correctly, Poole had spoken to me, wishing that I would make the proposition to Barker, as if somehow I could convince him to do anything. So far I hadn’t got up the nerve.
He was smoking his pipe when I returned, which was a good sign. He had unbent. I sat down and waited for him to speak first.
“Mazzini,” he growled.
“I beg your pardon?”
“Giuseppe Mazzini. He was a political refugee in London who joined the Freemasons and conceived of an organization along the same lines, called Young Italy, that would grow until it overthrew the Bourbon government. Later, after Sicily won its independence, the organization there gained power but began to factionalize.”
“Wait, wait,” I said, holding up a hand. “Are you trying to tell me the Mafia was conceived in London and is a Freemason organization and that’s why Forbes won’t help us?”
“Mazzini is the father of Italian Freemasonry, and he is also called the founder of the Mafia, but in his defense, he didn’t live to see it become a criminal organization. That only occurred with the chaos engendered after the Bourbons had been driven out.”
“And Forbes? How is he connected to them?”
“The Masons straddle international borders. In Italy’s case, lodges such as the Grande Oriente d’Italia and the Propaganda Due include members of the Camorra and the Mafia, but they are a small part of the general membership. I suspect Forbes thinks it politic not to stand against them, at least until he has more information. He and his little star chamber may lend us aid eventually, but there’s no saying what situation we shall be in by then.”
“Star chamber?”
“A metaphor. Cabal, if you prefer.”
“Ah.” I nodded. When in doubt, I say, best to act as if one knows what’s going on and hope not to be caught out by a question.
Behind our bench, swallows were flitting in and out of the shrubbery. It was remarkably warm and I felt almost too drowsy to think. It was difficult to imagine that nearby a secret, foreign organization was plotting who knew what form of devilry.
“So,” I said, going on, “Nicols has joined the English Freemasons and has its protection. He even has a lodge at the Royal.”
“Aye.”
“But Etienne has no such protection, since he’s not a Mason.”
“Oh, he’s a Mason, all right, but not a member of the English order. He’s a member of an ancient French lodge from Dijon called the Order of the Golden Fleece.”
“Golden Fleece,” I repeated. “Toisin d’or.”
“Exactly.”
“I believe I am getting a headache. So why would they help the Mafia but not Etienne?”
“They’re not. Pollock is saying they won’t choose sides.”
“Excuse me, sir, but are you prepared to face the Sicilians alone?”
“Not completely alone, I trust, but I must do something. We are obligated to the Home Office now.”
“Or is it because of Etienne?”
“No. I know that as soon as he can crawl out of his hospital bed, he shall go after his attackers and, in his weakened state, give them the opportunity to finish what they started, but, believe me, Etienne would be the very worst of clients.”
“So, are you a Freemason, sir?” I dared ask.
“No,” he replied. The word was accompanied by a plume of smoke from his mouth.
“But if you were, you would not be permitted to tell me, correct?”
“Correct.”
“So, either you are not a member, or you are a member. Which is it?”
“You tell me-you’re the detective.”
“Private enquiry agent,” I corrected.
“Not yet, rascal.” Barker finished his pipe and knocked out the ash against the bench, scattering it in the light breeze. “You’re still an apprentice.”
7
I cannot help but agree with Dickens, who said in The Mystery of Edwin Drood, “I don’t love doctors, or doctor’s stuff.” Now I have no wish to slight the medical profession, great men all, but I have a little trouble with those who will cheerily offer promises of a healthy recovery based solely upon a spirit of optimism. I wouldn’t go so far as to call Dummolard a friend-our relationship was rather as it was that morning multiplied by three hundred and sixty-five-however, I was relieved when we returned to Charing Cross Hospital to find that the Frenchman had awakened from surgery and the doctor assured us that, barring the unforeseen, he would pull through. I wanted to know the exact amount the unforeseen represented in his mind; but the doctor, all smiles, amiably brushed off my concerns. He had managed, at least, to pacify the two-headed hydra, mere et fille, and they were in the room with the patient now. We sat down again, and I felt vaguely concerned that there was now a chair I considered mine in this hospital.