“What subject? And why now?”
“Because you have a child on the way,” March said. “You are now responsible for the life of an innocent. It’s an experience that changes a man, changes the way a man thinks. If today had gone the way I’d planned, I would have told you about us over a good meal and a bottle of red wine. I even sent a gift to your home. I wanted you to have questions and to ask me about these things in an atmosphere of fellowship and trust. There are so many things I could have—”
“You said ‘us.’ Who do you mean? Wait. Never mind. First tell me what this is.” Day waved his hand to indicate the shallow cave behind him, then the entire length of the tunnel, all of the city, and everything that had happened over the past few hours.
“Come over here,” March said. He led the way down the tunnel and pointed to another alcove, marked only by a vague area of darker black. “Shine your candle in there.”
Day did as he was told and thrust his arm into the gloom of the recess, illuminating it with his fresh candle. It was identical to the one next to it: an iron ring in the floor, chains and shackles against the back wall. Day turned and approached the tunnel wall across from the alcove. There was another haphazard pile of bones, stacked high to a point under the ceiling, spreading out across the floor so that it all resembled some morbid pyramid.
March had already moved farther down the length of the tunnel. He pointed at another inky blotch on the wall.
“And there,” he said.
Day shone the candle’s flame into this third alcove. Again, the ring, the chains, the shackles. And across from it all, the pile of old bones.
“How many of these are there? What are they for?”
“There are eight of them,” March said. “Eight so far. There’s room here for more, but the work has been slow. Five of them are clustered here, and there are three more in another section of the catacombs.”
Day tipped his candle and let wax drip onto the shelf next to the shackles. He pushed the bottom of the candle into the wax and held it there for a moment until the wax had cooled enough to hold the candle upright. He turned back to March, his hands free, and began to calculate the distance between them. He was in the center of the makeshift cell and March was outside in the tunnel. There were perhaps six or seven feet between them. How quickly would March be able to get the revolver out of his pocket? How fast were the old man’s reflexes?
“Do you mind if I reach for my flask?” Day said. “It’s here in this pocket.”
“Of course. By all means.”
Day took out the flask and poured an ounce of brandy into his mouth. He swallowed and held the flask out to March, but his former mentor shook his head and smiled.
“No, thank you,” March said. “I believe I’ll stay right here, out of your reach.”
“Suit yourself.” Day corked the flask and slipped it back into his pocket.
“We are called the Karstphanomen,” March said. “And we have existed for many decades. This”—he held his hands out in the air, far apart from each other—“this is all ours. Miles and miles of tunnels and caverns and abandoned buildings, waterways and burial grounds and lost treasure troves. We own it all.”
“You live underground? Like rats?”
“Of course not. I live in my home in Acton. You’ve been there. You’ve supped with my wife and me. No, Walter, this place is where we do our work.”
“What kind of work is that?”
“The work of justice.”
“Justice?”
“Walter, you’ve spent the morning hours chasing prisoners. Why?”
“Because they escaped from prison.”
“But you have skills. Aren’t they better used to do something besides running round the city poking under rocks for villains?”
“You would rather let them be free?”
“Not at all,” March said. “But what good is a prison? If prisons worked, if that were a system that functioned properly, why then these men would already be reformed, would they not? You wouldn’t have to worry about where they are. You wouldn’t have to catch them again.”
“A prison is—”
“A prison is a cage,” March said. “That is all it is. A cage where we keep our most dangerous animals, those men we deem not fit to mingle with society. We keep them all in one place, where we can see them and feel safe. We do it for ourselves, for our peace of mind. But what of the men in that cage?”
“What of them?”
“Have we not done them a disservice?”
“How so?”
“If we’re to keep them in a cage, shouldn’t we teach them something? What do they learn there? It’s not a frivolous question. What do they learn by being caged? I believe the answer is nothing. They learn nothing.”
“One hopes some of them might reform their ways.”
“One hopes? Some of them? How often do you suppose that happens?”
“I wouldn’t know. Ask the head warder when we find Cinderhouse and return him to Bridewell.”
“Why would your Cinderhouse, or any of them, bother to reform at all? Listen, there’s no incentive to reform. We give them no reason. Criminals are such stupid people, Walter. They’re children, really. They must be taught. They must be shown the error of their ways. They must experience true justice.”
“A prison sentence is justice.”
“No, Walter, a prison sentence is law. Law and justice are very different concepts. How many people did Cinderhouse kill? Since you mentioned him by name, let’s use him as an example. How many were murdered by him?”
“I don’t know. Two policemen. There were children, certainly, but we don’t know how many over the years. We think he killed his wife and son. There were three small skeletons buried behind a carriage house.”
“Children.”
Day nodded. He had moved incrementally closer to March as they talked. He was now roughly four feet away from him, close enough to grab March’s arm before the retired detective inspector could get the revolver out of his pocket. He tensed, ready to spring at March, but the older man sensed the slight change in Day’s body language and stepped back, farther into the shadows of the tunnel. He snuffed his candle and became a disembodied voice in the darkness. Day relaxed visibly, but began to slowly inch toward March again.
“So,” March said, “this person killed children. What did he do to them? Did he hurt them first? Before he killed them?”
“I don’t know. I’d rather not…” Day sighed. “I think he probably did, yes.”
“Is it justice, then, that he be caged?”
“I wouldn’t know. I haven’t spoken to him. Perhaps if we find him, I could ask him.”
“Don’t be crude. No, of course there’s no justice in it. Those children are gone. Those policemen are gone. And their killer hasn’t learned anything, has he? How much better would it be for him if he experienced everything that he did to those children? What if he were made to feel what they felt, to truly feel their fear and their pain? What do you think? Wouldn’t that be more likely to change a man than simply putting him away, out of sight, behind bars?”
“Perhaps.”
“No, not perhaps. I’m right, Walter. That’s justice. Make the man experience his crimes firsthand. It’s the only way.”
“The law is the only way.”
“The law is a failure.”
“The law is the law, Inspector March. You should know that. You were the best.”
“I was deluded.”
“And now? You’ve joined some secret club and you believe the scales have suddenly fallen from your eyes?”