The Ashes of London

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Authors: Andrew Taylor
were.
    Moments passed. I stood by an oriel window overlooking a small courtyard. Williamson paced up and down, occasionally pausing to make a pencilled note in his memorandum book. It was strangely quiet after the hubbub of the streets. The thick walls of Barnabas Place made it both a sanctuary and a prison.
    ‘Why in God’s name is Alderley keeping us waiting?’ Williamson burst out, his Northern accent particularly marked.
    ‘Something’s going on, sir. Look.’
    While I had been at the window, nearly a score of servants had gathered in the yard; they waited, uncharacteristically idle for the time of day, moving restlessly to and fro, and holding short, murmured conversations with each other. There was a furtiveness about their behaviour, and a strange air of uncertainty.
    At that moment the door of the anteroom opened and a young lady entered. Williamson and I uncovered and bowed.
    ‘Mistress Alderley,’ Williamson said. ‘How do you do?’
    She curtsied. ‘Master Williamson. I hope I find you in good health?’
    Her dark eyes flicked towards me, and I felt an inconvenient jolt of attraction towards her.
    ‘Sir, my husband begs your indulgence, but he is delayed,’ she went on without waiting for a reply. ‘He will come as soon as he can, I promise. A matter of minutes.’
    ‘But he’s here?’
    She was older than I had first thought, a shapely woman with fine eyes. Her charms were not moving at the same rate as the calendar. She looked tired.
    ‘Yes, sir, he is,’ she said. ‘And you must pardon the delay. We have had such—’
    She was interrupted by another knock at the gate. Murmuring excuses, she slipped from the room in a rustle of silks.
    We heard her voice outside, raised in command, and that of the porter and of a stranger. A little later a man clad in black crossed the courtyard under convoy of the porter. They went almost at a run, scattering the servants as they passed.
    ‘I know that man,’ Williamson said, joining me at the window. ‘It’s Dr Grout, isn’t it?’
    ‘A physician, sir?’
    ‘Of course. What did you think I meant? A doctor of theology? He treated my Lady Castlemaine when she had the French pox. She swears by him.’
    Mistress Alderley returned. ‘Forgive me, sirs – we are at sixes and sevens.’
    ‘Someone’s ill?’ There was a hint of panic in Williamson’s voice, for stone walls were not a barrier to all evils, only to some of them. ‘Not the plague, I hope? Not here?’
    ‘Not that, sir, God be thanked.’ A muscle twitched beneath her left eye. ‘Something worse. My stepson, Edward, was attacked last night. In this very house. In his own bed.’
    Williamson sat down suddenly.
    ‘God’s body, madam. Will he live?’
    ‘It’s in the hands of God, sir, and Dr Grout’s. Poor Edward was stabbed in the eye. He has burns as well – his bed curtains were set on fire. He lies between life and death.’
    ‘Have you caught the man who did it?’
    ‘We believe so.’ Mistress Alderley sat down opposite him and gestured with a hand heavy with rings at the window to the courtyard. ‘It was an old servant, a malcontent. He was roaming the house last night at the time of the attack. My husband will soon have the truth out of him.’
    ‘Madam,’ Williamson began. ‘There is something Master Alderley must know about another—’
    He broke off. There was a commotion in the courtyard below. Two burly servants were manoeuvring an old man out of a narrow doorway sunk below the ground. The captive’s hands were tied in front of him. His face was bloody. His hair lay loose on his shoulders. He wore a shirt and breeches. His feet were bare.
    ‘He set fire to the house, too,’ Mistress Alderley said. ‘We could have burned to death in our beds.’
    The servants pulled the old man up the steps and dragged him across the cobbles to a ring set in the opposite wall. They strapped his wrists to the ring. The younger servant tugged at the buckle to make sure it was

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