“Yes, very well.” And Rutledge turned with him toward the Yard. He realized he was wet to the skin and cold.
Mickelson had disappeared.
The constable said, “Are you all right, sir?”
“I’m fine,” he said shortly, and the constable was wise enough not to say more.
In truth he was not fine. Tired, hurting, and angry enough to take on Mickelson and Billy at the same time, he set the pace, stride for stride with the constable.
When they reached the Yard, the constable—he realized in the light above the door that it was Miller—said, “He held us back, sir. He said he couldn’t see who was with you. The other man confused him. He said.”
“It doesn’t matter,” Rutledge told him.
“I think it does, sir.”
But Rutledge refused to be led into answering. He went to his office and sat there for some time in the dark, watching the storm move downriver, thinking about Billy and the man who had called him Will.
After an hour had passed, and then most of another, Rutledge stood up and walked to the door.
Chief Superintendent Bowles had not come to find him. Not to apologize for Inspector Mickelson’s disregard for orders or to congratulate Rutledge on his role in capturing the killer the newspapers had begun to call the Bridge Murderer.
He drove to his flat, bathed, and changed to dry clothes, then slept for two hours. When he woke, his face on one side was bruised, his knee ached, but on the whole no damage had been done.
He stopped at the Yard to ask the night duty sergeant for news of Hood and was told that the hospital reported he was holding his own.
“And there’s a message as well from Inspector Cummins, sir.”
He handed it to Rutledge.
The single word
Nodding to the sergeant, he left and drove to Essex.
It was very early. The storm over London hadn’t cleared the air here. The clouds were heavy, the rain dismal, and he had had no breakfast
Hamish said, “It willna’ improve your mood.”
He waited in a lay-by until eight o’clock, and then drove the short distance to Witch Hazel Farm. He found Edwin standing in the doorway, looking out at the weather.
“It doesn’t appear that this rain will stop,” Edwin called as Rutledge got out of the motorcar. “Good God, man, what happened to your face?”
“An altercation with a belligerent prisoner,” Rutledge said.
“Peter’s funeral is today. Did you know?”
“I spoke to Mrs. Teller yesterday in London. She told me.”
They walked indoors, and Edwin said, “What about Jenny? Can we go ahead there as well? I think it’s not in Walter’s best interests to go on brooding. We’ve hardly clapped eyes on him. He stays in his room. Leticia has been taking up his meals.”
“I see no reason not to release the body,” Rutledge said. “I’ve decided to agree with Inspector Jessup for now that these were accidents. I have found no evidence that they weren’t.”
“I don’t see how anyone would gain by their deaths. Financially or otherwise.”
Rutledge said, “It has nothing to do with money. What concerned me was the fact that your brother is no longer alive to deny he was married to Florence Marshall. And Jenny Teller is no longer alive to be hurt should the legitimacy of her marriage be questioned.”
“I don’t think—”
“No. I’m sure none of you did when first you embarked on this venture.”
Edwin said, “As I was about to say, I don’t think justice would be served by pursuing this.”
Rutledge entered the study to find the family collected there, save for Walter. They looked tired, dispirited, and isolated in their own thoughts.
Mary said, “The funeral is at two o’clock this afternoon. Did Edwin tell you?”
He thanked her, and asked after Harry.
“He’s bearing up well enough. The rector’s son gave him a puppy. I don’t know what Walter will say to that—he never cared for pets—but it has taken Harry’s mind off death.”
Rutledge was reminded of another small boy rewarded by a puppy from the litter in the barn.
Leticia said, “Did you speak to Susannah, Inspector? Is she coming?”
“I expect to see her,” he said.
She started out of the room. “I’ll see that her bed is made up.”
Rutledge had the feeling that his very presence dampened the conversation. He followed Leticia out into the passage. “I don’t believe she’ll stay here,” he told her.
“Well. Her choice, of course.”
He went to the nanny’s room that had been Jenny’s sanctuary and sat there until it was time to come down for the service. It was a quiet room, serene and seemingly distant from the tense atmosphere of the study, and from its windows, Rutledge could count the motorcars and carriages arriving for the funeral.
He made a point of attending. The church was larger by far than the one in Hobson. He watched the mourners gather and listened to a well-meant eulogy by Mr. Stedley, extolling the Captain’s bravery, his sense of duty to God and country, and his love for his family.