He knew he had to be thorough now. It wasn't merely a case of disengaging the woman from her hypnotic stupor; he had to probe the depths of her mind to remove any lingering suggestions planted by the archmesmerist, for it wouldn't do to have her spying for Oliphant, or, even worse, slipping poison into Burton's food.
'Hellfire!' he thought. 'What have I got myself into?'
THE SWEEPS
Vote OUT the HYPOCRITE!
Vote IN DISRAELI!
Aater that morning, after he'd arranged for a glazier to replace his broken window, Burton called at Algernon Swinburne's lodgings on Grafton Way, Fitzroy Square.
'By James!' exclaimed the poet, screeching with laughter. 'You're more battered each time I see you! What happened this time? An escaped tiger?'
'More like a white panther,' muttered Burton, noticing the dark circles under his friend's eyes. Swinburne had obviously continued drinking after their visit to the Tremors and was suffering the consequences.
The poet examined the explorer's face and hands, his eyes lingering on the cuts and puncture wounds.
'They must sting deliciously,' he commented.
'That's not the word I'd choose,' replied Burton, wryly. 'It was Oliphant. When was the last time you saw him?'
'Laurence Oliphant! Hmm, maybe eighteen months ago?'
'Describe him.'
'Average build; he has a bald pate with a fringe of curly brown hair around the ears, a bushy beard, rather feline features, magnetic eyes.'
'Complexion?'
'Pale. I can't remember his eye colour. Why?'
'Because the man I encountered this morning-who claimed to be him-was a pink-eyed albino, clean-shaven with a full head of hair. Get your coat and hat on, Algy-we have work to do.'
'So it wasn't Oliphant, then. Where are we going?'
'I think it was. He said he'd had work done by the Eugenicists, and you know how much they can change a man. Look at Palmerston! You told me Oliphant owned a white panther. I suspect that he's now closer than ever to his pet!'
Swinburne tied his bootlaces, slipped into his coat, and pushed a bowler hat down over his hair.
They left the flat and hailed a cab.
While they steamed southeastward, Burton told his friend about the latest developments: of his meeting with the Beetle and of Detective Inspector Trounce's discoveries; then he explained: 'We're going to Elephant and Castle to question one of the boys who returned after being abducted by the loups-garous. He remembers nothing, apparently-due, I believe, to a mesmeric spell cast by the albino. Maybe I can break through it, as I did with Sister Raghavendra. After that, we'll take a look at the rooms which were occupied by boys who're still missing.'
'Ah-ha! You intend a spot of clue-hunting, like Edgar Allan Poe's detective, Auguste Dupin?'
'Yes, something like that.'
While crossing Waterloo Bridge, their conveyance broke down and they had to hail a second vehicle. This-a horse-drawn 'growler'-took them the rest of the way across the river, past the railway station, onward down London Road and New Kent Road, and into the tangled streets of Elephant and Castle.
They stopped and disembarked on the corner of William De Montmorency Close. Burton paid the fare and shut Swinburne up when the poet started to complain.
'Never mind whether it's a shilling or not,' he said. 'Look over there! Something's up!'
Swinburne followed his friend's gaze and saw, farther along the road, a crowd of people gathered around a redbrick terraced house.
'Is that our place?'
'I fear so.'
They approached the throng and glimpsed police helmets among the hats, bonnets, and caps. Burton pushed through and tapped one of the uniformed men on the shoulder.
'What's the story, Constable?' he asked.
The man turned and gave him a doubtful look. Burton was dressed and spoke like a gentleman but had the appearance of a battered pugilist.
'And who might you be, sir?' he asked, haughtily.
'Sir Richard Burton. Here's my authorisation.'
A voice in the crowd exclaimed: 'Blimey! They've sent a `Sir.' Now we're gettin' somewhere! You'll collar the bugger what done away with the nipper, won't you, yet lordship? We want to see the devil crapped, we does!'
The crowd cheered.
'Crapped?' whispered Swinburne.
'Hanged,' translated Burton.
'I'm not sure about this, sir,' said the constable, hesitantly.
'Who's your superior?' demanded Burton. 'Take it and show it to him.'
The policeman looked again at the paper Burton had handed to him. He nodded. 'Just a tick, sir.' He left them and entered the house.
'Murdered!' said the man in the crowd. 'And not even ten years old.'
'A little angel, 'e was,' came a woman's voice.
'Aye, wouldn't say boo to a goose,' agreed another.
'Fancy killin' a nipper!'
'It ain't English!'
'It's one o' them bleedin' foreigners what done it, I'll lay money on it!'
The constable appeared in the doorway and indicated that Burton should enter the premises. The king's agent, with Swinburne in his wake, pushed through the onlookers and stepped into the house.
'Upstairs, sir,' said the policeman, handing back the document.
They ascended. There were three bedrooms. A dead child lay in one.
A man stepped forward with outstretched hand. He was small and slightly built but with a wiry strength about him. His brown moustache was flamboyantly wide, waxed, and curled upward at the ends. His lacquered hair was parted in the middle. He possessed grey eyes, with a monocle clenched in the right.
'Thomas Manfred Honesty,' he said. 'Detective Inspector.'
'A reassuring surname for a policeman,' observed Swinburne.
Burton shook the man's hand. So this was Trounce's erstwhile tormentor!
'I'm Captain Burton, acting on behalf of His Majesty. This is Algernon Swinburne. He's assisting me.'
Honesty looked askance at Swinburne, who fluttered his eyelashes.
'Ahem! Yes, well, the boy,' the detective spluttered, waving his hand toward the prone figure. 'William Tupper. Orphan. Age uncertain. Ten years? Chimney sweep. Damn shame. Pitiful really.'
Burton stepped over to the corpse and crouched beside it. The boy was tiny, even for his age. His thin neck was covered in blood; its source, a small hole at the base of the chin.
'Stiletto,' offered Honesty. 'In. Up. Pierced the brain.'
'No,' countered Burton. 'A swordstick, such as gentlemen carry. A stiletto blade typically has a triangular, round, square, or diamond cross section without sharpened edges, whereas the rapier style of blade, which is most often used in swordsticks, is either diamond shaped in cross section, with or without fluting, or a flattened hexagonal; in either case, with sharpened edges. Look closely at this wound, Inspector-you can see it was made by