now.' Jonathan got up from his chair. 'Is there no chance that the man might talk to me?'

    'I fancy that he may come round in time.'

    'I'll call at the prison in due course.'

    'Please do, Mr Redmayne. I left instructions that he was to be moved to a cell on his own if he agreed to help us. The place where he's held now is like a menagerie.'

    Christopher saw him to the door and waved him off. Jonathan strode briskly in the direction of Fleet Street. Before he could get his horse from the stable, however, Christopher saw someone walking towards him from the Holborn end of the lane. It was Martin Crenlowe. The goldsmith was relieved to see him.

    'I was hoping to catch you in, Mr Redmayne,' he said, arriving at the door. 'I had business nearby and decided to take a chance on your being at home.'

    'Come in, Mr Crenlowe,' invited Christopher, taking him into the parlour and indicating a seat. 'You were the last visitor I expected.'

    Crenlowe sat down. 'I wanted to know how your investigations were going.'

    'We are making definite progress, I feel.'

    'Good, good. I've something to pass on that may be of help.'

    'What's that?' asked Christopher.

    'Captain Harvest - or whatever the damn fellow's name really is - came to see me yesterday. He has the audacity of the Devil himself. He told me some cock and bull story about needing to go abroad and tried to borrow money.'

    'Did you give it to him?'

    'I most certainly did not,' asserted the other. 'I warmed his ears with some ripe language and sent him on his way. He betrayed the lot of us yet all he could do was to laugh in my face. Anyway,' he went on, 'I came to tell you that the villain is still in London and that he's in disguise. He's shaved off his beard and dressed himself like a clerk of some sort. I hardly recognised him at first.'

    'What did you do after he left?'

    'I went straight to Covent Garden so that I could warn Sir Humphrey.'

    'I know, sir,' said Christopher. 'I called on him myself, as it happens, and arrived in time to see you and Sir Humphrey having some kind of disagreement.'

    Crenlowe was annoyed. 'Have you been watching me, Mr Redmayne?'

    'Not at all. I chanced to come along at that particular time. Sir Humphrey seemed very upset,' recalled Christopher. 'He was waving his arms about in the air. Why was that? Was it anything to do with your former friend?'

    'Yes,' admitted the other. 'My warning came too late. He'd already been there and Sir Humphrey had foolishly given him what he wanted. When I remonstrated with him, he lost his temper. I calmed him down and went on my way.'

    'Why did Sir Humphrey give the man some money when you did not?'

    'He's not always as guarded as he should be, Mr Redmayne.'

    'Could it be that the captain had some power over him?'

    'That scoundrel had a power over the lot of us,' confessed the other. 'He had the most extraordinary charm when he chose to use it and we were all at its mercy for a time. Apparently, it still worked on Sir Humphrey but I'm proof against it now.'

    'The charm obviously worked on Signor Maldini as well.'

    'Yes, the captain often borrowed money from him.'

    'Was the fencing master able to afford it?' asked Christopher. 'His school was never short of pupils but I would not have thought it brought in a vast amount of money. Yet he never seemed to be short of it. If he had independent wealth, he'd not have needed to give fencing lessons. Where did his money come from, Mr Crenlowe?'

    'Who can tell? I never looked into the man's finances.'

    'I understand that he once commissioned a piece of jewellery from you.'

    Crenlowe started. 'Who told you that?'

    'Is it true?'

    'I never discuss my business affairs with anyone, Mr Redmayne.'

    'This one has a special interest for me.'

    'I'm not even prepared to confirm that it took place,' said the goldsmith.

    'Pietro Maldini has already done that for us and he has no reason to lie. Perhaps I should tell you that he is at present under lock and key at Newgate. After failing to kill me, he tricked his way into Henry's cell and attempted to strangle him.'

    'Heavens!' exclaimed the other. 'Did Henry survive?'

    'Thanks to the intervention of my friend, Jonathan Bale, he did. I did tell you that he was a remarkable man,' Christopher reminded him. 'Even Henry accepts that now.'

    'So he should. Tell me more. How and when did this all happen?'

    Christopher gave him a concise account of the events at the prison. The goldsmith was astonished that the attack had been allowed to take place and reassured to hear that Henry had come through it. He was impressed by what he heard of Jonathan.

    'You were right,' he conceded. 'I did not appreciate the constable's true worth. He not only tore the mask away from Captain Harvest, he's saved a man's life. Who would have thought Pietro Maldini desperate enough to act like that? We knew that our fencing master had a brother but none of us ever saw him.'

    'The captain did,' said Christopher. 'But let's return to this piece of jewellery.'

    'I told you, Mr Redmayne. All my transactions are strictly private.'

    'They must also be lucrative, Mr Crenlowe. Nothing in your shop would come cheaply. If Jeronimo Maldini commissioned something from you, it must have been expensive. Was he able to pay for it?' The goldsmith remained silent. 'Very well,' resumed Christopher, 'if you'll not tell me, I'll have to ask someone else.'

    'Who?'

    'Your client's brother - Pietro Maldini.'

    Mrs Cardinal was still annoyed that she had been rebuffed by Lady Holcroft and deprived of a companion for her visit to the shops. In the event, she remained at the house in the Strand and sulked. It took Susan Cheever a long time to mollify her, showering her with apologies and promising to go out with her that same afternoon. By the time that her son returned, Mrs Cardinal had recovered some of her good humour. Jack Cardinal joined the two of them in the parlour and sat opposite Susan.

    'Did you enjoy your ride with Lady Holcroft?' he asked.

    'Yes,' replied Susan. 'I enjoyed it very much.'

    'I've just been hearing about it,' said Mrs Cardinal, 'and it sounds rather dreary. Who could wish to be driven along crowded streets when she could have been helping me to choose some new additions to my wardrobe? But let's put that behind us, shall we?' she went on. 'Miss Cheever was hardly in a position to refuse the invitation. Now, then, Jack. What sort of a morning have you had?'

    'A rather dull one, Mother,' he said. 'Lawyers are such cautious creatures.'

    'Your father always called them a necessary evil.'

    'I seemed to be there for hours.'

    'What did you do after you left?'

    'I went to the coffee house nearby,' he told her. 'I knew that I'd meet some friends there and I was in need of more lively company. It was very pleasant.'

    'Whom did you meet?'

    'All sorts of people, including one whom I could cheerfully have avoided.'

    'Oh?' said his mother. 'Who was that!'

    'Egerton Whitcombe.'

    'Such an obnoxious young man!'

    'His manners have not improved since I last saw him,' said Cardinal. 'He's just returned from France and is staying here for a week or so. Lady Whitcombe and her daughter have come to London to welcome him back. According to Egerton, they've done nothing but argue since they met.'

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