“Privy Council,” the man whispered.
“The Duke is alive?”
The man nodded.
“Then what about the woman?”
“I'm sorry?”
“Margaret Hooke. Mrs.
The man swallowed. “I'm afraid I am not acquainted—”
Chang casually tipped the candle and dropped a spatter of wax onto the functionary's forehead. The man hissed with pain and clenched shut his eyes.
“She would be with the Duke,” Chang explained patiently. “If you have seen the Duke, you must have seen her.”
“No one has seen the Duke!” the man protested. “Everyone is waiting—all the Ministers, the Generals and Admirals, the Men of Business. There are rumors—blood fever at Harschmort House, quarantine …”
“Where is he now?”
“In his rooms! The Duke does not appear—merely sends his servants on—on—on—errands—as he requires information—”
“What information?”
“Whatever we can find—”
Chang dripped another stream of wax and used the man's subsequent writhing as a pause, allowing a shift in his questions.
“What is your name?”
“Rawsbarthe!” the man whined. “Andrew Rawsbarthe—assistant to the Deputy Under-Secretary of the Foreign Ministry.”
“Who is the Deputy Under-Secretary?”
“Roger Bascombe.”
Chang laughed out loud. “You are
Rawsbarthe sputtered, “Mr. Bascombe's ascent at the Foreign Ministry is due to his great talents—and once Mr. Bascombe discovers how I have been so roundly mistreated—”
“Roger Bascombe is
“My name is Chang.”
FOR A moment Rawsbarthe looked up without understanding, and then suddenly his entire body burst into a thrashing attempt to get away. As the fellow was on his back and in no way strong, it was simple for Chang to pin him with one knee and shift his grip to the fellow's throat, squeezing tight.
“You are a criminal!” Rawsbarthe gasped.
“And you were searching Mrs. Trapping's private room. I do not believe a woman's bedchamber is the lawful province of any Ministry.”
“Mrs. Trapping has been summoned to the Duke's presence! She has not complied. My investigation is fully within the scope of the Privy Council's powers—”
“Then why are you alone in the dead of night? Where are your soldiers? Where is your writ?”
“I…” Rawsbarthe gulped and twitched his cheek where a fleck of wax had hardened, a milky teardrop. “I… I do not answer to the likes of… ah…”
“Why does the Duke want to see Mrs. Trapping?”
“Her brother—”
“Which brother?”
Rawsbarthe frowned as if this were the question of an idiot. “Henry Xonck has withdrawn to his home in the country—an attack of fever. With his munitions works, such incapacity becomes a matter of national interest —”
Before the man could finish, Chang hauled Rawsbarthe to a sitting position against the side of a bedpost. Chang stood, ready to send a kick wherever it might prove necessary.
“So what did you find here? In the national interest?”
“Well, firstly—
“Goodness indeed,” sneered Chang. “Empty your pockets.”
Rawsbarthe shrugged his coat back into place and patted it vaguely, as if trying to remember where the pockets actually were. He plucked out an envelope and peered at the writing.
“Yes… here… and the woman whose belongings
“Tutor to the Trapping children.”
Rawsbarthe's eyes went wide. “You know her?”
Chang snatched the envelope from Rawsbarthe's grasp. “Keep talking.”
“The room is hers!
Chang dealt enough with the back staircases and alleyways of so ciety to know this sort of arrangement was far more common than was believed. What he did not know—and must discern, for his own safety—was where Eloise's involvement stopped. Was she merely Trapping's mistress… or more? Trapping had been on the periphery of the Cabal, a go-between serving the Xoncks and Vandaariff… but Eloise was hardly unobservant… or a fool…
Chang looked down at the envelope, sorting his earliest memories of Eloise at Harschmort—she had been whispering advice into Charlotte Trapping's ear. But on their last night—when she had been captured in the Comte's laboratory—it had been Francis Xonck who had taken personal charge of her. Could it be that Eloise was dear to Xonck—that he had manipulated events to spare her?
“Why take this?” Chang asked Rawsbarthe. “There were many others.”
“N-no reason at all, merely to satisfy my superiors that I had successfully entered—”
Chang sent the toe of his boot sharply into Rawsbarthe's ribs, turning the man's words into a wheeze. The letter was a single page, folded over, covered in script, addressed to
There was nothing else in the envelope. Chang crouched down, leaning his face closer to Rawsbarthe.
“Where is the rest of it?” he asked.
“I've no idea!” the man squeaked.
“Who is your immediate superior after Bascombe?”
“M-Mr. Phelps!”