nothing she saw-neither frock, nor locket, nor shawl, nor armoire-satisfied her completely. Thus was she saved the embarrassment of attempting to pay for any of these items with an empty purse.

The tearoom was the happiest surprise of all in our tour of the town. We had passed a coffeehouse on the way, and I looked longingly inside, for as was well known even then, I much preferred coffee to tea. Yet coffeehouses, in Deal as well as London, were of the male province; except for servers, I had never seen a woman inside such a place, nor have I since. Yet as we sat down in our chairs at a table quite near the window of the tearoom, I looked round me and saw that there were women aplenty scattered through the place; some were in the company of men; at other tables there were ladies only; and one brave soul, a woman of apparently limited means, had a table all to herself. The server, a woman of about thirty-five, presented herself and asked our order.

“We should like a pot of your best tea,” said I.

“Oh, well, all our tea is the best, sir. What sort would you like? We’ve Chinese green tea, Indian tea, even Persian.”

Not wishing to seem an utter numskull in matters of tea, I sat for a moment and pondered the matter.

“I understand,” said I, ”that Darjeeling is quite good. It is an Indian tea, is it not?”

“It is indeed, sir, and among the best. I might say that it is the best of the best.”

“Then a pot of that, please, and as for something to accompany it …”

“We have all manner of cakes and dainties, sir.”

“Might I perhaps speak with Mrs. Keen on the matter?”

She assented with a curtsey and disappeared through the curtained entrance to the rear of the shop. It was not much more than a minute later when a woman somewhat older than Mrs. Sarton (but otherwise quite like her) appeared from the rear and came straight to our table. Clarissa and I rose, curtsied and bowed, and introduced ourselves to the woman who offered herself as Mrs. Keen.

“You asked for me?”

“We bring you greetings from Mrs. Sarton,” said I. ”She would not have us pass through Deal without visiting your tearoom.”

“Ah, she wouldn’t, eh? Sounds like her, so it does. How long have you known her?”

“We’ve just met,” said Clarissa, ”and she seems quite the most wonderful person.”

“She is, bless you, and also quite the most wonderful cook in Kent. Indeed I should know, for I was her pastry maker for three years-that is, before both of us was turned out to make room for the new crowd. We’re both better off for it, but poor Molly had to put up with a lot from this town before she and her magistrate were married. Ah, the snubs and the gossip-it was disgraceful.”

Most of this last was whispered, yet there was conversation aplenty in the tearoom; none seemed to be listening.

“But sit down, both of you. I know why Molly sent you here. It was to have a sample of my best. And as it so happens, I just pulled a pan of my best out of the oven. It’ll be here with your tea.”

And it was. Her ”best,” as she called it, was a whole plate of sugar cakes of such a taste and quality as I had never experienced before-nor, for that matter, since. Clarissa and I ate them all, right down to the last crumb. It was, for us both, a most joyous experience of gluttony. (The tea was also good.)

We wandered the length of High Street, but when we came to Alfred Square, with its notorious inns, its drunks staggering about in the daylight hours, I thought it best that we circle round it and avoid it altogether. Thus we returned to Beach Street and to the sea. As we did so, I spied a stretch of sand beach ahead of us which was, in its way, quite mysterious. I had no trouble persuading Clarissa to visit the place with me.

What had attracted my eye at some distance was the unexpected sight of a mast-no, two of them-rising up from the water, bare of sails. As we came closer, I saw that there was even a bit more of the ship to be seen there: the forward gunwales were also barely visible, giving the impression that it was rising from the sea of its own power, like some great monster of the deep. Yet there were no depths where the masts rose up-only shallows. We stood together looking out at it. I, for one, felt something more than curiosity and something less than awe, and yet a bit of both.

“How do you suppose it got there?” Clarissa asked.

“It ran aground,” said I. ”Perhaps it was bad navigation that brought it to such an end. Or it may be that it was driven there by a storm.”

“It looks old. I wonder how long it’s been here.”

“I couldn’t say, though I’m sure there are those in town who could tell us with fair exactitude.” I studied its position in relation to the waterlines in the sand. ”At lowest tide it might be possible to walk out to it or wade there from the shore.”

“Possible for you perhaps,” said Clarissa, ”though not for me with these great skirts I must wear. Sometimes, Jeremy, I simply loathe being a girl.” She gave that a moment’s thought, and then added: ”And sometimes I quite enjoy it.”

Returning to Number 18 Middle Street, we were both surprised to learn that it was well into the afternoon- near three o’clock, as I recall. The meeting (to which I had not been invited) had concluded less than an hour before, and Sir John had asked if there might be a place, perhaps upstairs, where he might take a nap. He was accompanied to the small guest bedroom by Mr. Sarton. Sir John assured him that he was not ill, simply tired. This was heard from Mr. Sarton himself as he prepared to leave on an errand.

“He’s resting very well up there,” said he to me. ”Molly’s working at dinner, and Clarissa is doing what she can to help. How can we entertain you until dinner, Jeremy?”

“Oh, I need not be entertained, sir. So long as I have something to read, I’ll be well satisfied.”

“And have you something to read?”

“Well … as it happens, I don’t.”

“Come along then,” said he, and led me to that small room near the street door which served him as a study. He waved inside. ”Such as it is, my library is here. You are free to browse and read what you find. I must, however, ask you not to disturb the books or papers on the desk. They are part and parcel of something I’m writing-or hope to write.”

(Ah-hah, I had guessed correctly!)

“I shall certainly do that, sir. And I thank you, sir, ever so much.”

With that, he took his leave.

I entered the study and began searching through the nearest shelves. They were better-stocked than he had given out. I did not find what I hoped to-a copy of A Sentimental Journey, that I might resume where I had left off in the library of Sir Simon Grenville’s manor house. Nevertheless, I did find a thing or two to interest me in the shelves along the wall. There was a copy of Dean Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels; and tucked away in a far corner, I found a battered and dog-eared copy of a Latin grammar. It was so old and ill-used that I thought it must be Mr. Sarton’s first book of Latin.

I moved round the desk for a better look at the books in the case below the window. Yet as I did, my eyes fell upon a paper that had been left upon the desk. It was a map, rather crude but clearly drawn, of that stretch of sand beach which Clarissa and I had visited a good deal less than an hour before. There on the right was a rectangle, which was labeled ”shipwreck”; below it, the shoreline; and above and all around it, a shaded area indicating the size and shape of the sandbar which had trapped the ship. Significantly, the sandbar did not stretch the length of the beach: There was a channel marked, a clear passage from the open sea to the shoreline. Distances were noted in yards or feet.

This I found most interesting. I would wager that the map was the work of Dick Dickens. Had he brought it with him or drawn it on the spot? Well, little it mattered, for I daresay that Dickens knew the surrounding area so well that he could have drawn any number of such maps from memory. And if I were not mistaken, Mr. Sarton was now on his way to that sandy beach to study the lay of the land and the look of the sea. Or he might even, at that moment, be surveying the scene from the bluff above the beach, comparing it to the map whose image he now had fixed in his mind.

I could be sure now what was discussed at their meeting. More important, I even had a good idea where the operation which Sir John had mentioned to Mr. Perkins would take place. It occurred to me that after Mr. Sarton had returned, I might go for another look at the beach myself. With that in mind, I resolved not to weight myself further with books. I took the two I had chosen and stepped across the hall to the large parlor which served

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