need training,” Malcom said.
“Girls don’t have any place in the sewers.”
It was not every day that Malcom met someone more diabolical than himself. “I wasn’t asking. Find her a drain, go over the rules of the sewers, and then train her.”
“Train her?” the other man protested.
“She’ll need a tosher pole. Get her one. And then teach her how to use it to get herself underground, and how to navigate the tunnels.” He paused. “And teach her how to use it to defend herself,” he ordered, the matter done.
A short while later, Malcom rode up to the front of the unassuming structure between Tottenham Court Road and Willow Street. Sandwiched between two businesses, it was cleverly insulated, protected on both sides.
As he dismounted, Malcom patted his horse on the neck and did a sweep of the area, homing in on the street urchin who held the reins of an enormous black mare—horseflesh too expensive to belong to any of the people who dwelled here. Steele was doing well for himself.
One of Malcom’s men came loping over, his gait slightly uneven, yet nearly indiscernible. “North.”
Handing his reins off to Dore, one of many toshers who worked for him, Malcom found his way down the narrow alley until he reached the back of his residence. He leapt up the steps and, after inserting the small key, let himself in through the back entrance. His boots slopped water and grime over the rotten wood flooring. Not bothering to discard his jacket, Malcom moved through the narrow hall and quickly found his way to one of the three small rooms on the main floor.
The door sat open, with Fowler seated in a too-small-for-his-frame wooden chair.
The moment the old tosher caught sight of Malcom, he struggled to his feet, but Malcom waved the bruised bloke back. His right cheek was still swollen from the beating he’d taken a fortnight back. Fowler peered at the satchel Malcom held.
“Here.” Malcom tossed the findings over to their rightful owner.
Fowler caught them against his concave chest. “Ya found it,” the old man whispered, glancing up.
“Aye.” The moment Fowler had come home bloodied, with a foot broken from a ruthless assault in the sewers, Malcom had resolved to flush out the ones responsible.
“Never made a mistake like that before,” Fowler said, his throat working. The old man briefly looked into his bag at the contents and then hugged it once more. A glassy sheen misted those pale eyes. “Won’t happen again—”
Discomfited, Malcom waved off those assurances.
Fowler coughed into his hand. “It’s me damned eyes, is all,” he defended, wiping at those drops.
Even a visit from one of London’s most capable detectives was preferable to the old tosher’s tears. To any tears, really. Like his heels were on fire, Malcom entered the makeshift office . . . and immediately found him.
In fairness, one would have to be blind to miss a tall, ugly brute like Steele. The detective’s face and form bore the marks of his years on the street. And he stood there, his arms clasped behind him, his expression a mask of impassivity as he watched Malcom’s approach. “You’re North,” he said without preamble.
It wasn’t a question, but rather a statement spoken by one who’d been searching and at last had found his quarry. It deepened the warning ringing in Malcom’s head that had pealed since Giles had tracked him down.
“I don’t like company,” Malcom said by way of greeting, pushing the door closed behind him. “And I like even less people asking questions about me.” He layered a warning within that. Coming forward, Malcom shrugged out of his damp jacket. He deliberately tossed it close enough to Steele to soak him with the remnants of the sewer water.
He’d hand it to the other man: he made no outward reaction to the state of Malcom’s dress . . . or to the stench clinging to his garments or the dusty, sad conditions of this East London office. Of course, Steele, even having climbed out of East London and having established a new life for himself, couldn’t truly divest himself of this place.
“Steele,” Malcom said, with mock joviality. “I would offer you a brandy, but alas, I’m afraid in these parts we don’t have such luxuries to hand out.” To underscore that very point, Malcom fished a small flask from his pocket, another token of his time in the sewers. Taking a swig of the harsh whiskey, he wiped a hand over the back of his mouth, and held out the