for whatever reason, wearing a conspicuously expensive article like a gold watch, so easily visible.
It almost invited robbery. Was he lost? Was he even taken there against his will? "Did he mention meeting anyone?"
"No." She was quite certain.
"And the watch?" he prompted.
"Yes. I believe he was wearing it." She stared at him intently. "He almost always did. He was very fond of it. I think I would have noticed were he without it. I remember now he wore a brown suit. Not his best at all, in fact rather an inferior one. He had it made for the most casual wear, weekends and so forth."
"And yet the night he went out was a Wednesday," Evan reminded her.
"Then he must have been planning a casual evening," she replied bluntly. "Why do you ask, Sergeant? What difference does it make now?
He was not... murdered... because of what he wore!"
"I was trying to deduce where he intended to go, Mrs. Duff. St.
Giles is not an area where we would expect to find a gentleman of Mr.
Duffs means and social standing. If I knew why he was there, or with whom, I would be a great deal closer to knowing what happened to him."
"I see. I suppose it was foolish of me not to have understood." She looked away from him. The room was comfortable, beautifully proportioned. There was no sound but the crackle of flames in the fireplace and the soft, rhythmic ticking of the clock on the mantel.
Everything about it was gracious, serene, different in every conceivable way from the alley in which its owner had perished. Quite probably St. Giles was beyond the knowledge or even the imagination of his widow.
"Your husband left shortly after your son, Mrs. Duff?" He leaned a little forward as he spoke, as if to attract her attention.
She turned towards him slowly. "I suppose you want to know how my son was dressed also?"
"Yes, please."
"I cannot remember. In something very ordinary, grey or navy I think.
No... a black coat and grey trousers."
It was what he had been wearing when he was found. Evan said nothing.
"He said he was going out to enjoy himself," she said, her voice suddenly dropping and catching with emotion. "He was... angry."
"With whom?" He tried to picture the scene. Rhys Duff was probably no more than eighteen or nineteen, still immature, rebellious.
She lifted her shoulder very slightly. It was a gesture of denial, as if the question were incapable of answer.
"Was there a quarrel, ma'am, a difference of opinion?"
She sat silent for so long he was afraid she was not going to reply. Of course it was bitterly painful. It was their last meeting. They could never now be reconciled. The fact that she did not deny it instantly was answer enough.
"It was trivial," she said at last. "It doesn't matter now. My husband was dubious about some of the company Rhys chose to keep. Oh... not anyone who would hurt him, Sergeant. I am speaking of female company. My husband wished Rhys to make the acquaintance of reputable young ladies. He was in a position to make a settlement upon him if he chose to marry, not a good fortune many young men can count upon."
"Indeed not," Evan agreed with feeling. He knew dozens of young men, and indeed older ones, who would dearly like to marry, but could not afford it. To keep an establishment suitable for a wife cost more than three or four times the amount necessary to live a single life. And then the almost inevitable children added to that greatly.
Rhys Duff was an unusually fortunate young man. Why had he not been grateful for that?
As if answering his thought she spoke very softly.
"Perhaps he was... too young. He might have done it willingly, if... if it had not been his father's wish for him. The young can be so... so... wilful... even against their own interests." She seemed barely to be able to control the grief which welled up inside her. Evan hated having to press any questions at all, but he knew that now she was more likely to tell him an unguarded truth. Tomorrow she could be more careful, more watchful to conceal anything which damaged, or revealed.
He struggled for anything to say which could be of comfort, and there was nothing. In his mind he saw so clearly the pale, bruised face of the young man lying first in the alley, crumpled and bleeding, and then in St. Thomas's, his eyes filled with