time you are out of here he will be dead, and you can start a decent life without giving him a thought. You'll have a little money, because Durban would have wanted you to. We have it safely for you. You are his only relative, so it has to be yours. And if you would like a job, and don't mind some hard work, I'd like to have your help in the clinic I run in Portpool Lane. At least think about it. There'd be a room for you, good work to do, and some decent friends to do it with."
Hope flared in Mary's tired eyes, so bright and sharp that it hurt to see it. "You be careful of Phillips," she said urgently. "He isn't alone, you know. He started that business on his boat with money, quite a lot of it. Looks like nothing on the outside, but I heard Fish-burn say it was like the best bawdy house on the inside, comfortable as you like. And photograph machines don't come for nothing."
"An investor?"
Mary nodded. "Not just that, he's very well protected. There's a few people who wouldn't like anything bad to happen to him, and at least one of them is in the law, and stood up for him in court. A really top lawyer, not one of them that hangs around the courthouse hoping to pick up business, a Queen's Counsel, all silk robes, wigs, that kind of thing."
Suddenly Hester was ice-cold, imprisoned in something terrible, without escape, as if the iron door were locked forever. She could kick and scream forever, but no one could hear her. A Queen's Counsel, one who had defended Phillips in court.
"I'm sorry," Mary said apologetically. "I can see I've scared you, but you have to know. I can't sit by and let something happen to you when you've been so kind to me."
Hester found it hard to speak; her lips seemed numb, her mouth full of cotton batting. "A lawyer? Are you sure?"
Mary stared at her, struggling towards a dark understanding. She had no trouble recognizing the pain. "Phillips has power over lots of people," she said, lowering her voice as if even in prison she was afraid of being overheard. "Maybe that's why my brother never caught him. Lord knows, he tried hard enough. Be careful. You don't know who he's got in his pocket, who'd like to escape but can't."
"No," Hester whispered back without knowing why. "No, I suppose you can't."
Chapter Ten
It was the middle of the afternoon and Monk was busy catching up on some of the more pedestrian cases of theft from various yards along the waterfront when one of the men came to his door and told him that Superintendent Farnham had arrived and wished to see him, immediately.
Farnham was sitting down when Monk went into the room, and he did not rise. He was clearly unhappy and in a very bad temper. He indicated curtly for Monk to take the chair opposite him.
"The Phillips case is over," he said grimly, his eyes hard and flat. "You lost. In fact, not only you, Monk, but the whole of the River Police. You don't seem to be aware of quite how much." He held up his hand to keep Monk silent, just in case he should think of defending himself. "It was bad enough when the wretched man was acquitted, through your inefficiency and your wife's emotionalism, although one expects such a thing from women, but..."
Monk was so furious he could barely keep still. "Sir, that..."
"When I have finished!" Farnham exploded. "Until then, you will hold your peace. I am disappointed in you, Monk. Durban recommended you highly, and I was fool enough to listen to him. But thanks to your meddling, your obsession with this Phillips case, not only I, but most of the senior police in general, and half the ferrymen, lightermen, dockers, and warehousemen up and down both banks of the river also know a great deal more about the late Commander Durban than we wish to. Leave it, Monk. That is an order. There is quite enough crime on the Thames that genuinely needs your attention. Solve it, all of it, with speed and justice, and you may begin to redeem not only your own reputation but ours as well."
"Commander Durban was a good officer, sir," Monk said between his teeth, acutely conscious of everything Hester had told him the previous evening. "I have learned nothing about him to his