minutes to push her way through unyielding bodies of men intent on slaking thirst and enjoying the latest piece of news. She forced her way between two very corpulent bakers, flour still on their sleeves and aprons, and nearly fell into the lap of a neat, slender man sitting by himself eating a cheese and pickle sandwich. There was a tankard of cider in front of him, and a small brown-and-white dog at his feet.
"Mr. Sutton," she said breathlessly, straightening herself and attempting to look respectable. Her hair had fallen out of its pins, as it frequently did, and she had simply poked it behind her ears. "I'm very relieved to have found you."
He stood up politely, partly because there was no second chair for her to be seated. She could see immediately from his expression that he knew Phillips had been acquitted. It made it easier that she did not have to tell him, but she would have preferred that the news not be so very widespread. Perhaps everyone in London knew by now.
"Can I get something fer yer, Miss Hester?" he said dubiously.
"No, thank you, I have already eaten," she answered. It was not strictly true, but she knew he had no time to waste in the middle of his working day. She had enough favors to ask without using them up unnecessarily now.
He remained standing, sandwich in his hand. Snoot stared at it hopefully, but was ignored.
"Please continue," Hester invited him. "I would be most uncomfortable if I spoiled your lunch. All the same, I need to ask your help... please?"
He nodded grimly, as if a foreseen disaster were about to break over him, and continued standing. "You're goin' to go after that slimy bastard Phillips again, aren't you." It was a conclusion, not a question. "Don't, Miss Hester," he pleaded anxiously. "He's a bad one, an' he's got friends all over the place, people yer or me wouldn't even think of knowing the likes of 'im. Wait. 'E'll make a mistake one day, an' some-body'll have 'im. 'E was born for the gallows, that one."
"I don't mind if they hang him, or simply lock him up in the Cold bath Fields and throw away the key," she replied. "What I care about is that they do it soon, in fact, very soon. Before he has the chance to kill any more children, or anyone else, for that matter."
He looked at her carefully for several moments before speaking. She began to feel uncomfortable. His eyes were blue and very clear, as if nothing whatever could impede his vision. It gave her a peculiarly vulnerable feeling. She had to force herself not to try to explain to him even further.
"You want ter go over all the evidence again?" he asked slowly, his expression tense and troubled. "You're sure o' that?"
She felt a chill, even in this hot, close room. What was he trying to warn her from?
"Can you think of a better way?" she countered. "We made a mistake, several in fact, but they were errors in connecting people, not in the basic fact that Jericho Phillips is a child pornographer and murderer."
"You made a mistake in 'ow long 'is arm is," Sutton corrected her, biting into the sandwich at last. "You'll 'ave to be a lot more careful to catch a canny sod like 'im. An' 'e'll be watching for you this time." His eyes creased in concern.
She felt a shiver of fear. "You think he'll come after me? Wouldn't that just prove we're right? Wouldn't he be safer to let us wear ourselves out, and prove nothing?"
"Safer, yes," Sutton agreed. "But he might get annoyed and come after you anyway, if you get close enough to 'im to scare off some of 'is custom. And that in't all. There's the other thing to think about, an' I can't protect you from that, 'cause no one can."
"What thing?" she asked immediately. She trusted Sutton; he had proved both his friendship and his courage. If he feared something, then it was dangerous.
"The way I heard it, it wasn't just you and Mr. Monk who proved a bit sloppy," he said reluctantly. "It was Mr. Durban as well. You trusted in what 'e'd done, so you didn't take care to prove everything so not even a clever beggar like Mr. Rathbone could undo it. But what about Mr. Durban, eh? Why'd he slip up?"
"Because..." She had been about to say that he could not have realized how clever Rathbone