thank him. He decided against it; it might sound a little patronizing. "Hope so," he said instead. "I could do with one too."
Scuff grimaced. Monk knew he had great hopes of being given one himself, if he were lucky; possibly even a sandwich. It was unlikely that he had eaten today.
They took the ferry downstream, as suggested, and asked specifically after the lighterman they wanted. It took them more than an hour to find him, because he was already at work, first loading and then getting his lighter out into the traffic. They made some of their inquiries of a group of men standing around a brazier with boiling water, and Monk purchased a mug of tea and a thick slice of bread. He offered the same to Scuff, who thought about it as long as he dared, then said with practiced indifference that he didn't mind if he did. All the while he watched Monk out of the corner of his eye to make sure he did not miss his chance.
Monk affected not to notice.
"I already told yer," the lighterman said wearily. "Yer let the bastard orff! There in't no more I can say!"
They were sitting on the canvas bales as the flat-bottomed craft made its slow, heavy way downstream towards Greenwich.
"I know what you said," Monk assured him. "And all the evidence bears it out. But we didn't ask you what Mr. Durban said, or if he asked you anything that you didn't mention before."
The lighterman screwed up his face in thought, moving his eyes as if looking at the hard, glittering reflections off the water. "'E were upset," he replied slowly. "All bent over 'isself like someone'd 'it 'im in the belly. Tell yer the truth, I liked 'im better fer it."
So did Monk, but it was not the answer he needed. He had already asked Orme these questions, but Orme was so defensive of Durban that his answers were no longer useful; they had become simply a repetition that Durban had done the right thing. Monk was hoping the lighterman would remember some other information that Durban had let slip, some word, or even omission, that might lead in a new direction. He was fumbling, and he knew it. The lighterman's face showed his disappointment. He had expected more, and he had not received it. He had endangered himself to testify, and Monk had let him down.
"Are you afraid of Phillips?" Monk asked suddenly.
The lighterman was caught off guard. "No!" he said indignantly. "Why should I be? I never said he done nothin'. In't got no cause ter come after me."
"And if he had cause, would he?" Monk asked, trying to keep all expression out of his voice.
The lighterman stared at him. "Wot's the matter with yer? Yer simple, or summink? 'E'd bloody carve out me guts an' 'ang ' em on Execution Dock ter dry in the wind!"
Monk continued to look skeptical.
Scuff looked from Monk to the lighterman and back again, waiting, his eyes wide.
"An' yer won't catch 'im fer it neither," the lighterman added. "Not that you bleedin' lot could catch a cold soppin' wet in winter. Mr. Durban knew wot 'e were about. Reckon if 'e'd 'a lived, 'e'd a swung the bastard by 'is neck, all right."
Monk felt the words land like a blow, the harder because it was the one case Durban had not solved, and he did not want to admit it. But there was a thread in what the lighterman had said that was worth following. "So he was still working on it?" he asked.
The lighterman looked at him witheringly.
"'Course 'e were. I reckon 'e'd never 'ave given up." He squinted a little in the hard light, and leaned very slightly on his long oar to steer a few degrees to port.
"What is there to follow?" Monk found the words hard to say, placing himself so vulnerably, as if he were asking a bargee how to do his own job.
The lighterman shrugged. "Ow the 'ell do I know? 'E said sum-mink about money, an' making them fat bastards pay for their pleasures twice over. But I dunno wot 'e meant."
"Extortion," Monk replied.
"Yeah? Well, you in't gonna get any o' them exactly ter complain, now are yer?" the lighterman sneered.
Monk kept his voice level and his face as expressionless as he could. "Unlikely," he agreed. "At least not to me."
The lighterman turned slowly from his position holding the oar. He was a lean, angular man, but the movement was unconsciously