happened?" she asked, fear and admiration tightening inside her, her stomach knotted, her breath slow, as if the noise of it might stop her hearing what he would say next. It was stupid. Durban was dead and could not be hurt anymore. And yet she cared painfully that he had had the courage and the honor to defy them.
"Nothing, until the next time he caught them robbing a customer," the little man answered. "And put the girl in prison for it. Then they published it all right." His eyes did not move from hers. "Very embarrassing it was for Durban, but he weathered it. Lost a good few he'd thought were friends. Hard way to find out they weren't. Got laughed at in places where they used to call him 'sir.' It hurt him, but I only seen him show it once, and then just for a moment. He took it like a man, never complained, and never, far as I know, looked the other way on anything they did."
"What happened to the girl?" She felt a flood of warmth inside her, an easing of the ache of tension, then the chill again, and fear of the next answer.
"Nothing," Palk told her, his eyes reading her emotions like print on the page. "That wasn't Durban 's way. He knew she was only doing what she had to, to get by. He had a hot temper, but he never took it out on women or kids. Soft, he was, in his own fashion, as if he knew what it was like to be poor, or hungry, or alone." He smiled at the memory. "Beat the hell out of Willy Lyme for knocking his wife around, but gentle as a woman with old Bert when 'e got daft and didn't even know who he was anymore. Went into the canal after the poor old sod drowned himself, and cried when he couldn't save him. Poor old Bert. Came to his funeral, Durban did. Never knew for sure, but I reckoned he paid for most of it. Bert hadn't sixpence to his name."
He looked narrowly at Hester. "I don't know why yer want to know, Miss. You can't hurt Durban now, but there's a lot of folk won't take it kindly if you speak ill of him. Wouldn't be a good thing."
"I'm trying to stop those who would," she replied.
He looked puzzled, searching her face.
She smiled at him. "My husband took his place in the River Police, because Durban suggested him. We tried to solve Durban 's last case, and we failed so badly we can't go back and do it again. I want to show that the court was wrong and we were right, Durban and my husband and I."
"Won't do any good," Palk told her.
"Yes, it will. We'll know it, and that matters."
"Is Monk the new fellow at Wapping?"
"Yes."
"Won't be easy to follow Durban."
"Depends where he was going."
He looked at her without blinking. "Right and wrong," he said. "No man's right all the time, but he was more than most."
She stood up. "I hope so. But I need the truth, whatever it is."
"And then you'll tell everybody?"
"Depends. I don't know what it is yet."
He nodded. "That'll do. But be careful. There's plenty that'd kill to make sure you don't."
"I know that."
He hitched himself down off his chair, awkward, one shoulder almost half a foot higher than the other, and made his way to the door to show them out.
***
Unaware of Hester's mission, Monk started out again in the morning, with Scuff beside him, dressed as yesterday in the old boots. Very soon Monk would get him something better, but now he was compelled to go back to tracing Durban 's search for Mary Webber. He would rather have been alone. The effort of concealing his emotions and keeping up a civil conversation was more than the value of any help Scuff could give. But he had left himself no choice. Apart from wounding him by rejection, he dare not allow Scuff to wander around by himself now. He had endangered him, and he must do what he could to protect him from the consequences.
By midmorning, after several failed attempts, he was almost robbed by the very scuffle-hunter he was actually looking for. They were at the Black Eagle Wharf, between a cargo of timber and lightermen unloading tobacco, raw sugar, and rum. There was no breeze off the river to move the smell of it in the air. The tide was