the dockside in the noise of unloading, watching the lightermen coming and going across the water. There was a long apprenticeship to the craft of steering them, and Monk watched them with a certain admiration. There was not only skill but also a peculiar grace in the way they balanced, leaned, pushed, realigned their weight, and did it again.
There was steady noise around them as they ate their pies and drank from tin mugs of tea. Winches ground up and down with the clang of chains, dockers shouted at one another, lumpers carried kegs and boxes and bales. There was the occasional jingle of harness and clatter of hooves as horses backed up with heavily loaded drays, and then the rattle of wheels on the stone. The rich, exotic aroma of spices and the gagging smell of raw sugar drifted across from another wharf, mixed with the stinging salt and fish and weed of the tide, and now and then the stench of hides.
Once or twice Scuff looked at Monk as if he were going to say something, then changed his mind. Monk wondered if he were trying to find a way to tell him that boys like Billy were better off with Phillips than frozen or starved to death in some warehouse yard.
"I know," he said abruptly.
"Eh?" Scuff was caught by surprise.
"It isn't all one way. We aren't going to get boys like Billy to tell us anything."
Scuff sighed, and took another huge bite of his pie.
"Would you like another one?" Monk asked him.
Scuff hesitated, unused to generosity and not willing to chance his luck.
Monk was not hungry, but he lied. "I do. If you fetch one for me, you might as well get one for yourself."
"Oh. Well." Scuff considered for about a second, then stood up. "Don't mind if I do." He held out his hand for the money. "D'yer want another cup o' tea, an' all?"
"Thank you," Monk replied. "I don't mind if I do."
It took them quite a while to find a boy willing to speak to them, and it was Orme who finally succeeded. It was in one of the alleys close to the water. The passageway was so narrow a tall man could stretch his arms and touch both sides at the same time, and the buildings almost met at the roof edges, creating the claustrophobic feeling of a series of tunnels. It was crowded with shops: bakers, chandlers, ships' outfitters, ropemakers, tobacconists, pawnbrokers, brothels, cheap lodging houses, and taverns. There were openings into workshops and yards for the making, mending, or fitting of every piece of wood, metal, canvas, rope, or fabric that had to do with the sea and its cargo or its trade.
The wood creaked and settled, water dripped, footsteps sounded uneasily, and the shadows on the walls were always moving. Sometimes it was caused by light from the shifting tide in a dock inlet, water slapping against stone walls, or the thump of timber against the sides. More often it was someone running or creeping, or carrying a load. The stench of river mud and human waste was overpowering.
The boy refused to be named. He was thin and sallow. It was hard to tell his age, but it was probably somewhere between fifteen and twenty. He had a chipped front tooth, and one finger missing on his right hand. He stood with his back to the wall, staring at them as if expecting an attack.
"I in't swearing ter nothin'," he said defensively. "If 'e finds me, 'e'll kill me." His voice wobbled. "Ow d'yer find me, anyway?" He looked first at Monk, then at Orme, ignoring Scuff.
"From Mr. Durban's notes," Orme answered. "It's worth two shillings to you to answer truthfully, then we'll forget we ever saw you."
"Answer wot? I dunno nothin!"
"You know why so few boys ever run away," Monk told him. "Young ones we can understand. They've nowhere to go, and are too small to look after themselves. What about older ones, fourteen or fifteen? If you don't want to go to sea, why not simply leave? Customers are coming and going from the ship, aren't they? Couldn't you go out with one of them? He can't keep you locked up all the time."
The boy gave him a look of withering contempt. "There's twenty of us or more. We can't all go! Some are scared, some are sick, some are just babes. Where can we go? 'Oo'd feed us, get us clothes, give us a place ter sleep?