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in the small room behind Pearly Boy's shop in Limehouse. The shop was ostensibly to sell ships' instruments: compasses, sextants, quadrants, chronometers, barometers, astrolabes. Set out in order on a table was a variety of dividers and parallel rules. But Pearly's main business took place in the back room, largely concerning stolen jewelry, objets d'art, paintings, carvings, and jewel-encrusted ornaments. He had already taken over most of the Fat Man's territory.

He looked at Monk blandly, but his eyes were as cold as a polar sea. "Always 'appy to 'elp the police," he said. "What are you looking for, Mr. Monk? It is 'Monk,' isn't it? 'Eard word, you know. Reputation."

Monk did not take the bait.

"Yes, indeed," he said with a nod. "Something we have in common."

Pearly Boy was startled. "What's that then?"

"Reputation." Monk was unsmiling. "I understand you're a hard man too."

Pearly Boy thought that was funny. He started to giggle, and it grew and swelled into rich chortling laughter. Finally he stopped abruptly, wiping his cheeks with a large handkerchief. "I'm going to like you," he said, his face beaming, his eyes like wet stones.

"I'm delighted," Monk replied, sounding as though he had smelled spoiling milk. "We might be of use to each other."

That was language Pearly Boy definitely understood, even if he was dubious about believing it. "Oh, yeah, an' how's that then?"

"Friends and enemies in common," Monk explained.

Pearly Boy was interested. He tried to hide it, and failed. "Friends?" he said curiously. "'Oo's friends o' yours, then?"

"Let's start with enemies," Monk answered with a smile. "One of yours was the Fat Man." He saw the flash of hatred and triumph in Pearly Boy's eyes. "One of mine too," Monk added. "You have me to thank that he's dead."

Pearly Boy licked his lips. "I know that. I 'eard. Drowned in the mud off Jacob's Island, they say."

"That's right. Nasty way to go." Monk shook his head. "Would have fished the body up, but it was hardly worth it. Got the statue, which is what mattered. He'll keep down there nicely."

Pearly Boy shuddered. "You're a hard bastard, all right," he agreed, and Monk was not sure whether he meant it as a compliment or not.

"I am," Monk conceded. "I'm after several people, and I don't forget either a good turn or a bad one. Who is Mary Webber?"

"No idea. Never 'eard of 'er. Which means she's not in my business. She int a thief nor a receiver nor a customer," Pearly Boy said flatly.

Monk was not surprised; he had not expected her to be. "And I'm after a boy named Reilly, and even more than that, I'm after whoever was forced into looking after him, seeing to it that he didn't get hurt."

Pearly Boy opened his eyes wide. "Forced? Ow could anyone be forced? 'Oo would do that, an' why, Mr. Monk?"

"Mr. Durban would have done it," Monk replied steadily. "Because he didn't like having boys murdered."

"Well, I never." Pearly Boy affected amazement, but his curiosity overcame his judgment, as Monk had hoped it would. Pearly Boy dealt not only in stolen goods but in rare or precious information as well- that too at times stolen. "'Oo could stop that 'appening, then?"

"Someone with power." Monk said it as though he were thinking out loud. "And yet someone who had a lot to lose as well, a lot in danger, if you understand me?"

Pearly Boy was still two steps behind. "'Oo'd be killin' boys, then?"

"Jericho Phillips, if they get out of line, rebel against..." He stopped, seeing Pearly Boy's face go suddenly pallid and his body in its decorated waistcoat stiffen until his arms were rigid. Suddenly Monk was as certain Pearly Boy was one of Durban 's informants against Phillips as if he had written it in his notes. He smiled and saw in Pearly Boy's eyes that he had read the understanding, and it knotted his stomach with terror.

"One of Phillips's clients," Monk went on, his voice quite casual now. He leaned elegantly against the mantel, watching Pearly Boy's discomfort. "I can imagine it happening, can't you? Durban would have followed the man until he could confront him, maybe somewhere near Phillips's boat. Perhaps it would be just after this man, whoever he is, had left a night's entertainment, and the excitement and guilt were still hot inside him."

Pearly Boy was motionless, eyes on Monk's face.

"No lie would come to him easily then," Monk continued. "No matter how often he had prepared for such a moment. Durban would

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