agreed. "Thank you, Mr. Monk. I shall be forever in your debt. If there is anything - "
Monk stopped him. "Please don't thank me until I have earned it. I may find nothing further, or worse still, what I find may be something you would have been happier not to know."
"I have to know," Lucius said simply. "Until tomorrow morning, Mr. Monk."
"Good day, Mr. Stourbridge," Monk replied, walking towards the door to open it for him.
Monk was in the house in Cleveland Square by ten o'clock the next morning, and with Lucius's help he questioned the servants, both indoor and outdoor, about James Treadwell. They were reluctant to speak of him at all, let alone to speak ill, but he read in their faces, and in the awkwardness of their phrases, that Treadwell had not been greatly liked - but he had been respected because he did his job well.
A picture emerged of a man who gave little of himself, whose sense of humor was more founded in cruelty than goodwill, but who was sufficiently sensible of the hierarchy within the household not to overstep his place or wound too many feelings. He knew how to charm, and was occasionally generous when he won at gambling, which was not infrequently.
No maid reported any unwelcome attentions. Nothing had gone missing. He never blamed anyone else for his very few errors.
Monk searched his room, which was still empty as no replacement for him had yet been employed. All his possessions were there as he had left them. It was neat, but there was a book on horse racing open on the bedside table, a half-open box of matches beside the candle on the window-sill, and a smart waistcoat hung over the back of the upright chair. It was the room of a man who had expected to return.
Monk examined the clothes and boots carefully. He was surprised how expensive they were - in some cases, as good as his own. Treadwell certainly had not paid for them on a coachman's earnings. If the money had come from his gambling, then he must have spent a great deal of time at it - and been consistently successful. It seemed unpleasantly more and more likely that he had had another source of income, one a good deal more lucrative.
Monk did enquire, without any hope, if perhaps the clothes were hand-me-downs from either Lucius or Harry Stourbridge. He was not surprised to learn that they were not. Such things went to servants of longer standing and remained with them.
As far as Miriam Gardiner was concerned, he learned nothing beyond what he had already been told: she was unused to servants and therefore had not treated the coachman with the distance that was appropriate, but that was equally true for all the other household staff. No one had observed anything different with regard to Treadwell. Without exception, they all spoke well of her and seemed confused and grieved by her current misfortune.
Monk spent the following day in Hampstead and Kentish Town, as he had told Lucius he would. He walked miles, asked questions till his mouth was dry and his throat hoarse. He arrived home after nine o'clock, when it was still daylight but the heat of the afternoon was tempered by an evening breeze.
The first thing he wanted to do was to take his boots off and soak his burning feet, but Hester's presence stopped him. It was not an attractive thing to do, and he was too conscious of her to indulge himself so. Instead, after accepting her welcome with great pleasure, he sat in the coolness of the office which doubled as a sitting room, a glass of cold lemonade at his elbow, his boots still firmly laced, and answered her questions.
"Expensive tastes, far more than Stourbridge paid him. At least three times as much."
Hester frowned. "Gambling?"
"Gamblers win and lose. He seems to have had his money pretty regularly. But more than that, he only had one day off a fortnight. Gambling to that extent needs time."
She was watching him closely, her eyes anxious. Unexpectedly, she did not prompt him.
He was surprised. "I considered a mistress with the means to give him expensive gifts," he continued. "But in going around the places where he spent his time off, he seems to have had money and purchased the things himself. He enjoyed spending money. He wasn't especially discreet about it."
"So you think it was come by honestly?" Her eyes widened.
"No... I think he was