must have. I remember running into him once in Fountain Lane, although it was some time ago now. Perhaps as much as a month or so ago.”
“Do you know why he was there?”
“No. Why? What does Tyson have to do with this?”
Sebastian pushed away from the window. “I don’t know. But I intend to find out.”
Lieutenant Matt Tyson was about to enter Gentleman Jackson’s Boxing Salon when Sebastian walked up to him and said, “We need to talk. Come walk with me.”
Tyson paused, the faintest hint of a smile tightening the sun-darkened flesh beside his thin lips as he shook his head. “Sorry; I’m meeting someone here at four.”
Sebastian kept his voice pleasant. “We can have our conversation inside, if you prefer. I’ve no doubt Jackson’s other patrons would find the sordid details of your court-martial fascinating.”
Something flashed in the lieutenant’s eyes, something almost immediately hidden by his carefully lowered lids. “I was acquitted; remember?”
“Not by me.”
Without glancing at him again, Tyson resettled his hat on his head and turned his steps toward Piccadilly. A thick bank of dark clouds still hung low over the sodden city. Water dripped from overhanging eaves and misted windowpanes; the pavement glistened dark and wet.
“When did you sell out?” asked Sebastian, falling into step beside him.
“A couple of months ago, if you must know. What the devil difference does it make to you?”
“Curious timing.”
“What is that supposed to mean?”
“Only that after all these years, it looks as if Wellington is finally turning the tide against the French. I should think it would be a time of great opportunity for a man of your . . . talents.”
Tyson’s eyes narrowed. But all he said was, “Sometimes a man just gets tired of killing.”
“Not all men.”
Tyson threw him a quick sideways glance. “You did.”
It had been two years now since Sebastian had sold out for a complicated crescendo of reasons he’d yet to come to grips with. But then, he had never been the kind of man who took pleasure in killing.
Tyson had.
Sebastian said, “What was your business with Daniel Eisler?”
The man’s faint smile broadened. “My, my, you have been busy, haven’t you?”
“What was it?” Sebastian said again.
Tyson shrugged. “Eisler bought jewels. I had some to sell. And no, I didn’t slit some señorita’s throat or rape a convent full of nuns to get them. I took them off a dead French colonel at Badajoz. Where he got them is really none of my affair, now, is it?”
The bodies of the French dead were routinely stripped of their valuables, uniforms, and boots before being buried or burned. The spoils of war had long been considered a natural supplement to the King’s shilling. Officers didn’t usually join in the looting of the dead, although some did.
But the systematic looting of civilians was something else again. Wellington had always discouraged the age-old tradition of subjecting a conquered city to three days of ritual pillage by marauding, drunken soldiers—both because it was bad for discipline and because the British liked to portray themselves as saviors rather than conquerors. But Badajoz would remain forever a stain on the honor of the modern British army, for the fortified Spanish frontier city had endured days of savage rape, murder, and pillage after being stormed by Wellington’s troops last March. Tyson might claim his booty came from the body of a French colonel, but Sebastian suspected otherwise.
He said, “And did Eisler give you a fair price for your ‘items’?”
“He did, yes. Otherwise, why would I have done business with him?”
“Who suggested him to you? Thomas Hope?”
Tyson shook his head. “A friend from Spain. And I haven’t been anywhere near the old goat in weeks, so if you’re looking for someone besides Yates to pin this murder on, you’re just going to have to keep looking.”
In Sebastian’s experience, most people had a tendency to fidget when they lied; they hesitated, or their voices rose in pitch, or their demeanor shifted in some subtle way. But there were those who could meet your gaze, smile, and lie with a careless grace born of a complete absence of either guilt or fear of detection. Matt Tyson was one of those men.
“I might actually believe you,” said Sebastian, “if I hadn’t sat on your court-martial board.”
A quick flare of anger tightened the lieutenant’s features before being carefully smoothed away. He turned his head to watch an elegant red barouche dashing up the street. After a moment, he said, “I did see something at Eisler’s house the last