future.
âWhoâs going to look after the little lad?â
With that sheâd become part of his life, spending her days with James, her nights with Sedgwick. Within a week sheâd brought over her possessions, two worn, faded dresses and a few small things. A month later, theyâd moved to this new room, warmer and airier, just before winter began to exert its grip. A new start, he said, fresh surroundings and no memories.
âTired?â she asked, jarring him out of his thoughts.
Sedgwick rubbed his eyes with the heels of his hands. âLong past tired.â
âYou get to bed. Iâll blow out the candles,â she ordered tenderly.
In the dark he stared at the ceiling. The bed was cosy, and his arm slid around her.
âDo you ever think of going back?â he asked her.
âTo what?â she answered sleepily.
âTo what you used to do.â
That was his fear, that sheâd grow tired of this domesticity and leave him. Leave James. Leave a hole in their lives.
She laughed gently, a sound that moved him more than any words.
âYouâre a daft beggar, you are. Iâve wanted you ever since I saw you. Iâd have taken you away from her if I could. Does that tell you owt?â
âAye.â He drifted away, a smile on his lips.
Nottingham was at the jail well before light. Heâd heard the dawn chorus as he walked down Marsh Lane and over Timble Bridge, but it had brought him no pleasure. Holding Mary had soothed his soul a little, but once she was asleep his thoughts had begun to whirl uncontrollably.
All his life he had been a fighter. There had been times when that fight â finding enough food or a safe place to sleep â had meant the difference between life and death, and that had given him the desire never to lose. It was one of the qualities that made him perfect for this job.
Knowing that Wyatt had snatched a victim from under the nose of one of his men made him burn. He would not be outthought and outwitted by a killer, by a madman who saw death and defilement as apt revenge for the crime heâd been the one to commit.
He paused at the head of the ginnel, where the shadows slipped away from Kirkgate and the darkness seemed briefly absolute. Leeds wasnât that large, maybe seven thousand people. Wyatt was in it somewhere. Someone had seen him, someone sold him food, someone had rented him . . . what could he have rented?
Not a room, that much was certain. He couldnât have tortured, killed and skinned there. He needed somewhere larger, somewhere private. That narrowed it down a little. A house perhaps, or a workshop. He unlocked the door of the jail, glancing in the cells for anyone brought in by the night men. Just a pair of beggars, by the look of them, glad of a rest indoors for once, burrowed under their blankets and quiet to the world.
He put coal on the fire that had been banked for the night, and stirred the embers, watching the flames dazzle and heat seep into the room before taking off his heavy coat and pushing back his fringe.
For the first time since Roseâs death he had hope in his heart. Inch by inch he and Mary were drawing closer again, beginning to emerge from the fog. It was painful and there was still so far to go, but theyâd made their start.
He wouldnât allow Wyatt to crush that. Heâd find him and mete out justice. That was his job. There would be no trial where details of the killing could emerge, nothing to tarnish the reputation of Leeds, so carefully tended and burnished, nothing that could affect the heartbeat of trade. Heâd had to do this before, always reluctantly, and he had no doubt heâd have to do it again. The instances had been rare, but in every case heâd had no regrets.
He sat at his desk, a jumble of papers stacked before him. He knew he needed to take up Worthyâs offer. It meant more manpower, more information. But what, he wondered,
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