really lay behind it? Heâd known the procurer far too long to take what he said at face value. Worthy was a man with his own reasons for things, his own brand of evil.
The door opened and Sedgwick ambled in, his eyes morning bright, his hair a tangle.
âAnything last night?â Nottingham asked him.
âNo.â The deputy gave him the short answer. âWe searched almost everything, but there was bugger all to offer a clue. No one saw anything, no one heard anything.â He shrugged. âOf course.â
âWe need to find him before he kills Rushworth.â He didnât need to mention what would happen after Rushworth was dead. That knowledge hung between them like a dark promise.
âHow?â
âWyatt has to have space for what he does. And privacy.â He paused to allow the idea to sink in, waiting until Sedgwick began to nod his understanding.
âMakes sense,â he agreed. âSomewhere with some isolation.â
âStart looking around today,â Nottingham ordered. âHe needs to eat and drink, too. Heâs buying things somewhere. Get Josh out asking around the shops and the traders.â
âI will.â
The Constable looked up at Sedgwick. âSomeone was talking to me about Gravesâs murder last night. He knew what had happened after.â
The deputy raised his eyebrows. âIt wasnât from me,â he said defensively.
Nottingham waved the idea away with his hand. âI didnât think it was. Or from Josh. It was Amos Worthy who stopped me.â
âOh aye? Whatâs all this to do with him, then? I was hoping the winter might have claimed him.â
âHe says Graves was good to him long ago.â Heâd never explained to the deputy that his mother and Worthy had been lovers once; it was a history he needed to keep private.
âAnd?â
âAnd he wants to help us catch the murderer.â
Sedgwick glanced out of the barred window at people moving along Kirkgate, the sounds of the morning rising.
âIâd be wondering whatâs in it for him.â
âThat was my first thought, too,â Nottingham agreed quietly.
âIâve never seen him do owt that didnât benefit him or his purse.â
âHard to believe, but I think he might be sincere this time. I canât see any way he can use this to his advantage. And the more people we have looking, the sooner weâll catch Wyatt. Agreed?â
âMaybe,â Sedgwick conceded cautiously.
âPeople will say things to Worthyâs men they wouldnât say to us.â
âRather than face a beating, you mean?â
âNot always, John.â
He waited as Sedgwick considered.
âYouâre going to use him, arenât you?â
âIf Rushworth hadnât gone, I wouldnât have,â Nottingham replied reasonably. âItâs urgent now. And weâve got sod all so far. You know that.â
The deputy let out a loud, slow breath.
âAye, thatâs true.â
âSo weâve got nothing to lose.â
He wasnât sure if he was trying to justify the decision to himself or to the deputy.
âIf we can save Rushworth,â Sedgwick warned. âIt might already be too late. And what about the Mayor? Or the Corporation?â
âWe donât tell them.â His eyes flashed for a moment. âThey only ask that I do my job, not how I do it.â
âItâs dangerous, boss.â
The Constable nodded slowly. He knew that well enough. He just had to make sure he kept control of everything.
âIâll be back in a while.â
His coat warm around him, Nottingham walked through the drizzle down Briggate. His mind was a jumble of thoughts, of Rushworth, of Worthy, of Graves, of Mary, of Rose.
Just before the bridge he turned on to Swinegate. With the thaw there was plenty of life on the street, the squall of families, shopkeepers setting out their
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