âBut how?'
âIf the Captain should be suspected of being a spy, the authorities would have been at liberty to search amongst his papers for ciphers and so on. I can only presume that Rosalind feared that her naked portrait, the one that she was so anxious he should destroy, would be found if that happened.'
âSo was she the woman?' asked John's father.
âI thought at first it was Henrietta Tireman,' the Apothecary answered slowly.
âWhy was that?'
âBecause she was strong and had told me she could ride well. And, further, I found her hat on the church path after I had overheard Captain Pegram conversing with an unknown woman. But probably most of all because she had been in love â and still is â with the Marquis of Rye, whom I suspected of being involved.'
âDid you think she was the Moth?' asked Louis.
âNo, I thought that was Lord Rye himself.'
âWhy?'
âBecause of his misspent youth. I wondered whether he had become a spy in order to pay his debts and that now, for fear of blackmail, he was too deeply enmeshed to escape. There was another thing, too. The Scarecrow's obsession with meeting him. Now, of course, we know it was to get to Rosalind but at the time it seemed to me it was the Marquis that the spy was after. Mistakenly, the Scarecrow visited Captain Pegram, thinking, or so I believe, that such a grand house must belong to nobility. And indeed Nathaniel admitted, more openly than anyone else, that the Frenchman had called on him. It was on that occasion that the Scarecrow must have been given, or at the very least acquired, Captain Pegram's visiting card. Anyway, there was one other odd thing that happened round about that time. I overheard a couple arguing in the churchyard, quite bitterly and cruelly. The woman wore a strong scent but other than that I could not identify her. The man, who seemed in despair, was equally anonymous. Then there emerged the fact that the Scarecrow had bought a bottle of Evening in Araby, a perfume blended by Apothecary Gironde, for an unknown woman. Was it all the same female, I began to wonder.'
âGo back a little,' requested Sir Gabriel. âDid you believe Miss Tireman to be the woman in the churchyard? Miss Henrietta, that is?'
âNot at the time. But later, when I overheard the other altercation, the one I mentioned to you. I did.'
âFor what reason?' asked Joe Jago.
âAs I told you, I found Miss Henrietta's hat lying on the path near where the argument had taken place and, on another occasion, I smelled Evening in Araby on her.'
âI see,' said the clerk, and John felt absolutely certain that he did!
âThen came a conversation with Serafina, during which we discussed the various people involved. She was convinced that the anonymous couple who had fallen out so bitterly were the Frog and the Moth, but in that she was wrong. Yet in a way what the Comtesse said led me further along the path. You see, I believe that Captain Pegram knew that the Moth had been contacted by the Scarecrow. I believe that, desperate for help, she went to her former lover and he, still besotted, assured her that he would kill the Frenchman if necessary. However, she relieved him of that task by doing so herself, probably in a moment of fury.'
âBut how did you manage to identify the Frog?' asked Louis, leaning forward intently.
âIn relation to discovering the identity of the Moth, that was really quite simple. One night, when I was watching one of the spies signalling to a French ship â I wasn't sure which spy it was at that stage â I heard a sound that half frightened me out of my wits. It was a strange scrabbling, clawing noise, as if some awful monster were roaming the seashore. Then, when a French frigate ran aground on a sandbank, completely misled by an incorrect signal, I heard the sound again.'
âAnd what was it?' asked Elizabeth Fielding, intrigued.
âA dog.'
âWhat?'
âI said a dog.' John laughed. âSir Ambrose and Lady Ffloote owned â still do, I suppose â a wretched old hound which they will insist on calling The Pup. The poor thing seemed in a constant state of exhaustion, and now I know why. The Frog took the wretched creature with him when he went on his signalling missions, probably said that he was off to give it exercise. Anyway, the sound I heard was its claws scrabbling on the shale. That train of thought together with the sheer stupidity that the Frog demonstrated at every turn, convinced me that the spy could be nobody but Sir Ambrose.'
There was general laughter and a smattering of applause. John inclined his head, then looked directly at Louis de Vignolles.
âThere is one thing about that night which still remains unexplained. A dark man with a strong accent informed the Riding Officers at Rye that the French had landed at Pett Level. At the time I thought it had to be Lucius but now, of course, I realise it couldn't have been.'
Louis gazed at him, his expression blank. âHow strange. It must have been somebody patrolling the shoreline. But who would do such a thing in the middle of the night?'
âWho indeed?' answered John, and raised a cynical eyebrow.
âEnough of that,' put in Serafina, hiding a secret smile. âTell us how you discovered the identity of the Moth.'
âAs I said, I spent a while believing it to be the Marquis. However, the more I mulled the various ideas over the more a picture of a vain and greedy person kept coming into my mind, a person who would stop at nothing in order to reach the pinnacle of society and have money to burn. Now the people of the town may be odd but there was only one who answered that description in my mind, the fabulously beautiful Rosalind. When he was drunk, Captain Pegram almost told me the story of his love affair with her when she was very young â and he very rich! Once, probably twice, I had heard him in bitter argument with an unidentified female. And on the second occasion she actually ordered him to destroy âthe picture'. That made me feel certain that the field was narrowed to either one of the three Tireman women or a new and jealous mistress, for who else would care so much about a compromising portrait?
âThe dropped hat gave me food for thought. But what easier than for a sister to appropriate another sister's headgear? Then there was the perfume, Evening in Araby, which Apothecary Gironde sold to the Scarecrow for an unknown lady. Rosalind owned such a brand but Henrietta smelled of it. Isn't it a fact that sisters frequently borrow one another's cosmetics?'
Mr Fielding spoke again. âSo you had no physical clues, only the character portrait of someone cruel enough to kill in order not to obey an early commitment to spy for France and thereby risk losing their wealth and social position?'
âThere was just one piece of evidence, Sir,' answered John. âActing on your advice, I introduced Dick Jarvis into society, masquerading as Louis's cousin and dressed as a gentleman of quality. He came to my farewell assembly and there he identified Rosalind as the woman who had removed the card from the Scarecrow's pocket.
All that night I wondered whether she was protecting Captain Pegram or acting for herself by not wanting the Captain's name to be associated with the victim in any way. But in the end only she, wretched and jealous girl that she was, seemed to meet all the qualities, if one can use that word, the murderer displayed. Then I realised that I had described her as a butterfly to Serafina and that the French for moth is Papillon de Nuit. But still I wasn't totally sure, not until the moment when the second French spymaster, Lucius Delahunty, alias Lucien de la Tour, a rogue who managed to deceive me utterly, killed her, just as she had murdered his own cousin.'
âBut who,' asked Elizabeth Fielding, âwas poisoning Mrs Harcross?'
John smiled ruefully. âNo one. She was doing it to herself. The poor woman, along with several others I might add, was taking something called the Elixir of Youth, prepared by Mrs Gironde without the supervision of her husband. Not knowing any better, the silly soul was picking and compounding the wrong simples, with the result that she was slowly poisoning the entire middle-aged female population of Winchelsea.'
âWhat did you do?'
âI told her to stop it at once â and she did!'
âWhat a sad and extraordinary tale,' said Sir Gabriel slowly.
âVery sad,' echoed John, and just for a moment he looked utterly downcast.
Joe Jago cleared his throat noisily. âTell everyone about the post script, Mr Rawlings.'
The Apothecary smiled again. âA small and disreputable smuggler called Little Harry arrived at Petronilla's Platt just before I left. He gave me a bag of money and a letterâ'
âWhat did it say?' interrupted Elizabeth.
âI'll read it to you.' John produced a paper covered with exuberant handwriting from his inside pocket. “âGreetings to my old companion, John Rawlings. I beg you, my friend, for the sake of the hours that we have spent jovially together to provide a headstone for my cousin with the enclosed guineas. Let it read, âGerard de la Tour, 1727â1757, who died in the service of his country.'” It was dated three days after Rosalind's fatal shooting and the address was merely given as “En route à Paris”.'
âSo Lucius definitely escaped?'
âYes.'
âAnd the headstone?'
âThe order is already in train,' said Sir Gabriel. âI have taken the liberty of adding a fleur-de-lys to it, unpatriotic though some might think it.'
âTwo more things,' said Serafina, looking very puzzled. âThe first is, why did Rosalind do it? How did a country parson's daughter come to be spying for France?'
âHer grandmother was French and I presume, though I don't know for certain, that she spoke the language fluently, as did Henrietta. After all, that is how the Tireman family became involved with the nobility. Henrietta went to teach the Marquis's sister French, then, very foolishly, introduced Rosalind to the household when the governess left. I say foolishly because by this time he had asked Henrietta to marry him, only for the Marquis to abandon her in favour of her more beautiful sister.'
âPoor thing,' said Elizabeth Fielding sympathetically.
John looked very pinched indeed. âAll's well that ends well,' he answered bitterly. âI am told that Lord Rye has now seen the error of his ways and that Henrietta is restored in his affections.'
âJohn,' said Sir Gabriel, his voice gentle. âI am still not quite clear. Did Rosalind agree to spy in return for money?'
âI believe so, yes. Simply for the sake of her own vanity and perhaps, too, to ensure she landed a wealthy husband. I always thought how well dressed and fashionable the Tireman family was. In fact at one time I thought the rector might be spying in order to cope with the cost of clothing them. However, it seems the girls supported themselves. Henrietta obviously earned extra by teaching, but her sister had other, darker ways.'
Serafina nodded. âSo who is the French spy who has infiltrated London society and whom Lou â I mean the Secret Office â is so desperately seeking? Which one of your suspects is he, John?'
The Apothecary gave a shrug worthy of a Frenchman. âThat I have not been able to discover, my dear. We will simply have to wait and see,' he said.
John Rawlings, Apothecary, was born circa 1731, though his actual parentage is somewhat shrouded in mystery. He was made Free of the Worshipful Society of Apothecaries on 13 March, 1755. On that occasion he gave his address as 2, Nassau Street, Soho, thereby linking himself irrefutably with H.D. Rawlings Ltd., Soda Water Manufacturers, who were based at the same address over a hundred years later.
It might surprise some readers to know that at the time of the Seven Years War the secret service in this country was extremely well organised. It was roughly divided into two sections, the Secret Office and the Secret Department. The Secret Office came directly under the control of the Secretary of State, who funded it. It was the duty of this office to run the secret service, whose function it was to obtain information for the government. It employed spies in Britain to detect plots, and abroad to discover the designs of foreign powers. The Secret Department was part of the Post Office and was founded as early as 1718, though it is possible that the Department had existed before then in a slightly different form. During the Seven Years War the Secretary of State, the Earl of Holdernesse, would instruct Anthony Todd, head of the Post Office, to open any mail that he considered might be suspect. Anything written in code or cipher was then immediately taken to Dr Edward Willes who, unbelievably, combined the roles of Bishop of Bath and Wells and Secret Decipherer to the King. Ciphers, of course, are as old as time and are still used today. Interestingly, the Secret Department was not disbanded until the middle of the nineteenth century. The Secret Office, however, though now called the Secret Service, still flourishes.
During my researches I not only found Dr Willes but also a French spy who lived amongst London society and was eventually caught by the Secret Department. For the moment I intend to keep his identity secret in the hope that one of these days he might return! Meanwhile all I can say is 2729 386 1285.