President Lincoln's Secret. Steven Wilson

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу President Lincoln's Secret - Steven Wilson страница 14

President Lincoln's Secret - Steven  Wilson

Скачать книгу

Fitz said.

      “Every report places him here,” Tooke said. “That’s what I’ve been able to learn. When he has traveled to Quebec City before, he stayed in various hotels, under assumed names.” He pulled a notebook from his pocket and glanced at Fitz apologetically for the interruption. “I want to be sure of my facts,” he explained, refreshing his memory and continuing. “Just over six feet, heavy set, white hair, in his midfifties, very belligerent and impatient. Very particular about his meals, and prefers the company of—”

      “Yes,” Fitz said, “Presbyterians. Where is he now?”

      “We don’t know,” Tooke said. “I don’t know. He does have rooms at the St-Denis, but no one recalls seeing him for some days.”

      “How long, exactly?” Fitz said.

      “That’s just it,” Tooke said. “He was so secretive about his comings and goings that no one is certain.”

      “Have you searched his rooms?”

      “Yes,” Tooke said. It was clear he found the idea troubling. “I don’t like snooping about another man’s room. It is ungentlemanly.”

      “Advance to spying, Mr. Tooke,” Fitz said. “See how you feel about that.”

      “Did you find anything of substance, Mr. Tooke?” Asia asked.

      “Well,” Tooke said, “there is one thing.” He pulled his heavy coat to one side and dug through his clothing. He held up a small, leather-bound notebook, about four inches by six inches. The edges were worn, and the cover was speckled with stains. He handed it to Fitz.

      “What is it?” Fitz asked, trying to open it with one hand. Asia took it from him and opened it. As she turned the pages, one after another, Fitz saw on each a wild array of numbers, drawings, and indecipherable notations.

      “I have no idea,” Tooke said. “It’s his, Professor Abbott’s. I found it in his valise, but—” He stopped, letting the mysterious contents of the book finish his explanation.

      “You found the valise in his rooms?” Fitz asked. “Then he was close by, or had been so recently?”

      “No, sir. I had the place under observation. Several of the hotel staff were paid to keep me informed should he return. He never appeared. He abandoned the valise.”

      “Was there nothing else in the valise?” Asia asked.

      “No,” Tooke said. “Nothing of importance. A few personal things. Books. Newspapers. Unfortunately, Inspector De Brule has the valise.”

      “De Brule?” Fitz said.

      “The Crown Inspector. I approached him several times to assist us. He was very polite but absolutely useless. He is a very odd person.”

      “This adventure is filled with odd people,” Fitz said, prepared to be unimpressed.

      “De Brule is quite wealthy, and he counts many influential people as his friends. People say that he has his position because of his ability to gather information, embarrassing information, about high-ranking officials. He is also decidedly anti-Union, and vocally pro-Southern,” Tooke said. “He always appears to be helpful, but in the end it is only an appearance.”

      “How did he come to have Professor Abbott’s valise?” Asia asked.

      Tooke hesitated. “He took it from me, as I was leaving Abbott’s rooms. It was by good fortune that I had slipped his notebook into my pocket.” Asia was about to hand the book to Tooke, but the young man shook his head. “Please keep it. You might be able to divine some meaning from its contents. I can’t.”

      “Do you know the Southern agents in the city?” Fitz asked. “Could they be involved in Abbott’s disappearance?”

      The carriage stopped, and Tooke wiped the condensation from the window and looked out. “Here is the St-Denis.”

      The carriage bucked as the driver alighted. The door flew open and a blast of cold air announced they must abandon the warmth of the vehicle.

      The lobby of the St-Denis was small, Fitz noted, not as luxurious as Willard’s but comfortable, inviting, with a scattering of divans, tables, and surprisingly, given the intense cold outside, potted plants. Fitz was about to ask Asia what kind of plants could possibly survive this extreme weather, but decided against it. She had chided him on his lack of knowledge about flora. In a pique his only reply had been, “I know grass and trees. That should suffice.”

      “I’ll see to your rooms,” Tooke said, hurrying to the front desk.

      “How are you?” Fitz asked. He had been planning his questions carefully the entire trip, knowing that his efforts to inquire after Asia’s well-being often had ended in disaster. She would lapse into silent periods, sometimes emerge in a defensive mood, and then seeing that he was hurt and confused, become contrite. He had been watching her closely, sensing that whatever troubled her in Washington had made the trip with them. When her attention drifted away from their journey to the passing countryside, he began to develop his strategy. He vowed to keep his temper in check and to mask the irritation that arose when he found himself sinking deeper and deeper into the morass of misunderstood emotions.

      Asia Dunaway looked at her husband, surprised at the suddenness of the inquiry. “Well, Fitz. A little tired, of course.” Her smile told him she was aware there was more lurking behind that question. “Why?”

      Fitz stepped aside as a cart bearing their luggage passed by.

      “You were—” Fitz began. “You don’t seem yourself.”

      Her sadness returned. “It is nothing,” she said. “The length of the journey.”

      “It was before we came to Quebec City,” Fitz said, trying to keep his thoughts in order. He would be logical about this, he reminded himself, and not let his feelings intrude. “Sometimes I find you as you have always been, but then a cloud comes over you, and I suspect I have done something.”

      “It is not that, Fitz. Let us not speak of it now.”

      “But when I ask, you change the subject, or—”

      “Well, here we are,” Tooke said, suddenly appearing. “Room 221. Your bags should be there now. All we need do is follow the porter. Is something wrong?”

      Fitz felt defeated. He was tired and his arm throbbed, and he knew he did not have the reserve to wage a campaign that required delicacy and understanding. And yet here was the woman he loved, at times so distant she might have been a stranger, deflecting his attempts to reach her. He realized he had failed her somehow, and for the first time a thought emerged he had done his best to keep submerged: Was there someone else?

      “Perhaps if you retire to your rooms for a brief respite?” Tooke suggested.

      “Why don’t you go on,” Fitz said, struggling to remain calm. He was angry at Asia, with her secrecy, with his inability to return his wife to the person she was.

      “Yes,” she said, following the porter.

      “Let us go to the consul offices,” Fitz

Скачать книгу