The Fleet Street Murders
day.
    “I must go,” Lenox said to McConnell. “I’ll see you for supper?”
    “Can’t I tag along and help you campaign?”
    “Tomorrow, certainly—but have another afternoon of rest, won’t you?”
    McConnell still looked disheveled, and Lenox, though he had never been embarrassed by a friend before, felt he couldn’t march around Stirrington with the doctor now. How politics had already changed him! It wasn’t clear whether McConnell understood Lenox’s motives, but without any further protest he agreed to spend the afternoon on his own.
    Lenox’s mind fairly swarmed with ideas. It would have been useful, in fact, to ask McConnell to look at Hiram Smalls’s body, but now the doctor was here; still, work might be the best thing for him. If there was any possibility of foul play, Lenox might ask him to return.
    Sandy Smith turned out to be a small, dark-haired, and precise-looking man, a contrast to the vast Crook. He wore glasses, a short-brimmed hat, and a snug gray waistcoat, and constantly checked a gold pocket watch that sat in a small pocket therein. He shook Lenox’s hand enthusiastically and repeated several times that he thought their chances were better than anyone realized, which was cheering to hear.
    Soon enough they arrived at a small, square park, full of bright green grass and low, well-maintained trees.
    “This is Sawyer Park,” said Smith. He gestured to the arcades that ringed it. “Many of our finest shops are here—there you see my law office—and the apartments above the arcades are very eligible indeed. Mr. Roodle’s agent has that shop, the milliner’s.”
    “I don’t see much of a crowd.”
    Smith looked at his watch. “We have twenty minutes yet. Nobody wants to close shop or leave work much before they have to, but there’ll be a hundred people here, give or take. How many have you been speaking to generally?”
    “Yesterday? Only twenty or thirty at a time. More like meetings than speeches.”
    “Well, I hope you’re in good voice.”
    “I think I am. The issues shall carry us, I expect.”
    “Well,” said Smith doubtfully, “people around here are fond of a good speech.”
    “Shall I take questions?”
    He laughed. “Yes, whether you like to or not.”
    “I see.”
    Smith and Lenox spent the next few minutes shaking hands with people who happened to pass by. Some of these stayed in the park, others left and then returned with a friend, and soon there was a sizable crowd amassed on the small green, even larger than a hundred people. Lenox felt nervous, but he had practiced on the smaller crowds and knew he could deliver his speech. His anxiety now went toward the questions, which might well be rude or mocking. I must remember to maintain my own manner, he thought; there’s nothing I can do about anybody else’s.
    At last he went to the small raised platform that served as a kind of Speakers’ Corner and delivered his speech. It went off fairly well, drawing appreciative laughter and confirming hisses at the right moments.
    Then came the questions.
    The first was already dangerous. “Why would you care about Stirrington?” a man a few feet off to the side asked.
    “Because there’s an election here!” somebody farther back shouted, and everyone laughed.
    “It’s true that I’m here because of this by-election,” Lenox said when the noise had died down, “but I’m here because I care about every corner of England and all her people, and Stirrington is just as much a part of this country as Sussex, where I’m from, or London, where I live. People here, like people anywhere, want a decent wage, a strong government, and”—here Lenox gulped back his pride—“a fair price for beer.”
    This answer earned Lenox a round of applause.
    “What’s a fair price?”
    “Less than you’re paying,” the candidate answered.
    “Do you drink?”
    “Not right now, thanks.”
    Another laugh, and Lenox felt he was getting the hang of the questions. A little

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