The Merchant and the Rogue by Sarah M. Eden
Vera stepped back inside the shop just as Ganor was approaching the door.
He dipped his head to her. “I’ll see you come Tuesday, Miss Vera.”
“Actually, do you have a minute more?”
He eyed her a moment, brows angled low. “Something amiss?”
The shop was full with customers milling about. That made for a whole heap of perked ears and open eyes.
“Why don’t I hover about the place for a time?” he suggested. “Then we can talk when the shop is quieter.”
“I’d appreciate it,” she said. “But I can’t pay you for an extra day of—”
“Vera.” He took her hand, sending a bolt of lightning straight through her. “I’m here today as a friend.”
A friend.That somehow weighed on her heart and brought a smile to her face all at the same time. “I can’t remember the last time I had a friend, unless you count the characters in Mr. King’s stories. They start to feel like friends by the time he finishes a tale.”
“What of the characters in Mr. Donnelly’s stories?”
“I’m usually terrified of them by the time I’m done.”
Ganor laughed quietly. He still held her hand, and he walked with her the rest of the way into the shop. Though she had work enough to do, she wished they could remain just as they were. “Why is it you think authors are so crooked?” he asked.
“We’ve known enough of them and suffered enough because of them.” Vera sighed. “Devious lot, the whole of them. But, then, they spend their days writing falsehoods; only stands to reason they’d have false lives as well.”
It was a damning evaluation, to be sure. Did she not see any redeeming value in writers?
“Their writing has given you friends,” he said. “That’s at least something in their favor.”
She regretfully slipped her hand from his, taking up a stack of papers that needed to be put away. “I don’t know how to make sense of it all. And I’ve a heap too much on my mind at the moment to try twigging so big a question.”
He motioned with his head toward the browsing customers. “You see to your work. When the shop’s not so busy, you can tell me a little of what’s weighing on you.”
Ganor was as good as his word. He wandered about the shop, talking with customers, teasing Olly, encouraging Licorice. And he smiled at her. Often. Beyond the way it flipped her heart about in her chest, it was a comforting connection she needed more than she’d realized.
She’d not been lying when she told him she had few friends. She couldn’t really say she had any since coming to Soho. The shop kept her too busy. Papa’s wariness of new people kept her too isolated.
But Ganor had found his way past all of that. He’d shown himself to be kind and thoughtful. He’d brought the children scarves and had more than once supplied her with roasted chestnuts simply because he knew she liked them. He was funny and personable. She enjoyed talking with him and was certain he felt the same way. If only he could be in the shop every day.
The afternoon passed. The children collected their day’s coins and went on their way, Olly with a salute and Licorice with a quiet word of parting. Soon enough, the shop was empty except for Vera and Ganor.
He joined her at the counter. “Why don’t you spill your thoughts while I help you close up?”
She nodded. “But don’t lock up. I’ve people coming later.”
“Do you, now?”
She began moving prints and pens and parchment from the displays to the drawers where they were kept. Ganor saw to the end-of-day sweeping.
“Do you remember the note I got last week offering to keep an eye on the shop and see to our safety?”
“For a quid, if I recall rightly.”
“Exactly.” She glanced over her shoulder at him.“There was another note from the Protector today, telling me this week’s payment would be collected tomorrow.”
His head tipped to the side, the way one often did when pondering on something surprising. “I didn’t realize ’twas more than the one payment.”
“Neither did I. And I haven’t the first idea who’s behind it, so I cain’t even ask questions.” She pulled the money box from the cash drawer. “Will he be asking £1 every week? And what’s he doing, exactly, for that quid? And if he’s made this promise to so many of the businesses on the street, can he promise to have enough eyes and ears hereabout to keep all safe who’re paying for it?”
“Hold, hold, hold.” He stood with the broom in one hand, but his attention fully on her. “Others in the area have received the same offer?”
She nodded. “Peter said he’s heard of it from quite a few. I’m having as many as’ll come to the shop tonight to see if we can’t twig the thing.”
“Twig, meaning ‘sort out,’ if I remember.”
She smiled. “I’ll have you sounding South London before too long.”
“Not if I have you sounding Irish first.”
She did enjoy when he flirted. “You’d have to spend a heap more time here for me to work that miracle.”
“Is that an invitation?” he asked, his voice low and warm. Quick as anything, his dashing expression dissolved into laughter. “I shouldn’t enjoy making you blush, lass. It ain’t charitable of me.”
Her heart leapt about, something it often did when he was nearby. “I don’t mind.”
“So, you don’t know who’s leaving the notes, but do you at least know who’s collecting the payment?” he said.
“Oi, but it ain’t anyone I’ve seen before, and he ain’t been in here since.”
He took up his sweeping. “You’re hoping someone else knows more.”
“I’m probably making an ocean out of a puddle,” she said. “But this ain’t the sort of mystery I like. It has me a bit unsettled.”
“Would you mind terribly if I hover about for your meeting tonight?” Ganor asked.
“I’d appreciate if you did.” And not merely because it’d mean spending some extra time with him, something she enjoyed even more than she’d let on. Having another mind spinning over the mystery would increase their odds of solving it.
Vera stood in the shop that night looking over the familiar and worried faces of her neighbors. The window shades were pulled down, giving them a whisper of privacy. Papa had returned from his errand a bit pensive, focused to the point of near silence. She wasn’t certain what that meant, but it was keeping him in the flat above the shop, making this meeting far less complicated.
Having called for the gathering, Vera was the evening’s foreman of the jury. Best get to it.
“Two weeks ago, I received a note,” she said, “promising to watch over this shop, in light of the burglary at the tobacconists, for the price of £1. Today, I found another note—”
“—about the next payment,” Mr. Overton tossed in, understanding dawning in his face and tone.
Vera nodded. “And I’ll confess, I’m more than a touch confused. The first note said nothing about any more payments.”
Murmurs of acknowledgment hummed around the room.
Peter spoke up from the back, surrounded by a few street sellers. “Ours is a touch different. This ‘Protector’ must know we ain’t got a quid to hand over. We’re being asked a sixpence.”
“Have any of you seen who’s leaving these notes?” she asked the group.
“I haven’t,” Mr. Okeke said.
“Me either.” Mr. Bianchi, whose misfortune had led to all this, was present as well. Apparently, he was being offered protection too.
Heads were shaking all around.
Vera looked at Ganor, sitting amongst her neighbors. He was jotting notes on a small writing pad. He truly meant to help her make sense of this, and he’d managed to do so without shoving her to the side.
“Has anyone made a second payment?” she asked the group.
“We have,” Mrs. Murphy said.
“Same bloke collected as last time?” Vera pressed.
Mr. Murphy shook his head.
“It’s curious.” Vera couldn’t make heads nor tails of any of it.
“May be strange methods,” Mr. Bianchi said, “but the street’s been peaceful this past week. That’s worth having a few unanswered questions.”
“I’d still like to know who the Protector is,” Mr. Okeke said. “I need to know how many payments we’re meant to make, and if we can bring the cost down a touch if we can’t afford it.”
“I agree,” Mr. Overton said.
“So do I.” Vera leaned against the counter. “How many of you, if you tossed it around your brain box a bit, could draft a list of the people who’d been in your shop or business the days you found your notes?” Seeing worry enter the faces of the two misses—the sort Soho was known for—and, knowing their profession made saying too much a dangerous thing, she quickly added, “Memories can be patchy, obviously. It wouldn’t need to be a full list.”
“The street sellers’ll never remember everyone,” Peter said. “Hundreds pass by our carts every day.”
She nodded. “You’d likely do better to set your mind to anything or anyone unusual.”
Peter turned to his fellow mongers and a low conversation began.
Vera looked over to the merchants and neighbors gathered as well. “What say the lot of you, then?”
They all agreed to do what they could. The group milled about, bemoaning their troubles and tallying their odds. Gemma, one of the misses, approached, concern in her eyes.
“Something else weighing on you?” Vera asked in a low voice.
She nodded quickly.
“Are you in danger?” Clare, who stood nearby, asked. Though Vera didn’t know her line of work, she didn’t think Clare belonged to Gemma’s profession.
“We’re all of us always in some danger.” Gemma turned back to Vera. “But leading this charge, as you are, could be the Protector won’t appreciate it. Might be you’ll rue trying to identify him.”
“Could be.” She’d not deny it were risky. “Bein’ afraid ain’t reason enough to not do things that are important.”
“You’re either very brave or very foolish,” Gemma said.
She was likely a little of both. But she also wasn’t alone. She could depend on Ganor; she knew she could. Vera pasted an unbothered smile on her face. “I suppose time’ll tell, won’t it?”
“It always does,” Clare said. “Always.”