“Yes,” she said again, her slight smile at odds with the atmosphere of terror and misery in the kitchen, “Michael will take me back, Catharine. So tell me the news, it’s been an age since I saw you.”
“Oh, I’m fine enough, Liz. But these killings . . .” Catharine Long shuddered. “And the police are such hopeless fools. You heard what Sir Charles Warren’s done?”
Liz shook her head, not particularly interested in what the head of the Metropolitan police force did. As long as a woman kept moving and didn’t try to stand in one place, coppers generally didn’t bother her. “No, I haven’t heard.”
“He’s taken every single East End detective off the beat! Assigned them to patrol west London. And he’s switched about the West End detectives to patrol Whitechapel and Spitalfields and the docklands. Have you ever heard of suchlike? Why, the detectives out there don’t even know the street names, let alone the alleyways this madman must be using to escape!”
A woman seated beside them moaned and rocked back and forth. “They don’t care about us, so they don’t! All they want is to show the ruddy newsmen they’ve put a few coppers on the street. Not a man Jack of ’em gives a fig for the likes of us. Now if it was fine ladies he were cuttin’ up, they’d have a policeman in every house, so they would . . .”
Liz and Catharine Long exchanged a long, silent look. It was only too true, after all. Despite the show of putting extra men on the beat, both women knew they would have to defend themselves. Liz clutched the handle of her knife through her worn skirts and held back a shiver. Perhaps she ought to just burn the letter?