“They can’t keep her there forever, God curse her! And if she shows them that letter, I’ll set fire to the whole bloody police station, blow up the bleeding gas main under it!” He jerked his black cloth cap down further over his brow, all but concealing his face, even from Dominica’s low-light camera. “We’ll find Stride, follow her as we did the others, wait until she’s drunk, then I’ll approach her and secure my letters. You can have her, afterwards.”
“Yes . . .”
“You remember the code, James, that we agreed upon, should anyone come upon us while we’re about our business?”
“Yes, yes,” Maybrick said, his voice a trifle impatient now, “if you see someone, you’ll cry Lipski! and I’ll do the same if I spot anyone.”
Lipski . . . The name of a poisoner who’d triggered a wave of anti-Semitic hatred in these streets the previous year. That hatred was sickeningly alive and well in the wake of the Ripper’s murders. John Lachley and James Maybrick were deliberately fanning the flames of anti-Semitism, throwing the police even further off their trail, by using a word like Lipski as a coded warning. Anyone hearing that particular name would automatically assume it was aimed at a foreign Jewish murderer, rather than a warning between conspirators.
No wonder the constabulary had never caught the Ripper. Diabolically clever, these two. But hardly a match for Dominica Nosette. She smiled to herself as they returned to Flower and Dean Street, heading to the doss house at number 32 in search of Elizabeth Stride. And this time, they hit paydirt straightaway. The kitchen entrance opened, spilling light and warmth into the blustery night. Elizabeth Stride paused in the doorway, speaking to someone in the kitchen.