As they approached Duke Street, a short, auburn haired woman emerged from that narrow thoroughfare, moving with angry strides and muttering to herself. A dark green chintz skirt with three flounces picked up the light from a distant gas lamp, revealing yellow flowers of some kind in the cloth. Her black coat had once been very fine, with imitation fur at the collars, cuffs, and pockets. A black straw bonnet trimmed with green and black velvet and black beads was tilted rakishly on her hair. The woman was strikingly familiar, Maybrick couldn’t immediately think why.
“ . . . lousy bastard,” she was growling to herself, not having seen them yet, “give you two whole florins, I will, he says, if you can get me to spend! How was I to know he was so sodding impotent, he hadn’t managed it in a whole year . . . Half a damned hour wasted on him and not tuppence to show for it! I’ve got to find somebody who can read that blasted letter of Annie’s, that’s what, get some real money out of it. The newspapers will give me a reward, that’s what I told the superintendent of the casual ward, and I meant it, by God! If I could just get a reward, now, maybe I could take John to a regular hospital, not a workhouse infirmary . . .”
Lachley closed his hand around Maybrick’s wrist, halting him. Recognition struck like a rolling clap of thunder. Catharine Eddowes! Wild exultation blasted straight through him. Lachley hissed, “I’ll lure her down to Mitre Square, in City jurisdiction . . .”
Yes, yes, get on with it! His hand already ached where he gripped his own long-bladed knife. Maybrick faded back into the shadows, leaving Lachley to approach the angry prostitute, whom they’d last seen so drunk she could scarcely stand up. Clearly, the evening’s stay in jail had sobered her up nicely. Good! Her terror would be worse, cold sober.