Margo put in, “Women like poor Liz Stride would’ve hated her for it.”
Skeeter had seen enough pictures of Long Liz to know she’d been a mannish, horse-faced Swede, missing half her teeth, poor creature. Word was, her lover had been utterly devastated by her death. “Well,” Skeeter cleared his throat, “where do we start? I hadn’t realized the East End was so big.”
“Huh, this is nothing,” Margo put in. “You ought to see the docklands. They stretch out to forever.”
Malcolm cast a jaundiced eye at his fiancée. “I fear Mr. Jackson will have ample opportunity to tour the docklands before this business is done. Now that you’ve seen something of Whitechapel, Mr. Jackson, and have a feel for the territory, I would suggest we repair to Middlesex Street. If they’re supplying their wardrobe from the East End, it’s the likest spot to search.”
“I’m following you,” Skeeter said ruefully.
Malcolm led the way past Christchurch, which rose in startling white purity from the grime, and walked briskly down to Fashion Street, then cut over to Middlesex, a long block to the west. The Sunday cloth fair which had given the street its famous nickname was conspicuously absent, but shops selling ready-mades of a cheap cut, mostly stitched from mill-ends cloth, were open for business. Malcolm pushed open the door of the nearest, leaving Skeeter and Margo to follow. As the door swung shut with a solid thump, a well-scrubbed shop girl in a worn dress eyed them, taking in their fine clothes with a dubious, narrow-eyed stare.