“We’d best not walk it, then,” Tanglewood muttered, “that’s a bloody long way from Stepney to Rotherhithe and Bermondsey. There’s a tram line nearby, we’ll catch the next tram heading west. When do the other ships go, Jackson?”
He used his cap to protect the ink on his list. “Eleven o’clock, Blackwell Basin, West India Docks. Two p.m., Import Basin, East India Docks. Seven o’clock this evening, Royal Albert Dock.”
“He might try for a later ship,” Margo mused as they located the tram stop. “Just to give himself time to pull together the kit of goods he’ll need. Money, clothing, sundries, a packing case or duffel bag to hold them in.”
“We might get lucky at the secondhand shops, if the transit offices don’t pan out,” Noah Armstrong said quietly. Armstrong didn’t say much, but listened with an almost frightening attentiveness and the detective’s ideas were always sound. The tram arrived a moment later, glistening a wet, cheerful red, its sides covered in advertisements. They managed to secure seats on the lower level, where they could sit out of the rain. Passengers on the upper deck sat huddled under the open sky, with rain pouring down their collars despite umbrellas that turned the top of the tram into a lumpy, domed canopy. The horses snorted, shaking their great, dappled heads against the downpour, and chewed at their bits, jingling their harness bells and tugging at the reins, then the tram rumbled into motion along the tracks.
They crossed the Thames, its grey water choppy in the storm. Hundreds of river taxis and sailing ships bobbed like forlorn, waterlogged birds. Steamers chugged and churned their way through the leaden water, spewing coal smoke into the dark sky. Rain spattered against the tram’s windows, bringing Skeeter’s spirits even lower as he caught sight of the vast Surrey Commercial Docks on the southern shore of the river. Surrey was exclusively commercial, offering no passenger service, which meant security would be tighter.