Kill-Devil and Water pm-3

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Kill-Devil and Water pm-3 Page 2

by Andrew Pepper


  ‘Why cut out her eyes?’ Tilling said, reading his mind.

  ‘And why sprinkle her face and body with quicklime but leave a scrap of paper in her dress with the name and address of a lodging house?’

  Pyke bent forward and sniffed the body. He’d smelled the odour as soon as he’d stepped into the room but hadn’t been able to place it. Not simply the ripeness of putrefying flesh, but something sweeter, tangier.

  ‘You said a half-empty bottle of rum was found next to the corpse?’ he said, ignoring Hart.

  ‘That’s right,’ Tilling replied.

  ‘Here.’ Pyke stepped aside to let Tilling do what he’d just done. ‘Can you smell it on her?’

  ‘The rum?’

  ‘On her body. All over it, in fact.’

  Tilling offered Pyke a puzzled stare. ‘What are you suggesting? That she was embalmed with rum?’

  ‘Perhaps.’ Pyke took another look at the body, particularly the colour of her skin. ‘I wouldn’t describe her as Negro but could we say she was mulatto?’

  ‘For what it’s worth,’ Hart interrupted, ‘that would be my opinion on the matter.’

  ‘That she was mulatto?’ Tilling asked.

  The coroner shrugged. ‘Well, look at the swarthiness of her skin here and here,’ he said, pointing to her hands and wrists.

  ‘Yes, I suppose.’

  ‘Together with the rum,’ Hart said, looking warily at Pyke, ‘it could mean she had some kind of connection to the West Indies.’ He waited for a moment. ‘After all, those people are a law unto themselves, aren’t they?’

  Tilling and Pyke looked at one another, frowning.

  ‘Well, do you honestly believe a godly white man would have done that to her?’ Hart added defensively.

  ‘Are you saying that someone with darker skin than you or I is naturally predisposed to gouge people’s eyes out?’ Pyke asked.

  ‘I didn’t say that… I simply meant that the negro race is more predisposed towards savagery. Science has proved this to be so.’

  Pyke looked again at the dead woman and tried to work out whether her features were Caucasian or not.

  ‘I’ve been in touch with the magistrate at Shadwell. The inquest will take place here, in this room, tomorrow at ten. After that, if no one has claimed her, someone will have to make arrangements for her burial.’ Hart put his scalpel back into his bag and snapped the fastener shut. ‘Otherwise the stink will become unbearable.’

  Tilling thanked Hart for his work and ushered him to the staircase. ‘You’ll recommend that the jury deliver a verdict of wilful murder, won’t you?’ Pyke overheard Tilling say to the coroner.

  Pyke went to cover the body with a sheet. A few moments later Tilling joined him.

  ‘So you want me to find the man who did this to her?’ Pyke asked eventually.

  Tilling nodded. ‘Don’t tell me you’re not interested. I can see it in your eyes.’

  Pyke walked across to the window and stared down into the yard below. It felt strange, disconcerting even, to be free all of a sudden. ‘What I am interested to know is why a man in your elevated position, and with your newfound responsibilities, would consider employing the services of a lowly convict.’ He paused. ‘The last time I checked, there were something like three thousand men working for the New Police.’

  ‘And how many of those men do you think have been trained to run an investigation of this type? Of any type.’ Tilling sighed. ‘You know as well as I do that the emphasis has always been placed on prevention rather than detection. That was Peel’s intention when he first proposed the force ten years ago and it still holds true today.’

  This much was true. Contrary to the belief of Pyke’s mentor at Bow Street, Sir Richard Fox, Peel and subsequent Home Secretaries for Melbourne’s Liberal governments had argued that the role of the police was not to investigate crimes after they had taken place but to prevent them from happening by crowding the streets with policemen. For his part, Pyke had always found this reasoning to be obtuse. To prevent crime, you needed to find a way of eradicating poverty — something no politician wanted to do. Until then, all you could hope to do was go after the worst offenders and use every dirty trick and every soiled piece of information to put them behind bars.

  ‘You’re telling me that the Metropolitan Police doesn’t have any specialist detectives?’ Pyke turned around. ‘I don’t believe that for a minute. What usually happens when someone is murdered?’

  Tilling considered this. ‘I suppose you wouldn’t have seen or read the newspapers in Marshalsea.’

  ‘What do you think?’ In fact he hadn’t read a newspaper for more than nine months.

  ‘Two days ago Lord William Bedford was murdered in his own bed, while he slept. He was stabbed in the stomach with a letter opener.’

  ‘Return to sender, eh?’

  Tilling stared at him. ‘Do you think for one moment that’s amusing?’

  Pyke shrugged.

  ‘I don’t think you appreciate the pressure we’re under to apprehend the murderer.’ Tilling wiped his forehead and thinning pate with his handkerchief. ‘Bedford is, or was, a well-respected member of the aristocracy. If we don’t find his murderer quickly, we’ll face public ridicule and political censure.’

  ‘And because of that, you don’t have the time or resources to lavish on a poor mulatto woman who had the misfortune to be murdered at the same time.’

  Pyke could see he’d landed a small blow; Tilling gave him a grudging nod. ‘You always did have the ability to see through bluster.’

  ‘So who killed Bedford?’

  ‘At present, I have no idea. But as you can probably guess, our much-lauded press has already worked itself up into a frenzy of speculation.’

  ‘And all your best men have been assigned to the investigation.’

  Tilling grimaced. ‘The commissioner, Sir Richard Mayne, has taken control of the case but he’s handed over the day-to-day responsibilities to two of our best detectives: Inspector Baker and this chap called Benedict Pierce. I’m told he used to be a Bow Street Runner. Perhaps you know him?’

  Pyke didn’t even try to hide his disdain. Pierce was an unlikely combination of Christian piety and ruthless ambition — hence the kind of man who attributed the wealth he accrued to God’s grace rather than his own grubby machinations.

  ‘Let me guess. In the meantime, Mayne’s instructed you to take care of this “lesser” problem. Or make it appear as if you’re taking care of it.’

  ‘I see prison has made you even more cynical.’

  ‘I wonder how Mayne would feel if he knew you were offering work to a jailbird such as myself?’

  ‘If it came down to it, I could persuade him. Mayne listens to Peel and you know you still have a friend there.’

  A few years earlier, while he’d still owned his own bank, Pyke had unwittingly done battle with, and vanquished, one of the Tory leader’s most feared political adversaries, and he had yet to call in the favour.

  Pyke turned back to the window and stared up at the sky. It felt oddly exhilarating to see it without the imposition of bars or walls. And he had already decided to do what Tilling was asking him to do; it would be a way of trying to redeem himself in the eyes of his son. ‘I’ll need some money to live off and a purse to run the investigation.’

  Tilling nodded but waited for a few moments. ‘Five pounds a week, until the killer is caught.’

  Pyke turned back to face Tilling and shook his head. ‘Not enough.’

  ‘That’s more than a sergeant would earn.’ Tilling crossed his arms. ‘Of course, I could always take you back to Marshalsea.’

  ‘Fifteen.’

  It must have been the way Pyke said it which angered Tilling because almost at once his colour rose. ‘You’re acting as if I’ve come to you holding a begging cup. In fact, you’re quite right. I could get a hundred men to do this job but I thought you might appreciate the chance to make a fresh start — if not for yourself, then for your son.
’ Tilling’s expression softened. ‘Look, Pyke, I don’t see this as an act of charity. You’re the best detective I’ve ever known. But if you sink any deeper into the quagmire, you might not find a way back.’

  Pyke considered Tilling’s outburst, admiring the man’s doggedness but hating him for being right. He nodded slowly.

  ‘So you’ll do it? You’ll find the man who did this to her?’ Tilling looked at him, expectantly.

  ‘I’ll see what I can find out. I’m not making any promises.’

  ‘None expected.’ Tilling waited. ‘What do you need?’

  ‘I’ll need an artist with a strong constitution and a sense of discretion who can sketch as good a likeness as is possible under the circumstances.’

  ‘Anything else?’

  ‘Some money to get things started.’

  Tilling threw him a purse. ‘There’s twenty pounds. That should be enough for now.’ Pyke caught the purse and pocketed it without inspecting the contents. ‘Won’t you get into trouble for hiring my services?’

  Tilling shrugged. ‘I might, but that’s for me to worry about.’

  Lifting up the sheet, Pyke had another look at the woman’s mutilated face, but it wasn’t necessary. Every curve and undulation, every blemish and bruise, had already been lodged indelibly in his mind.

  TWO

  The landlord’s name was Thrale and he’d once been a bare-knuckled fighter. Pyke didn’t recognise him straight away, even though he’d seen the man fight William Benbow ten or fifteen years earlier. Thrale told them that the woman’s name was Mary Edgar; that she had rented a private room in his lodging house about a week ago and had paid in advance; and that she’d shared the room with a black man called Arthur Sobers, who, until that point, had been staying in one of the general rooms for two pence a night. Sobers, Thrale said, had first shown up about three weeks earlier, having just arrived on a ship from Jamaica. Thrale seemed to be in awe of Sobers’ physical presence and he struck Pyke as the kind of man who worshipped toughness, even though his own body was now old and broken. Pyke recalled the fight he’d witnessed all those years ago. In the end, Benbow had taken Thrale apart, punch by punch, but the beaten man had refused to lie down. It was as bloody a spectacle as he’d ever seen. Thrale should have stayed down but didn’t. That told Pyke something about his character.

  ‘So the two of them, Mary Edgar and this man Sobers, were intimate with one another already?’

  ‘I’d say so.’ Thrale’s nose had been broken in numerous places.

  ‘You’d say so or you know so?’

  ‘She told me she wasn’t used to the cold, coming from Jamaica. He told me he was just off the ship from the West Indies. They shared a room. The rest I worked out for myself.’

  When they had shown Thrale her body, he hadn’t flinched, not even when he saw her face. He’d identified her immediately, and when Pyke had tried to push him — how could he be so certain, given the mutilations and the effects of quicklime? — Thrale had shrugged and said he just knew. He’d identified her dress, too. He’d seen her wearing it the night before she was killed.

  ‘Is Sobers still staying at the lodging house?’

  ‘Ain’t seen him for a couple of days.’ Thrale scratched his chin. ‘You think he done it?’

  ‘That was going to be my next question.’

  ‘How should I know? He’s a tough one, that’s for sure. Apart from that, he didn’t give much away, kept himself to himself. She did, too.’

  ‘You think they were attached?’

  ‘You mean was they fucking?’ His grin revealed an incomplete set of uneven, yellow teeth.

  ‘That’s one way of putting it.’

  Thrale considered the question. ‘They was sharing a room not much larger than a cell. They’d have to be intimate.’

  ‘But you don’t know what brought them to London in the first place?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘Or which ship they came on?’

  ‘I didn’t say for certain they’d come on the same ship. He told me he was just off the ship; but he didn’t mention a name. She said she was from Jamaica. That’s all. I don’t like to pry into my guests’ affairs.’

  Pyke waited for a moment. ‘You described him as black. Would you say she was a mulatto?’

  ‘A blue-skin?’ Thrale looked into his face. ‘If I walked past her on the street, I’m not sure what I’d think. She could certainly have passed as white.’

  ‘Anything else you can tell me about her?’

  Thrale sniffed and then stared down at the corpse, now covered with the sheet. ‘I ain’t disparaging my lodging house or the folk who stay there. But she was nicely dressed and well spoken. She looked as out of place as a butterfly in a cage of rats.’

  Pyke thought about the scrap of paper they’d found in her dress. It was almost as if the man who’d killed her had wanted them to find out who she was and that she’d stayed at the Bluefield. ‘But you didn’t ask her why she’d chosen to rent one of your rooms?’

  ‘Like I said, I don’t pry into my guests’ affairs.’

  Pyke told him they’d need to find Arthur Sobers as soon as possible and that he would have to search the room and put some questions to Thrale’s lodgers about Mary Edgar. He arranged to drop by the Bluefield later that afternoon and made Thrale promise not to disturb the room — and, if he saw Sobers, not to tell him what had happened.

  ‘He seemed like a fine chap,’ Thrale said, ‘but I guess, with blackbirds, you just never know.’

  Pyke asked Thrale whether he’d stay until the artist arrived, so that between them they could come up with a sketch of the dead woman.

  ‘I saw you fight Benbow, must have been fifteen years ago,’ he said, while they waited.

  ‘Hardest fight of my life.’

  Pyke nodded. ‘At the time I thought you should have stayed down.’

  ‘And now?’

  ‘You did what you had to.’

  Thrale looked at him with new respect. ‘I’d stayed down, I might as well have ended me life then and there.’

  After the artist had sketched what Thrale reckoned to be a reasonable likeness of the dead woman, Pyke took a hackney carriage back to his uncle’s apartment in Camden Town. On the way he asked the driver to stop at a slop-shop in Battle Bridge where he purchased a presentable frock-coat, and on Camden Place he paid a barber to trim his hair and whiskers. He got all the way to the pavement outside the apartment before realising that he didn’t have anything for Felix. Not knowing what kind of gift was appropriate for a ten-year-old boy, Pyke dithered on the bottom step and was spotted through the front window by his uncle. A few moments later, the door swung open, and Godfrey hobbled down the steps to greet him.

  ‘Dear boy, is it really you?’ He took Pyke’s arms in his hands and squeezed them, as he had always done when trying to show affection. His cheeks might have been a little redder than Pyke remembered, and his hair a little whiter, but aside from that, he was the same as ever. ‘We weren’t expecting you for another month or two.’

  At the top of the steps, Pyke was greeted by Copper, a giant mastiff and former fighting dog that Pyke had unintentionally acquired a few years earlier when he’d shot one of its legs off with a pistol. Oddly enough, the animal hadn’t held this against him. Recognising him instantly, the three-legged beast hopped excitedly towards him, tail wagging. Pyke patted Copper on his black muzzle, accepting the licks to his hand, then looked up to see Felix holding the banister. He had come halfway down the inside stairs but didn’t seem to be ready to join them in the hallway. ‘Felix, my lad, come down here at once and greet your father,’ Godfrey called out.

  Felix didn’t move.

  Jo appeared from the back of the apartment; she was wearing a kitchen apron and her hair was tied up under a lace bonnet. ‘ Pyke.’ She hurried forward and they greeted one another awkwardly, a handshake and a kiss rolled into one. Although she was technically his servant, they had nonetheless become close in the years sinc
e Emily’s death. In that time, Pyke had also become aware that Felix had started to regard Jo as a surrogate mother, and he’d tried not to place too great a burden on her, but her kindness and good nature meant she had always been willing to help in whatever way she could.

  ‘You look well,’ Jo said. ‘You really do.’

  ‘And so do you.’ He meant it, too, but his gaze drifted up the stairs to where Felix was still standing.

  Jo noticed this and said to Felix, ‘Come down here at once, young man.’

  But Felix still refused to budge. Pyke took a few tentative steps towards him. ‘Felix?’ He waited for his son to look at him but the lad’s eyes were planted on his shoes. ‘Do you not recognise your own father?’ He tried to keep his tone light and breezy, not wanting any of them to see his bitter disappointment at Felix’s apparent indifference. In his head, he’d imagined the lad bounding down the stairs and throwing his arms around him.

  ‘Hello, Father,’ Felix mumbled. Then, without warning, he turned and disappeared up the stairs.

  Jo called out, ordering Felix to come back down ‘this minute’, a maternal firmness in her tone, but when nothing happened, she said she would go and drag him down if necessary. Pyke stepped forward and blocked her path. ‘It’s my fault. I should have given you time to prepare, time for Felix to adjust. Leave him for the moment. He’ll come round.’

  ‘I just can’t understand it,’ Godfrey said, shaking his head. ‘The boy talks about you constantly. Doesn’t he, my dear?’

  Jo smiled but her awkward reaction suggested she didn’t entirely concur with Godfrey’s assessment. Pyke thought about the way she had spoken to Felix, and the way Felix had taken her hand on the street earlier that day.

  ‘You’ll stay with us, though? I’m afraid you won’t have your own bedroom but if you don’t mind sharing the front room with Copper…’

  ‘Thank you, but the sooner I find my own accommodation, the better it’ll be for all of us.’ Pyke had intended to stay the night but the coolness of Felix’s reaction had wounded him and now all he wanted to do was be by himself.

 

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