by John Drake
Pieces Of Eight
John Drake
* * *
* * *
This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters
and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author's imagination.
Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities
is entirely coincidental.
HarperCollinsPublishers
77-85 Fulham Palace Road,
Hammersmith, London W6 8JB
www.harpercollins.co.uk
Published by HarperCollinsPublishers 2009
Copyright © John Drake 2009
John Drake asserts the moral right to
be identified as the author of this work
A catalogue record for this book
is available from the British Library
ISBN-13: 978-0-00-726895-5
Set in Sabon by Palimpsest Book Production Limited,
Grangemouth, Stirlingshire
Printed and bound in Great Britain by Clays Ltd, St Ives plc
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced,
stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means,
electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise,
without the prior written permission of the publishers.
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade
or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the
publisher's prior written consent in any form of binding or cover other than that
in which it is published and without a similar condition including
this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
* * *
For my son
my pride and inspiration,
my critic and my friend
.
* * *
Acknowledgements
Once again I thank the expert professionals whose advice and
guidance has made this a better book than ever an author
could produce by himself: my editors Julia Wisdom and
Anne O'Brien, and my agent Antony Topping.
* * *
* * *
Table of Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Afterword
* * *
Chapter 1
11 a.m., 15th November 1732
The Chapel, Salvation House
St Pancras Court, Opposite the Smallpox Hospital
London
The corpse lay in a lake of blood that drenched its pious black coat, its lank white hair, and the clerical bands that descended from its comprehensively slit throat where bone gleamed from the bottom of a tremendous slash. The mutilating fury of repeated knife strokes had rendered the face unrecognisable, such that the victim's identity was given only by his clothes and the wide-gaping mouth full of long brown teeth that were one reason - though not the only one - that he'd so seldom smiled in life.
"Good God!" said Captain Peter Garland. "Cover him up, and get the women out of here!" He looked to Mr Bains, the house steward, and then to the two menservants, and finally to the herd of maids and cooks peering in horror through the chapel door. But none of them moved.
"Pah!" said the captain, and set about doing the job himself. A sea-service officer in his thirties, Garland had faced shot and shell, and this wasn't the first time he'd dealt with dead men and the pieces of them. He stepped up to the altar, laid aside the wooden cross, ripped the white altar
cloth from its moorings and draped it across the body of his late brother-in-law, taking care that, whatever else showed, the face was covered.
"So!" said Captain Garland, looking away from the corpse to the bloodstains on the whitewashed walls. "What happened?"
Mr Bains was trying his best, but he was an elderly man, long in the reverend's service, who - along with the rest of the congregation - had thought him the font of all wisdom. And now here was the reverend dead and murdered in his own chapel! Bains stood weeping and wringing his hands with his entire world overturned, the women wailing at the sight of him and the two male servants snivelling besides.
"Brace up, man!" cried Captain Garland. "Brace up all of you, dammit."
"Yes, sir," said Bains. "Sorry, sir. We didn't know if you would come."
"What?" said Garland, "D'you think that man -" he pointed at the corpse "- could keep me from my sister? My Rebecca - her that was a mother to me when our own ma died?"
"God bless you, sir," said Bains.
"God bless you," said the rest.
"So! Where is she? And m'nephew?"
"Upstairs, sir. In the parlour."
They were halfway up the stairs when three blows sounded on the front door knocker, and everyone jumped. Again nobody moved so Garland went down and opened the door himself. Outside was a carriage and pair that he'd not even heard arrive, what with his mind so full of other things. A coachman stood in the doorway in his caped cloak and livery hat, wrapped in scarf and mittens against the cold.
"Ah!" said Garland, peering out into the miserable grey November where the coach body swayed as a fat gentleman in boots and greatcoat was helped down by one of his footmen. "Sir Charles!" he said, and ran forward to shake his friend's hand.
"Captain Garland!" said the other. "Came as soon as I got your note." He was a middle-aged, heavily overweight man, who moved slowly and breathed with difficulty, except when standing still or sitting down. "T'aint my jurisdiction, this," he cautioned, "and the proper authorities will need to be informed." he peered at Garland, "You do know that, don't you?"
"Yes-yes-yes!" But you must have experience of such cases."
"What cases?"
"Damned if I know, Sir Charles. It was only chance that I happened to be in London and Bains knew where to find me. I sent for you the moment I heard…" He looked around. "I've not set foot in this house in years!"
"Have you not?" said the other, and Garland saw that all eyes were on him.
"Now then!" he cried, clasping his hands behind his back. "Silence and pay heed! This gentleman is Sir Charles Wainwright, Police Magistrate at Bow Street, who is here to take this matter in hand." He looked at his friend. "Sir Charles…?" he said.
Sir Charles took charge. Getting the basic facts from Captain Garland, he directed a number of sharp questions at the reverend's servants, then stumped into the chapel - respectfully doffing his hat as he did so - and poked the cloth off the corpse with his walking stick.
"Bless my soul!" he said. "Not the sweetest sight, is he?"
"No," agreed Garland.
Sir Charles looked round the chapel, noting its severe simplicity, disdain of decoration, and rows of plain wooden chairs.
"What denomination worships here?" he asked. "Quaker? Moravian?"
"Presbyterian," said Garland. "A branch, at any rate: 'Church of the Revelationary Evangelists'. Or at least that's what they were calling themselves when last I was here."
"Aye," said Wainwright, nodding, "these dissenters are morbidly fissiparous."
"They're what?"
"Dividing: always dividing. That's what you get for denying the authority of the bishops!"
"Hmm," said Garland. "Well, he was very strong in his beliefs, my brother-in-law. It's why I was turned out of his house - for I used to be one of them, d'you see," he shrugged. "But I was in love with the service, and wanted to be like my shipmates and say chaplain's prayers."
Sir Charles turned from the hideous corpse, looked the chapel up and down, and sniffed.
"Place stinks of soap and polish. Never seen anywhere so clean in all my life, I do declare!"
"Huh!" said Garland. "That's the reverend! Detested dirt of all kinds. Every stick and pot scrubbed, and the servants made to bathe daily in a wash-house out the back."
"What?" said Sir Charles, incredulous. "Every day? It's a wonder they didn't leave him."
"Not they! Not once he'd got his hooks into 'em. Terrified, they were."
"Of him?"
"Him and his good friend the Devil!"
"What about the family? How did he treat them?"
For a moment Captain Garland seemed lost for words. He was a plain man bred up to a hard service where a loud voice satisfied all needs of communication… but that wouldn't do now.
"There's only his wife - m'sister Rebecca - and her son," he said. "And Rebecca… well, she was a woman, and to him all women were damned as pedlars of lust, while children were damned as fruits of lust…" He bowed his head in memory, "He used to say to them… he used to say to m'poor sister and her boy - and I heard this m'self, mind - he used to say…" Captain Garland stood silent as he tried to bring himself to repeat the words. Finally he shook his head, and rubbed the back of his hand across his eyes.
He looked at Sir Charles. "He weren't very nice to them. Can we leave it at that?"
"Bless my soul!" said Sir Charles, for Garland had shed tears. "Come along, Captain. Enough of this - let's see the widow."
The stairs to the first floor were a fearful obstacle to Sir Charles, and it was a long, slow climb, but finally - led by the miserable Bains - he and Garland entered the front parlour: another fiercely scrubbed room, almost bare of furnishings, where they found the reverend's wife and son, sitting waiting in a pair of Windsor armchairs.
"Good day, ma'am," said Sir Charles, advancing towards her, then stopping short as he saw the blood spattered over her clothes. The woman sat unmoved. She was a tired creature: wrinkled and prematurely old, with wispy hair and sad eyes.
"Ma'am?" repeated Sir Charles. But she never even blinked.
"Rebecca?" said Garland in a hushed voice, shocked at the sight of her. "It's me, m'dear. Little Peter that sat on your knee…" Odd as the words were from a grown man, they stirred the woman and she looked up at them.
"I did it," she said. "And it may not be denied, for 'Every man's work shall be made manifest' - First Corinthians, chapter three, verse thirteen! And I am not ashamed: 'I have fought a good fight. I have finished my course. I have kept the faith' - Second Timothy, four: seven! And if I have sinned, then, 'Charity shall cover the multitude of sins' - First Peter, four: eight!"
"Sir Charles," whispered Garland, "she's raving! She's come adrift and cast loose her moorings." But he whispered too loud.
"No!" said Rebecca sharply. "It is my husband who was mad! Thus I killed him because he had gone too far. 'Behold! Now is the accepted time' - Second Corinthians, six: eight!"
Sir Charles sighed and turned to the boy sitting alongside her.
"Now then, my lad -"
"He must have seen it, sir;" said Bains, who was hovering at the door. "He was in the chapel with her, sir. They went in together."
"Yes, yes!" said Sir Charles, waving the servant away. He turned back to the boy. "My lad, I am a magistrate and I must ask you what has gone on here?"
"I don't know, sir."
"Then why your mother covered in blood?"
"I don't know, sir."
Sir Charles asked more questions, but learned nothing. Finally he took Garland aside.
"He's a good boy. Credit to his mother, poor soul. He'll not betray her, while she, poor soul, has lost her mind. I've seen the like before: husband a bully, wife stands it twenty years, then one day takes a knife and stabs him fifty times!"
"Aye," said Garland, nodding, "that'd be the way of it - and the swine deserved it, too!' 'Tis only a pity she did it in front of the lad."
"Indeed," said Sir Charles, "But I know a doctor who'll say what's needed to keep her from the hangman and safe in a private madhouse." Sir Charles glanced at the boy. "What about him, though? Shall you take him?"
"That I shall!" said Garland. "I've no other family, aside from the sea-service, so I shall enter him as a gentleman volunteer, first-class, and it shall be my pleasure to help him up the ladder!" He turned to his nephew and, managed a smile: "Now then, young Joseph," he said, "come along o' your uncle Peter and you shall be a king's officer one day, and maybe even a captain. How'd you like the sound of Captain Flint?"
* * *
Chapter 2
Early morning, 30th September 1752
The southern anchorage
The island
"Remember," said Long John, "a round turn and two half-hitches! Keep it simple. Don't go trying to work a Turk's head, nor a cable-splice!"
Ratty Richards, ship's boy, grinned. "Aye-aye, Cap'n!" he said. Skinny, tired, and dripping wet, he was the only one of the seventy-one men and three boys on the island who could dive in six fathoms of water and still do a few seconds' work at the bottom.
"You sure, lad?" said Long John. "You've already had a good whack. You don't have to go again if you don't want to…"
"I'm ready, Cap'n!"
"Ah, you're a smart lad, you are. I knew it the moment I set eyes on you. So here's your sinker and in you go."
Splash! Ratty Richards rolled over the gunwale of the skiff into the cool water, one hand pinching his nose and the other clasping the heavy boulder that would take him down. As he sank, the safety line round his waist and the heavy rope looped through it paid out from their coils while Long John, Israel Hands, Sarney Sawyer and George Merry leaned over the side to see him go down.
"Bugger me!" said Israel Hands. "Is this goin' to work, John? I've lost count how many times he's been down." He sighed heavily. "Don't want to drown the lad."
"Oh?" said Long John. "Weren't it yourself as pleaded for the Spanish nine?" He jerked a thumb at the sea bed. "For myself, I'd not've tried to raise a twenty-six-hundredweight gun with this -" He looked at the two boats, joined by a pair of spars, floating with barely a yard between them. Long John and Sawyer were in the skiff, with Hands and Merry in the jolly-boat; Ratty Richards's rope fed into a heavy block suspended from the spars and then to an iron windlass that had been firmly bolted to the midships thwart of the jolly- boat. The block-and-tackles were sound, but the boats were too small. Unfortunately, they were the only boats on the island.
"He's down, Cap'n!" cried Sarney Sawyer, looking below. "And he's workin' on her. Go on Ratty, my son!"
"Go on, Ratty!" they all cried, peering through the clear water pierced to the bottom by the hot morning sun, showing every movement the boy made.
Down in the booming depths, the weight of water crushed Ratty's chest as if a horse were rolling on him, and he strained to remember his orders. Water bubbled from his mouth as he grabbed one of the gun's dolphins. The Spanish founders h
ad followed obsolete style in adding these elegant decorations, but they were ideal for work such as this. The plunging sea-beasts, cast integral with the barrel, formed loops of iron perfect for lifting the gun. Ratty tugged the rope from the line round his waist then slid it through one dolphin and into the next.
So far, each attempt had failed. Now, lungs pounding, he struggled to secure the rope. In a ship, he could tie a knot without thinking; it was bred into him, instinctive. But not down here.
He threaded the rope through the second dolphin… a round turn... Ratty passed the rope around itself… and two half hitches… he tied the first hitch… torture and suffocation… he fumbled for the second hitch. He lost the rope. He fumbled again and again… blindness and agony… fear of death… Ratty kicked his bent legs almightily against the gun, launching himself like a soaring lark… up, up, up, frothing and bursting and spouting breath and blood and stretching for the blessings of light and air.
"Uhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!" he thrashed and splashed and breathed water and choked and broke surface.
"Gotcher me lad!" cried Long John, hauling him into the skiff and dumping him between the thwarts.
"Urgh! Uch! Yuch!" Ratty's guts vomited seawater and his eyes stared wide, not quite believing he wasn't dead.
"Did you do it lad?" said Long John, looming over him. "Did you make fast and secure?"
"Dunno," said Ratty.
"Bugger!" said Israel Hands.
"Clap a hitch there, Mr Gunner!" said Long John, and laid a hand on Ratty's shoulder. "This man's done his best, and no man can't do no more!" He stabbed a finger. "Or p'raps you'd like to heave off your britches and take a dive yourself?"
"Not I," said Israel Hands. "Ah, you're right, John! Bloody gun's too big. What we needs is a proper longboat, and a good big 'un."
"The which we ain't got," said Long John.