A Cold Wind Down the Grey

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A Cold Wind Down the Grey Page 1

by Wendy M Wilson




  Wendy M. Wilson

  A Cold Wind Down the Grey

  Copyright © 2018 by Wendy M. Wilson

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise without written permission from the publisher. It is illegal to copy this book, post it to a website, or distribute it by any other means without permission.

  First edition

  This book was professionally typeset on Reedsy

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  Contents

  Dedication and Details

  Wanganui, 1888: A Testimonial for Inspector James

  Greymouth, 1866: Finding George Dobson

  Greymouth, 1866: Down the River to Town

  Greymouth, 1866: The Autopsy

  Greymouth, 1866: The Inquest: Day One

  Greymouth, 1866: The Funeral

  Greymouth, 1866: The Coach Returns

  Greymouth, 1866: The Inquest: Day Two

  Wanganui, 1888: The Boatman’s Steps

  Greymouth, 1866: The Suspect

  Greymouth, 1866: The Warning

  Greymouth, 1866: The Arrest

  Greymouth, 1866: The Reporter

  Greymouth, 1866: The Interview

  Greymouth, 1866: The Body

  Wanganui, 1888: The Maungatapu Murders

  Greymouth, 1866: Neither Man Nor Boy

  The Arnold Track, 1866: More Bodies

  Maori Gully, 1866: George Dobson’s Last Walk

  Greymouth, 1866: The Skittle Alley

  Greymouth, 1866: The Criterion Hotel

  Hokitika, 1866: The Accessories

  Greymouth, 1866: Burgess Confesses

  Wanganui, 1888: The Executions

  Greymouth, 1866-67: Sullivan Returns

  Hokitika, 1867: The Trial: Day One

  Hokitika, 1867: The Trial: Day Two

  Greymouth, 1867: A Letter to the Editor

  Greymouth, 1867: A Cold Wind Down the Grey

  Wanganui, 1888: Memento Mori

  Afterword

  Dedication and Details

  Dedicated to the memory of William Henry James, 1827 to 1907

  This book is a fictionalized account of an actual crime and the police inspector who investigated that crime: the murder of George Dobson, a young surveyor whose extended family have left their names all over the South Island of New Zealand.

  I have kept as close as possible to real events, but have made some guesses regarding motivation and emotions. I investigated Inspector James’ life before 1866 closely, using the Australian newspaper database Trove, and the genealogical database Ancestry. The events of 1866 and early 1867 were covered closely in the newspapers of the time, and I relied on them for many of the details in this book. Inspector James’ personal life came to me in pieces, from a notation on a cue card in the Greymouth History Museum, to cemeteries in Wanganui and Timaru, and by the time I had finished my research I felt I knew him well.

  My primary source of research for events in this book was the online New Zealand government database Papers Past, especially the newspaper The Grey River Argus. For a bibliography with links to the database please check my website: www.wendymwilson.com.

  The title of this book is taken from a description of the Barber: A chilly damp wind that blows down the Grey Valley and seen only in a handful of places in the world the ‘Barber’ is the local name for a katabatic wind formation.

  Cover image used with permission from The Hocken Collections at the University of Otago:

  William Marshall Cooper (1833-1921), Greymouth, 1866-1871, chromolithograph by Harnett & Co., Hokitika, Lithographers, 210 x 330mm, accession 12,729 Hocken Collections - Uare Taoka o Hākena, University of Otago

  1

  Wanganui, 1888: A Testimonial for Inspector James

  He knew as soon as he walked through the door of the station that something was up. Constable Crozier, seated nearest the door, said a quick, “Morning Mr. Inspector James,” then refused to meet his eyes, shoving something under his desk. The rest of his men stopped talking suddenly and watched him, grinning. He sighed. He’d come by arrangement to pick up his personal effects and his men were waiting to pounce on him and force another one of those bloody framed testimonials on him. That imbecile from The Herald was there as well, perched on his usual wooden stool. The reporter caught his eye and winked, pleased to have been proven right.

  He’d run into the reporter in court recently while testifying against a young lad who’d been terrorizing his neighbourhood. The boy on trial, Joshua Bason, was a bad seed—two brothers already at the industrial school up in Burnham, and his father in court that same day, charged with going about carrying a loaded gun and using insulting language when not in a sober state. The reporter had come up to him afterwards to discuss the case. They’d spoken briefly, but as he moved away the reporter had asked, “What will you do, Inspector James, now that you’re retiring?

  “Retiring? I’m not…where did you hear that?”

  The reporter’s expression had changed – he’d smelled blood. “We heard Pardy from New Plymouth was taking over this district in addition to his own.”

  “I’ve received no intimation of such a change,” James had said, worried. Surely it could not be true—but what if it was? Was the bloody government trying to save money again? Why did the force always take the first cuts? And why him?

  The next day the rumour, accompanied by his denial, had appeared in the paper, and a week later he’d received the official letter telling him he was to be retired with six month’s salary. He’d felt like a fool. Six month’s pay, they’d offered, in lieu of the pension he’d been promised when he left Victoria to come to New Zealand. He had some savings, but how would they manage, the two of them? And what would happen to the new house?

  Constable Crozier made a sudden move, rising to his feet, almost knocking over his chair. Clutched in his large awkward hands was a letter encased in a massive gilt frame. A testimonial, as he had surmised. Others were rising as well, and the young recruit appeared like Aladdin from the kitchen wheeling a tea trolley loaded with a battered silver tea pot, tin mugs, and a plate of buttered pikelets from Woolley’s.

  James stood there, a smile frozen in place, as they sang an enthusiastic round of “For he’s a jolly good fellow,” wondering what to say in response. Perhaps he should let out his house and move to something cheaper, up north, leave behind his wonderful new home here… But Elizabeth would be distraught. She’d finally started to enjoy life here, to fit in…

  “…and so say all of us…”

  The voices faded, and Detective Benjamin stepped forward rubbing his hands together in that annoying way of his. Benjamin was being transferred as well, to Wellington, the Gazette said. Last night, Benjamin’s friends had presented him with a gold watch chain. Very nice. Better than the testimonial James’ men were about to foist on him, he was sure. But Benjamin was not a chain-of-command type; he treated everyone as equals, regardless of stature. He’d never be given his own command with that attitude.

  “Inspector James,” said Benjamin. “I’ve been commissioned by the police of Wanganui, and the surrounding district, to hand you this letter, expressive of the regard with which we all hold you, and to express the regrets of those who are unable to attend.”

  Benjamin gestured towards Constable Crozier, who cleared his throat and thrust the framed testimonial forward. “Inspector James, when you took over Wanganui District in 1880, I was stationed in Hawera,” he said. “I was serving under an officer second to none in the force as a policeman, but his conduct towards the men was different to that of yours, and when you ca
me we all felt as if we had…as if we had been let out of prison.”

  James attempted to look appreciative. They tolerated him because he was decent to them, impartial, severe only when necessary—certainly much less severe now than he’d been as a younger man. But he didn’t believe they admired or respected him.

  “I’ve been in the service twenty-three years,” Crozier continued. “and served under many different officers, but none as considerate as you, sir.”

  He held the framed testimonial forward and James took it, making a show of turning it around and reading it carefully. The frame was excellent, anyway. It would look good with one of his Indian ink sketches - replace those oils he was going to have to sell. Maybe he would frame the sketch he’d done the day of young Dobson’s funeral, of the diggers on the beach silhouetted against the waves. Always been a favourite of his, that one. He’d discovered it in the side drawer of his Davenport when he was clearing it out for the move to the new house, tied up with a couple of newspapers from back then he’d forgotten about.

  “I have to return you my sincere thanks for the kindly expressions embodied herein.” He looked around the room, briefly holding the eyes of each man. They had all signed the testimonial, even those who weren’t present. “Until this moment, I never knew I was held in such esteem, but I take your kindness as evidence of your appreciation of my conduct during the time I have been in command of you and the feeling that I have gained your respect is something…is something to be thankful for.”

  They clapped politely and he saw his sergeant glance over at the clock.

  “I’ve been in service for thirty-seven years…”

  Constable Crozier grimaced. The old bugger’s going to tell us about his whole entire life, his face telegraphed. Well, dammit, he wanted to tell them. He deserved that at least. Pushed out of the force after that length of time, with nothing but a handwritten testimonial in a, well, in a good frame, although probably picked up cheap at Jackson’s Auction House.

  “Thirty-seven years,” he repeated. “Although nine of those years were in Victoria. I joined the force in Victoria in ’54, right off the boat from London. That was the year to join. Any of you could have joined, even…” He caught Crozier’s eye and stopped himself. “They took anyone over five foot seven who could ride, and was of good character. That was after the defeat of the miners at the Eureka Stockade. Broham was there, and Hickson, Shearman, of course…”

  His mind started to wander back to those times. Shearman had brought him to New Zealand. Commissioner Shearman of the Province of Canterbury he was back then. A good man, who’d had James’ back during the incident in Timaru. Said he had the “toughness of character” to be a strong leader, and for that reason had later given him the gold escort to lead. Their careers had stayed in tandem for years, Shearman always a step or two above him, until James had been given command in Wellington. But when the cuts came at the end of his first year, Shearman had pushed him out and taken the job for himself, the job he’d worked so hard to get. The government had fobbed him off with a new position up here in Wanganui, still a first-class inspector, but with lowered stature. Shearman’s betrayal had stung; Elizabeth swore never to speak to Helen Shearman again.

  He shook himself, and pulled himself back to the task at hand. “I started out in Timaru, as Sergeant of Watch.” He saw Constable Crozier’s shoulders slump in dismay. “In ‘64. Then in ‘65 I was promoted to inspector in charge of the gold escort. We rode from Christchurch across the mountains to Hokitika, myself and some troopers—and Shearman, the Commissioner of Police. A hell of a ride, it was. No roads then, of course, they were still being built, but Cobb’s Coaches started running later the same year. Shearman was in the first coach to cross, and so was Edward Dobson, the provincial engineer, George Dobson’s father…”

  He realized he was starting to ramble, and stopped. The reporter was tapping his pencil on his knee, an irritated expression on his face, no longer taking notes.

  He felt foolish.

  Detective Benjamin helped him out. “Did that for a while, did you, sir?”

  “What? Oh, the gold escort? No. Just one trip. The bloody … the miners started sending their gold by sea around the Bluff to Melbourne after the government refused to insure the stuff.” Lucky really. The route through the mountains was treacherous…easy for bushrangers to hide in the dense bush and assault them, even with the fortifications added to the gold coach. The “perambulating, impregnable, gold-escort redoubt,” the papers laughingly called it…

  His men were all frowning now, wanting to get at the food. Better finish this thing then.

  “I worked my way up through the ranks,” he said, looking at Constable Crozier, still a constable after twenty-three years on the force, “principally by sobriety, truthfulness and perseverance, and I trust you will advance the same way, if you apply yourself.” Crozier blushed and looked at his feet. Benjamin was frowning disapprovingly.

  James felt a brief pang of guilt about what he’d said, and changed the subject. “Let’s all get at that tea, shall we?”

  He poured himself a mug, folded over a couple of pikelets in his left hand, and went into the small room beside the kitchen he used as an office, holding the framed testimonial under his right arm. He leaned the frame against the wall and lit himself a Scotch Cap, staring at the testimonial as he drank his tea, thinking back on his career. Left-handed. Who was that, and why was it important? Something twigged in his mind and then disappeared. Left hand, right foot. Connected with something he had….

  It was a damned shame that he’d just closed on the Halswell Street property. They had both been so happy with the new house, pleased to be moving from the cramped quarters of Sydney Place, Elizabeth ready to entertain more, to hold soirées. She’d already made an appointment with Mr. Harding to have a photograph taken for her carte de visite. He would let out the Sydney Place house—the lease still had some time before it expired. But what work could he do? All he knew was policing.

  They would move to Halswell Street, he decided, and not go north. He would pick up some work as a justice of the peace, sell his sketches, do something. He could take up writing - write a book about his experiences. They deserved Halswell Street after all they’d been through. He’d spent the last twenty years collecting furniture and fittings, and they were finally going to have a place worthy of them: his beautiful Schwechten piano, the velvet drawing suite, the Brussels carpets, the dinner service Elizabeth loved, the Davenports, and his art pieces: the over mantel oil paintings and the alabaster ornaments.

  He drained his tea, lit himself another cigarette and leaned back, still staring at the testimonial. An odd feeling brushed over him momentarily, a feeling that he had been here before, seated at his desk staring at something on a wall.

  It all came back to him in a rush. He had been thinking about it all day, without realizing he had. The murder of George Dobson in ’66. He’d been sitting at his Davenport in his house on Arney Street in Greymouth looking at the reward notice he’d pinned to the wall, just as he now sat and looked at the testimonial. That must have been after he found the body.

  Poor Elizabeth had been pregnant the whole time he’d been investigating young Dobson’s murder – tired, uncomfortable, nauseous. And Thomas’ birth was early, partly because of the shock of…. but Thomas had amazed them both from the start; he’d had nothing but success his entire life. Training as an architect now, by god, at Atkins and Clere, the best architects in Wanganui. What a pity Elizabeth couldn’t warm to Thomas the way she had the others…he’d never understood it.

  He did not want to think about his children, any of them, even now, and focused instead on the murder, and the day he’d found the body. The smell, the gut-wrenching smell, he could almost think it was still in his nose now, so strong had it been. From a body that had lain there for six weeks…with that ugly thing sticking up from the ground, taunting him with its presence…

  He took a last draw at the cigaret
te, enjoying the cleansing burn of it in his lungs, and stubbed it out in the dregs of his tea. He could carry everything home easily, if only he didn’t have to cart along the damn testimonial. He would leave it behind and ask Crozier to deliver it to him tomorrow. He’d invite Crozier in for a drink—sit on the verandah with a beer, that was the ticket. He wasn’t a police officer now. He could be polite to the man.

  As he walked through the station carrying his possessions - an Indian ink drawing of the wharf he’d done when he first arrived in Wanganui, a spare uniform shirt, a bag of pens and papers - he responded to the murmured goodbyes from his men, and opened the door to his new life. The day was sunny and cold, somewhat frosty, and on any other day would be full of potential. How he would miss being a police inspector. The idea weighed on his spirits as he headed down Bell Street towards the courthouse and Taupo Quay.

  The past rose from the depths of his memory to meet him. He had spent so much time in courthouses, here and down south in Greymouth. He’d met Edward Dobson for the first time in a courthouse, after Dobson had crossed the mountains from Christchurch by Cobb’s Coach to instigate a search for his son, just days after everyone had realized that young George was missing. Someone must have sent a telegram; the electric telegraph was being built across the country around that time. Charles Todhunter, George Dobson’s brother-in-law, had arrived soon after to assist in the search. He’d liked Todhunter. A decent man.

  James had known that George Dobson belonged to an influential family, connected by blood and marriage, a mob of road builders, surveyors, engineers, men who were building Canterbury and the west coast. In fact, back then very little got built on the west coast of the South Island unless a Dobson or a Dobson relation had his finger on the plan. The family were stunned to learn of the deadly gang of killers who had slaughtered their son and so many other men, to understand that even they had not been immune from such a disaster. If a young man like George Dobson, well-liked and well-connected, could suffer that fate, who was safe?

 

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