Turncoat

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Turncoat Page 13

by Don Gutteridge


  Marc took note of the point, then said, “Most of these people will have known Jesse Smallman better than his father. Jesse was an associate during the period when the alien question threatened the political and property rights of the immigrant Americans, and tempers were naturally frayed. But the question has been more or less settled for a year. Any direct threat to the livelihood of Wicks, Hislop, or Farley is over. They do appear to me to be consumed by the demands of their farms. And, of course, Jesse himself died twelve months ago. It’s an unequivocal connection between Joshua and some mad soul out there that I have to establish and understand.”

  Hatch puffed on his pipe. “We also have to consider the possibility that we may well have a different sort of mystery on our hands—one that doesn’t involve a deliberate murder.”

  It was something they had both been thinking, but, spoken aloud, it seemed somehow more daunting.

  ONCE AGAIN MARC ARRIVED LATE FOR breakfast. If Winnifred had slipped past his door last night on her way to another assignation with the hired hand, no hint of it showed in her face or demeanour as she went about helping young Mary serve up helpings of porridge and molasses, followed by pork sausages and boiled eggs, with thick slices of just-made bread and peach preserve. Thomas’s chin drooped slightly more than usual below his downcast eyes (too much ale, or some more physical activity? Marc wondered), and Mary Huggan’s cheeks glowed from something more than fanning the morning fire.

  After breakfast, while Erastus and Thomas went off to the mill to check on some suspected damage to the mill wheel from shifting ice, Marc walked down to Crawford Creek. He could imagine the unerringly straight surveyor’s line that permitted one curve of the meandering creek to be included in Hatch’s property and another curve, in the opposite direction, to be excluded from the Smallman lands, depriving them of drainage and irrigation. Feeling vaguely impious, he tramped off the worn path and along the bank of the stream, impressing his regimental bootprints defiantly upon the clergy’s preserve.

  His efforts to revisit the facts of the case this morning, however, were waylaid by the sudden and disturbing image that popped into his head of Winnifred Hatch and Thomas Goodall entangled and thrashing on that simple ploughman’s bed in the January dark. And that lascivious picture turned his thoughts to his own romantic past.

  Outside of his early fumbled attempts with one of his uncle’s maids, his only sustained and satisfying sexual relationship had been with Marianne Dodds, a ward of their illustrious neighbour, Sir Joseph Trelawney. Theirs had been a passionate affair, chaste at first, but after a tacit understanding of sorts had been reached, it had quickly become a complete meshing of body and youthful spirits. When Marc was sent up to London to apprentice law, letters of confession and promise and eternal steadfastness cluttered the mailbag of the daily coach between London and Kent. Then hers stopped. By the time Marc could get leave to return home, Marianne had been forcibly removed to a distant shire and his love letters had been burned in the great man’s grate. No explanation was ever offered for either barbarity. Several months later, back in London, he learned that Miss Dodds had been married off to a vicar with five hundred pounds and a twenty-year-old son. Uncle Jabez, unfailingly kind and meaning to be helpful no doubt, had whispered some unconsoling wisdom in his adopted son’s ear: “In this country, class is class and blood is still blood. I can give you everything you need and deserve, except that.”

  Marc’s reverie was interrupted by the sight of a small figure making its way towards him along the trodden path behind Smallman’s barn. He waved. Beth waved back.

  In his suffering and bewilderment at Marianne’s loss, Marc had plunged back into his work, happy now that lawyering was so hateful to him. And for the first time he had given in to the teasing of his fellow clerks, as young as he but infinitely more worldly, and followed them to the theatre and the fleshpots of London. Only once. The one good aspect of that night, ironically, had been his delight with the play itself, and his subsequent participation in amateur theatricals. His friends later accused him of moral priggery, but his abhorrence of the brothel and the offstage licentiousness of accommodating actresses was a physical revulsion, inexplicable but as uncontrollable as a reflex. There had been no woman in his life since.

  Marc started across the untrodden snowscape of the Clergy Reserve towards Beth, who had halted at the edge of her property to wait for him.

  It wasn’t that there had been no opportunities for romance at balls in the neighbourhood, or later at the Royal Military School. At the suggestion of his “uncle” Frederick, Marc had willingly been sent to the school to “mend his heart and seek the only commendable career for a young man of spirit.” Even in Toronto, since his arrival last May, there had been possibilities. So far, Marc had danced, flirted, dallied, and generally enjoyed the company of women, but that was all. He had refused to join the subalterns on their periodic expeditions to the stews and gambling dens of Toronto that catered exclusively to the needs of officers robbed of combat by the prolonged post-Napoleonic peace. Despite his apparent prudery, Marc retained the respect of his mates, even their affection.

  “Good morning, Ensign Edwards,” Beth said as he puffed up the path towards her. “I see you decided to take the military route.”

  “DID JOSHUA HAVE ANY SORT OF contact, friendly or otherwise, with any of the extremists out there in Buffaloville?”

  They had walked, without predetermination, into the woods on the Crown land above the Smallman farm, savouring the air, enjoying the challenge of ploughing their way through the pure drifts.

  “None that I know of,” Beth said. “Apart from his evenings with that Georgian crew and our trips into town for supplies, and the half dozen rallies we went to over the summer and fall, Father went nowhere. It took every one of us to keep the farm afloat, even with the mortgage lifted. The drought was severe. Everybody suffered to some degree.”

  “You can remember no altercations at any of the rallies?”

  “None. Besides, Azel Stebbins was about the only one of those people to come to the meetings. After the business with the Alien Act was over and they got back their rights, most of them lost interest. They had farms to run. Like us.”

  “But you kept attending,” Marc said gently.

  “I had my own reasons.”

  “I suppose Jesse knew more of these people than his father did,” Marc said, then he took her mittened hand briefly to guide her over a windfall.

  “Yes. They worked together off and on through the election year of thirty-four. And Jesse did some carpentry for a couple of them—corncribs, I think. He was a wonder with his hands.”

  “And your efforts helped to get Reformers like Dutton and Perry elected in this end of the province, to establish a Reform majority in the Assembly, and even get the alien question settled in your favour …”

  “But?”

  “But even with your majority and Mr. Mackenzie’s manoeuvring to get the Seventh Report on Grievances across the Atlantic, even then you were no closer to winning your claim against the injustices of the Clergy Reserve allotments.”

  Beth stopped so she could read his expression. “So you think our claims may be just, do you?”

  “All one needs to do is take a morning constitutional to see that.”

  “You should’ve brought Sir John along.”

  “It’s easy now for me to understand how angry and frustrated your husband must have been last year. To have achieved a majority in the House and have so little to show for the effort, and risk.”

  “And a governor standing on the dock at Toronto ushering in penniless outcasts from the Auld Sod, sure to be grateful voters in the next election.”

  “From Jesse’s perspective, it must have seemed like ‘now or never.’ In two years’ time the entire government might have been Tory.”

  “With ample means of avenging themselves on so-called traitors and mischief-makers.”

  A new thought occurred to Marc, and he said, “His fath
er must have learned these things, just as I am beginning to, soon after he arrived here. And Tory though he was, he must surely have built up some feelings of resentment over what happened to his son.”

  “He was very fond of Jess,” Beth said, looking straight ahead.

  With mixed emotions, Marc pressed on. “Might he not have drawn the conclusion—as he attended the Reform rallies—that it was all that radical and inflammatory talk that had pushed Jesse to the edge? And could such resentment have resulted in some harboured enmity on Joshua’s part towards one or more of the extremists, which, unknown to you, led him to accuse or challenge or even threaten that person or persons?”

  Beth seemed to be giving the notion due consideration. After a while, she said, “I reckon it more likely he came to understand exactly why his son did what he did.”

  “I don’t follow,” Marc said.

  Beth took his arm. “Then it’s time I explained.”

  THEY STOOD SIDE BY SIDE IN the barn. The sun bored through the unchinked log walls and spilled at their feet. From the hayloft at one end of the single, spacious room a square crossbeam ran to the far side. In the shadows, a pair of pigeons cooed amiably. Behind them and under the loft, cows chewed at the clover hay thrown to them earlier by Elijah, their literate caretaker.

  “I found him hanging there. Just after noon. I wondered why he hadn’t come in for his meal. Thank God I didn’t send Aaron after him. Jess knew Aaron and I were spendin’ the morning with Mary Huggan’s family. So nothing would disturb him.”

  “I don’t need to know—” Marc said, wondering whether his touching her would be welcomed or resented.

  “I think you do. That milking stool was tipped over. He’d used it to stand on, then kicked it halfway across the barn. He’d even made a kind of rope-manacle for his hands and somehow tied them behind his back.”

  “Behind his back?”

  “He wanted nothing to tempt him from his purpose.”

  They stood staring up at the scar on the beam where the noose had rubbed it—one of them imagining, the other reliving.

  “You see, I misled you a little last time when I said Jesse wasn’t tempted by the radical solutions being whispered throughout the district. In truth, he’d become desperate and depressed.”

  Marc spoke only because the silence continued longer than he could bear. “Do you know if he actually had contact with any seditionists?”

  “He may have. If he did, he didn’t tell me. There seemed to be a lot of things he couldn’t tell me … near the end.”

  “I’m thinking that he may have learned something that his father might have subsequently come across, something incriminating—”

  “But that’s what I’m tryin’ to show you,” she said. “Jess was unlike his father in many ways, but there was one thing they had in common. They believed in the law and the rights it gives us and the duties it demands in return. In any other time and place, my Jesse would’ve been as conservative as his father. I believe he stared sedition in the face, he may even have let it whisper treason in his ear, and when he realized the rule of law was about to fail him, he had only two choices left.”

  “To break it—”

  “—or take himself out of its reach,” she said, suddenly weeping.

  Marc held her, and she shuddered against him, letting her hurt and anger pour out.

  “There was nothing you could have done,” he said as she wiped her cheek with his handkerchief, then blew her nose in it.

  “I know that,” she said. “But I can’t make myself believe it.”

  As they were about to leave the barn and the scene of its past horror, Marc paused to stroke the nose of a dappled draught horse in a stall near the door.

  “She used to pull our cutter,” Beth said, “but we had to sell it last week. Bessie here goes off to a man from our church next Monday.”

  “But your father-in-law will have left you some money and valuables?” Marc said with some surprise.

  “He intended to—that I know—but he left no will,” Beth said matter-of-factly. “When Father came back here to live, he engaged Mr. Child as his solicitor. And Father mentioned to him that he had a brother who went down to the States before the war, so there could be nephews and nieces he never heard from. It might be months and months before I know—”

  “While your solicitor pursues them as part of the probate,” Marc said with a rueful sigh.

  “But Father did pay off our mortgage,” Beth said firmly, “and sweated behind a plough and harrow.” She turned abruptly as if to leave.

  At the back of Bessie’s stall Marc noticed that the horse had knocked over a bale of straw and exposed the barrel it had been concealing. A barrel with a spigot.

  Beth came up beside him and followed his gaze. “Oh, dear,” she said, but it wasn’t in alarm.

  “Whisky?” Marc asked.

  “Rum, from Jamaica. Elijah thinks it’s his secret cache.” She smiled. “And we’ve never had the heart to let on.”

  “Was it here when he came?”

  The note of levity in Beth’s voice evaporated. He felt her grow tense, and wary, as she had been in their first encounter. “Why can’t you let him be?” she said. “Jesse wasn’t a rum-runner. Or a bootlegger. Such men don’t take their own life on a matter of principle.”

  “You’re right,” he said. “Please accept my apologies.”

  She leaned against him and, despite the layers of winter clothing, her womanliness and its effects were unmistakable. “Do you always talk like you’re in some duchess’s drawing room?”

  “Always, ma’am.”

  “I’ve never been a ma’am, or even the missus,” she said. “Just Beth.”

  “I’d be honoured if you’d call me Marc, then.”

  Beth tilted her face towards Marc’s, who gathered her close. But the door behind them was jerked open without ceremony or concern for what it was interrupting. It was Aaron, wide-eyed.

  “Co-come, quick! You’re wa-wa-wanted!”

  “Who wants me?” Marc said sharply.

  “Mister Ha-Ha-Hatch. He’s seen the pe-pe-peddlers!”

  SUPERNUMERARY CONSTABLE HATCH WAS WAITING IN front of Beth’s house with his own horse and Marc’s. He was flushed with excitement.

  “Come on, lad. Durfee spotted the peddlers’ donkey clumping onto the ice at the foot of his property.”

  “Which way were they headed?”

  “There was only one of ’em, and he went east, real hasty, up the shoreline.”

  “Be careful!” Beth called after them.

  They swung onto the Miller Sideroad and galloped down towards the highway.

  “If he’s headed east on the ice,” Marc shouted, “we could surprise him and cut him off at Bass Cove.”

  “By golly, you’re right,” Hatch replied. “That donkey can’t run too fast on the ice, and we’ll save the horses by taking the road.”

  So they wheeled east onto the Kingston Road, galloping apace, and retraced the route they had taken an hour after Marc’s arrival in Crawford’s Corners on Tuesday. Twenty minutes’ hard riding found them on the Indian trail that wound its way up to the scene of the murder and the cave beyond. With no new snow to fill in their previous footprints, they were able to urge their mounts past the deadfall trap before abandoning them and surging ahead without the aid of their snowshoes.

  “Christ, he’s in the cave!” Hatch cried.

  Marc looked up to see the snout and ears of the donkey poking above the rim of the ridge where the cave was situated. Ferris O’Hurley was floundering towards it, apparently spooked by their approach. An unexpectedly deep drift slowed Hatch and Marc just long enough for the jackass and its master to scamper down the far slope and hit the ice of the cove. They were in full flight west.

  “Don’t worry,” Hatch puffed when they had struggled to the top of the ridge. “I’ve got James watching the sideroad north. If the bugger tries to get back into the Corners he may end up with a buttful of Durfe
e birdshot.”

  “My hunch is he’s heading back towards Toronto and Lewiston.”

  “Then why come east to the cove?”

  “The cave, you mean.”

  They went to have a look.

  O’Hurley had indeed been making for the cave, for the evident purpose of collecting or destroying materials left there earlier. Ashes from a fire more recent than Tuesday were clearly visible, and papers had been torn and burned in it. Several bottles that had once held what appeared to be contraband spirits or wine had been smashed and scattered, their labels singed.

  “They must’ve been here yesterday,” Hatch said ruefully. “Somebody who should know better has told them we’ve become interested in this place, so the skinny one beetled out here to obliterate whatever they’d left in the vicinity—before picking up his partner in the bush farther down and lighting out for the States.”

  Marc sighed.

  “What’s wrong?” Hatch said cheerfully. “We’ve put the fear of Jehovah into them. They won’t be back here for a while.”

  “Don’t you see?” Marc said, sifting idly through the debris. “These fellows are likely advance men for smugglers. They’ve been using this cave as a hideout, a drop point, and a storage bin for a long time.”

  “And?”

  “And that means that the snowshoe print and broken pipe stem we found on Tuesday could have been left here by one of these peddlers or by any one of a dozen possible confederates.”

  “And therefore not likely left by the killer of Joshua Smallman?”

  “Right.”

  “But that pipe stem hadn’t been here long,” Hatch said. “That break on the stem looked fresh, and the thing wasn’t completely covered with snow. Even though the ledge here is sheltered, a fair amount of snow would have drifted over it.”

  Marc nodded. But he was thinking of his conversation with Beth. “What connection, I wonder, could a man like Joshua Smallman have had with vagabonds like O’Hurley and Connors?”

 

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