The Big Book of Jack the Ripper

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by The Big Book of Jack the Ripper (retail) (epub)


  “Oh, it were daylight, right enough, but the sun not up. I ’ad just time to do ’er proper, then nip into my ’idin’ place on ’Anbury Street. The bobbies, they never found me,” he added with scorn in his voice for the earnest bumbling humans who sought to track him down. However much I found the thought repugnant, I saw he was truly one of us in that, his sentiment differing perhaps in degree from our own, but not in kind.

  I observed also once more the relish with which he spoke of the slaying, and of his hairsbreadth escape from destruction; the sun is a greater danger to us than ever Scotland Yard will be. Still, we of the Sanguine Club have survived and flourished as we have in London by making it a point never to draw undue attention to ourselves. Being helpless by day, we are hideously vulnerable should a determined foe ever set himself against us. I said as much to Jack, most vehemently, but saw at once I was making no impression upon him.

  “Aren’t you the toffee-nose, now?” he said. “I didn’t ask for no by-your-leave, and don’t need one of you neither. You bloody fool, they’re only people, and I’ll deal wiv ’em just as I please. Go on; tell me you’ve not done likewise.”

  To that I could make no immediate reply. I have fed innumerable times from victims who would have recoiled in loathing if in full possession of their senses. Nor am I myself guiltless of killing; few if any among us are. Yet with reflection, I think I may say I have never slain wantonly, for the mere sport of it. Such conduct must inevitably debase one who employs it, and in Jack I could not help noting the signs of that defilement. Having no regard for our prey, he would end with the same emptiness of feeling for his fellows (a process I thought already well advanced, by his rudeness toward me) and for himself. I have seen madness so many times among humanity, but never thought to detect it in one of my own.

  All this is, however, as I say, the product of rumination considerably after the fact. At the time I found myself so very unnerved as to fasten on utter trivialities as if they were matters of great importance. I asked, then, not that he give over his cruel sport, but rather where he had come by the apron that gave him his sobriquet in the newspapers.

  He answered without hesitation: “Across the lane from where I done the first one is Barber’s ’Orse Slaughter ’Ouse—I filched it there, just after I ’ad me bit o’ fun. Fancy the fools thinkin’ it ’as some meanin’ to it.” His amusement confirmed what I had already marked, that he found humanity so far beneath him that it existed but for him to do with as he wished.

  Again I expostulated with him, urging him to turn from his course of slaughter.

  “Bloody ’ell I will,” he said coarsely. “Oo’s to make me, any road? The bobbies? They couldn’t catch the clap in an ’ore-house.”

  At last I began to grow angry myself, rather than merely appalled, as I had been up to this point. “If necessary, my associates and I shall prevent you. If you risked only yourself, I would say do as you please and be damned to you, but your antics threaten all of us, for if by some mischance you are captured, you expose not only your own presence alone but reveal that of your kind as well. We have been comfortable in London for long years; we should not care to have to abandon it suddenly and seek to establish ourselves elsewhere on short notice.”

  I saw this warning, at least, hit home; Jack might despise mankind, but could scarcely ignore the threat his fellows might pose to him. “You’ve no right to order me about so,” he said sullenly, his hands curling into fists.

  “The right to self-preservation knows no bounds,” I returned. “I am willing to let what is done stay done; we can hardly, after all, yield you up to the constabulary without showing them also what you are. But no more, Jack. You will have us to reckon with if you kill again.”

  For an instant I thought he would strike me, such was the ferocity suffusing his features. I resolved he should not relish the attempt if he made it. But he did not, contenting himself instead with turning his back and wordlessly taking himself off in the rudest fashion imaginable. I went on to the station and then to my home.

  At the next meeting of the Club I discovered I had not been the only one to encounter Jack and hear his boasts. So also had Norton, who, I was pleased to learn, had issued a warning near identical to mine. If anything, he was blunter than I; Norton, as I have remarked, is not given to mincing words. Our actions met with general approbation, Martin being the only one to express serious doubt at what we had done.

  As the youngest among us (he has been a member fewer than two hundred years), Martin is, I fear, rather more given than the rest of us to the passing intellectual vagaries of the mass of humanity, and has lately been much taken with what they call psychology. He said, “Perhaps this Jack acts as he does because he has been deprived of the company of his own kind, and would be more inclined toward sociability in the world as a whole if his day-to-day existence included commerce with his fellows.”

  This I found a dubious proposition; having met Jack, I thought him vicious to the core, and not likely to reform merely through the good agency of the Club. Norton confined himself to a single snort, but the fashion in which he rolled his eyes was eloquent.

  Titus and Arnold, however, with less acquaintance of the newcomer, eagerly embraced Martin’s suggestion: the prospect of adding another to our number after so long proved irresistible to them. After some little argument, I began to wonder myself if I had not been too harsh a judge of Jack, nor did Norton protest overmuch when it was decided to tender an invitation to the Club to him for the following Friday, that is to say 21 September.

  I remarked on Norton’s reticence as we broke up, and was rewarded with a glance redolent of cynicism. “They’ll find out,” he said, and vanished into the night.

  It was with a curious mingling of anticipation and apprehension that I entered the premises of the Club for our next meeting, an exhilarating mixture whose like I had not known since the bad nights when all of mankind was superstitious enough to make our kind’s every moment a risk. Titus was there before me, his features communicating the same excitement I felt. At that I knew surprise afresh, Titus having seen everything under the moon: he derives his name, after all, from that of the Roman Augustus in whose reign he was born.

  “He’ll come?” I asked.

  “So Martin tells me,” replied our Senior.

  And indeed it was not long before good Hignett appeared at the lounge door to announce the arrival of our guest. Being the perfect butler, he breathes discretion no less than air, yet I could hear no hint of approval in his voice. What tone he would have taken had he known more of Jack I can only imagine. Even now his eye lingered doubtfully on the newcomer, whose garments were as gaudy as the ones in which I had first met him, and which contrasted most strikingly with the sober raiment we of the Sanguine Club commonly prefer.

  After leaving the port and the inevitable cheeses, Hignett retired to grant us our privacy. We spent some moments taking the measure of the stranger in our midst, while he, I should think, likewise took ours. He addressed us first, commenting, “What a grim lot o’ sobersides y’are.”

  “Your plumage is certainly brighter than ours, but beneath it we are much the same,” said Martin, still proceeding along the lines he had proposed at our previous session.

  “Oh, balls,” Jack retorted; he still behaved as though on the Whitechapel streets rather than in one of the more refined salons London boasts. Norton and I exchanged a knowing glance. Titus’s raised eyebrow was eloquent as a shout.

  Martin, however, remained as yet undaunted, and persisted, “But we are. The differences between you and us, whatever they may be, are as nothing when set against the difference between the lot of us on the one hand and those among whom we dwell on the other.”

  “Why ape ’em so, then?” asked Jack, dismissing with a sneer our crystal and plate, and overstuffed chintz chairs in which we sat, our carpets and our paneling of carved and polished oak, our gaslight which yields an illumination more like that of the sun (or so say those who can
compare the two) than any previously created, in short all the amenities that serve to make the Sanguine Club the pleasant haven it is. His scorn at last made an impression upon Martin, who knew not how to respond.

  “Why should we not like our comforts, sir?” Titus, as I have found in the course of our long association, is rarely at a loss for words. He continued, “We have been in straitened circumstances more often than I can readily recall, and more than I for one should care to. Let me remind you, no one compels you to share in this against your will.”

  “An’ a good thing, too—I’d sooner drink ’orseblood from Barber’s, I would, than ’ave a digs like this. Blimey, next you’ll be joinin’ the bleedin’ Church o’ Hengland.”

  “Now you see here!” Arnold, half-rising from his seat in anger, spoke for all of us. Horseblood is an expedient upon which I have not had to rely since the Black Death five and a half centuries ago made men both too scarce and too wary to be easily approached. To this night I shudder at the memory of the taste, as do all those of us whom mischance has at one time or another reduced to such a condition. I almost found it more shocking than the notion of entering a church.

  Yet Jack displayed no remorse, which indeed, as should by this point be apparent, played no part in his character. “Get on!” he said. “You might as well be people your own selves, way you carry on. They ain’t but our cattle, and don’t deserve better from us than they give their beasts.”

  “If what Jerome and Norton say is true, you give them rather worse than that,” Titus said.

  Jack’s grin was broad and insolent. “Aye, well, we all have our sports. I like making ’em die monstrous well, better even than feeding off ’em.” He drew from his belt a long sharp blade, and lowered his eyes so as to study the gleaming, polished steel. Did our reflections appear in mirrors, I should have said he was examining his features in the metal.

  “But you must not act so,” Titus expostulated. “Can you not grasp that your slayings endanger not you alone, but all of us? These cattle, as you call them, possess the ability to turn upon their predators and hunt us down. They must never suspect themselves to be prey.”

  “You talk like this bugger ’ere,” said Jack, pointing in my direction. “I were wrong, guvnor, an’ own it—it’s not men the lot of yez are, it’s so many old women. An’ as for Jack, ’e does as ’e pleases, an’ any as don’t fancy it can go play wiv themselves for all ’e cares.”

  “Several of us have warned you of the consequences of persisting in your folly,” said Titus in a voice like that of a magistrate passing sentence. “Let me say now that you may consider that warning to come from the Sanguine Club as a whole.” He looked from one of us to the next, and found no dissent to his pronouncement, even Martin by this time having come to realize our now unwelcome guest was not amenable to reason.

  “You try an’ stop me and I’ll give yer what Pollie an’ Annie got,” Jack shouted in a perfect transport of fury, brandishing the weapon with which he had so brutally let the life from the two poor jades. We were, however, many to his one, and not taken by surprise as had been his earlier victims. Norton seized the knife that sat among Hignett’s despised cheeses. Of the rest of us, several, myself included, carried blades of our own, if not so vicious as the one Jack bore.

  Balked thus even of exciting terror, Jack foully cursed us all and fled, being as I suspected too great a coward to attack without the odds all in his favour. He slammed the door behind him with violence to make my goblet of port spring from the end table where it sat and hurtle to the floor. Only the quickness of my kind enabled me to save it from destruction and thus earn, though he would never know of it, Hignett’s gratitude.

  The crash of Jack’s abrupt departure was still ringing in our ears when Martin most graciously turned to me and said, “You and Norton appear to have been correct; my apologies for doubting you.”

  “We shall have to watch him,” Titus said. “I fear he will pay no heed to our advice.”

  “We shall also have to keep watch over Whitechapel as a whole, from this time forth,” Arnold said. “He may escape our close surveillance, yet be deterred by observing our vigilance throughout the district.”

  “We must make the attempt, commencing this very night,” Titus declared, again with no disagreement. “That is a mad dog loose on the streets of London, mad enough, I fear, to enable even the purblind humans of Scotland Yard eventually to run him to earth.”

  “Which will also endanger us,” I put in.

  “Precisely. If, however, we prevent his slaying again, the hue and cry over this pair of killings will eventually subside. As we are all gathered here now, let us agree on a rotation that will permit at least three of us to patrol Whitechapel each night, and” (here Titus paused to utter a heavy sigh) “all of us on our Fridays. Preservation here must take precedence over sociability.”

  There was some grumbling at that, but not much; one thing our years confer upon us is the ability to see what must be done. Hignett evinced signs of distress when we summoned him from downstairs long before the time usually appointed, and more upon being informed we should not be reconvening for some indefinite period. Not even the promise that his pay would continue heartened him to any great extent; he had grown used to our routine, and naturally resented any interruption thereof.

  Having decided to patron Whitechapel, we walked west along the south bank of the Thames past the Tower of London and the edifice that will upon its completion be known as Tower Bridge (and which would, were it complete, offer us more convenient access to the northeastern part of the city) to London Bridge and up Gracechurch Street to Fenchurch Street and Whitechapel. Once there, we separated, to cover as much ground as our limited numbers permitted.

  Jack had by this time gained a considerable lead upon us; we could but hope he had worked no mischief while we were coming to the decision to pursue him. Yet the evening was still relatively young, and both of his previous atrocities had taken place in later hours, the second, indeed, so close to sunrise as to seem to me to display a heedlessness to danger suitable only to a lunatic among our kind.

  I prowled the lanes near Spitalfields Market, not far from where I had first set eyes on Jack after supping off the young whore, as I have already related. I should not have been sorry to encounter her there once more, since, I having in a manner of speaking made her acquaintance, she would not have shied from my approach, as did several ladies of the evening, and I was, if not yet ravenous, certainly growing hungry.

  It must have been nearing three when I spied Jack in Crispin Street, between Dorset and Brushfield. He was coming up behind a tart when I hailed him; they both turned at the sound of my voice. “Ah, cousin Jack, how are you these days?” I called cheerily, pretending not to have noticed her. In my most solicitous tones I continued, “The pox troubles you less, I hope?”

  “Piss off!” he snarled. The damage to his cause, however, was done, for the whore speedily took herself elsewhere. He shook his fist at me. “You’ll pay for that, you bugger. I only wanted a bit of a taste from ’er.”

  “Starve,” I said coldly, our enmity now open and undisguised. Would that keeping him from his prey might have forced that fate upon him, but we do not perish so easily. Still, the hunger for blood grows maddening if long unsatisfied, and I realized his suffering hardly less than he the twin effusions of gore he had visited upon Whitechapel.

  He slunk away; I followed. He employed all the tricks of our kind to throw me off his track. Against a man they would surely have succeeded, but I was ready for them and am in any case no man, though here I found myself in the curious position of defending humanity against one of my own kind gone bad. He failed to escape me. Indeed, as we went down Old Montague Street, Arnold fell in with us, and he and I kept double vigil on Jack till the sky began to grow light.

  The weakness of our plan then became apparent, for Arnold and I found ourselves compelled to withdraw to our own domiciles in distant parts of the city to protect ourse
lves against the imminent arrival of the sun, while Jack, who evidently quartered himself in or around Whitechapel, was at liberty to carry out whatever outrage he could for some little while before finding it necessary to seek shelter. A similar period of freedom would be his after every sunset, as we would have to travel from our homes to the East End and locate him afresh each night. Still, I reflected as I made my way out of the slums towards Knightsbridge, in the early hours of the evening people swarmed through the streets, making the privacy and leisure required for his crimes hard to come by. That gave me some small reason, at least, to hope.

  Yet I must confess that when nightfall restored my vitality I departed from my flat with no little trepidation, fearing to learn of some new work of savagery during the morning twilight. The newsboys were, however, using other means to cry their papers, and I knew relief. The concern of getting through each night was new to me, and rather invigorating; it granted a bit of insight into the sort of existence mortals must lead.

  That was not one of the nights assigned me to wander through Whitechapel, nor on my next couple of tours of duty there did I set eyes on Jack. The newspapers made no mention of fresh East End horrors, though, so the Sanguine Club was performing as well as Titus could have wished.

  Our Senior, however, greeted me with grim and troubled countenance as we met on Fenchurch Street early in the evening of the twenty-seventh, preparatory to our nightly Whitechapel vigil. He drew from his waistcoat pocket an envelope which he handed to me, saying, “The scoundrel grows bolder. I stopped by the Club briefly last night to pay my respects to Hignett, and found this waiting there for us.”

  The note the envelope contained was to the point, viz.: “You dear chums aren’t as clever as you think. You won’t catch me if I don’t want that. And remember, you haven’t found my address but I know where this place is. Give me trouble—not that you really can—and the peelers will too. Yours, Jack the Ripper.”

 

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