by Alex Grecian
“You should have seen yourself,” the girl said when she had caught her breath. “You looked funny.”
“You tied my feet together. That wasn’t nice.”
“Well, of course it wasn’t. It was a prank. Pranks aren’t meant to be nice.”
“I don’t like pranks.”
“You’re not clever enough to think of any or you would like them.”
“I don’t think I would.”
“Have you ever seen a pig bleed?” the girl said.
Henry ignored her. He left his boots untied and stood.
“I have. Seen a pig bleed, I mean,” Virginia said. “Its eyes get very big when it gets cut. They bulge out. It’s quite funny. That’s what you looked like when you fell down.”
Henry said nothing. He stooped and lifted the pew, turned and moved across the aisle. The girl skipped ahead of him and put out her tiny foot to trip him, but he was ready for more pranks and stepped easily over her leg, moved her gently out of the way with his elbow. The girl backed up and pouted at him.
“You’re no fun at all, you know.”
Henry ignored her. He carried the pew across the sanctuary and set it down. He looked carefully around for the girl and saw her running down the aisle toward two other children. She had lost interest in him. He breathed a big sigh of relief. There were more pews that needed to be moved, but he decided to sit, to rest for a minute and relace his boots.
When he was ready to get back to work, he checked to see where the cruel little girl was. He didn’t want any more pranks.
It seemed to him that it was better to be nice than to be clever.
48
Day didn’t understand how it was possible for a dead body to bleed, and he didn’t stop to ponder it. His Colt Navy had cleared his jacket and was aimed at Bennett Rose before the innkeeper could move his own weapon. Sutton Price stood numb by the bed, staring at his son. There was no immediate danger from that side of the room. First things first.
“Give me your rifle, Mr Rose,” Day said.
“I have to shoot him, Inspector,” Rose said. “I have to. He killed his own boy.”
Calvin Campbell had been standing, dazed, next to Hester Price, but now he took a step toward Sutton, his massive fist raised above the miner’s head. Hammersmith grabbed Campbell’s fist and appeared to be trying to force it to one side, but Campbell didn’t budge. Even so, Day trusted his sergeant to handle that situation for at least the next few seconds. The rifle was still the biggest threat in the room.
“We don’t know that he did anything yet,” Day said.
“We do. The boy’s bleedin’. Show a murderer his victim, bring him near enough to the body, and if it bleeds . . . well, then, that’s your man.”
“One of your superstitions?”
“How else would you explain that, Mr Day?” Rose pointed to Oliver. “Is that somethin’ you’ve seen before?”
“No,” Day said. “But I don’t pretend to know what it means.”
“I do know.”
“Be that as it may, give me your rifle. You people called us here, asked us to investigate this. Give us a chance to do that. If you shoot Sutton Price, I’ll have to arrest you for murder. Is that what you want?”
“Do it,” Rose said. “The people here are different. This isn’t London. We follow the old ways.”
“But it’s London you’d be going to.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean, the instant I arrest you, you’ll be on a train to London, where you’ll face proper justice.”
“That ain’t how it works.”
“It works however I say it works.” Day glared down the barrel of his Colt at the innkeeper. He saw the rifle begin to waver as Bennett Rose lost his resolve, but Day was careful to hide the relief he felt. He kept his expression stern and his eyes steely and he tried not to shiver with cold. He hoped he looked the part of the London lawman, despite his ragged clothing and his disheveled hair.
Finally, Bennett Rose nodded and handed over the rifle. “This isn’t the time, is all. I can wait. Justice will be served the Black Country way.” He pointed at Sutton Price and sneered. “You hear me?”
Day didn’t wait to find out whether Sutton Price had heard the innkeeper. With his right hand, he slipped his revolver back into his jacket as he took the rifle from Rose with his left hand. He gripped the rifle by its barrel and shoved it back hard at Bennett Rose’s ample midsection. The innkeeper toppled over backward with a grunt and fell against the wall behind him. He slid down the wall, holding his abdomen.
“Stay there,” Day said. “Stay on the floor.” He swung the rifle around and pointed it at Calvin Campbell. “Drop your arm, sir, and be careful of my sergeant when you do it.”
Campbell sized Day up and gave him a slight smile. “You’re someone to reckon with, aren’t you, Inspector?”
“I’ve had a rough day.”
Campbell lowered his fist and clapped Hammersmith on the shoulder. He pulled Hester Price away from her husband, turned her toward him, and gathered her in his arms. She collapsed against him, her face buried against his broad chest, her arms wrapped around his waist. Day could hear her muffled weeping. Campbell closed his eyes, one hand stroking Hester’s hair.
“Will you take Sutton Price back to London, then?” Campbell said. He kept his eyes closed when he spoke.
Day looked at Oliver’s father. The miner stood like a statue by the bed, still staring at his son’s body. He hadn’t moved when Hester had beat her fists against him or when Rose had shot at the ceiling, hadn’t seemed to notice any of the drama happening around him. He simply stood. Day imagined he might stand there until he died.
There was much about police work that Day didn’t feel he was particularly good at, but understanding people, even criminals, knowing their motives and behavior, that was something he felt confident about. None of the people in the little room with Oliver Price’s body acted like a murderer. They had found the missing people they’d been sent to Blackhampton for, but there was still much that Day didn’t understand about it all.
“Not yet,” he said. “Mr Campbell, I need my doctor and I don’t think I can spare Sergeant Hammersmith. Would you do me the great favor of bringing Dr Kingsley here just as quickly as possible?”
“I would rather not leave Hester right now.”
“I understand, but Hester needs to know what’s happened to her child, and Dr Kingsley is best qualified to tell us.”
“Send Rose.”
“Mr Rose’s behavior is . . . unpredictable. He’s already caused a great deal of trouble and I would prefer to keep an eye on him here.”
“Surely I’m a suspect. What’s to keep me from leaving Blackhampton?”
“I don’t think you’ll leave her.”
Campbell looked down at Hester, at the top of her head. “No,” he said. “You’re right about that.”
Hester pulled away from him and looked up at his face. The room was dark, and lamplight from the corner table caused silver hairs among her yellow tresses to sparkle. The corners of her mouth were lined with hard experience and her eyes were rimmed with red. Day looked past the evidence of the years and saw how beautiful she once was. And he looked past the traces of her grief to see how lovely she still was. She reminded him, in some small and indefinite way, of Claire, and he understood Campbell’s devotion. He felt something well up in his own chest, but he swallowed his empathy. He was careful not to look at the little boy lying on the bed.
“Go, Calvin,” Hester said. “Bring the doctor and come back fast.”
Campbell nodded. “You won’t have time to miss me.”
“I’m finished with Blackhampton now,” Hester said. “Do you understand? There’s nothing for me here.”
Campbell nodded again. Without another word, he turned and left the room. Day
heard his footsteps on the stairs and then heard the inn’s front door open, heard the wind raging through, and then heard the door close. Suddenly the room was very quiet.
49
The American had not lost his way (he never lost his way), but the journey from the woods to the train depot, while a straight line, was difficult. He wore a good pair of brogans, but they were old and worn and the seams leaked. His woolen socks were soaked through, and he couldn’t feel his toes. He had known too many soldiers, in the old days, who had lost their feet to frostbite. He didn’t want the same for himself. But there was nowhere to rest. The few outbuildings he saw along the outskirts of the road had lights on in their windows. People were inside, cozy and dry by their fires. He knew from hard experience that if he went to their doors they wouldn’t let him come inside. One look at his face would be enough to ensure that. But he simply didn’t have the heart to kill a family just so he could enjoy the warmth of their home for an hour.
And so when he found the two horses, hitched to a carriage, he counted it as a blessing from above. They were standing in the field, only a few yards to the west of him, as still as some statue built to depict a brave and patriotic journey through the storm.
He veered in their direction, mildly worried that the horses were frozen in their tracks, dead already. He was nearly dead with cold himself. If the horses were dead, he would lie down in the carriage and, he imagined, people would come along someday and find him there and wonder how an American had come to be driving a carriage across the English countryside in the middle of an unseasonable late storm.
But the horses weren’t dead. The younger one—he could tell by her size and energy—stamped her feet at his approach and snorted. The older one stood in her tracks, but followed him with her black eyes. He approached them slowly, and not only because he didn’t want to scare them. He couldn’t have moved quickly if he’d wanted to. He reached out a shivering hand and patted the younger one’s muzzle, stroked her, and whispered nonsense until she calmed. It didn’t take long. She was cold and hungry and tired. The older horse wasn’t a problem. She wasn’t going to last a lot longer, no matter what happened, and she knew it. Horses had small brains, but they were even more conscious of their mortality than humans were.
He pulled himself up into the carriage, slipping on the step and recovering, trying not to jolt the thing too much and scare the poor horses. The reins hadn’t yet frozen, and he scooped them up in his stiff hands, gave an experimental snap. The horses obeyed, dug in and moved. He snapped again. The wheels gritted against the packed snow and spun, and then miraculously found purchase and rolled.
He pulled the reins and the horses slogged around, slowly, painstakingly, blinking their big dark eyes at the snowflakes that landed on them, and finally they were facing in the opposite direction and he began to steer them toward the train depot, where he was certain Campbell was waiting.
He had no idea what he might do if he found himself alive and well in Blackhampton tomorrow, but he had no other life or purpose but to finally enact his revenge upon Calvin Campbell.
50
Jessica Perkins was wiping sweat from Heath Biggs’s forehead when Calvin Campbell burst through the doors of the church for the second time in an hour, his hair frosted white, his face raw and pink. He stopped at the back of the sanctuary long enough to glance around, located Dr Kingsley, and ran down the center aisle to him. An hour ago, Campbell had taken Hester Price from the vicar’s room, and they had left the church. The children had not seen their mother. She had hurried past them and was gone so quickly that even Jessica wasn’t sure what she’d seen. Now Campbell was back, but without Hester. Jessica dropped her cloth and glanced over at Peter and Anna, who seemed to be deep in conversation with little Virginia, then hurried over to where Campbell was gesticulating wildly at Kingsley. Campbell grabbed Kingsley’s shoulder, but the doctor pulled away from him. Even before she was close enough to hear what they were saying, she recognized the tension in their voices.
“I have an obligation to these people,” Kingsley said.
“He’s a baby,” Campbell said.
“From what you’ve told me, there’s nothing I can do to help the baby. I can help the people here.”
“It was your man, Day, who sent me to fetch you. I’m not going back without you.”
“Good. Then you can lend a hand here.”
“A baby?” Jessica said. The men stopped arguing and looked at her. “Did they find little Oliver?”
Her voice broke as she asked the question, and she realized she didn’t want them to answer. But Campbell was wild-eyed and uncaring.
“Yes,” he said. “Oliver is dead.”
Jessica gasped and clutched the lace at the throat of her dress as if the air were attacking her. “Oh, no,” she said. “I had so hoped . . .”
“I must get back to Hester. I haven’t time for this.”
“Hester?” Jessica said. “Then that was her. I thought it was. You’ve found the children’s mother.”
“She’s at the inn.”
“Is there word of Mr Price?”
“He’s there, too.”
“You must take the children to their parents.”
“I’m not here for that,” Campbell said. Jessica thought he sounded cruel, uncaring, but realized that he was completely focused on something else. He seemed to be barely aware of her next to him in the cavernous room full of Blackhampton’s sick and dying citizens. “Come with me, Dr Kingsley, or I will carry you back to the inn.”
Kingsley’s eyebrows shot up with surprise, and he took a look over his shoulder as if determining whether he had room to run. Henry, Kingsley’s massive assistant, materialized at his side. Jessica wasn’t sure where he’d come from or how he managed to move so quietly.
“If the doctor wants me to,” Henry said, “I will make this man go away.”
Henry sounded utterly sure of himself, and Campbell reared back, sized up the other giant. Jessica wondered who would win in a contest between them. They were the two largest men she had ever seen. But Kingsley laughed, and it was enough to break the tension.
“I’m sure that won’t be necessary, Henry,” Kingsley said. “But thank you.”
“He should be careful how he talks to you.”
“I think Mr Campbell is upset and simply forgot himself.”
“Yes,” Campbell said. “I’m afraid I’ve spent too much time alone over the years. I sometimes forget my manners.”
Henry nodded. “Doctor’s teaching me manners. He could teach you, too.”
“The children should be with their family,” Jessica said.
“If the doctor will come with me, I’ll come back for the children. The storm’s too much right now for them.” But there was something in Campbell’s eyes that made Jessica think he was lying. He had no intention of coming back for Virginia, Anna, and Peter. He was right; he had spent too much time alone and that also meant he hadn’t learned to properly lie without giving himself away. She had no idea why he wouldn’t want to reunite the children with their parents. Maybe he wanted to spare them the sight of their dead brother. Maybe he had his own agenda in Blackhampton and they weren’t a part of it. But whatever the case, she felt certain the children were strong enough for the brief trip to the inn.
“I’ll go,” Kingsley said. He looked around at the pews full of patients. “I’ll go, if it means that the case will be finished. Then Day and Hammersmith can come back with me and help.”
“I’ll come with you,” Henry said.
“No, I need you here, Henry. If we all go, these people will have nobody.”
“I don’t know medicine yet.”
“They don’t need medicine. They need a watchful eye.”
“I have two of those.”
“Indeed you do.” Kingsley turned to Campbell. “Take me there. Then bring me right
back here.”
Campbell nodded and led the way. He waited impatiently in the foyer while Kingsley fetched his bag and buttoned his overcoat, then the doctor hurried up the aisle and allowed himself to be escorted out into the blowing wind and snow.
Jessica didn’t waste a second. She knew that the men’s tracks would quickly fill with snow. She grabbed the children and bundled them into their coats, slipped their overshoes on their feet, and hustled them out of the church, ignoring their questions. She carried Virginia.
Outside, footprints were still visible, pressed down into the snow, two or three inches deep. Two sets, Campbell’s and Kingsley’s. She pulled her hat down over her forehead, hitched Virginia higher on her hip, and set out in the direction of the inn, putting her own feet in the men’s tracks. She could only see two or three yards ahead, and snowflakes caught in her eyelashes, forcing them closed. They wanted to stay closed, to crust over with ice. The village was completely silent, white and womblike. She and the children might have been the only people left in the world.
“Hold each other’s hands,” she said.
Peter and Anna held hands and followed her away from the church, into the swirling veil of white snow.
51
Day broke the silence. “Mr and Mrs Price, I believe it’s time you told me what’s been happening here.”
Hester Price sat back on the edge of the bed and looked at her son and said nothing. Sutton Price seemed to be in a daze. He stared at his wife. Bennett Rose sat upright on the floor. “I told you what’s happened,” he said. “Sutton Price killed his own son. You saw what happened. Oliver bled when his father came near to him. The dead boy’s had his say and told us who did the deed.”