“The letters may have been from anyone but the Ripper.”
“Who?”
“Newspaper writers hoping to sell more papers. There’s quite a competition to outdo each other with sensational and sordid stories, in America, England, France.”
“These reporters do jostle for something to print. And I can tell you from doing a few hundred interviews that those folks invent up one side and down the other. Usually it’s to my benefit, though. Lies only add to your legend. Oscar Wilde found that out when he came to the States. He and his wife received us when we appeared in London. Love the way the English and the French are coming to us now. We have grown up as a country, Missus Norton. We are of consequence.”
She smiled. “We are. So you say that the Indians are . . . utterly subdued. They would not revert to their savage ways on foreign soil.”
“Their savage ways are not so different from our savage ways. I found that out when I took Yellow Hand’s scalp. On the prairie there’s only wind and God and what men do, and not all of it’s nice. Savagery has its reasons, you must understand that. They worship their gods with their particular sacrifices. And sacrifices are always human, one way or another. We celebrate the torture of a god-man on a cross. That so different from how a Jesuit died at the hands of the Huron two hundred years ago? Some of the Plains Indians mutilate the bodies of dead enemies. We think that’s savage. We kill ‘em and embalm ‘em and bury ‘em whole. Much more civil, right? But some Indian tribes think the cuts in dead flesh release the souls to the Great Spirit, keep evil ghosts from walking the land. Savagery? Or spirituality?”
“Spirituality seems an odd concept for Indians.”
“Oh, I don’t know. Sitting Bull is a warrior, yes, but he is much more of a spiritual leader. Once he stopped a fray by sitting down on open ground between hostile Indian and Army forces. They shot away at each other, but not a bullet touched Sitting Bull. After a while, both sides were surprised enough to sit down with Sitting Bull and talk treaty.”
“Impressive,” Irene said, “but when I lived in America I heard that women who have fallen into Indian hands—”
“They can be brutal to captives, but so were the Romans. And some whites have become Indian in captivity. The Indian has lost his lands, thanks in part to me. I’d like to see them get some recompense. The ones in my show are chiefs the government would like locked up as ‘hostiles’ on a reservation, like Sitting Bull. Look at my posters.” He gestured at the iron standards everywhere bearing colorful illustrations. “In my programs I say, The Former Foe—Present Friend, the American.’ Can’t make it plainer than that. The Plains Indians are the best light cavalry on the planet. I like working with them. They have been my enemy, but they are fine warriors. I have seen an Indian chief match the dignity of the Queen of England. She saluted our American flag at my command performance for her in London, one of three. Victoria Regina has been Queen longer than I’ve been on this prairie. Where would an Indian get the hatred to stalk and kill foreign women?”
“These were prostitutes. He might not understand that kind of citified corruption.”
“No, the Indians didn’t have brothels, but some had slaves, or prisoners of war, and those poor souls could be treated quite savagely, white or red, men or women. And some Indians, like the Apache, would rape as well as kill. But Indian women were also used by the white man. The word ‘squaw’ came to mean that, like ‘Jane’ or ‘Mandy.’ All were words for prostitutes on the frontier.”
“ ‘Jane’ or ‘Mandy’ were used as description for prostitutes in the West?”
“Now don’t you go telling Calamity Jane that. Could get dangerous.”
Irene, however, was thinking aloud. “Mandy. Jane. Mary Jane. Mary Ann. Annie. An Indian on his own in London might hear names like those, especially in a district like the East End that was riddled with prostitutes, and think that the white man’s privilege was his at last.”
“Not likely! Indians don’t think tit for tat like that.”
“But if one were mad?”
“Insane? I suppose it’s possible. Being cut loose in some of these European cities might do that. Or drink. But not likely. They’ve always stuck to themselves. That’s all they’ve wanted, and that’s the only thing we white men couldn’t let happen.”
“And from what you know of Jack the Ripper’s work, it couldn’t be Indian mutilations?”
“I was traveling the Eastern seaboard when that Jack fellow was doing his worst, but I read about it in the papers. Some of the women were disemboweled. Apaches’d do that. Have done that. But they like to work on the living, and Saucy Jack was sure to kill first, with a slash to the neck. He butchered the dead. Now the Cheyenne and Sioux, they do their work in battle, or just after. They can be postmortem throat-cutters, I admit. And scalp-takers, but it’s all a part of war.
“The truth is the Army and the frontiersmen, they’ve been as bad about after-death mutilations as anyone, once they got the idea.” He glanced quickly at me as if worried about letting me overhear such things. “You’ve been a Pinkerton, Missus Norton, and this gal here claims sympathy for the thousands of buffalo I’ve slain. So I’ll tell you plain: the white man, soldier or settler, he did as bad or worse. I’ve heard them brag of ‘trophies’—purses made from Indian women’s breasts, necklaces strung with toes and fingers, some of them child-size.”
I gasped, and he turned to me as fast as a striking snake. “That era’s over, thank God. The Indians who’ve survived have become curiosities, at least around the world. The Queen last year in London and some of her ladies tickled the chins of the Indian babies in our troupe, and the babes laughed, and laughter knows no language. We are ambassadors, and we give the Indians their rightful title back: Americans.”
“It seems,” said Irene, “as if the late unpleasantries on the frontier are nearly over.”
“Oh, we may look like wild men, ma’am, but we are progressive. I am proud to number Theodore Roosevelt as a friend, and we plan to raise some dust together. I’ve got a town a-growing in Wyoming, but before America paves the plains with streets and tram-cars, I’m looking into plans to preserve some of the land and its creatures for the future. And,” he added, looking each one of us in the eye in turn, “the women in my show earn the same as the men. I support the suffragist cause to give each and every one of ’em the vote.”
“I applaud you, sir,” I said, ashamed of sounding like a civic booster.
“I will believe it when I see it,” Irene added, smiling ruefully.
“True, good intentions don’t put food upon the widow’s table,” he rejoined politely, “but the notion of universal suffrage will not pass away like the buffalo. Mark my words.
“I do want to bring the American ideal of independence and enterprise to the whole world,” he added. “It’s my thought to form a troupe soon of the world’s finest horsemen—Arabs, German Cuirassiers, Vaqueros, Cossacks, American Indians and cavalrymen, Cubans, and Pacific Islanders. East, West, or in between, they’re superb riders and more alike than different.”
“More alike than different,” Irene repeated slowly. She waited until Buffalo Bill’s full attention had returned to her. “Then the forces that created Jack the Ripper could spring from any culture. East. West. Or in between. Which is where we stand. Europe.”
He fidgeted, grinding his bootheels in the muck, but finally nodded.
“Yes, ma’am. If you put it that way.”
He took a deep breath. “It’s possible your Whitechapel killer is an insane Indian. Who’d blame ’em for going insane? You have to picture it: them living in the American wilds for centuries. Then a first white man comes, with a few more. And a few horses. The Indian takes the horse and forgets the riders. Then a few decades later more white men. And more horses. Then the horse soldiers. And the settlers. At first they think it’s just that few and this few that they can fight. But the buffalo dwindle from the white man’s guns, from a blanket of millions to a few thousand.
Food, clothing, weapons, all gone. And the white man keeps coming, with his women and children and cattle and horses and guns. Finally, they see that, wide as the land they’ve always known is, there is other land beyond knowing, filled with other people beyond knowing, and there are not enough warriors to stop the new herd that is swallowing up the land. The folks in Europe must have felt that way when the Huns came from the East. Suddenly, everything they were was not enough. So I suppose an Indian, facing this in his lifetime, could go a little crazy. Anything is possible.
“If you need my further help, let me know. I am not a scout any longer. There is almost no more need for what I was. What I would like to be is someone who builds the future, though I am entombed by my past. I’ll help you if you need it.” He grinned. “And I’m itching to introduce Merlinda the Mermaid to a European audience.”
35.
Of Couches and Corks
The filles who people the maison de prostitution would almost
all be incapable of requlating their expenses themselves; they
would fall into the most wretched misery if their material life
were not governed and ensured by the maitrônes.
—DR. JULIAN JEANNEL, DE LA PROSTITUTION
Never underestimate the power of a needle case.
One would think I had captured an ineffably rare South American butterfly from the way that Sherlock Holmes displayed my tiny prize under the lamplight.
He clapped a magnifying glass to his right eye like an oversize monocle while he pricked and stared at and . . . smelled the poor brown crumb I had carried on my person since Irene and I had visited the maison de rendezvous.
“If only I had my chemicals and vessels from Baker Street!” he lamented, more to himself than to me. “Or a larger sample. It is cork, of course. The wine was probably Spanish. Are you aware of the many arcane processes necessary for the production of a simple wine-bottle cork, Miss Huxleigh?”
“Thankfully no. I am barely aware of wine, sir, much less the method that lets the evil genie out of the bottle, so to speak.”
He ignored my temperance speech, as most people did, but I felt obligated as a parson’s daughter to make it now and again.
“I believe I see part of the impress of the letter ‘s’ on this crumb,” he went on. Obviously, this was a man used to talking to himself or to some docile associate who would only nod and clear his throat. “It could be from ‘bodegas,’ the Spanish word for wine cellar. And you swear that you found this fragment on the death-chamber carpeting? Did you not say you visited the house wine cellar on another occasion?”
“Irene found the crumb of cork. And we descended to the wine cellar the next night.”
“For one who avoids spirits, you have certainly frequented the wine cellars of France of late.”
“Only because Irene insisted.”
“She insists, does she? And you obey?”
“I have found her imperatives to be at least interesting.”
“Ha!”
I could not tell if he was reacting to my words or something he had seen in that magnifying glass of his.
“It is a pity you are so incurious about the origin of bottle corks, Miss Huxleigh. Their creation is a long and laborious effort. Like all such things, a rich history means a wealth of information to be gleaned from the end product of the process. A humble bottle cork is a lengthier creation than the wine it entombs.”
I murmured my surprise. This revelation was quite astounding to one who, after residing in France, had been cowed into believing that the wine-maker’s art was the most ancient and holy of pursuits, eclipsing all others.
“Indeed,” he said, warming to his topic, “the cork oak tree, most usually found in the sere, hot plains of Portugal, has been protected since the thirteenth century. It must grow twenty-five years and may be harvested only once every decade. Even then, the tree must have its outer bark stripped away by ax at least twice before the proper layer of cork is bared. The virgin bark is used for boards and tiles. Only the deepest, densest bark is suitable for wine corks.”
For some reason I found his depiction of the process rather . . . unsettling. “I thought that the French invented all things having to do with wine,” I said rather tartly. Nothing vanquishes an unsettled feeling like a tart retort.
“So do the French, but they use Portuguese cork. Actually, the notorious monk Dom Perignon was the first to apply cork to wine bottle necks.”
I frowned.
“Yes, he was the Frenchman who invented champagne. In that they are correct, but today Portugal is the largest producer of corks.”
“Then why do you think the wine is Spanish?”
“Besides the telltale ‘s’? I can see that you do not put much faith in it, but then you have not studied wine bottles as I have.”
I was tempted to comment on the obvious conclusion, but remembered my role as spy and saboteur.
He mistook my silence for acquiescence. Irene was right; he was an infant in the ways of women, particularly in the ways that women have of dealing with male presumption.
“You say the wine cellar was relatively undisturbed?” he asked.
“Yes. I was told that the usual wines were kept upstairs. Only the unusual vintage was brought from below.”
“Perhaps for an unusually high-ranking patron?”
This I had not thought of. “You mean Bertie.” I had no trouble referring to the Prince of Wales by that childish nickname now that I had learned just what that nasty boy was up to.
“I must see the wine cellar for myself.”
“That seems wise.”
“And you must accompany me to say if it has been further disturbed since your last visit.”
“I? How would I know?”
“My questions will aid your memory. Besides”—he stood, having replaced the crumb of cork in my etui, which he then appropriated by tucking it into his coat pocket—“I will rely upon you to extract the name of the Crown Prince’s . . . er, upholsterer from the madam of this place. These sorts of discussions are best left to women.”
Also best left to women for longer even than cork had been used to stopper fine wine was . . . silent indignation.
Still, there was no denying the satisfaction of sweeping back into the maison de rendezvous in the train of Sherlock Holmes.
The doorman greeted him by name and deep bow. We were immediately escorted into the madam’s private sitting room and offered sherry.
Neither of us succumbed.
“I am here, Madame,” he said without taking the offered seat, “on the business of our mutual honored client.”
She eyed me pointedly, clearly having forgotten my visit to her establishment with Irene.
“My, ah, secretary. She will accompany me to the wine cellar, and then I would wish you to make yourself available for any questions she might have. You realize that international matters of great moment hinge on what we do here.”
“Wales is likely to see more of himself in the press than he likes,” she answered with French frankness, her chins quivering with amusement. “He does so love Paris. It would be très triste if this last escape from the wearying rounds of statecraft were denied him. So”—she clapped fat, beringed hands together—“I can deny his emissary nothing. Even”—here she glanced at me with dismay—“if one such emissary dresses like a shopgirl.
“If there is any service of the house you would like after your investigations, Mr. Holmes, I would be happy to provide . . . her. Or them.”
His expression tautened to match my inner indignation. “Thank you, no, Madame. My investigations in all cases are reward enough. I will leave you now, but Miss Huxleigh will return shortly.”
She sighed her disappointment and fluttered lamp-blacked eyelashes.
Sherlock Holmes observed her as he would a bug twitching under a pin.
“Au revoir,” he said, with a curt bow, exiting the room and leaving me to totter after him.
In the passage
he stopped to take a deep breath, his hands shifting on the handles of the doctor’s bag he had brought with him. “I must apologize, Miss Huxleigh, for exposing you to such shameless sorts as Madame Portiere.”
“That is nothing,” I said, “for one who has been exposed to such a shameless sort as the Prince of Wales.”
He eyed me with one eyebrow raised. “You are obviously a stouthearted soul. You see that I have a certain authority by virtue of my illustrious client. I advise you to keep your opinion of him to yourself in this place, for I rely upon you to gain the information I require from that corrupt creature. It is not a task for a gentlewoman, but I trust that you see it is necessary.”
I nodded, speechless. He had called me a gentlewoman, which bespoke some notion of gentlemanliness on his part, will wonders never cease.
I led him to the back stairs and the route to the wine cellar, well remembering my last descent this way with Irene and Pink. Elizabeth, that is. Though household servants observed us, they offered no challenge. I suspect the detective’s tall, spry figure was no stranger to any part of this vast house. In the kitchen he swooped an oil lamp from a table and announced his intent to borrow it. No one objected although all watched like chained mastiffs.
We plunged down the narrow stone stairs to the wine cellar.
“It is difficult to imagine the Prince visiting these lower regions,” he remarked, as we entered the damp, dark kingdom of Brother Dom Perignon.
I was reminded of princes of darkness from Gothic novels, of hooded figures gathering in dungeons, of torture chambers and blasphemous ceremonies. . . .
Nothing stirred, save the occasional rat. Which brought my mind back to Bertie.
“Why would you suppose the Prince had been down here?”
“He is known to go where Princes seldom do . . . the cancan clubs in Montmartre, artists’ studios, houses like this. I admit that I wonder if perhaps His Royal Highness did not precede Miss Pink on the death scene. No one would admit it, of course.”
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