Authors: Chris Nickson
âEvidently the place was empty. We managed to put it out before it could spread.'
âThank God for that.' She licked her thumb and rubbed a smudge from his cheek. He grinned at the gentle roughness of her fingertip against his face. Her hair was greyer each year and the pain of Rose's loss still lingered in her eyes, but he held her closer to his heart with each season, even after more than twenty years together.
âYou'd better go and wash and put on some clothes that don't stink,' she told him. âAre you hungry?'
âI'm fine for now. How's the garden coming?'
Mary smiled.
âI've put the herbs over there.' She pointed to a cleared corner where the earth looked dark and rich. âAnd I'm just planting the onions.'
Clean and in a fresh shirt and breeches, he sat and read his way through the new edition of the
Mercury
. As usual it was filled with news taken from the London papers, things that didn't concern or interest him. The great men would do their damnedest in the capital, but all that mattered in his world was here in this city. He skipped past the advertisements offering outrageous claims for efficacious pills and potions to thumb through the Leeds announcements and their snippets of scandal and innuendo. There was nothing he didn't already know or hadn't proved for a lie.
By the time he'd finished, Emily was lifting the latch with Lister just behind. He smiled to watch the lad trailing her like an eager pup.
âHello, love,' he said. âHow was your teaching?'
She untied the bonnet and shook out her hair.
âI wish Mrs Rains would let me try some new things,' she replied with a small pout. âI think we could have the girls reading and counting much better if we did.'
âIf anyone can persuade her I'm sure you can,' he offered, hoping the girl hadn't been too insistent.
âWe were talking about it on the way home.' Emily reached out and took Lister's hand, squeezing it tightly. âDid you see there'd been a fire on the Calls, Papa?'
âI was there,' he told her and turned to the lad. âRob, talk to Mr Sedgwick when you go in tonight. Make sure you keep a couple of men standing guard on the house that burned. We don't want it flaring up again or anyone going in. You'll have to move the others around so everything's covered.'
âYes, boss,' he answered, and Nottingham saw the quick flash of relief at the change of subject. âI'd better go. I need to eat and be ready.'
âBetter not be late for work.' They grinned at each other in brief shared understanding before Lister left. They were a good couple, he thought. He was a solid, steadying influence on Emily, tempering her away from wilder moments. And she brought something out in him. He'd come to care about people. Between the job and courting, he'd become a very likeable young man. She could do a great deal worse than end up with him.
The Constable didn't want to enter the house until full light. It was simply too dangerous to risk blundering around among shadows and debris. Rob had stayed on to help and two of the men were hauling ladders. Yesterday's sunshine had given way to high pearly cloud, but the soft spring warmth remained in the air.
âI heard something odd after you'd gone yesterday, boss,' Sedgwick said.
âWhat's that?'
âA woman thought she saw someone coming out of here before the fire.'
Nottingham turned sharply. âWhat? Someone set this?'
The deputy shrugged.
âWe'd best see what we can find, then,' the Constable said grimly.
The walls still stood, damaged and scarred, but solid. Inside, though, there was little left. Holes in the roof let light pour in like water. The floors had given way in places, fallen all the way through to the cellar where beams lay broken and burned.
âSee if there's anything upstairs,' Nottingham told the deputy. âWatch those steps, though. Lizzie'll kill me if you end up hurt. Rob, you come with me.'
They lowered one of the ladders and the Constable climbed down to the cellar warily, turning slowly and picking his way across patches of the beaten earth floor, stirring up a fog of fine ashes with every step. The cloying smell of smoke filled the place, rubbing his throat raw as he breathed. The fire had done its work well. Apart from the wreckage there was little to see, just a few small pieces of rubbish pressed down into the dirt, the detritus of lives that had been lived there. He wondered again how the blaze had begun. Had the woman really seen someone leaving here? Why would anyone want to burn
this
place?
He moved on cautiously, hands exploring under timbers that were still warm to the touch. He'd almost finished when his fingertips pressed against something. He felt slowly along the shape, pursing his lips, his face grim.
âSome light over here,' he ordered briskly. âGet Mr Sedgwick down here and let's get this shifted. I want to see what's underneath.'
The wood had collapsed to make a roof over her. Without that she'd have burned like everything else, the house her funeral pyre. Lister and Sedgwick worked slowly and methodically to pry away each piece, gradually uncovering her as the Constable watched.
Even with the shelter there wasn't much left, little more than a husk of who she'd once been. What remained of her flesh was cooked crisp, all blistered and cracked with the smell of roasted meat. Her hair had been scorched to the scalp, the bone showing through in awful, vivid white. The features of her face were almost all gone; the only things left were her nose and mouth; there was a split in her upper lip, and a jut of bone that could have been a break or a cleft palate. Only her shape gave away her sex, with a mound on her belly. Had she been pregnant?
âLet me take a look.'
Nottingham crouched and moved closer to see her. Her hands were crossed over her breasts, the skin of her arms fused to her sides by the heat. It all seemed wrong, he didn't understand it. He reached out to what remained of her fingers, feeling the brittleness of her flesh crumble under his touch to leave hard, opaque bone. Someone battling to live, to escape, wouldn't have ended up like this, in this position of grace, he thought.
Slowly, gently, he blew the ash off her stomach, brushing away small fragments as he tried to make out what was there. Then he understood. The colour left his face. He stood abruptly and walked across the cellar, pushing his hands against his head, taking short, painful breaths, as if all the air in the place had withered. He squeezed his eyes closed to try and force the vision away. He believed he'd seen all the images of evil in his time, counted and stared deep into them to know them. But he'd seen nothing like this. This was beyond nightmare. A baby, and too small for a newborn. Whoever did this must have ripped it out of her body.
âWhat is it, boss?' the deputy asked.
âSee for yourself.' The words came out as a croak and he hawked to clear the bile out of his throat. âLook at her, John.'
He watched as the deputy bent then backed away suddenly as he realized what he was seeing. He stood, shaking his head helplessly. It was beyond all comprehension.
âFuck.'
âRob, go and fetch the coroner.' He paused to glance at Sedgwick. âSend the rest of the men away.'
Lister dashed off, just leaving the two of them to wait with the body.
âHow?' the deputy asked, unable to take his eyes off her.
âI don't know.' The Constable's face was dark, his gaze returning to the body. âI thought I'd seen it all, but this . . .' He didn't own the words to describe what he felt. âIf the wood hadn't fallen that way we'd never have known. There'd have been nothing left.'
They stood with the perfume of the destruction filling their nostrils.
âSeems like that woman who thought she saw someone leaving the house before the fire might have been right,' Nottingham said.
âI know.' Sedgwick's voice was empty.
Nottingham knew he couldn't pause to think too deeply yet about what was in front of him. He needed to keep his mind working.
âYou'd better talk to her again. See if you can get anything more from her.'
âYes, boss.'
âWe'll take the body back to the jail ourselves. For right now I just want us and Rob knowing about this.'
The light filtered down on them, so pale it seemed unnatural, something from a tale of ghosts and devils. Finally Brogden the coroner arrived, Lister at his side. He climbed down to the cellar awkwardly, testing each rung of the ladder before trusting his ample weight on it. At the bottom he stopped to inspect his costly clothes, brushing away a few flecks of dirt.
He could afford to dress well. In addition to being Coroner of Leeds, Brogden was also the city's Sergeant-at-Mace and Clerk of the Market, all titles that lined his purse deeply for little work, bringing him more than most people would earn in five years.
He picked his way fastidiously through the rubble and wreckage, careful not to scuff his freshly-shined shoes with their glistening buckles.
âWhere's the body?' he asked, and the Constable indicated with his head. Brogden didn't move any closer. âWas she burned to death?'
âWe don't know yet.'
âNo matter.' He waved his hand idly. âShe's dead, anyway.' He turned to leave and stopped. âWas there something else?'
âTake another look, Mr Brogden,' Nottingham told him. âSee what's on her belly.'
The coroner peered for a moment, then pulled back, horrified, looking mutely at the others before leaving. That would live on in his dreams for many nights to come, the Constable thought.
âRight, let's get her back. Rob, you go and get a sheet so we can cover her. We'll find something to put her on.'
They were careful moving her, the body fragile as ash, so light she might have been made of smoke. But lifting her from the cellar was difficult, slow work that brought the taste of vomit hard into their mouths.
Finally they had her on a door that hadn't been damaged too badly, just scorched on its edges, and carried her up Kirkgate to the jail where they put her in the cell they used as a mortuary. The Constable lit two lamps; even on the brightest day the light in the room was dim.
He set up a mug of ale, a bowl of clean water and a cloth, tied a kerchief around his face and took a deep breath. Slowly, gently he eased the cover from the corpse. Then he soaked the cloth and tenderly began to wash away the ash and grime from her belly.
He worked silently, stopping only to spit and rinse the taste from his mouth with small sips of beer. Finally, with the water in the bowl death-dark and thick, he stood back.
The foetus rested on the girl's stomach. It was tiny, hardly any longer than his hand, but there was no mistaking the babe. Its head was large, almost too big for the fragile body; he could discern the features, the eyes and mouth, the fingers and toes, the chest now empty of all life, legs bent and stopped as if the boy had been trying to push his way up to her breast.
He saw the black line where the girl's belly had been slashed open and the child torn out. The cord had been raggedly cut and they'd both been left to vanish in the blaze, to become no more than cinders. He gazed at them again with a deep, overwhelming sorrow.
Finally he covered the bodies again and walked silently back out to the office where Sedgwick and Lister waited.
âWell?' the deputy asked.
The Constable hesitated a long time before answering, running a hand through his hair, not sure he could even speak.
âThat's definitely a baby on her belly,' he said finally. âNot even born yet. The killer sliced her open and took it out of her.'
âChrist.' Sedgwick turned away quickly.
Nottingham looked over at Lister. The lad was too young to understand the full horror on the slab. He'd never been a parent, never lost a child. He couldn't know the pain, couldn't feel it in his gut, aching and gnawing.
âWhoever did it set the fire to burn them up,' he continued bleakly. âWe were just lucky the bodies survived or we'd never have known anything. I want you two out talking to people along the Calls. Don't mention the corpses but find out everything you can. See if you can discover who owns the place, who used to live there, who'd have known it was empty. You talk to that woman again, John, and then see if anyone else saw anything odd. We need to find out who the dead girl was. Someone's got to know her and miss her.' He paused and his voice turned hard. âI want the bastard who did this.'
The men left. Alone, the Constable sat to write his daily report for the mayor, uncertain how he could begin to describe what he'd seen. He eventually settled for the barest sketch. He was sanding the paper dry when the door of the jail opened and a man walked in.
âI'm Hezekiah Walton,' he said. âI'm looking for the Constable.'
Nottingham glanced up at the man and smiled genially.
âI'm Richard Nottingham, I'm the Constable of Leeds,' he replied. âHow can I help you, Mr Walton?'
The man bowed slightly
âDo you know a family named Cooper?' he asked.
âThere are plenty of people named Cooper in Leeds.' He gestured the man to a seat.
âThese won't have been here too long, a month or two at most,' Walton said. âUp from London, parents and two boys about ten and twelve.'
The Constable stared at the man.
âAnd what's your interest in them?'
âI'm a thief taker,' he explained. âThe father stole twelve guineas, some plate and lace from the people who've employed me to find them.'
Nottingham leaned forward with interest, steepled his arms under his chin and studied Walton carefully. He looked to be in his late thirties, with thick streaks of grey in his long hair. He was unshaven, the bristles dark against his skin, his clothes coloured with dust from the roads. His coat and breeches were charcoal grey, well cut but old and worn, the long waistcoat once good ivory silk. A sword and scabbard hung from the waist, the leather of the blade handle shiny with use.