Read The Truth of All Things Online

Authors: Kieran Shields

Tags: #Detectives, #Murder, #Police, #Historical Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Murder - Investigation, #Portland (Me.), #Private Investigators, #Crime, #Trials (Witchcraft), #Occultism and Criminal Investigation, #Mystery Fiction, #Historical, #Salem (Mass.), #Fiction, #Women Historians

The Truth of All Things (52 page)

“He didn’t suffer long. I know this is terribly trying, but please, Helen, once more, think back. Is there anything else about what he said?”

“No,” answered Helen. “He just said he would have to cancel our dinner plans. He’d been reviewing the riddle again and thought he’d found something. A possible error. He was planning to try to have a look at the original.”

“I doubt the bishop would have allowed that.” Lean tapped his pencil on his notepad. “And that was at what time?”

“Just about two o’clock is when he telephoned me at the historical society.”

“And I found him lying right there this morning at half ten.” Doran’s voice from the doorway startled Lean, who’d nearly forgotten that the giant was still in the room.

“So this happened after we left the station.” Lean looked at Grey. “If only he’d come with us.”

Grey held up a finger. “I’ll need to speak to Bishop Healy, see if the doctor ever made it to the cathedral to see the original.”

“What difference does it make?” Lean stepped closer to Grey. “The damage is done.”

“Still, in the interest of fully understanding all that has passed before us in this inquiry …”

Lean glared at Grey, who returned his look impassively.

“My uncle,” said Helen.

Both men turned to face her. Lean’s irritation at Grey’s dogged pursuit of the final tragic minutiae of the case melted away when he saw the pained expression on Helen’s face.

“What do we do?” she asked.

“Oh, of course,” Lean said. “I’ll have some men over immediately to take him. So you can proceed with the arrangements.”

“That’s not what I meant.”

Lean gave her a puzzled look.

“He wouldn’t want it known that he died like this. Murdered by some madman. My uncle always despised the way that they were treated, the insane. Feared and detested. Locked away and chained like animals, or criminals, or …”

“Or witches,” Grey added.

“He’d hate the thought of what people would say about this. About his work. They’d use his death as another example to prove that the insane are too dangerous to treat and how they should all just be locked away.” Helen wiped the tears from her eyes. “It was the whole reason he came here—he wanted to help the veterans, and not for just the wounds that you could see.”

“The truth of it is that your uncle was murdered,” Grey said.

“By a man who is already dead. Who cannot be prosecuted or
punished in this world. Must we let that man strike out at my uncle again? He took his life. I won’t have him murder his legacy as well. You owe him that at least.”

Lean exchanged a glance with Grey, who looked away after a moment.

“I can speak with the coroner,” Lean said, “have some reliable men collect your uncle’s body. Things can be arranged … quietly.”

“Thank you, Archie.”

A short while later, Lean helped Helen into a hansom cab and paid the driver to take her home. Grey stood near, and they watched the cab turn the corner out of view.

“Do you wish to come to the cathedral with me?” Grey asked.

“No. I truly don’t. Please stop, Grey. It’s over. There’s nothing left to answer. The inquiry is finished. It’s time to let it all rest … and bury our friend.”

G
rey entered his study and, from force of habit, went to his cluttered worktable. The investigation had burned itself out, leaving these piles of papers and notes as worthless remnants to be swept away. He picked up a page of testimony against George Burroughs. It reminded him of a program from some momentous opera, now finished. All the glorious notes just a memory, and he was just a patron exiting into the night with nothing more than that scrap of paper clutched in his hand. The wondrous music gone, replaced by all the mundane sounds of the world.

Above the empty fireplace, his father’s old pipe still sat on the mantel. The stone bowl felt cool in his palm. He never did learn if Geoffrey Blanchard had spent time among Abenakis in connection with his father’s temperance activities. Instead, Grey was left with the assumption that Jack Whitten had lived among the Indians after he was released from the orphanage. He must have found his mother again
while she traveled with the Indian shows. He supposed Lean was right—it simply didn’t matter now. The unasked, unanswered questions would remain, themselves like dead bodies that would never be committed to the ground. It no longer mattered what had started Whitten down his murderous path. Was there any reason he chose those specific victims? Why had he bothered to kill Dr. Steig? There was nothing left to gain from those questions, as frustrating as it was not to know. It was a question that he’d never left unresolved in any of his prior inquiries: Why did a certain person have to die?

Grey went to his desk and began sorting through the papers, pushing them aside until he recovered a small newspaper article:
DROWNED MAN PULLED FROM RIVER
.

“Last month I asked Herrick about the day my mother and I first arrived here.”

From his stuffed chair, Cyrus Grey showed no obvious sign of interest.

“Easter Sunday. He remembered it vividly,” Grey said.

“Well and good.” Cyrus returned to his newspaper.

“The year was 1867. Easter fell on April twenty-first.”

“If you say so.”

“I had occasion recently to spend some time in the basement of the
Eastern Argus
and found something that piqued my curiosity. So later I also checked the archives of the
Daily Press
, the
Express
, and the
Daily Advertiser
.” Grey drew out a small newspaper clipping from his coat pocket. “This is the earliest report on the incident that I could find. The first mention in any Portland newspaper.”

Cyrus skimmed the article and tried to hand it back, but Grey did not accept it.

“You’ll notice the date on the story,” Grey said.

“April twenty-second.”

“He died that Friday prior, April nineteenth. You couldn’t have known in time. The men you sent to retrieve us arrived too quickly, before news of the death became known here.”

“Your mother must have telegraphed me.”

“She didn’t leave the house after he died. Not once until those men came for us.”

“A friend of hers, then. I don’t recall exactly. What are you getting at, Perceval?”

Grey sat down opposite his grandfather. “The truth, now. Did you order them to kill my father?”

“How can you ask me that?”

“Did you?”

The old man dropped his newspaper on the side table. “Of course not.”

“Then tell me how. Why were those men there? It would have been no later than Saturday night that they roused us from our home. What were they doing there so quickly?”

“I sent them. Is that what you want to hear? Fine. But I never told them to hurt the man. I provided money to give to him. An exchange, if you will. They were to bring your mother and you home. I never meant for that fellow to be harmed.”

“ ‘That fellow’? You can call him my father. You can’t hide the plain truth of it.” Grey held his arms out, putting himself on display. “That was your intent? To buy us back? Give him some money and he’d just walk away?”

“Maybe it was foolishness. So I’m guilty of being a fool. But I’m not a murderer. They said it was an accident. Words were exchanged; trouble started. But they swore it was an accident.”

“And that’s the end of it all?” Grey slumped back in his chair. “But why? Why send them in the first place?”

“Your mother needed to come home; she needed help. You know the way her moods were.”

“She was happy then. He made her happy.”

“You were a child. What did you understand of the world they let you see? The simple truth is she needed doctors, not medicine women or some such. Real help.”

“You still believe that? Knowing how things ended. You think the doctors helped her?”

“She couldn’t be saved. I know that now. But I saved
you
.”

“From what? My family?”

“From that life. Easy enough for you to sit here now and blame me for all. But where would you be if I’d never acted?” Cyrus rose and collected himself for a moment before facing Grey again. “Look at yourself. Look at who you’ve become. You can’t even comprehend the life you’d be living. What would you be now? A medicine man. Some itinerant basket weaver, roaming about like a Gypsy. A drunkard working at odd jobs.”

“Not everyone in the world needs all that you have to be content.”

“Content? You’d never have been content with a simple life, full of mundane chores and accomplishments. You think me cruel, no doubt, my conduct unforgivable. But what of all these investigations of yours? All these interesting matters you devote yourself to uncovering. Because of me, you were able to pursue this strange life you’ve chosen. Be honest with yourself, Perceval. Deep in your heart, you don’t truly regret what I did.”

Grey shot a furious look at his grandfather.

“Yes, I caused you pain, your mother, too. But I never meant to—I wanted the best for her. And I failed.” Cyrus went to the cabinet and poured himself a drink. “Parents and children are uniquely fitted in this world; they can wound each other far deeper than God should ever allow. And there’s little to be done to dull that pain. I’m sorry for your mother, more than you can know. But the past is done. Dredging it up with these questions will never make things whole.”

Grey stood. The anger drained from his eyes, and he walked to the door.

B
ishop Healy walked up the aisle. By the light of the many flickering candles, he saw the thin, dark man seated in the final pew. In their
prior meeting, he’d had the impression that Perceval Grey was not a man who placed his faith in the Lord. But now he was leaning forward, head resting on his joined fingertips, in the appearance of prayer, or at least in deep contemplation. The bishop wanted to wait for Grey to notice him, but he was busy, especially now with all the arrangements to make in the wake of Father Coyne’s tragic death.

“Mr. Grey?”

Grey’s eyelids snapped open. He stood and reached out to take the Bishop’s hand, the gesture accompanied by a tired smile.

“Thank you for taking the time to see me, Your Excellency.”

“Not at all. Would you like to come back to my office? You seem troubled. I’d hoped that I had helped you in our previous discussion.”

“You did. Thank you again.”

“But …?”

“But not before another loss,” Grey said. “A friend.”

“Not Deputy Lean?”

“Lean? No, he’s fine.”

Bishop Healy expected a further word or glance that would invite another question from him on Grey’s loss, but there was no such sign from the man.

“So how can I help you, Mr. Grey?”

“I just have a simple question remaining. Did Dr. Virgil Steig pay you a visit the night before last?”

Bishop Healy was surprised by the question. “The same night as the fire.”

“Yes. I was sorry to hear about Father Coyne.”

“Thank you. At least his suffering is over and he is home now with God.”

“Yes.” Grey smiled, but it looked forced, and he sustained it only long enough for the gesture to be duly noted. “And Dr. Steig?”

“No. I didn’t see him.”

“Not a call on the telephone or a note? Any communication at all?”

“Not that I’m aware of,” Bishop Healy answered. “Why? Is there something the matter?”

“No. Just trying to piece some little thing together. Thank you for your time. I must be going.” Grey made to leave.

Bishop Healy had seen the strain showing through on the man’s face. There was definitely something eating at him. Though he barely knew Perceval Grey, it was not easy for him to turn away from someone in such distress. He had to at least offer the man a chance to reach out.

“Mr. Grey,” he called, “perhaps you’d care to attend the funeral masses. You might find them to be of some comfort.”

Grey’s hand was on the door out to the entryway. He stopped and looked back. “Oh, thank you, but … masses? Father Coyne and who else?”

“His man there, Peter Chapman. You must have met him when you spoke to Father Coyne.”

“Peter Chapman? What information do you have about his death?”

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