A Better Quality of Murder: (Inspector Ben Ross 3) (23 page)

BOOK: A Better Quality of Murder: (Inspector Ben Ross 3)
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‘I did not need to. I am always in my lodgings on a Saturday afternoon.You see, Inspector,’ he leaned forward to draw my attention to some serious point he was about to make. ‘For most men Sunday is a day of rest. For men of the cloth, however, it is our busiest day for we are about the Lord’s work. It is also the day when we preach our main sermon of the week. On Saturdays, Inspector Ross, I write my sermon for the following Sunday. As today is Friday, I can safely say that tomorrow afternoon I shall be engaged on the same task. Week in, week out, Inspector, that is the pattern of my life.’ He sat back, surrounded by an air of saintly forbearance that made me want to reach across the table and choke him with my bare hands.

 

However there was an irrefutable logic to his reply. Probably every Saturday of the year, clergymen up and down the country were toiling away at the same duty. But nevertheless I pressed on.
‘Did anyone see you there? Your landlady? Any visitor?’
He looked hurt. ‘I impress on my landlady that I am not to be disturbed. The writing of my sermon takes me all afternoon. I don’t dash it off in a few minutes! It requires thought. The examples illustrating it must be carefully chosen. The preacher must reach the hearts and minds of his listeners, Inspector, without confusing them. He must explain, illuminate and inspire. I have often laboured late into the night at the writing of it.’
I refused to be distracted by the image of Fawcett toiling away by candlelight.
‘But there was a meeting that afternoon at the Temperance Hall, not far from Waterloo,’ I put to him. ‘Our maidservant, Bessie Newman, went there to collect some pamphlets.’
‘So I believe. I am sorry she was given the pamphlets to distribute without your express permission. I have told your wife of my regret. But I was not present myself at the hall on that Saturday afternoon, nor indeed on any other Saturday. Mr Walters conducted the meeting that day. Perhaps, if you care to ask your maidservant, she will confirm it.’
‘You have a loyal band of workers,’ I said to him, still trying hard not to show how much he irritated me and miserably aware that I was failing and that, even worse, he enjoyed my frustration.
He nodded graciously.
‘But you had not persuaded Allegra Benedict to join them.’
‘No, she was of another religious persuasion. But you are quite right. She was not one of my congregation, so I am at a loss to guess why you think I should have arranged to meet her. And in Green Park?’ he shook his head. ‘You grow fanciful, Inspector.’
‘Let us see if I am!’ I snapped back at him and saw that fleeting smile. He had me really rattled and I had all but given up trying to conceal it. I forced myself to regain my self-control.
‘I believe that, although she did not attend your meetings at the hall, nevertheless you were in contact with her. She knew of your so-called good work because she had heard you talk of it at Mrs Scott’s house. She had been encouraged to contribute to your funds, either because she believed the money would be put to good use, or because she had another reason for wishing to please you. At any rate, she met you that day to give you money from the sale of a piece of family jewellery. She had just concluded the sale in the Burlington Arcade. We have spoken with the jeweller.’
He blinked at the mention of the jeweller. That was not speculation on my part. Allegra had indeed sold the piece.
‘I have no idea why the lady needed money but it was certainly not to give it to me. You may search my lodgings. You will not find it, or any other sums of money, in my possession. All is spent on my work.’ He pursed his lips. ‘I understood her husband to be wealthy. This selling of a piece of jewellery privately seems a surprising thing for her to have done. But if you say she did it, then she did so. But I cannot even guess at her purpose.’ He shook his head. ‘There are many troubled souls out there, Inspector. Who knows what was in her mind?’
I drew a deep breath. In for a penny, in for a pound. ‘What is more, I believe that you and she were conducting a clandestine affair.’
Now he stiffened, flushed and a frown creased his brow beneath those Byronic locks. He looked every inch the wounded innocent. ‘That is a most offensive suggestion, Inspector Ross! Naturally I deny it. I deny it vigorously! Not only because I am a man of the cloth, dedicated to his work and bound by the requirements of religion; but she is – was – a very respectable married woman. I take it you have not suggested this scandalous and, I don’t doubt,
actionable
theory of yours to the lady’s husband? Casting aspersions on the reputation of someone who cannot respond? Is this what our police officers have come to?’
But he was disturbed. The vigorous denial was delivered with a real passion suggesting to me it sprang from alarm. You might say anyone would be troubled by my accusation even if, or particularly if, he were innocent. But I have interviewed a good many guilty men. Aha! Mr Fawcett, I thought, you had not reckoned on your amorous entanglement becoming known.
‘I must insist,’ he was saying, ‘on knowing on what basis you make these lurid accusations. You cannot possibly have
any
reasonable argument for them.’
‘We believe,’ I said, ignoring his demand, ‘that Miss Isabella Marchwood carried your correspondence to Mrs Benedict.’
But now he was on safer ground. I saw him relax and cursed my clumsiness. Miss Marchwood could no longer be called in witness.

 

‘She told you this herself? Miss Marchwood, I mean. She made this ridiculous claim?’ His eyes gleamed.
Again, I ignored his question. ‘There is supporting testimony from Mrs Benedict’s personal maid and a former butler employed by Mr Benedict.’
Morris had made the expedition to Englefield Green and interviewed Henderson, the lady’s maid, fortunately still living at The Cedars. Morris has a way with below-stairs members of the household. Henderson had happily told him all when informed of Seymour’s claim. She had definitely twice come upon her mistress burning letters and on one occasion (this confessed with a deep blush) rescued an unburned scrap from the grate, out of curiosity. It had been signed
Jos
. . . The last part of the name had been reduced to ash but she was quite certain of the first three letters. Unfortunately for us, she had not kept the charred fragment.
Fawcett threw up his hands. ‘Gossiping servants! Goodness, Inspector, a man of your experience surely places little reliance on such so-called information. I am surprised at you. To believe a poorly educated lady’s maid with a mind heavily influenced by cheap novelettes? And a
former
butler? A dismissed servant with a grudge?’ He shook his head sorrowfully at my gullibility. ‘No court of law would place reliance on such testimony, Inspector.’
He was right. I could not prove it. He knew I could not. If I persisted now I would sound increasingly as if I were grasping at straws.
‘Let me get this quite clear, Inspector,’ Fawcett continued carefully. ‘Are you suggesting – I can hardly believe it, but it seems you are – that I had a hand in the murder of the unfortunate Mrs Benedict?’
‘We are only asking for your cooperation in our investigation,’ I heard myself say woodenly.
‘And Miss Marchwood? Do you imagine I can help with that dreadful business, too? Are there any other crimes, at present unsolved, that you would like to lay at my door? I begin to feel a little like the scapegoat of the Old Testament, sent out into the wilderness laden with the sins of the children of Israel.’
‘I have no further questions at this time!’ I snarled.
He had me on the run. ‘Am I to be charged with
any
offence?’ he asked.

 

‘Not at present,’ I confessed.
‘Then I am free to leave?’
‘Yes, you are free to leave,’ I said. I could see Biddle in his corner giving me a startled look. Well, Biddle was young and had a lot to learn.
Fawcett rose elegantly to his feet and dusted off his sleeves. ‘I take it my diamond pin will be returned immediately. I should not like to think it could be lost in police custody.’
I leaned across the table. ‘You are pushing your luck too far, Fawcett. Yes, you may go. But don’t leave London.’
‘Why should I?’ he replied. ‘Good day to you, Inspector.’
Shortly afterwards, I watched from my window as he strolled off down the road. Dunn was probably right and he would not run, at least not straight away. We had played our hand and shown it to be weak. He had admitted nothing and we could prove nothing. But still, he must be concerned that we knew of his liaison with Allegra. A man like Fawcett would be making plans for his future. What, I wondered, would he do now?
Chapter Fourteen
Inspector Benjamin Ross

 

I made my way home that Friday evening deep in thought as I headed south towards the river. I was wondering how to explain the latest turn of events to my wife and to our maid of all work, as explain to them I eventually must. There was a faint chance they hadn’t yet heard the news and then I would need to say nothing tonight. That would buy me a little time but I couldn’t pin my hopes on it. It was far more likely that word would already have got about the congregation and the news carried to my own home by some eager talebearer. They knew Lizzie was married to me. Someone might have hoped to glean information, another reason for not telling Lizzie before; not that she would be indiscreet but Bessie might be.

 

Most men, I reflected ruefully, would not have found it necessary to explain anything to a servant. It was my bad luck that our maid was both an enthusiastic member of Fawcett’s congregation and outspoken as well. So, Ben Ross, I told myself, you can’t win. Bessie will probably be dismayed to hear Joshua Fawcett was arrested in the first place, and obliged to spend a night in the cells; Lizzie will be disappointed to hear he’s subsequently been released (and piqued that I hadn’t told her of his arrest the day before).
Rain had begun to fall in a steady drizzle. Already pavements and road surfaces glittered wetly in the glow of the gas lamps. People were hurrying to be home, as I was. Even so, the ubiquitous London prostitutes were out and about seeking the first customers of the evening. As I passed a doorway I heard myself hailed as ‘dearie’ and an invitation was extended to let the speaker ‘cheer me up’. The voice sounded young. I paused and peered into the shadows, with half an intention to arrest the girl for her own sake and lock her away from the streets and their dangers if only for the one night.

 

There was a gasp. The light from the nearest lamp-post was shining on my face and the girl could see me far better than I could see her.
‘It’s you, ain’t it?’ she said. ‘You’re that inspector what came to the Hero to speak to Jed.’
‘Come out!’ I ordered sharply. ‘Let me see you.’
A figure emerged and I saw the girl in the mauve bonnet who had been with Jed Sparrow in the public house. She still wore the same bonnet, despite its unsuitability for the time of year, and a light gown equally out of season, with petticoats short enough to reveal her boots and mud-splashed stockings. For warmth she had draped round her shoulders a small cape edged with some fur that looked to me as if it had last been worn by a cat. She also carried a brolly and now put this up to shield herself from the rain – and perhaps also to put a barrier between herself and me.
‘I remember you,’ I said. ‘You sat at the table with Sparrow and another girl. So, out collecting rags, are you?’
She gave a nervous giggle. ‘That’s Jed’s little joke,’ she said.
‘Sparrow would do well not to jest with the law. What’s your name?’
She hesitated. ‘Rose,’ she said at last, adding in a frightened voice, ‘Here, you’re not going to run me in, are you? I only just got here, I ain’t earned any money yet.’
‘And Sparrow, in another of his little jokes, will black your eye if you go home empty-handed,’ I said. ‘As he used to beat Clarrie Brady.’
‘You found Clarrie, didn’t you?’ she said quietly.
‘I viewed her body in the morgue. I didn’t find her. The River Police did that. She was taken out of the Thames.’
She sighed. ‘It don’t seem fair,’ she said. ‘It was the River Wraith who did that to her, wasn’t it?’
She said this with a kind of dull certainty that was sadder than any more dramatic tone.
‘You’re afraid that, one night, he’ll find you, too,’ I said.

 

‘I already saw him,’ was the reply.
I hadn’t expected this. ‘When? Where?’ I demanded. ‘Not tonight?’
‘No, it was a couple of weeks ago, just before Clarrie disappeared. I saw her that day and after that I never saw her no more. I knew the Wraith had got her. She was afraid of him. We’re all of us afraid of him, but Clarrie, she knew he was looking for her.’
‘Daisy Smith said the same,’ I said.
‘Daisy and Clarrie, they were good friends.’
‘Rose,’ I said gently, ‘tell me where you saw the Wraith and how it came about.’
‘It was during the week before we had that really thick fog, I think it was the Thursday.’ She paused. ‘But the weather wasn’t good. The river mist had come up, nowhere near so bad as it got later, but still bad enough. Down near the water it was swirling about and sort of confusing for anyone out and about in it like I was. The cold got into your bones. I stopped and bought a hot potato from a seller. I stood by his stove to eat it and warm meself up. I know that seller; I often buy a potato from him in cold weather. Just after I moved off, hadn’t gone very far, I heard footsteps hurrying along behind me. I turned quick – but not quick enough. He was there, all white robes, like a burial shroud, with staring black holes instead of eyes . . . He spoke to me.’
This was the first information I’d had that anyone had heard the prowler’s voice. I asked eagerly, ‘What did he say? What was his voice like?’
‘Very soft,’ she said. ‘Strange that, you’d think it would be harsh, croaking. But it was very soft and would have been quite nice if it hadn’t been coming out of that face. He called me a harlot, a daughter of sin, and he sort of . . . hissed. I let out a really big yell, and the potato seller, further down the road, he heard and he came running. He was shouting out, “What’s up?” because he guessed it was me screaming. When the old Wraith heard someone coming he took off too, just vanished into mist. By the time the potato seller got there, I was shaking. But the Wraith had gone.’
Rose had seen Clarrie on the Thursday – and met the Wraith that same evening. But if he’d been looking for Clarrie on that Thursday evening, he’d not found her, because Daisy had seen Clarrie on Friday morning, at a coffee stall.

 

‘You were fortunate,’ I told Rose. Indeed she had been, because she too had seen him close at hand and heard his voice – and perhaps only the approach of the potato seller had saved her. If the Wraith had wanted to practise his skill with a cord that night, it would have been Rose’s body I’d seen at Wapping.
‘Maybe.’ Her thoughts were echoing mine. ‘Maybe it would have been better if I hadn’t seen him. Clarrie saw him and look what happened to her. Perhaps he is looking for me, now.’ She peered up at me from beneath the umbrella. ‘You going to run me in? Don’t, please!’
‘No,’ I said wearily. ‘I’m not going to arrest you. But take care and try and stay where there are plenty of people around.’
‘Daisy said you were all right,’ she confided.
‘I’m obliged to Daisy,’ I said. ‘Goodnight, Rose.’
‘Goodnight, Mr Ross.’
I set off on my way again but the meeting with the girl, and her youth, had depressed me. Perhaps it was the thought of that scoundrel Jed Sparrow waiting for her to bring home any money she earned. Whatever the reason, I turned my head and looked back.
She was standing where I had left her, beneath her brolly, but now she had apparently snared a customer. A well-dressed man was talking to her and some discussion, probably over price, taking place. Then he looked up and in my direction, as if he sensed that the pair of them were observed, and I saw in the gaslight that it was Sebastian Benedict.

 

I would say that my initial response was surprise. But then my surprise faded, to be replaced by a mixture of feelings. To put the best interpretation on his presence, it was possible he was simply unhappy and lonely following the death of his wife, and that had led him to come up to town and seek out one of the ladybirds working about the streets. Or, and now my emotion was turning to one of anger, this had always been his habit. Despite a beautiful wife at home, he was one of those men who find more pleasure and excitement with prostitutes. There are plenty of well-to-do men of that sort. But it still shocked me that Benedict was turning out to be one of them.
I turned on my heel in disgust and walked on, but soon I heard footsteps rapidly overtaking me and a voice called, ‘Ross!’
I stopped and waited. Benedict caught up with me, rather out of breath. I noted that although still clad in severe mourning, he had removed the silk scarf from his top hat. His servants would have noticed if he had changed his dress to come up to town so he was obliged to seek his pleasures still clad in deepest black.
‘You are astonished to see me,’ he said, his manner and voice both defiant.
‘I am a police officer,’ I told him. ‘Very little surprises me, Mr Benedict.’
The coldness of my tone had impressed him. I fancied that even in the gaslight, I could see him flush. ‘You censure me!’ he said angrily.
‘I am investigating Mrs Benedict’s murder,’ I said. ‘Your behaviour is only of interest to me in as much as it touches on my enquiries.’
‘Damn it!’ he exclaimed, ‘I am not the only man—’ He broke off.

 

‘Indeed not, sir.’ I kept my tone bland.
‘But I am in mourning, and you disapprove of my being here on that account,’ Benedict said. When I made no reply to this, he went on, ‘When I told you I loved my dear late wife, that was the truth.’
‘Yes, sir,’ I said.
He hesitated. ‘I would like you to understand, Ross, I want to explain . . . You see, my wife was . . . She was a work of art. No sculptor or painter could have produced more perfect a form. I always feared that . . . that she would become pregnant.’
Now I was startled enough to show it. ‘You feared it? Most couples hope to start a family.’ As I supposed that Lizzie and I would one day, if all were well. ‘But that’s not my concern, sir,’ I added apologetically, because odd though it seemed to me, it was truly not my concern.
‘You see,’ he said, ‘I could not have watched that perfect body become distorted and bloated with child. I have seen pregnant women with their puffy faces and awkward gait. That Allegra should become like that? No!’ He paused. ‘So, you see, my wife and I seldom shared a bed.’
This unwelcome and distasteful confession did touch on my investigation. Could it have been this very lack of a physical relationship within the marriage that had driven Allegra to seek love elsewhere?
I heard myself ask, ‘How did your wife feel about that?’
Angrily he snapped, ‘A woman of refinement does not entertain base cravings!’
Confound the fellow! I thought. Does he truly believe that? Then he is stupid, deluded, or simply callous and making a sorry excuse for his habit of frequenting common prostitutes. But I’d been right in my judgement; he did look upon Allegra as a possession, something to be added to his art collection, not a real living being with human emotions and vulnerability. Too late now to argue that out with him. After all, I told myself, I’m neither his medical adviser nor his father confessor. Let him believe such nonsense if he wants to. It has brought him grief once already and very likely will do so again. I just hope he doesn’t ruin another woman’s life as he did Allegra’s. In the meantime, he doesn’t like me and I don’t like him. There is no need for any pretence.
Aloud I said, ‘Well, then, you had better get back to your ladybird. However, it is my duty to warn you that such women are not always only what they appear to be. If you have valuables on you, take care. She may act as decoy for some ruffian who is lurking in the shadows waiting for you. I need not mention the diseases such girls often pass on.’
With that, we parted company. At least I might have given him something to think about.

 

I arrived in my own house to find myself confronted by two pairs of eager eyes. As I suspected, the news of Fawcett’s arrest and his overnight stay in the cells had got about. My faint hope that it hadn’t was instantly dashed.

 

‘Well?’ demanded my wife.
‘What have you done with poor Mr Fawcett?’ asked Bessie, less subtle and more partisan.

 

‘The devil take your Mr Fawcett!’ I snapped irritably. What with encountering Fawcett and Benedict on the same day, it really was too much.
‘Ben . . .’ murmured my wife, with a glance at our maid.

 

‘I have had to let the fellow go,’ I told her.
‘There,’ said Bessie smugly, ‘I knew poor Mr Fawcett couldn’t have done anything.’
‘Go and peel the potatoes, Bessie!’ ordered Lizzie.
Bessie went, not without a last triumphant look at me.

 

‘You didn’t tell me, when you got home last night, that you’d arrested him,’ said Lizzie, as I’d known she would. The look in her eyes fell somewhere between reproach and accusation.
‘We hadn’t charged him,’ I said feebly. ‘It’s a tricky moment when you bring a man in for questioning. I thought it better to be silent on the matter last night and wait until I’d spoken to him today.’ I threw myself down in an armchair. ‘And, as I told you both just now, we have had to release him.’
Lizzie perched on the edge of the chair opposite. ‘He could not tell you anything, then?’ she asked.
BOOK: A Better Quality of Murder: (Inspector Ben Ross 3)
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