Nottingham eased his way in, and immediately the full stench of death caught in his throat, making him retch. It was inescapable. All around the room, stacked across the floor like forgotten wood, were awkward bundles of white: corpses laid out in their winding sheets.
This was one of the places the city had used to store its winter dead, a place to leave them until the ground was soft enough for burying. Now, as the thaw took hold, they were putrefying, and the charnel house smell was like the opened gates of hell.
Wyatt lay among them, a dark shape, and the only one moving. Outside the river raged. In here there was only the rank stillness of death. The Constable moved closer, the knife tight in his hand.
âYou've been lucky twice now, Constable.' Wyatt's voice was ragged and breathless, with an edge of desperation. âI fell over a corpse.' He laughed bitterly. âI twisted something. I can't get up.'
âEveryone needs luck,' Nottingham told him. âYou've had your share. But luck runs out.'
For the first time he could see Wyatt's full face. The man had thin hair, barely enough to cover his scalp, plastered against his head by the water. His skin was the colour of aged wood, the price of so many years of sun. The T branded on his cheek was bright and loud.
Wyatt gingerly touched his ankle. âFuck, that hurts.'
The Constable simply stared, wondering how many times Wyatt's victims had complained and screamed from their pain before he killed them and took their skin. He was tempted to kick the ankle to see if it made him yell, so he could experience a tiny portion of the agony he'd inflicted. Instead he kept his distance, wary of a ruse and any weapons the man might have.
âGet up,' he ordered.
âI can't.' Wyatt shouted the words, his face contorted.
âThen you're going to have to crawl.'
Wyatt tried to roll over, letting out a sharp moan as his foot touched the ground. It was convincing, but the Constable stayed back.
âI don't care how you do it, but you're going to move,' he said sharply. Slow drips of rain fell from the tip of his dagger. He'd recovered from the chase and breathed normally again. He kept his gaze fixed on Wyatt.
He should kill the man right here, slice his throat open, just the way Wyatt had done with Graves and Rushworth. Kill him and send him down the river. Wyatt had to be erased from history, as surely as if he'd never come back to Leeds.
The man extended his arm as if he was going to pull himself along, fingers curling to prepare for the effort. Wyatt's eyes flashed with pain, then his arm whipped out towards Nottingham's leg.
The Constable stepped back neatly, leaving Wyatt clutching at air.
âGet up,' he said again.
âNot going to kill me?' Wyatt's voice was a sly taunt. âMaybe your shoulder still hurts too much? Or do you want the trophy?'
âYou'll die. I can guarantee that.'
The man looked up with the furtive gaze of an animal. âI'm used to it. I was dead inside from the time the ship left until it returned. Then I came alive again. A resurrected man, Constable.' He gave a short, sharp bark of a laugh. âDying again doesn't scare me. I could slide out of here and into the river.'
âThen why don't you?'
âBecause I'd rather make you kill me.' He moved slightly and twisted his mouth at the pain. âBut you won't. Not in cold blood.'
Nottingham said nothing. The man was right. He relished the idea, but he couldn't do it. Not like this. He heard a noise and half-turned, watching Wyatt from the corner of his eye.
Sedgwick and Worthy stood in the doorway. The pimp's thigh was coarsely bandaged, an old piece of grimy cloth wound tightly around it. He was limping heavily, using his stick and dragging his boot as he hobbled. He seemed aged, suddenly vulnerable, his large body bent and deflated. The creases and folds of his face were deeper and rougher, showing the old man he usually hid so well.
At least Sedgwick looked unhurt. His eyes were fixed on Wyatt, burning with hatred.
âSo you got the bastard,' Worthy said. He might have looked smaller but his voice still had power, and the anger flowed in his words.
âHe's too scared to kill me,' Wyatt taunted. âHe's a man of principle, is Mr Nottingham.'
âBut I'm not, laddie.' Worthy pronounced the words flatly, as if it was a perfectly understood fact of life. He reached under his greatcoat and pulled a long knife from its sheath on his belt. âYou stabbed me. I'm not going to let anyone do that and get away with it.'
âThere's always a price, isn't there?' Wyatt sounded fatalistic, almost content at having been given a final sentence.
âAye, there is.' Worthy spoke softly. âAnd it has to be paid in full.'
Nottingham stood and watched. He knew Worthy too well. The man had announced he'd kill, so Wyatt would die. And Nottingham would do nothing to prevent it. All he felt now was relief that he wouldn't have to complete the task himself.
âDo you know who I am?' Worthy asked.
âNo.' Wyatt shook his head, eyes moving between the three men standing above him. Sedgwick hung back, uneasy, but the Constable ignored the glances he gave.
âYou're not with them, that's for certain.' Wyatt moved his leg and gritted his teeth.
âA man ought to know who's killing him,' the pimp told him. âI'm Amos Worthy. That name mean anything?'
âNothing. Should it?'
âSam Graves was a friend of mine. I admired him.'
âYou never worked for him, then.'
âThat's as mebbe.' Worthy cut off the interruption. âBut he helped me when none of the other sods in this place would.'
âGood for you.' Wyatt raised his head then hawked and spat. âHe destroyed my life.'
âThe way I've heard it, you were caught stealing from him. So don't tell me you didn't have it coming. And you didn't just kill him, laddie, you desecrated him.'
Wyatt didn't respond.
âA real man wouldn't need to do that,' Worthy said with venom. As the anger rose in him he stood more erect and seemed to grow younger, chest jutting out menacingly.
âBoss . . .' Sedgwick said, but Nottingham waved him to silence.
Wyatt looked up at the Constable. âCharlotte?' he asked.
Nottingham shook his head. She'd disappear too, so there was no lingering vestige of what had happened. The Mayor would have a discreet word with Graves's widow, and there was no one to care about Rushworth.
âYou'd better kill me, then,' Wyatt said with finality.
âThink you deserve a quick, easy death, do you, laddie?'
âDoes what I think matter to you, old man?' It was a goad, and Worthy reacted.
He was swift with the blade, slicing across Wyatt's neck. The blood gushed up in a shining arc. As his breath gurgled, Wyatt turned to the Constable. There was no fear in his stare, just triumph.
Nottingham held the murderer's eyes until the life had gone from them. It was over in a moment but it seemed to last forever.
Worthy wiped the blade on his coat and returned it to its sheath.
âWe'd better get him out of here.'
The words roused the Constable. It made sense. Even in this village of the dead a bloody corpse would raise questions. He turned to glance at Worthy.
âPut him in the river, laddie,' the pimp said, emphasizing each word slowly as if addressing someone simple.
Nottingham took the corpse by the collar, dragging it slowly over the ground. Outside the rain continued, but the air smelt clean and fresh, of life.
âLet him drop,' Worthy ordered, and the Constable released his hold. Putting his weight on the stick, the procurer limped over. He raised his leg and pushed at Wyatt, grunting with effort and pain.
The body began to roll and tumble down the slick, muddy surface towards the river. The water flowed violently as Wyatt slid inexorably towards it.
The river took him quickly, the current pulling him down like a lover and dragging him under. Nottingham waited, wondering, half-hoping he'd surface, but there was nothing, just the flow surging downstream.
âLooks like your murderer drowned, Constable,' Worthy said finally before sliding the knife into its sheath and limping away slowly.
Nottingham didn't move. He just stood and looked at the river, barely even noticing the rain. He didn't stir until Sedgwick reached out and touched his arm.
âLet's go back to the jail, boss.'
âI suppose we should, John.' He sighed. âThere's nothing more here.'
Thirty-Five
He was surprised to see people moving on the streets, the bustle of a crowd, of horses and humans, none of them knowing what had happened. Nottingham felt as if he'd walked out of a dream. Or perhaps a nightmare.
Sedgwick was at his side, hunched against the weather, his face dark with concern. They turned on to Kirkgate then into the sanctuary of the jail. Nottingham sat, not even taking off his coat.
The deputy tended the fire, poking the coal until the flames danced and warmth began to fill the room. Without a word, the Constable stood and walked through to the cells. Charlotte was sitting on the floor, knees pulled to her chest, her gown grubby and gathered around her legs.
âIs he dead?' she asked.
âYes,' he told her. âHe drowned.' How easy it was to lie, he thought.
She nodded, unsurprised by the news. Her hair was lank, its black colour heavily streaked with grey in the morning light. âAnd what about me? How are you going to kill me?'
âYou can die if you want to,' he said without sympathy. âI'm going to give you a choice. You can walk out of here now. Leave Leeds. No coat, no money, nothing, and you never come back.'
âOr?'
âOr you can die like him.'
âIs this a test? Do you want to see how much I love him?'
âNo test,' he promised.
Her eyes narrowed with suspicion. âWhy?' she asked.
âBecause I've seen too many corpses this winter. I'm sick of death.'
âAnd what if I choose to die?'
He sighed and shook his head. âIt's up to you. He's in the Aire. Walk in the river and join him if you want. But no one here's going to kill you.'
He unlocked the door and left it open, then went to sit at his desk. He started work on his report for the Mayor, detailing Wyatt's end. Eventually he heard the soft shuffle of her footsteps. She stood at the entrance to the cells, wary and untrusting.
âYou won't stop me?'
He shook his head.
She took hold of the door and opened it, letting in the bitter sound of the rain. Without looking back at him, she asked, âTell me something, please.'
âWhat?'
âDid he die easily?'
Nottingham considered his answer.
âNo,' he said finally, âhe didn't.'
She walked on.
âYou've let her go, boss?' Sedgwick was standing by the fire, his expression outraged, the pock marks burning on his cheeks. His old stock was untied, coat hanging open over an ancient crimson waistcoat whose colour had faded.
âShe was never here, John.'
Nottingham went over to the desk, picked up Wyatt's papers and pulled the two books from the drawer. He weighed them in his hand, the sum of three lives wasted that could easily have been more, and tossed them on to the blaze. âNone of this ever happened. That's what the city wants.'
âSo we let Worthy get away with murder?'
âYes, we do. I couldn't have done it, not like that. If you're honest, neither could you. Someone had to. Maybe we should be glad Amos was there.'
The binding on the books began to crackle and burn and the sharp scent of hot flesh filled the air.
âIt's how things work in the world, John,' the Constable said quietly. âBut at least it's over. The dying can stop now.'
The day seemed strangely quiet. The rain continued, slowing to a teasing airy drizzle at times before the deluge returned in earnest. Where the Aire had broken its banks people were struggling to save their possessions from the water.
For Nottingham there was paperwork. Reports to write, rolls of the dead to complete, the work of every humdrum week, and he was glad to return to it. He and Sedgwick ate their dinner next door at the White Swan, a mutton pie washed down with good ale, the subject of Wyatt still heavy on their minds.
âIt was wrong,' the deputy insisted.
âThe only thing wrong about it was that I let someone else kill him,' Nottingham told him. The subject had been preying on him all day, pecking away at him. âI should have done my job.'
âI thought our job was upholding the law.'
The Constable took a deep drink. âThe definition of the law can be very broad sometimes.'
âBroad enough for murder, boss?'
âIn this case, killing him was justice.'
âWithout a trial?'
âHe'd confessed to his crimes. He'd gloried in them. A trial wouldn't have served any purpose. We did the right thing. The only thing.'
Sedgwick shook his head.
âThink about it,' Nottingham continued. âAll these people, everyone in the city.'
âWhat about them?'
âIf they'd known what was going on, what do you think would have happened? Someone going round doing what he did. We'd have had panic. Do they really need to know how evil men can be?'
âWe know.'
âIt's our job to know,' the Constable pointed out. âAnd this time we served the people best by keeping everything quiet, by killing Wyatt.'