âMaggie said you're the Constable?' she enquired, confusion on her face. Had she dressed up to receive him, he wondered?
âI am. I'm sorry, Mrs Bradley, but I have ill news for you.' There was never a way to break a death easily. Murder was difficult enough, but suicide was something impossible to understand.
âWhat do you mean?' she asked sharply. âHas something happened to Henry?'
âNo.' He looked at her. âYou'd better sit down,' he told her. âIt's your brother.'
âWill?'
âYes.'
She looked up at him, uncomprehending. âWhat is it? Is he in trouble?'
Nottingham paused.
âI'm afraid he's dead,' he said finally. âHe killed himself.'
âWill?' She spoke the word again. âWill?'
âYes.' He watched with concern as her eyes began to lose focus, and took her hand to steady her. âDo you want me to get the maid?'
She shook her head slowly, squeezing her eyes firmly shut to stop any tears leaking out. Her fingers squeezed hard around his, the grip tight. She needed to control herself, he knew that, to let the shock pass. She let go of him, pulling a linen handkerchief from her sleeve and crushing it into a ball in her small fist.
âIt's Will?' she asked. âYou're sure?'
âIt is,' he told her in a gentle voice. âI'm sorry.'
âBut why  . . . why would he kill himselfâ?'
âI don't know,' the Constable answered. âWe're trying to find out. Can you think of any reason?'
âNo,' she said after a while, her voice full of bafflement. âHe said that the business was doing well. He was making money. He was going to invest in Henry's â my husband's â firm.' She put her hand to her mouth. âHenry.'
âMrs Bradley.'
She looked at Nottingham, her thoughts jerking back hard to the here and now.
âWere you and your brother close?'
âHe always came to church with us on Sunday. We go to the new church, we have a family pew there.'
âWhat about your sisters?'
âAlice lives in York and Susan is in Pontefract. I'm the oldest.' Her eyes widened as another understanding reached her. âI'll have to tell them, won't I?'
âYes. I'm sorry.'
She dabbed quickly at a tear before it could run down her cheek.
âDid your brother have a girl, by any chance?'
âWill? A girl?' she asked in astonishment. âYou didn't know my brother, did you?'
âNo.'
âWill didn't have time for courting. He was always working. I used to tease him about it, tell him he'd end up a rich old bachelor.' She smiled briefly at the fleeting memory. âWhy do you want to know?'
âBecause it might give a reason. A cause.'
She shook her head. âNo, I don't think it can be that.'
He stood up. âMy condolences again,' he said formally, and moved towards the door.
âConstable?' He heard her draw in a breath and knew what was coming. He'd expected her to ask. âIs it possible that my brother's death wasn't a suicide? An accident, perhaps?'
He knew the reason for the question. No family wanted the shame of a suicide. It was a stain that never washed out, the quiet whispers behind hands and the pitying looks without words. But there was nothing he could offer her except a short movement of his head that committed him to nothing. By now the word had probably spread too far to be drawn back.
He strolled up Vicar Lane to the Head Row, then back down Briggate to stop at the Ship. The food was tasty, the meat fresh, not rancid and covered in spices, and Michael always carried good ale.
But he barely noticed what he ate or drank. Instead he was thinking about Elizabeth Bradley. She'd said little but revealed much. Will Jackson obviously kept his own life away from his family. If he'd been courting an available girl there'd have been no reason for that.
He'd also had money to invest in his brother-in-law's business, so the cloth finishing must have been making a profit. That seemed to rule out money as a possible reason behind his death.
Nottingham put the last of the mutton pie into his mouth, washing it down with the ale and made his way back to the jail.
Elias Tunstall had a shifty face, Sedgwick decided. With a sharp nose and a widow's peak to his greasy hair, he had the look of a rat, eyes constantly moving around as they walked through the business premises of Tunstall and Jackson, Cloth Finishers, on the Calls.
âWhy?' he asked desperately when the deputy told him of the suicide. âWhy would he want to do that?'
âWe don't know yet. That's what we want to find out. Is the business doing well?'
âIt's doing grand,' Tunstall answered, puffing out his thin chest. âWe've got more work than we can handle.' He deflated again as the realization hit him. âDon't know what we'll do now, mind.'
The voices in the nap shop stopped as soon as Tunstall entered and he glared around the men. Over in the corner the preemer boy, a lad of maybe twelve, was taking wood fibres out of the teasels used to raise the nap of the cloth. Two men worked side by side on the frame, pulling the combs over the wool.
âI want you working, not gabbing,' Tunstall said, heels clacking brightly on the floor as he led Sedgwick along.
In the next room the men laboured silently, working with scissors near as tall as themselves to crop the nap to an even length. Sleeves rolled up and kerchiefs tied at the neck, they moved carefully and precisely, faces drawn in deep concentration. One slip could ruin a length and it would come from their wages, the deputy knew.
Beyond that, in a long hall with windows and doors cast wide open to try and draw in some air, others worked the irons in the steamy, oppressive heat, pressing and bundling the cloth, ready to go back to the merchants and be sold.
âThere's brass in this,' Tunstall explained, cuffing a boy who was struggling with a bucket of water, âand we're making it.' He paused. âFor the moment, any road.'
âDid Mr Jackson seem upset about anything lately? Was he quiet?'
âWill?' Tunstall chuckled, baring his yellow teeth. âAs pleasant a soul as you could meet. Always ready to laugh with the workers, said it made them feel better, but I don't know that it's true.'
âWas he courting?' Sedgwick let the question slip casually. Tunstall shook his head emphatically.
âAlways working, that lad. If he wasn't here he'd be off seeing customers. Did that one day every week. About the only time he wasn't busy was Sunday and he'd have crept in here then if he could.' He sighed. âHe was no more than a lad, too. What could have made him do summat like that?'
âWe'll try to find out,' the deputy promised. âDid he go out to customers the same day every week?'
âNo, different days each week.' Tunstall answered without thinking. âBut he kept the orders coming and that was all that mattered. What about his family?'
âThe Constable's informing his sister.'
Tunstall wasn't going to say too much, but he might have more luck with the workers, Sedgwick thought. They were men who'd need a drink after working here. Catch a few of them in an alehouse, buy them a jug or two and their tongues would loosen. Men always saw more than the bosses imagined.
The afternoon was passing by, and the deputy decided he might as well wait rather than return to the jail. He slipped through the streets to Dyers Garth and lay back lazily on the riverbank. The swirl of the water was lulling and after a few minutes his thoughts started to drift. Come winter he'd be a father again, God willing. A new little bairn, a part of him. He'd loved James as a baby, and found real peace in holding him and watching him sleep. But he knew that the fear would be there, that something would happen, that Lizzie would die in childbed, that the newborn wouldn't survive. It happened all too often, not one dead but both, leaving only a vast emptiness the heart couldn't fill.
He breathed deep to clear his head, letting the sun bring back some contentment, and dozed until the bells of the Parish Church tolled six. Slowly he roused himself, brushing grass off his breeches, and wandered back to the Calls. The men came out laughing, loud in their brief freedom. Some went their way, but one group of five passed through Back Lane to Low Holland and the alehouse that had been made from a cottage there.
The deputy gave them five minutes, time enough to sit and wet their throats after a long day's labour. Then he entered, greeting Nettie behind her trestle and pointing to the twice-brewed that would fight the day's heat.
âI know you,' one of the men called to him. âYou were at our place earlier. Talking to t'boss.'
âAye, I was.' Sedgwick lifted the mug, took a long, deep swallow and walked over to join them on the bench. âI had some news for Mr Tunstall.'
âWhat was that, then?' another man asked. He had a face that seemed faintly familiar, but for the moment the deputy couldn't put a name to it. âWhat's the Constable's man want at Tunstall's?'
âIt was about Mr Jackson.' Suddenly he remembered the man's name â Caleb Rountree. He'd questioned him once about some stolen property, but they'd never been able to prove anything. âDid you know him, Caleb?'
The others laughed that the law would recognize him and Rountree reddened, burying his face in his mug.
âWhat's happened to him?' an older man asked quietly.
âDead,' Sedgwick told them, looking around the table. âKilled himself.'
âWhat?' Rountree crashed his pot down on the wood, eyes wide in disbelief. âGive over! What would he want to do summat like that for?'
âI don't know. Any of you know him?'
The older man struck a flint and lit his clay pipe, the sound of his drawing on the tobacco the only noise at the table. The others glanced at each other, unsure what to say.
âHe were better than Tunstall,' the man said finally. âNo side on him for all he were the boss. He knew the jobs and he could do them himself if need be. Crop a good length, too.'
Sedgwick motioned for Nettie to bring a jug.
âHe worked us hard enough, though,' Rountree complained.
âYou know much about him?'
âWhat's to know?' asked Rountree sourly. âThey have their lives, we have ours. Not like we're going to mix, is it?'
âNever know,' the deputy said. âYou might have heard something. Rumours.'
âThe wife saw him in town once,' the older man said idly. âMiddle of the day and he was with a lass.'
âOn a work day?'
âAye. She told me when I got home, that's how I remember.' He shrugged carelessly. âNeither here nor there, I suppose.'
âHow long ago was that?'
The man scratched thoughtfully at the thatch of curls on his head. âHad to be before winter, I think. Couldn't tell you any better than that.'
No one else seemed to have anything to offer. Sedgwick stood, careful to leave the ale. âIf you think of anything else, come and find me,' he said. As he walked away Rountree was already greedily pouring for himself.
By evening Lister had gone carefully through all the letters, scribbling notes in his tiny, cramped writing. Finally he threw down the quill in frustration.
âWell?' Nottingham asked.
âThere's nothing about any plans, just love notes and meetings.'
âKeep looking tomorrow. There might be something in there. How do you care for the job?'
âIt's surprised me,' Rob replied thoughtfully. âI like it.'
The Constable smiled grimly. âA suicide isn't the best way to start, but you've done well. Go home and back at six tomorrow. And not a word to your father, please.'
âI won't say anything,' he promised.
Nottingham didn't dawdle on the way home, but strode out of the city, fingering the letter in his pocket. His boots clattered over Timble Bridge and up Marsh Lane, and the door opened on a rusted hinge with a soft creak more redolent of winter than bright summer.
Mary came quickly from the kitchen, her eyes expectant then glowing as he grinned.
âYou did it?' she asked with a laugh.
âI did,' he told her with surprise and produced the paper from his pocket. âShe'll have no trouble finding another position with this. Where is she, anyway?'
âIn her room. She's been there most of the day, poor love. Go and show it to her, Richard, it'll cheer her up.' She gave him a full, deep kiss and he drew her close, stroking the back of her neck until she pulled away. âGo on, make her happy.'
He tapped on the door of Emily's room and entered. She was sitting on the bed, a book open in her lap although she wasn't reading. As she turned to him he could see the redness of old weeping in her eyes and the puffiness of her lips. He held out the letter.
âTake a look at that,' he said and waited as she unfolded it and skimmed the words once, then again, her mouth widening as she read.
âPapa.' The word was part question, part squeal of joy. She ran to him, arms wide, and hugged him. âBut how did you  . . .?'
âNever you mind,' he said, happy to see her mood so suddenly lifted. âDon't worry, Hartington won't say a word, and you should be able to find another position quite easily with a recommendation like that.'
âWith something like this I could be governess to the king.' Her pleasure filled the room. âThank you, papa.'
He left her reading the paper again, feeling that perhaps today had been worthwhile.
âFor my money Sarah Godlove came into Leeds every week and met Jackson,' the deputy said firmly. It was still early and the morning light shone with the promise of another warm day as the three of them sat in the jail. âI know we don't have proof yet, but  . . .'
Nottingham sat forward thoughtfully in his chair, elbows on the desk, fingers steepled under his chin.