Read Shadow of the Serpent Online
Authors: David Ashton
And yet he missed his little fleshly beast. The surrender in the eye, the biting of the lips, and when he laid bare the creamy skin and cupped the softness, such shameful trembling then ensued as they fell into the pit of hell together. Wantonly, deliberately, damnably, ate of the forbidden fruit. Predator and prey. Each in turn.
He wrenched his mind away from pictures that might fire the blood with their sweet obscenity, poured a little wine into the glass, swirled it round and sniffed the bouquet.
Pas mal.
Perhaps a little
earthy
. But it would have to do, let it breathe.
And he would have to wait. Who knows what sharp edge would be sharpened from the whetstone of patience? What variations of a hungry, oblique desire might rise to the surface? Anticipation is everything.
Paper contact. Nothing more. He had picked up the report from their agreed drop-off point and left a little offering in return. A very important little offering with precise instructions as to its usage and the time to throw it in the mix. Not part of the original plan, a touch of improvisation on his part, but it would augment, convince and, with a bit of luck, bring death and destruction.
He emptied the glass, little finger crooked in the air to amuse himself no one else being on hand, and put it down with a flourish. That’ll have to do, old chap, more where that came from, that’ll have to do.
He reached into his inside pocket, pulled out his operative’s report, read it again and sniffed the paper. The faintest trace of perfume rather overwhelmed by the odour of cigars from the case he often kept in the same pocket.
A single page. Short and to the point.
All was proceeding according to calculation. The subject was not easy, the objective difficult, but so far, so good. He smiled. It was a phrase he himself often used to cover a multitude of sins. There had also been a strange coincidence, which the operative had seized upon and indicated that luck might be with them.
Either that or they might have the truth on their side, perish the thought.
He laughed at that notion, then crossed to the fire where half a forest seemed to be burning in the hearth, dropped the paper on to the flames and turned to warm his backside, surveying the room at the same time.
Severe masculine lines ran everywhere like the North British railway. Dark mahogany ruled the roost. A heaviness of purpose to furniture and fittings – but what else could one expect from such a regimental billet?
On the wall, a glassy-eyed stag’s head stuck out like the prow of a ship, its antlers raised to no great purpose since they had signally failed to stop a well-aimed bullet.
A symbol of Christ, the stag. According to Pliny, it drew serpents by its breath from their holes, and then trampled them to death. A reprehensible practice.
There was a full-length mirror set into the panelling just by the door, and he crossed to look at himself in the bilious, rusty glass. The plenitude of length was to check on the rigours of the kilt, he supposed, and the ugly rust to discourage any narcissistic leanings.
He scrutinised his own face. All things to all men. A Protean plasticity of feature. Despite his years, his many troubled years, a trim figure, well enough dressed, nothing too ostentatious, Jermyn Street never shouts its wares.
A boyish cast.
Puer eternus
. The eyes light blue, not holding much warmth, but then death is such a cold affair and they had seen so much of death.
The hair above a silver-yellow, the mouth below, a cruelly sensual slot. Not without humour. A smiling assassin.
An abrupt turn left his image to its own devices and he moved to the window. It was criss-crossed with thin lead piping of sorts and the glass, pale ochre, lent the scene outside a tinted quality, like an engraving.
He was looking out over the esplanade, the approach to the fortress where Lady Jane Douglas, the most beautiful woman of her age, had been burned to death in the sight of her son and her second husband; accused of attempting the king’s life, James IV, by dint of poison and sorcery. Her real crime was, of course, being a Douglas.
And many witches on that very esplanade had been, as they so quaintly put it in these parts, ‘worryit at the stake’, that is strangled and burned after scant trial for – as they were accused and found guilty of – renouncing their baptism and dancing with the devil. Five at a time, no less. Save on firewood. Thrifty folk, the Scots.
Dancing with the devil would seem to be a most unhealthy pursuit unless … authorised.
The other window of the apartment looked out and down towards the Lawnmarket where the Serpent knew that in James’s court lay a tall house called Gladstone’s Land. It had been acquired in 1631 by one Thomas Gledstone of that hallowed family. Know thine enemy.
From high on the castle to look down on the people below was to observe them as so many ants, crawling about their predestined pathways.
He could lift his foot and crush them all, but wholesale slaughter was not his style.
You must identify, isolate, and then destroy. Without emotion, as a curious child might pull the legs one by one from an insect and leave it not dead precisely, but powerless, incapable, twitching on its back.
A crack of sound as the gun on the half-moon battery on the eastern front of the citadel signalled one o’clock, Greenwich Mean Time, to all the good citizens of Edinburgh.
He had been about the streets late the night before and accomplished much.
Like Wee Willie Winkie, crying through the lock. Are the children all in bed?
A vision from the previous night came into his head. Good fun. Out by the skin of his teeth, but it had been good fun. Splendid to be back in the field.
Time for a spot of lunch. Time for a spot of lunch, old boy.
My soul, do not seek immortal life, but exhaust the realm of the possible.
PINDAR,
Pythian Odes
The body was dead, no doubt about it. Dead as a doornail. The room smelt of stale sweat and whisky, the cadaver sprawled out on the mattress as if just fallen heavily to sleep.
McLevy observed the corpus. Mulholland was outside taking notes from the live members of the household and the inspector was grateful for the solitude. The constable and he and were scarcely on speaking terms owing to a slight
disagreement
of procedural intent.
It had manifested itself in this respect.
As soon as they had been deposited outside Eileen Marshall’s door the young man, seeing the way the investigation was heading along with the squinty-eyed demeanour of his inspector, made what he considered to be an important point. More than just important.
Crucial
.
‘What do we tell Lieutenant Roach?’
‘Nothing,’ came the response serene.
‘Nothing?’
Mulholland’s eyes were near popping from his head and McLevy regretted ever bringing him along in the first place. A weakness on his part. The need for witness.
Even though he had underplayed the exotic frissons of his exchange with Joanna Lightfoot and presented it more as a stark narration, the look on his subordinate’s face had not been one of confidence. And it was even worse now.
‘Nothing?’
repeated the constable, his voice rising to a high note so that a passing carthorse neighed in reply, thinking to have heard a fellow labourer.
By this time they were heading up Chambers Street, ready to turn into a cold whipping wind coming up the bridges from the direction of Waverley Station. But the wind was nothing compared to the coldness Mulholland felt in his bowels. A fell dank creeping chill.
‘I know that look on your face, sir. Somewhere you are entertaining the impossible possibility of a link between one of the most important political figures of this age and murders which occur at thirty-year intervals.’
McLevy smiled at a passing young woman who was clutching at her fashionable
chapeau
as the wind picked up.
‘Hold on to your hat,’ he advised.
Mulholland was not to be diverted.
‘And why did you not tell me of this George Cameron business before?’
‘I like tae keep things up my sleeve,’ was the nonchalant reply.
‘That’s for magicians!’ Mulholland said sharply. ‘I’m supposed to work along, not guess magic tricks, leave all that prestidigitation to Pope Leo. This is nothing less than a weird and crazy fantasy, not one shred of proof!’
‘Of course it is,’ agreed McLevy blandly. ‘Stories, supposition, ghosts and mirrors. We can’t tell that tae the lieutenant, he’d have a heart attack.’
‘He’ll have one of them anyway when he finds out what we’re up to and he’ll tell you what I’ll tell you. Stop. Right. Here!’
McLevy did so. A piece of paper had blown against his face and he had automatically caught at it. It was an election pamphlet, a picture of William Gladstone, arm raised, finger pointing. The words below the image said simply,
The People’s
William. He is the man.
The inspector crumpled the paper up and threw it into the air so that it sailed over the side of the South Bridge, which they stood upon now, down to the Cowgate below.
He watched as it gave the appearance of life, dipping and swooping, but it was at the mercy of a stronger element, a force of nature which would not be denied.
‘It may all be moonshine,’ he said quietly. ‘But I made a promise to George Cameron which I must try to fulfil.’
He brooded further as they walked on, Mulholland shaking his head like a cow plagued with flies.
‘If these two murders are connected in any way, and there is any chance, no matter how strange and fanciful it might all seem, of finding the perpetrator, then I shall go right tae the end.’
‘Ye’ll be on your own, then,’ said the constable bitterly, still smarting about being kept in the dark.
‘That doesnae worry me, I was born so.’
McLevy was equally bitter, feeling he’d been let down.
‘I asked you along because I value your opinion but if this is all ye can offer, then the least you can do is keep your mouth shut and not clipe on me tae the lieutenant.’
‘I am not a clipe,’ said Mulholland stiffly. ‘I do not betray, but I have my duty.’
‘So did Pontius Pilate,’ was the caustic response.
Both noses were out of joint and, to tell the truth, there were deep feelings of disappointment on either side. As George Cameron had been towards him, so McLevy may have wished to be to the constable, father to son.
But that was to overestimate the young man’s need for a parental shadow, and also somewhere evidenced a refusal on the inspector’s behalf to acknowledge that he lacked the same generosity of spirit as the big Highlander.
In frozen huffy silence, they had traced their path back to Leith station, a nondescript building even more nondescript inside. Sergeant Murdoch at the desk, half-asleep as usual, dust motes floating in the air around him.
Ballantyne with his tongue sticking out of the side of his mouth was attempting to write up a report. He did give them a quick glance, paused as if to say something, then got his head back down swiftly as the highly polished door which led to Lieutenant Roach’s inner sanctum, the only door in the place with a shine worth the mention, swung open and out stepped the man himself.
Roach often put McLevy in mind of a crocodile for some reason. The lieutenant possessed a long jaw which he habitually worked from side to side when perturbed, and bulging slightly bloodshot eyes which hinted at sins suppressed.
The man’s neat white collar and black tie peeped out of the open neck of the official braided frock-coat.
Stiff and tidy. McLevy had never seen him out of uniform, and wondered idly what he wore. Perhaps a scarlet cloak and boots of Castilian leather?
Roach pursed his lips. ‘You’ve been out all morning, McLevy.’
‘On the case, sir. On the case.’
A jovial reply and swiftly in, lest Mulholland blurt out his procedural misgivings.
A wintry smile from the lieutenant, the man had something on his mind, something in the back pocket.
‘My suspicions were correct,’ he said bleakly.
McLevy blinked. Surely Roach hadn’t got wind of what he was purposing, who could have told him? And yet the lieutenant had an uncanny knack of sensing when McLevy was up to mischief. A knack developed by dint of the fact that Roach usually was the one who got it in the neck.
Mulholland stepped forward. ‘Suspicions about what, sir?’
The big lanky unctuous bastard was going to betray him, McLevy was sure of it.
Roach took a deep breath.
‘At the lodge last night, Chief Constable Grant laid his hand upon my shoulder and said …
Women chopped in half are no great advertisement for our fair city, lieutenant. Murder is a blot. Clean it up. Sooner before later.’
The lieutenant jerked his jaw in painful memory.
‘And I have to say the way he was looking at me confirmed my worst fears. As if I had the pox.’
‘A grand suspicion, sir. I remember you saying the very words. A plague carrier, did you not say?’
A sidelong glance at McLevy indicated where Mulholland thought the source of the pestilence might lie but, to the inspector’s relief, he added nothing to the above words.
In fact, McLevy was a little ashamed of his earlier accusation. Mulholland might well sook up, but he wasnae a clipe. Not yet. The inspector was safe. No one would tell on him. He was safe.
His ears were buzzing and the ground seemed to move beneath his feet, surely Edinburgh wasn’t suffering a tremor of the earth?
He closed his eyes and in his mind he was a wee boy looking up at his mother; her mouth opened and shut; he couldnae hear the words but the spittle was fair flying in his direction.
She raised both her hands, fingernails like talons, but then her face changed to that of a desperate sanity. She crossed to the door, locked it, put the key on the table, then turned towards him.
The woman reached out tenderly to touch the boy’s face and then snatched something up from the table, flung herself away into the alcove bed set into the small room, and pulled across the curtain.
The wee boy stood alone. He was hungry. He went to a chair, clambered up on it and sat carefully by the table.
Maybe if he was good, nothing bad would happen? He waited. Time passed. The curtain was closed.
McLevy came out of this disquieting reverie to realise that Roach had addressed a question to him. Both lieutenant and constable were awaiting a response.
‘I am sorry, sir,’ he muttered. ‘I have not quite grasped the implication of your last remark.’
Roach’s eyelids blinked down, then up again, the skin a thin membrane; by God the man
did
look like a crocodile.
‘A simple query. You are the investigating officer, McLevy. What is the progress of the said investigation?’
‘I have suspects in mind, sir. When I am more certain, I shall acquaint you.’ Mulholland sniffed audibly. ‘And now if you will excuse me?’
He badly needed to sit down, dizzy spells were a bad sign, too much coffee the night before, a fractured sleep, his fast not broken, the portents of a gathering obsession.
‘You will not be excused,’ said Roach with a certain grim relish. ‘D’you know of a woman … Bridget Lapsley?’
‘Keeps an auld hoose in Meikle John’s close,’ replied McLevy promptly, glad to get back on even ground. ‘Rents the rooms tae all and sundry. When in drink, is prone tae caterwaul all night. Hence her familiar – Biddie Yammerlugs.’
‘Your knowledge of Leith’s depraved and lost souls never ceases to amaze me,’ said Roach bleakly. ‘She sent in word not half an hour ago. I was almost on the desperate point of rousing Sergeant Murdoch, when into the station you
fortuitously
march.’
‘What word did she send?’ McLevy muttered.
‘One of her lodgers has died in bed.’
‘I’m surprised she didnae throw the body out the window, rent and be damned.’
‘Well, she did not. You are to inspect the corpse.’
‘Are the circumstances doubtful, sir?’ Mulholland attempted to supply an interest singularly lacking in his inspector.
‘McLevy will tell us that.’
Roach turned to go back into his room. The inspector was still a little shaky; what he wouldn’t give for an aromatic cup of Arabian best in Jean Brash’s garden, the early roses matching her red hair, listening to the fluting calls of the whores as they hung out the morning-washed bed linen.
‘Could one of the constables not pay a visit?’ he said with a hopeful glance at Mulholland.
‘It is your concern,’ said Roach. ‘It is connected. As you are so fond of telling me, everything in Leith is connected.’
On that cryptic remark, the door closed, leaving the inspector hanging out to dry like the whorehouse sheets.
‘You’re not the only one keeps things up the sleeve, eh?’ said Mulholland.