A Brutal Chill in August: A Novel of Polly Nichols, The First Victim of Jack the Ripper (26 page)

BOOK: A Brutal Chill in August: A Novel of Polly Nichols, The First Victim of Jack the Ripper
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“You’ve done me a great harm,” he bellowed, his eyes bulging and his face red. “I cannot work with
this
.” He held out his crippled hand, then thrashed in a paroxysm of frustration, accidentally striking his damaged digits against a leg of the table. Tom doubled up with the pain.

Despite fear that he’d strike her again, Polly hurried to him and held him. “I’m sorry,” she said. “I don’t know why—”

“It’s the lush, and you know it,” he gasped around the pain.

Yes, she did, and with the realization that there wasn’t anything she was willing to do about it, her spirit collapsed. While Tom shook in her arms, she was lost to black despair. As he became calm, she returned to herself cautiously.

Polly touched his white, sweat-slicked face and he didn’t flinch. She helped him get up and they sat at the table. He began to shake again, and she kept her arms around him.

“I don’t know what should become of us,” Tom said. “I would leave you now, but I have no one else to help me.”

Polly chose not to think about the future. Against her will, she glanced at the gin on the table to make sure the bottle hadn’t been upset and spilled.

Satisfied, she turned her attention back to Tom. He’d gone slack. If not for her embrace, he’d have fallen out of his chair.

Polly heard a delighted humming, and could almost make out a tune. Her heart racing, she glanced about the room, thinking someone had come in while she attended Tom. No one appeared in the open. Then she heard,
The soul of you, a hole in you, as what your screams beseech…,
yet couldn’t tell if the words came from within her head or without. She didn’t want to believe that Mr. Macklin had come for her again.

“Tom,” she whispered into her lover’s ear. “Wake up. Help me.”

He didn’t respond. Polly clung to him, fearful that he had somehow died of his wounds, and left her alone with the intruder. She told herself that her imagination had got the better of her, even as she strained to see within the shadows of the open wardrobe, the darkness to the right of the door leading outside, and to the left of the bed.

Papa had been right when he’d said that Mr. Macklin haunted those who drank too much.

Misery craves companions in Hell. How many drunkard souls has Mr. Macklin delivered to the devil? How the drink must burn in Hell!

Tom inhaled sharply and coughed, startling Polly. She hugged him tighter, relieved to know he yet lived. Still glancing about warily, her fear continued to build. She was about to try again to awaken Tom when he groaned and sat up, shrugging her off angrily.

Polly got up, cautiously inspected the room, and found nothing unusual.

“Help me,” Tom commanded, and she returned to the table.

They inspected his damaged hand. His index and middle fingers were crooked, and each had a bloody cut. Polly fetched the ewer, the water-filled basin, and a flannel. She carefully cleaned the wounds.

Tom bent, and with his left hand, lifted from the floor a small crate in which Polly had carried vegetables back from market recently. “Hold it there, while I break off the side,” he said.

Polly steadied the thing against the table top, and he snapped off a thin wooden slat. With her help, he shaped the piece of wood into a splint. Polly tore strips from an old chemise and used them to bind the splint onto Tom’s hand so that his fingers wouldn’t move.

“I’ll pour the gin down the privy,” she said, taking up the bottle. She intended to take the bottle out of his sight and drink the contents all at once.

“No,” he said, wearily. “I need it for the pain, and I’ll need more.”

“I’ll go get it,” Polly said eagerly.

Tom gave her a long hard look before she went out. “Go also to the Spratling Smithy and tell Mr. Hooks I have an injury and won’t be back for some time.”

 

* * *

 

Indeed, Tom could not work. He drank heavily for the pain. Polly took advantage of the opportunity to drink heavily as well. Although he couldn’t smell the alcohol on her, he knew she staggered about and slurred her words. She gave him bread to eat so she didn’t have to cook. His anger toward Polly remained, but with his level of intoxication, he seemed unable to express his feelings in a meaningful way.

As he began to come out of his binge, Polly could see that his spirit had been broken. Tom didn’t speak to her unless he had to. His movements were slow, yet not careful. His eyes held a frightening resignation.

Even when drunk in the past, he’d had a hopefulness; a strength about him that suggested he could get up and find his way in the world. His love for her had been his undoing.

“Go to the smithy, and tell Mr. Hooks I won’t be back,” he said.

Tom had given up on everything. Polly imagined him, head hung, entering the workhouse. Her heart turned over in her chest, her breath caught in her throat, and she turned away to hide her tears. She knew that to prevent that terrible vision from becoming a reality, she must speak to Mr. Hooks on Tom’s behalf. Her effort might come to nothing, but she had to try.

“I’ll go speak to him very soon,” Polly said.

She spent two days sobering up, nursing from a bottle of gin only enough to keep her from trembling. On the third morning, while Tom still slept, she packed a change of clothes and a half loaf of bread into a carpet bag. She kissed Tom’s cheek and left the room quietly.

Polly went to the Spratling Smithy in King and Queen Street, and approached the master blacksmith, shaking as she did so. He took her to the side, away from the work area.

“I’ve come to talk to you about Tom,” she said.

He was a powerfully built fellow with a head of silver hair. “Yes, Mrs. Dews.”

Polly didn’t correct him. A week earlier, when she’d first met the man, she allowed Mr. Hooks to believe she was Tom’s wife.

“Has he taken a turn for the worse?” he asked, with a look of concern.

“No,” she said. “Well, yes, but it’s my fault, and he shouldn’t suffer for it.”

His face became lined with concern, the black soot in the creases of his skin accentuating his expression. Polly saw that he struggled to understand.

“I drink…” she began, suddenly unsteady.

He reached out a hand to brace her.

Admitting her crime to a stranger would make the severity of her condition all too real. The prospect took her breath away. Still, gasping, she blurted, “In my drunkenness, I broke his hand.”

He reached out with his other hand to hold her up as she began to sag. Tears streamed down her cheeks. “He’s done his best for me, and I’ve brought him to ruin. Please don’t give his position to another. He’s a good man.”

“Yes,” Mr. Hooks said, “he is. He’s one of the best I’ve had.”

“I must leave him for his own good,” she sobbed. “But he needs help. Is there anything you can do?”

He seemed to think for a moment. “I can take him in.”

Polly gripped his hands. “Truly? Do you mean what you say?” She’d thought Mr. Hooks might hold Tom’s position. Polly hadn’t hoped for more.

“Why, yes. My eldest has left home. My wife, Alexandra, God bless her, fancies herself a Florence Nightingale after her experience helping in the workhouse infirmary for the church. She’ll have him right in no time.”

The man had a look of surprise as Polly pulled him close and hugged him. She released him and found that his look of concern had returned.

“You’re in a bad way,” he said.

Polly shook her head. “I’m well enough for what I deserve.”

“Please allow me to help you.”

“No one can help me. I’ve got a demon after me.”

“You mustn’t believe that.”

“Yes, but I do.” She handed Mr. Hooks her key to the lock on Tom’s door. “His room is 22 Morecombe Street.”

“Mrs. Dews, please,” he said.

Polly turned away and made her way out of the smithy and onto the street. She would cross the river so that Tom might not find her easily if he should look.

To deaden her dreadful memories, and calm the storm of regret, grief, and shame that built inside her, Polly needed more drink.

35

Visitation

 

 

Polly stayed most nights at Gaskel’s common lodging in Endell Street. She returned to prostitution. No emotional qualms stood in her way. On nights when she hadn’t earn her doss or decided to drink away the funds instead, she slept in shrubs among the stands of trees in Saint James’s Park.

When she’d arrived on the north side of the river in October, there had been hundreds of unemployed people sleeping rough in the park. In the middle of November there had been riots in Trafalgar Square over something concerning employment and Ireland. Afterward, the numbers of those staying in the park diminished, although not by much. If awake and aware enough when she arrived in the park at night, Polly heard many others moving about, also sheltering among the shrubs.

One night in late November, following three quarterns of extraordinarily cheap gin on an empty stomach, she was making her way along West Strand when she saw a heavy coat fly out of the window of a fine carriage traveling along the lane. As winter came on, she’d need a better coat. To her good fortune, none of the other pedestrians around her seemed to have noticed the fallen garment. Heedless of the manure piles, she hurried into the road, stumbled, and fell in the “mud.” Drivers leaned out to curse at Polly as they struggled to avoid hitting her. She got to her feet, and dodged her way drunkenly into the busier part of the road where the cobblestones were exposed. A hansom cab struck her as she bent to pick up the coat. As she flew backwards through the air, Polly knew she’d met her end, that the clattering hooves and wheels grinding along the road would make short work of her. That was, she decided, a fortunate turn of events.

Her head struck the hard granite surface of the road and all went black.

 

* * *

 

Polly found herself standing on the footway beside the road, watching the backside of the hansom cab moving away. A dread feeling accompanied the sight. She didn’t understand how she’d got to safety, yet didn’t have the presence of mind to think it through.

The black, fur-lined overcoat in her hands, made of fine cotton or linen, had clearly belonged to a gentleman. A smear of vile-smelling vomitus marred the fabric. She had a vague notion of cleaning that off in the pond in Saint James’s Park.

With such a fine coat, she didn’t have to spend four pence for doss—she’d be warm through the night, sleeping in the park.

As she staggered past Trafalgar Square, the dread feeling followed her. She saw a toff moving toward her, a white-whiskered gentleman all in black, wearing a square-crowned bowler and a short top coat or jacket, and no overcoat. He carried a cane. As she moved, so he seemed to move, perhaps a hundred yards away, pausing when she paused, hurrying forward when she did. Polly became certain that the coat she’d picked up belonged to him. Why, then, didn’t he call out to her, approach, and ask her to return the garment? She saw no other reason a man of his obvious social status would take an interest in her. Polly had never had a client of his caliber.

She hastened west along Pall Mall East to Waterloo Place. Before turning south in the hopes of reaching the park and hiding herself among the trees, she glanced back and saw a glowing red about the head of the figure, a cigar possibly. As the red light brightened and became two embers, she recognized Mr. Macklin’s glowing eyes.

Polly ran to the west side of Waterloo Place, and looked back. The figure came bounding over the two-story gentleman’s club on the corner and landed with a light step in the road. He changed from the white-whiskered fellow into a thin man with dark hair, a cruel grin, and heavy black eyebrows. His short coat presently extended nearly to his feet. The cane had disappeared. Instead, he held a bottle connected to a chain around his neck. Polly turned away from his jeering face before his glowing eyes fixed upon her own. Her heart leapt up into her throat and escaped in the form of a shriek. The Bonehill Ghost had again stepped openly into her world or had somehow pulled her into another nightmare.

Running toward the park, she saw in her peripheral vision his inky black form giving chase with a blur of tiny, giddy footsteps. The sound of those steps had an odd mechanical rhythm, with a grating and snapping sound. Passing a columnar monument, she dashed down steps, and took another fall over the last few. The cushion of the coat helped break her fall, and she rolled onto the green, got up, and began dodging through the trees.

Polly felt the demon’s fingertips reaching for her. She dropped the coat with the hope of tripping him up. Still, she heard the snap and grind of his rapid, mincing tread. The sound of sloshing, the rattle of chain, and a hollow thumping told her that his bottle banged against his empty chest as he ran. Shouting for help, she crashed through the shrubs where she and so many others slept at night. Figures rose up out of the greenery, shouting, flailing. Her knee struck a man in the head and he went down. Another man came toward her. She couldn’t let him stop her or the demon would catch up. Polly struck the man in the face and kept moving. Two women grabbed for her. Polly twisted out of their grip.

The dark demon rose up in front of her. She turned sharply, tripped, and fell toward a tree trunk, striking the side of her head.

BOOK: A Brutal Chill in August: A Novel of Polly Nichols, The First Victim of Jack the Ripper
3.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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