Hop Alley

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Authors: Scott Phillips

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Copyright © 2014 Scott Phillips

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Phillips, Scott, 1961-

Hop Alley : a novel / Scott Phillips.

pages cm

1.
  
Murder—Investigation—Fiction.
  
I. Title.

PS3566.H515H88 2014

813’.54—dc23

2013043962

ISBN 978-1-61902-379-6

Cover design by Michael Fusco

Interior design by Domini Dragoone

COUNTERPOINT

1919 Fifth Street

Berkeley, CA 94710

www.counterpointpress.com

Distributed by Publishers Group West

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1

FOR CORT McMEEL

CONTENTS

Prologue: Omaha, Nebraska, November 1873

Four Years Later

One: Denver, Colorado, March 1878

Two: The Origin of the World

Three: Cut Down by a Lady

Four: Skullduggery!

Five: An Earlier, Equally Ill-Conceived Proposition

Six: Hop Alley Aflame

Seven: Hop Alley, Laid Waste and Captured on Glass

Eight: A Brief Sojourn in the Hoosegow

Nine: An Angel’s Ministrations

Ten: Exeunt, Pursued by a Bear

Acknowledgements

About the Author

PROLOGUE

O
MAHA
, N
EBRASKA
, N
OVEMBER
1873

M
aggie was unhappy. Six months with me in the wilderness—proverbial but also, too often, literal—had sapped the joy from her, that delightful
esprit
that had attracted me to her as much as her considerable physical charms. As disastrous and miserable as the summer and fall of 1873 had been, the coming winter augured still worse, and as the weather had begun growing cooler Maggie’s normally garrulous and cheerful disposition curdled into an ominous silence, which I feared would end with her walking out on me to take her chances elsewhere.

It was my fault that we had been living in such a rude and penurious manner, crisscrossing the plains and stopping in towns too new or poor to have a permanent photographer, there making stereographic pictures of those few residents who could afford such a luxurious memento. Few of these towns had a boarding house suitable for a woman’s custom, and many was the night we slept in a canvas tent camped along a river; we considered ourselves very fortunate when we occasionally obtained permission to sleep in a hayloft stinking of horse piss, bare planks bespeckled with swallow shit.

I knew, too, that she missed the company of other women, for the towns we visited were largely populated by males of the sort who wander the western areas of our country looking for opportunity; seeing Maggie’s reaction to these villages I understood that they were unlikely, barring some fantastic stroke of good fortune, to attract many of the softer sex.

A
ND SO
W
HEN
we arrived at the city of Omaha, Nebraska, I thought to regain some of her favor by checking into the Cozzens House hotel, which was reputed to be the finest in the middle of the nation, despite the town’s reputation for roughness, violence, and general squalor. Viewed from a purely economic standpoint this was not the wisest course of action open to me, but I hoped Maggie’s spirits would revive once she’d tasted a bit of the
vie de luxe
away from which I’d spirited her.

As I signed the guest ledger in a lobby whose opulence verged on vulgarity I asked the clerk where I could securely store a wagon loaded with photographic equipment and chemicals. He sniffed before each sentence he spoke, as though an air of imperiousness might counteract his hickish demeanor.

“You can store it where you stable your animal, sir,” he said. “Burwick’s livery is across the street and they’ll lock it away real tight for you.”

“Pardon me, sir,” said a small, portly man standing nearby as I walked away from the desk holding the room key. He wore a well-cut suit of gabardine, and he spoke so quietly that it was necessary to lean in closely to understand what he was saying. This, I surmised, was due to embarrassment over his pronounced lisp.

“I don’t mean to eavesdrop, but am I to understand that I am addressing a member of the photographic profession?”

“You are,” I said.

“My name is Daniel B. Silas. I am an attorney-at-law, and it happens that I have a client who’s in need of a good photographer. You are staying only for the night, or could you be persuaded to stay in our city for a day or two?”

My head was cocked at quite an angle trying to understand him, and at first I heard “city” as “shitty,” but I maintained my poise and didn’t snicker. “Our plan was to depart in the morning,” I said, trying to appear casually disinterested but in fact overjoyed at the prospect of recouping what this
extravagant interlude was draining from our meager savings. “I would have assumed that a town of this size was full of photographic studios.”

“Yes, sir, it is.” He looked around the lobby as though afraid he’d be overheard saying something incriminating, which piqued my interest further. “None of them will take this job. On moral grounds.”

“Aha,” I said. “I understand. That’s not something I’d be willing to risk, either. In any event the world is already full of ‘girlie’ photographs.” I had no moral objections to dirty pictures, certainly—I had after all taken a few, purely for my own pleasure, back in Kansas—but I didn’t wish to run the risk of having them confiscated, thereby drawing attention to myself.

I had shocked him, and he hastened to correct my misapprehension. “Oh, no, sir, you mistake my intent. What this gentleman wants isn’t anything objectionable. His problem is the local fellows either think it’s buncombe or they can’t make it happen.”

“Can’t make what happen?”

He looked around, as though someone unseen might be listening, then leaned in just as I was doing.

“Make the spirits of the dead appear,” he whispered, his eyes widening for effect. “On a wet plate.”

Of course it was buncombe, of the purest and most foolish kind, but if there was money in it, I was hardly in a position to turn it down. I’d never made a spirit photograph before but the
gist of it was simple double exposure, and the examples I’d seen of the genre seemed either inartistic or unconvincing or both, and I loved a challenge.

“Oh, I can make them appear. Tell me, who’s this gentleman?”

T
HAT
N
IGHT
M
AGGIE
and I ate in the hotel dining room, she dressed in the one fine gown that remained to her and the only jewels she hadn’t sold during our flight from Kansas and I wearing my least shabby suit. I looked perfectly unworthy of her company and was aware that the waiter’s eyebrow was raised in condescension aimed at only me.

Maggie appeared completely unaware of it, however, and lapped at her lobster bisque and dissected her roast pheasant as calmly as if she still ate that way every night. She radiated a great relief, however, at this temporary restoration of her social station, and I brought up the possibility that we might spend another night there.

“That would be lovely, Bill,” she said, seemingly unconcerned about the cost, and then the headwaiter brought over the
carte des desserts
, at which point we dismissed the topic.

T
HAT
N
IGHT
, AS
I lay abed staring at the finely wrought plasterwork on the ceiling, all my physical wants having been satisfied, Maggie spoke to me in a measured tone I had heard
her use with her husband, on those occasions where she wanted it to appear that she was merely making a suggestion, whereas in fact she was making a nonnegotiable demand.

“It’s awfully nice to lie in a proper bed, Bill.” Here I knew I was due for trouble, for she’d pointedly never complained about the hardships of a mostly outdoor existence, and I’d known for weeks that she longed to furnish me with a litany of grievances, legitimate ones in her case, for she was a city girl and a fancy one at that. “Don’t think it hasn’t been a fine adventure, parts of it, anyway. Until June I’d never spent a night of my life under the stars, and it was lovely for a while, but I’ll drown myself before I’ll spend the winter in a tent.”

“Naturally when winter comes we’ll go south where it’s temperate.”

“I won’t. I want to go to Greeley and rent a house.”

I winced a bit at the mention of the name. She had read about the Greeley Colony in the Colorado Territory, a utopian community whose aims appealed mightily to her; I found them inane and impractical. Maggie was, however, a woman of varied, eccentric, and passionate enthusiasms, spiritualism having briefly been one of those, and as these had a way of passing quickly I had hoped she’d abandon the idea of settling in Greeley. It did occur to me now that it was likely filled with the sort of people who might pay money for photographs of the spectral representations of their departed dear ones.

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