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Authors: Tessa Harris

BOOK: The Dead Shall Not Rest
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Chapter 45
O
nce they had passed the boundary stone, the motley crew of mourners was seized by the need for refreshment. Perhaps it was because they were now out of the City of London’s authority and on the road to Kent that they felt safer, mused Mad Sam O’Shea. Or was it simply that they had been up at the crack of dawn, heaving the monstrous casket onto the cart and lugging it for a good few miles already? Either way, the refreshments at the Thomas a Becket beckoned. The watering hole of many a good pilgrim over the years, it would certainly provide well-deserved respite for him and his men this morning, he told himself.
The bizarre cortege pulled up outside the inn. O’Shea and Crookback were in the front seats while the other men—there were four of them—sat on what were by now foul-smelling cabbages and rhubarb that covered the coffin on the wagon. They all climbed down, and two remained to guard their precious cargo while the others piled into the hostelry.
A few moments later a carriage pulled up. Lovelock was driving with young Will at his side.
“What are they doing?” asked Lydia anxiously, looking out of the window, seeing the cart with its odd load. “Surely they should not have stopped?”
Carrington shook his head. “These Irishmen are a law unto themselves,” he said reprovingly.
“Begging your pardon, my lady,” interjected Emily. “But my father will take good care of Mr. Byrne. I know he will.”
Lydia nodded. “Yes. Yes, of course he will,” she replied. “Let us take this opportunity to take refreshment, too, shall we?” she suggested.
 
Thomas felt a great nausea in the pit of his stomach as he rode out to Earls Court. He loathed and detested Hunter for what he had done to Lydia and, no doubt, other women in her situation, yet did not relish his task. It was a terrible thing to accuse a man of murder when all he had was hearsay evidence and no witnesses to the actual act itself.
Howison was at the gate. He recognized Thomas and sneered. “Welcome, Dr. Silkstone,” he said, his weather-beaten face stretched into a broad grin. The doctor did not return the greeting. All he could recall was that menacing face as he leaned against a tree in Cockspur Street, day and night, shadowing poor Charles.
“I am come to see Dr. Hunter,” he told him.
He was led past the neat row of small skulls, through the great hall lined with pickled animals from moles to monkeys and into the laboratory, where he found Hunter leaning over some vast tome and making notes, spectacles hooked over his nose. The anatomist looked up when he heard Thomas approach.
“Ah, Dr. Silkstone, what a pleasant surprise,” he greeted him, removing his glasses. Thomas was surprised at his affability, and more than a little suspicious. Here was a man whose most cherished ambition, nay, obsession, had been thwarted, despite weeks of careful planning. The giant had slipped out of his grasp and his body would be halfway to the coast by now, and yet the anatomist seemed almost cheerful. Thomas was about to shatter his mood.
“I am come on a most serious matter, Dr. Hunter,” he told him.
“Then you better sit down, Dr. Silkstone,” he said, gesturing to a chair.
“It concerns the murder of the young castrato, Signor Carlo Cappelli.”
Hunter nodded. “I have read of the case. A most unpleasant murder, by all accounts.”
“Indeed so, sir. I was tasked to carry out a postmortem on his body,” said Thomas.
The anatomist leaned forward gleefully. “Och! How fortunate you were. Fascinating, I shouldn’t wonder. I have always wanted to dissect a castrato, as you know.” His expression was one of delight, and Thomas recalled the night of the concert and his interest in Cappelli’s physiology then. He went on: “As their body grows, their lack of testosterone means their epiphyses do not harden in the normal manner, you know. That is why they are often so tall and with unusually long ribs. Did you note that, Silkstone?”
Thomas was taken aback by this enthusiastic reaction to his original question. “I was trying to ascertain how Signor Cappelli died, sir, not studying the physiology of a castrato.”
Hunter reflected for a moment. “Pity, that,” he lamented. “A wasted opportunity. But what about the vocal cords? Were they small? ’Tis the extraordinary power of their lungs forcing air through those tiny cords that makes their voices so high, you know. I’d love to get my hands on such a larynx.”
Shocked by such a reaction to his questioning, Thomas decided to plunge in. “But I believe you have, sir,” he blurted.
Hunter stiffened and looked puzzled. “What did ya say?”
Thomas took a deep breath and repeated himself. “I believe that Signor Cappelli’s larynx is in a preserving jar in a store cupboard in this very room, sir,” he said unequivocally.
The anatomist paused for a moment, his gnarled fingers stroking his chin in thought. “And I assume Giles Carrington told you this,” he said finally.
Thomas felt the blood pounding through his ears. “Yes sir, he did.”
“Then let us see if he is right,” said Hunter, calmly reaching down to his desk drawer and bringing out a key. Lighting a lantern, he walked over to the door in the wall and unlocked it. Opening the grille wide, so that Thomas could see everything, he revealed his store of human organs, all floating weightlessly like exotic fruits in brandy.
The young doctor could not hide his amazement. There was row upon row of jars and ampules, each neatly labeled and each bearing the name of the organ within, together with its previous owner’s.
“So, this is my collection of human body parts, Dr. Silkstone,” he said proudly, walking into the storeroom. “Each organ is here for a reason, a purpose. You see this one,” he said, pointing to a cylinder containing what appeared to Thomas to be a section of a small intestine with a hole in it. “ ’Tis a duelist’s jejunum. That is the bullet hole, right through the middle. And this, this is the Marquis of Rockingham’s heart,” he announced proudly. “He gave me permission to have it afore he died.”
“So you keep these for study, sir?” asked Thomas.
Hunter nodded. “For study and for posterity,” he replied. “One day, not in my lifetime, but maybe in the next century, or the one after that, men might be able to learn from these samples. It might help them in the curation of so many diseases that blight mankind.”
Thomas was stunned by such a momentous revelation. Here was a man ahead of his time, he thought; a true disciple of science and imagination. He felt almost humbled by such breadth of vision and momentarily forgot the purpose of his visit, his eyes playing on the endless possibilities of future discoveries encapsulated within the jars before him.
Forcing himself to be pulled back into the moment, he remembered his purpose. “Sir, are Signor Cappelli’s vocal cords here?” he asked earnestly.
Hunter shook his head. “If they are, Dr. Silkstone, I have not put them there.”
Together they scanned the shelves. It was Thomas who spotted the jar first, slightly hidden by another vessel.
“Could these be they?” he asked, taking the jar off the shelf.
“I have not seen those before,” replied Hunter, “and I do not have any other such specimens.” It was clear to Thomas that he was telling the truth.
“So someone else must have put them there?”
The anatomist nodded and the men exchanged knowing looks. In an instant Thomas knew. “Why would Giles Carrington want to have you arrested for murder?”
Hunter walked out of the storeroom and Thomas followed. “ ’Tis a long story,” said the old anatomist, easing himself onto the chair once more. “His father died under my knife. He was a wealthy banker and he suffered an aneurysm in his leg. I operated on it, but it was before I had perfected my technique and he died a few days later.”
“I see,” said Thomas quietly, trying to digest the implications of such a revelation.
“I thought no more of it. Och, my patients die every day, but then last year, the lad came to me, telling me he was the son of this man and he wanted to be a great surgeon. I thought it a noble ideal and I felt obliged to him as well. I had, after all, deprived him of his father, albeit unintentionally.”
“So you took him under your wing, and all the time he was plotting your downfall,” said Thomas.
Hunter nodded. “It certainly seems that way, Dr. Silkstone,” he replied. “But you will have to ask him yourself. Could it be that Giles Carrington is your murderer, Dr. Silkstone?” he asked calmly.
It was only then that the horror of the situation struck Thomas. “But he is with Lydia,” he exclaimed, suddenly remembering the giant’s funeral procession eastward to Kent.
“Then you must go to her at once, Dr. Silkstone, afore he murders anyone else!” cried Hunter, a hand held aloft melodramatically.
Thomas did not appreciate being mocked so cruelly, but he knew the anatomist was right, and the sick feeling in his stomach that had seized him before now gave way to rising panic. He had to catch up with the funeral cortege, and quickly.
John Hunter watched the young doctor race to his waiting horse and gallop off down his drive. He smiled to himself. In his eagerness to save his beloved Lydia from the clutches of a suspected murderer, he would surely be distracted. It would make Pertwee’s mission so much easier. The giant would soon be his.
Chapter 46
D
espite numerous stops along the way, the bizarre funeral procession made good progress. They arrived at their appointed inn shortly before nightfall. Lovelock had gone on ahead previously and arranged for Charles’s casket to be stored overnight in the tavern’s barn.
Lydia, Carrington, and Emily had followed on behind, driven by Will, ensuring O’Shea and his crew did not become too distracted by the pleasures of hostelries along the route. The road was being well used. There were parties of pilgrims heading for Canterbury and cartloads of fruit coming to the city from the orchards of Kent. Lydia had intended to keep a weather eye open, but she was still tired from her ordeal and left it to Carrington to watch for any suspicious signs. There was still a danger of them being followed, and the newssheets carried several warnings about the unscrupulous nature of those who would seek to anatomize their precious cargo. Lydia shivered. She, too, had experienced firsthand Hunter’s ruthlessness and knew that he never gave up easily, although with each mile away from London, she told herself, the risk lessened.
The inn was adequate in its provisions and Emily was on hand to see to her needs. Over dinner in an upper room Carrington spoke to Lydia of his work at St. George’s Hospital. He seemed a pleasant enough young man to her, if a little intense at times. It was only when the talk turned to the pursuit of the giant’s corpse and the name of Hunter passed his lips that his expression altered. Lydia noticed that he shifted uncomfortably on his chair and that he diverted his eyes away from her face.
“That man is evil,” he said through clenched teeth. Lydia did not contradict him. She believed, from her own experience, that what he said was true, but she could see that there was some deeper substance to his hatred of the anatomist.
“He has wronged you, Mr. Carrington?” she asked.
He looked at her straight. “He murdered my father,” he hissed.
Startled, Lydia leaned back from the table. “That is a grave accusation, sir. How so?” she asked, wide-eyed.
“He operated on his leg. My father suffered an aneurysm, a large swelling that threatened to kill him. He was in agony and most of the surgeons he saw recommended amputation.” Carrington touched the blade of the knife that rested on the table before them. “But my father would do anything to avoid losing his leg, so when he heard of John Hunter and his newfangled operation to tie off the artery, he asked to be his patient.”
“But the operation failed?” suggested Lydia.
Carrington nodded. “He died in unspeakable anguish a week later.” The student’s eyes filled with tears at the recollection.
Lydia felt his pain. She recalled her own agony at the hands of Dr. Hunter. “I am sorry for your loss,” she murmured, placing her hand over his on the table in a spontaneous gesture of empathy.
Instantly he lifted his gaze, and she realized what she had done was inappropriate. “Forgive me, Mr. Carrington,” she said, withdrawing her hand quickly, as if she had just touched hot embers. “I am tired. I must abed,” she told him, rising from the table. “Tomorrow will be a long day.”
Downstairs the Irishmen and Crookback sipped their tepid ale and reminisced with tales of the giant Byrne around a roaring fire. While not all their recollections were accurate, blurred as they were by liquor, they were all fond.
“I recall the time he gave me locks of his hair to sell, and when a cripple held on to his legs he could walk again,” said Mad Sam O’Shea, looking deep into the embers of the fire.
“And I recall he patted me on the ’ead,” chirped up one of the younger members of the group. They raised their cups to that memory, too.
Crookback had his stories, as well. “There was a time the showman would give us no supper and Charles, God rest his soul, stood up to him and picked him from the ground. Lifted him clean three feet in the air,” he recalled. “ ‘Give us our bread,’ he growled at him, and sure enough we shared not a loaf but a leg of mutton an hour later!”
There was a general chorus of approval and another toast was drunk. “To the finest Irishman that ever lived,” they cried, their sentimentality growing with each pot of ale. And so the night went on.
Outside, across a small courtyard, in a barn not ten yards away, lay the object of their adulation and the subject of their numerous toasts. Charles Byrne’s body was safe. No one could enter the barn without first passing the back windows of the inn, where they all sat, keeping guard over the remains of their friend in their own very special way.
 
About ten miles to the west, Thomas had been forced to stop for the night in an inn at Gravesend. He was making good progress when his horse went lame and he had to walk the last five miles into the port. He reluctantly ate some bread and cheese, even though he had no appetite for it, and retired early so that he could leave at first light. With a good night’s rest and a fresh horse, he reckoned he could easily catch up with Lydia and the funeral cortege before they reached Margate, where Charles was to be consigned to the sea. He prayed the giant’s hapless friends would keep true to their word. Now that he knew Giles Carrington could not be trusted, the band of Irish reprobates was his only hope.
The next morning the sunlight seemed brighter than usual to the Irishmen. The clatter of horses’ hooves and the shouts of the pot boys and scullery maids were louder too. And how stiff they were! What sort of mattresses were these that they were as hard as wood? It was only a few moments after their waking that they realized they had, indeed, slept on wood. They had not taken to their beds that night, nor even dozed by Charles’s coffin as planned. The liquor had got the worst of them, and one by one they had fallen into a drunken stupor by the hearth.
As soon as he realized what had happened Mad Sam scrambled up and rushed out of the door, shouting.
“The giant. The giant!” he cried, hurtling toward the barn. His motley crew followed in hot pursuit, hollering and shouting as if the very world were coming to an end. But they need not have worried. The gigantic coffin was still there, resting peacefully on the flagstones. O’Shea ran a careful hand over the lid. It was all intact. The nails were as secure as the teeth in his head. He patted the box like a horse, then bent down and whispered: “Are you well in there, Charles, me old
cara?
” Satisfied that he had received a reply in the affirmative, Mad Sam nodded vigorously. “All’s well,” he told his men, and they breathed a collective sigh of relief.
Alerted to the commotion below as she dressed, Lydia told Emily to look out of the window. The maid watched anxiously as the men emerged from the barn, but her expression changed when she saw they were smiling.
“Mr. Byrne is safe,” she told her mistress.
“We must thank God for that,” replied Lydia. It was certainly no thanks to the Irishmen, she thought.

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