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Authors: Lucy Ribchester

BOOK: The Hourglass Factory
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Underneath were some more notes on Ebony Diamond and a conclusive ‘report’ from Wilson based on Jenkins’s information that both ‘Diamond’ and ‘Evans’
had been about to spill the beans on a mastermind suffragette plan.

‘Forgive me, sir, but this seems like scant evidence for . . .’ He looked at the hallway drawers being tumbled out, the furniture tossed over. ‘If it’s top secret that
they’re planning to torch Nottingham Castle, why send an uncoded message from Paris? Jenkins heard nothing this afternoon to corroborate that’s what they’re up to.’

‘Doesn’t matter why we ordered it. Point is, Freddie, now’s the chance to wrap it up. Get her for double murder and you’ll sink ’em all.’

‘Get who for murder?’

Stuttlegate’s eyes danced. ‘How’d you like your name to be up in the hall of fame? The man who broke the suffragettes.’

‘But you can’t be suggesting—’

‘Annie Evans, Ebony Diamond. Look it’s all in there.’

Primrose looked down at the file, noting how big his hands were against its slim brown card. Big and useless and clumsy. He squeezed the bridge of his nose. ‘Get who exactly for what
murder?’

Stuttlegate came close. ‘I’ve got Mrs Pankhurst in one of the rooms up there.’ He pointed to the top of the stairs where a policeman was trying to wrestle a safe box from a
woman. His eyes were alight. He waited, anticipating admiration, but it wasn’t forthcoming so he went on. ‘Now madam’s not under arrest. Yet. But you can have a crack at her. If
you want. First jipper.’

‘What am I supposed to say to her?’

Stuttlegate brought his face devilishly close. ‘I don’t care, Freddie. I really don’t care what you say. So long as you leave the wheels off her bath chair this time.’
Before Primrose had cottoned on to what Stuttlegate had said, the Chief was wading out into the lobby, sticking his fat hands out again, directing the black insectile forms of the uniformed
officers as they burrowed about their growing evidence piles.

Primrose felt his teeth clenching together. Bath chair indeed? So it was Stuttlegate who had left that article on his desk the other day, the one about May Billinghurst and her bath chair with
the love heart round it. It had to have been. The whole point of giving him the investigation, while continuing to meddle in it from afar seemed to become suddenly clear. It was a test; the gloves
were off and he was being tested right here, right this minute, as a suffragette sympathiser.

He flinched as he turned to see Wilson’s lanky shadow on the column beside him.

‘Sorry, sir. Didn’t mean to startle you.’ He paused. ‘Did he mention who was upstairs?’

‘Yes. Is she being held against her will?’

‘Not yet. Becoming ratty though. Saying she might not cooperate without a solicitor, so if we’re going to get anything out of her . . .’

Primrose disliked that ‘we’ but was too tired to argue. ‘Do you know which room she’s in?’

Wilson gallantly held out his arm to usher the Inspector forward. Primrose, as he mounted the stairs, felt a growing sense of dread. If indeed he was standing on the cusp of a landmark moment in
the fight against the women’s movement, why hadn’t his superior elected to take the interview? At the back of his mind, alongside sleep and indigestion, was the groggy hope that he
wasn’t right now being led into some kind of professional trap.

Tussles were breaking out on the stairs. One woman had managed to get a young blond constable into a ju jitsu lock, but released him when Primrose and Wilson passed. On a side table in the upper
landing, Primrose noticed a small shiny pistol tossed into a police evidence box, along with a packet of blanks and a brace of scratched wooden Indian clubs. The whine of the electric lift, sending
box after box of seized goods down to the lobby, blended into the background.

They continued along the corridor until they came to a gallery with a door leading off to the left. Above them a domed skylight let in the bleary violet night.

Wilson didn’t bother to knock but cranked the handle open to let Primrose pass. Inside a woman sat with her back to them, facing the windowless wall, still wearing her outdoor hat: a white
creation tied with a wisp of silk under her chin. She was perched upright and proper on the near side of an oak table covered with ledgers, pamphlets for rallies and copies of the day’s
newspapers. Strewn carelessly atop them and labelled with an orange police evidence tag lay a dog-whip; a hard black handle stiffly tapering into a tongue of yellow leather.

Mrs Pankhurst didn’t turn around. Primrose headed behind the desk for the second chair, then thought better of it and pulled it around to her side. Wilson closed the door and leant against
it. Primrose introduced them both and muttered a weak thank you to her for agreeing to help.

She took a moment to look at him. Her eyes carefully roamed his features, taking in his throat and shoulders as if she might be assessing a cow at market. ‘I didn’t have much choice,
Inspector. Your men don’t respond well to reasoning when handcuffs and rubber bats do the job so nicely.’

‘They’re just doing what we have asked them to do.’

‘Look at this place. Did you see, on the way up? They’ve taken records, lost the order for filed documents. Nothing we are doing, right now, in here is illegal.’

Primrose’s eye fell upon the dog-whip. Her gaze followed.

‘How can I assist you?’ she asked. Her face, he noticed, was drawn, much more so than the photographs made out. She had high cheekbones and large round hooded eyes that cast down to
her lap every so often. Her skin was so fragile that fine blue veins were visible beneath its surface, mirroring the flat sea-blue of her eyes. She made him feel like a boy, like she had seen
better and more terrifying men than him countless times before.

‘Your daughter Christabel—’ he cleared his throat.

‘It is hard enough,’ she interrupted, ‘keeping tabs on my daughter for my own purposes without having to worry about keeping track of her for yours.’

Primrose shifted. The upholstery on the seat was uneven, sloping on one side. He wondered if this one was reserved for unwelcome visitors. ‘Are you proud of her?’

‘I’m proud of all of my children, alive and with God. If you’re asking if I approve of her evading conspiracy charges while the rest of us went to prison, I approve of her
cause. Sometimes that’s enough to justify the methods.’

‘Methods. That is why we are here after all.’

‘Your tone doesn’t become you. It makes you seem even more nervous than you are.’

Primrose took a sharp breath, steadying his hands. ‘Violence is a WSPU method.’

‘We prefer militancy. Militancy means war. And this,’ she jabbed a finger towards the ground, indicating downstairs, ‘is a war, Inspector. We didn’t mean it to be but it
has become one.’

‘And in war people get hurt. Murdered.’

‘In your wars perhaps but not in ours. The only recklessness the suffragettes have ever shown has been about their own lives, not the lives of others. You obviously haven’t been put
on surveillance duties at enough of our rallies.’ She nodded at the dog whip. ‘See who is violent to whom then. It has never been, and will never be, the policy of the Women’s
Social and Political Union to endanger human life. We leave that to the enemy. We leave that to the men in their warfare.’

Primrose caught Wilson’s eye but the sergeant’s expression was unreadable. He put the brown file on the table and opened it. Mrs Pankhurst watched his hands carefully.

‘I want to ask you about a woman called Ebony Diamond. Know her?’

She didn’t blink. ‘Of course.’

‘When did you meet her?’

‘I think she came to us almost a year ago. She had met some pamphleteers at a country fair. That’s what our ladies do. Go to country fairs, spread the word. You wouldn’t like
to believe most of the things we do are peaceful.’

‘Doesn’t matter what I’d like to believe. Violence speaks for itself.’

She waited until he looked at her again. ‘Violence frequently attaches itself to reform. Without it no law would be passed. We would still be waiting for the corn laws, or common
man’s suffrage. You, I dare say, Inspector,’ she looked him up and down, resting her eyes on his broad labourer’s shoulders, ‘would likely not be allowed to vote.’

It was too much. Primrose felt his exposed neck beginning to boil. Being yanked in here, disorientated, unprepared, dumped in chaos on his own investigation. He would not be humiliated in front
of an inferior by this cool-throated woman. He thought of Stuttlegate waiting in the lobby rubbing his ginger chops, and felt suddenly helpless, as if to punish the woman in front of him would be
to play right into the Chief’s hands. But to let her goad him would be something worse. ‘Violence is one thing, but murder is quite another. What if I told you that all this, all this
here tonight had nothing to do with your pamphlets and your rallies and your silly hammers. What if I told you that you and your daughter weren’t wanted for conspiracy any more, you’re
wanted for murder. Would you still fob me off with nonsense riddles about the past?’

‘I still wouldn’t tell you where Christabel is. That’s a mother speaking, Inspector.’

‘Then you’re more stupid than I took you for.’

‘What are you driving at? I’m getting very close to not cooperating until I see a solicitor.’ Her voice finally tightened. ‘Arrest me or release me.’

‘Annie Evans.’ He watched for a reaction but she gave none. ‘Found with her throat cut last Thursday night, the night of your window smash. Tempers were high that
night.’

‘Tempers against the government.’

‘And any dissenters who didn’t want to toe the line on your plans?’

She said nothing. He tried a different tack. ‘Christabel was in town. Miss Evans was found with a portcullis suffragette badge on her.’ Still no reaction. ‘Ebony Diamond. Would
you care to comment on where she might be?’

‘I have no idea, Inspector. They both left the WSPU weeks ago. We can’t keep track of every girl who comes and goes.’

‘There’s been no black drapes in the window for Annie, no mention of her in your newspaper. No talk of her in here.’

She opened her mouth in shock then closed it quickly, as if chastising herself for her own surprise at being under their surveillance.

‘What did you think of Ebony?’ Primrose asked. ‘Did you like her?’

‘Like most women who come to us, we find comfort in each other. We find hope in the thought that we are doing something to change the world.’ She chewed her lower lip. ‘The
truth is I was very sorry when Miss Diamond and Miss Evans stopped coming to meetings. But we don’t have time to dwell on the whys. Perhaps she couldn’t afford to be associated with us
once she was engaged at the Coliseum.’

‘What about Miss Evans?’

‘Annie and Ebony were very close.’

‘So you think Miss Diamond left because of her career? And Annie followed.’

‘I would like to think,’ she said slowly, ‘that if it came to it, Ebony Diamond would rather use herself to gain publicity for the movement than the other way round. But then I
am an optimist, Inspector. Suffragettes can’t really afford not to be.’

Primrose scratched his head. The uneven cushion was bothering him. He stood up to stretch his legs, and Mrs Pankhurst looked quietly aghast at such ungentlemanly behaviour. Her husky-dog eyes
followed him as he paced. He could feel Stuttlegate’s shadow hanging in the corner of the room, waiting for him to make the stab, the kill, slurp up first jippers or whatever he had said.
Defeat knotted in his stomach as he stretched out his back and realised Mrs Pankhurst was still watching him.

‘Was there anyone who might have been afraid that Ebony Diamond was about to ruin some grand plan of theirs? That out of spite, because her ideas had been rejected, that she might threaten
to leak some great event, sabotage some piece of destruction, like burning down Nottingham Castle?’

Mrs Pankhurst didn’t flinch but she scraped back her chair, then put her hands on the table, inches from the dog-whip. ‘Inspector, I’ll forgive you if you’re confused.
Perhaps you weren’t listening earlier. But the suffragettes do not put people’s lives in danger. When the men burned Nottingham Castle two people died. Two people were murdered so you
could have the franchise. That telegram my daughter sent was destined for your eyes. She wanted to make a point. And by God,’ she gestured at the door where the beating of footsteps and thump
of papers hitting floorboards filtered in, ‘she’s had you busy.’

He opened his mouth but she hadn’t finished.

‘It’s the militancy of men, Inspector, that has drenched the world with blood, and for these deeds of horror men have been rewarded with monuments, songs, epics. The militancy of
women will continue to harm no human life save the lives of those who want to fight the battle in their own way. Time will reveal what is rewarded to them. I would suggest, Inspector,’ she
said, letting her gaze settle back on the dog-whip, ‘that if you are looking for those with blood on their hands I would try looking a little further towards the government.’

It was only in the lobby, warmed by the bodies of men at work, that Primrose realised how cold the interview room had been. He pumped the blood back into his fingers, while
Wilson stood staring at him. Behind them at a distance Mrs Pankhurst leant over the gallery rail, looking down at the ransacked office.

‘You’re letting her go?’ Wilson said softly.

‘You don’t believe what she said?’

Wilson shrugged. ‘You can’t trust them. Look what happened with her daughter.’

Primrose pushed his hand up through the greased parting of his hair and let his breath out.

‘She makes you uneasy.’ There was a goading smile on Wilson’s face.

Primrose felt the chill in him curdle quickly into a hot anger and began walking towards the stairs. ‘What makes me uneasy is that there’s a murderer on the loose and all we seem to
be concerned about is using it as an excuse to spy on suffragettes. Suffragettes here, suffragettes there, the only place we’re bloody looking is suffragettes. It wouldn’t make such a
damned difference if it wasn’t murder. It’s that girl’s funeral tomorrow.’

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