Read The Path of the Wicked Online
Authors: Caro Peacock
âA reasonable idea, if you could do it.'
âVery reasonable. The man's not a fool. Far from it.'
âSo are you going to do what he wants?'
âI thought I might as well have a try at it. After all, I'll be going back in that direction anyway. I told him I'd do what I could and come back and give him a report sometime next week, one way or the other.'
âAnd you'd tell me as well?'
âCourse I would.'
He looked at me as if I must be crazy to think otherwise. From Amos's point of view, nothing between us had changed. Not yet, at any rate.
I said goodbye to him and walked to the Mechanics' Institute. A man in the hallway said yes, Mr Jones was expecting me, and showed me into what looked like a lecture room, with rows of chairs and a low platform with a blackboard. Barty Jones was sitting with his legs stretched out. He stood up when I came in, but his greeting had the same note of sarcasm as at our first meeting.
âGood morning, Miss Lane. You got my note, then. Kind of you to call.'
I said I hoped he and his friends got home safely on Wednesday night, returning the sarcasm in kind. I wanted to remind him of the debt he owed me. I might as well have saved my breath.
âWe did. Are you comfortable, lodging out there with the magistrate?'
Goodness knows how he'd found out where I was staying. Perhaps somebody had spotted me with Mr Godwit in town.
âIs that what they do with government spies, then? Billet them with the magistracy to save public money?' he said.
I was suddenly blazingly angry. After all, it had been my refusal to be a government spy that had tipped me into this tangled affair.
âIf you think I'm a spy, why did we take so much trouble to warn you?' I said. âIf it hadn't been for Tabby and me, you'd have led your men straight into an ambush of shotguns.'
I was glaring at him. He glared back.
âSo how did they know we were coming in the back way?' he said.
âBecause a boy of ten with a box of toy soldiers would have done the same. Leave a warning on the front gate and come in at the back. If that's your idea of tactics, I'm surprised you've stayed out of prison so long.'
He stared at me for what seemed like a long time and then began laughing, a deep laugh from his bootsoles.
âAre you trying to teach me tactics, miss?'
âSomebody should. If you must know, the chairman of the magistrates left a map on the table showing where he was going to put his men. I saw it and came to warn you. I'm not a government spy and I expect you to take that back or I'm leaving.'
He stopped laughing. âWhat makes you think I have stayed out of prison, in any case? I've picked oakum in my time.' He spread out his square, calloused hands. âAll right, for the present we'll assume you're not a government spy.'
It wasn't the retraction I'd demanded, but it would have to do. I sat down at the end of the front row of chairs. âSo, what have you got to tell me about Joanna Picton?' I said.
It took him a moment to register that I'd said her name, not Jack's. He blinked.
âJoanna?'
âYou helped Jack with the campaign to stop her being hanged â the petition, the march. You know a lot about Joanna.'
He sat, four chairs away from mine. His eyes were wary.
âJack came home to find her in prison on a capital murder charge,' I said. âHe might not have been a very good brother until then, but he did what he could.'
âIt was criminal what they did to her,' Barty Jones said, a sincerity in his voice I hadn't heard before. âShe'd have no more intended to kill that baby than the kindest mother in the land. They drove her to it â the magistrates and the board of guardians and the rest of them. What will she do in Australia? She'd hardly been out of the parish before all this happened to her. It's just killing her another way.'
âShe never named the father,' I said. âNot to the magistrates, the assize judge or anyone. Did she tell her brother?'
He shook his head, staring down at his big hands.
âDid he ask her?'
âThey never let him see her. Jack's no favourite of the law, not the kind they let go prison visiting.'
âBut he wanted to know?'
âOh yes, he wanted to know.'
âAnd was he trying to find out?'
âOf course he was. He said whoever had fathered the baby should be standing in the dock alongside Joanna, no matter if he were the highest in the land.'
âSo he suspected it was somebody of high position? Did he know more than that?'
âI don't know what he knew. Jack was always a close one, but he was even closer after he found out what had happened to his sister.'
âI think there was somebody trying to help him,' I said.
âWe were all trying.'
âSomebody else. Mary Marsh.'
He looked at me, saying nothing.
âThere was something between him and Mary Marsh,' I said.
He scowled. âThat's what they say when they're trying to make out Jack killed her.'
âI don't believe it was a love affair, but I know for certain that they met secretly at least once,' I said. âJoanna worked in the house where Mary Marsh was governess. She was still working there at the time the child was fathered. Mary might have offered some information to Jack when Joanna was sentenced to death.'
âWhy would she do that?'
âHumanity? A sense of justice?'
He considered and then nodded. âYou're right. Jack did meet Mary Marsh, and more than once. They met at my house a couple of times, when Mary had to bring the girl in for a ball or a party or somesuch.'
âWhen?'
âAfter Joanna was sentenced, when the appeal was going on.'
âBut he didn't tell you what it was about?'
âI guessed it was something to do with the sister.'
âI think she told him a name,' I said. âI think he's determined to bring that name out at the assizes, whatever happens to him.'
âHe thinks he's a dead man in any case. He's always said the judges and the politicians won't rest until they've hanged him on some trumped-up charge or other. He'll go down fighting.'
âBy naming the man?'
âProbably.'
âAnd do you know the name?'
âI'll leave that to Jack. If he wants to name him at the assizes, I'm not stealing his thunder. But if you're as sharp as you think you are, you'll have worked it out by now.'
I didn't rise to the bait because something that had been at the back of my mind had grown to a near certainty.
âI'm surprised you're going to let him be hanged without even telling a lie for him,' I said.
I'd caught him by surprise, but he tried not to let it show. âWhat lie?'
âIt would have been the easiest thing in the world to say he was with you all that evening and night. With the reputation you and he have, people might even have believed that you were out together looking for ricks to burn down.'
âYou think a judge would take my word for anything?'
âProbably not, but it might have been worth trying. A man might risk perjuring himself for a friend.' He said nothing, but I could see his pride was hurt. âBut it wouldn't have been any use, would it?' I said. âBecause you're pretty sure you know where he was that evening.'
âDo I?'
âAt the Kembles' house. He was seen not far away from it.'
âHis mother lives near there.'
âA good mile away, and he wasn't very dutiful about visiting his mother. He was hoping to see Miss Marsh.'
It was a toss of a coin whether he said anything or not. While he was making his mind up, he stared at me like a craftsman judging the grain in a piece of wood. Then he gave one quick nod of the head, decision made.
âIt was the other way about. She'd sent him a note asking him to meet her.'
âThat evening?'
âYes.'
âYou saw the note?'
âJack showed me. Two lines, asking him to meet her at ten o'clock, in the usual place.'
âWhat was the usual place?'
âSomewhere in the woods behind the house.'
âAnd he intended to go?'
âYes. I warned him it might be a trap, but he said he'd have to take the chance.'
âWhy a trap? She'd been helping him.'
âShe
had
been, until they got at her.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âI only know what Jack told me. Right up to the time the poor girl was transported, the Marsh woman was helping Jack find out who was responsible for what happened to her. As soon as she's gone, Miss Marsh changes her tune, doesn't want to meet Jack any more. She tells him she's been wrong all along, that the father wasn't who they thought it was. She's been told another name, so she says, but she won't let him know this time till she's certain.'
âHow did Jack Picton take that?'
âHow do you reckon? He thought she'd been bribed or threatened into turning against him. I agreed. I was surprised all along that she'd done as much as she did, and now she'd gone back to her own side.'
He meant what he was saying, I could see that.
âBut why a trap?' I said. âAnd what sort of trap?'
âCan't you guess? He goes to meet her in the woods in the dark, she screams out as if he's laying hands on her and Master Kemble and half a dozen keepers rush out of the bushes and accuse him of rape. Ten years in prison and who's going to believe a word he says about anything?'
I looked at him, wondering if he realized that he had just produced a convincing motive for his friend to kill Mary Marsh. He must have seen that in my face.
âHe didn't kill her,' he said. âHe'd never have killed her, even if she had turned against him.'
âThen why did he run away and hide?'
âHe'll have his reasons. Maybe they'll come out in court, if they'll let him speak.'
I said nothing to that, convinced that the more Picton said, the more he'd turn judge and jury against him.
I thanked Barty Jones and walked with him to the door. I'd liked to have asked him if he still believed I might be a government spy but guessed he didn't give up anything easily, suspicions included. I was lucky to have got as much as I had from him. He'd confirmed my guess that Jack Picton and Mary Marsh were working together and then added the twist that she'd turned against him. I found that hard to accept. As for the idea that she'd let herself be the bait in a cruel trap, it was close to unthinkable. The likes of Jack Picton and Barty Jones saw traps and plots everywhere. Stick to what seemed likely: Mary had been helping Picton in trying to find the father of Joanna's child. Soon after Joanna was deported, Mary decided that they'd suspected the wrong man. Did that mean that she'd found out for certain who had fathered the boy who'd drowned in a ditch?
I strolled along the Promenade, sorry that I'd agreed to meet Mr Godwit for tea, still two hours away. If it hadn't been for that, I could have collected Rancie and ridden back. As it was, I was in riding habit on a hot August afternoon with no very clear idea what to do next. Worse, I was getting looks. Riding habit and top hat were not normal wear for afternoons in a place where other women were in muslins or cotton prints and ribboned bonnets. As it happened, my riding habit was a smart one with tight waist, tapering sleeves and an overskirt caught up with a button on the left side. It looked well on horseback in Hyde Park, but the glances I was getting from some of the women showed all too clearly that it was considered racy for Cheltenham. That, along with the heat and the confusion in my head, put the devil in me. I started to feel angry with the perfectly inoffensive invalids in their bath chairs, the ladies with their little crystal bottles for collecting spa water, the leisurely citizens sitting in the shade of trees, listening to the band. Where had they been the night Joanna Picton walked between freezing puddles carrying her baby? If she'd knocked on any of their doors, would they have let her in? Unfair, of course. Most of us aren't heroes of generosity, or any other kind of hero. Mary Marsh, it seemed, had been a hero. I was convinced now that she'd gone a long way outside social boundaries and risked her own reputation in trying to help Joanna, even associating with her outlaw brother. In the end, it had cost her not only reputation but life. Until then I'd been doing my duty by trying to help Jack Picton, whether he deserved it or not. It was more than duty in the case of Mary Marsh. She deserved justice.
I was walking along, not looking right or left, when I heard somebody calling my name.
âMiss Lane, I say, Miss Lane.'
The voice rang out like a huntsman calling hounds to order. I turned, and there was my acquaintance from the racecourse, Henry Littlecombe, lounging against the trunk of a tree near the bandstand. Like me, he was dressed for the saddle, in his case breeches, soft-topped boots and a checked waistcoat. It had been a mistake to turn. He took it for encouragement, straightened up and came striding towards me.
âI say, what a piece of luck to meet you again. I've been looking out for you every morning, but you never came.'
His high-pitched voice would have been audible across several fields, let alone the Promenade. People weren't just glancing now; they were openly staring at me. I should have given him a cold nod and walked on, but the devilish part of me decided that if I was being judged as a fast woman, or worse, I might as well live up to it. So I wished him good afternoon and raised no objection when he came up and walked beside me.
âAre you in town on your own, Miss Lane? Beastly hot, isn't it? May I offer you a lemonade or an ice or some such?'
A lemonade would be very welcome, I said. A tea garden was in sight, with tables under trees around a small fountain. We headed towards it. Since the fates had thrown Henry Littlecombe in my path, I thought I might use the occasion to confirm some things I thought I knew.