Authors: Robin Blake
O
N FRIDAY MORNING
I rode the few miles to Kirkham in cheerful weather, which promised another hot day ahead. But I was feeling baffled, and wringing my brains to understand what I had just discovered at the House of Correction.
Before leaving town through Friary Bar I had diverted down Marsh Lane, intending to take the chance of reuniting the late Jackson with his errant shoe. The Porter took me straight to the locked cell in which Jackson reposed, turned the key and left me to it. I found that the corpse-washers Mary and Dolly had been in, and now Jackson lay under a plain sheet, awaiting his next appointment â the viewing by tomorrow's inquest jury. The clothes bag lay on the floor nearby and this I emptied until I came to the single shoe, to which the one I had with me was the pair. Except that, when I put them side by side, I saw at once that it wasn't.
The shoes were much alike in style, but the one that had been on Jackson's left foot was a clumsy, much scuffed and dented object, with worn-down heel and thinned sole. The shoe I had found at the Stone was a less exhausted and more refined thing, with some fancy stitching here and there, though it was by no means new. When I tried slipping the corpse's right foot into this unexpected shoe I found that it fitted well enough. Tybalt Jackson's dress had been a little shabby, but not slovenly. Why would he have been wearing odd footwear?
Arriving at Kirkham I found the shop of Joseph Ransom to be a small and hardly prosperous establishment. Instead of a proud position on or beside Kirkham's Market Square, where it might assert itself as the town's prime centre of the cordwainer's art, it kept apart at the bottom of a row of backstreet cottages, a shy business that disdained acclaim.
Yet if this is a true image, Betty Ransom did not fit it very well. She was a forward woman, with flashing eyes and a comfortably upholstered body â a woman who enjoyed inhabiting her own flesh.
âCome in, Mr Cragg,' she said gaily, after I explained that I was gathering information about a man that had been staying at her brother's inn. âRansom is at the tannery, fetching leather, so he's not here to object to my entertaining a strange man in my parlour.'
We passed through the shop and into the living quarters. The parlour was as orderly and clean as her brother's was disorderly and foul. She insisted on my waiting while she fetched in some elderflower wine.
âI make it for sale at my brother's inn but the fool only gives it away. Drinks nothing but ale himself, and a lot too much of it.'
I took a sip. I would rather have had Tokay, or even Cyprus wine, but in its way this wasn't bad.
âI have had a conversation yesterday with your brother,' I said, when I had complimented her on the wine. âHe says he went out to the tavern on Wednesday night, leaving you in charge of the inn.'
âHe did that. I go over to him every week, Wednesdays. I like it, for a change, though I would wish he'd keep the place cleaner. So who is this man you want to know about?'
âHis name is Tybalt Jackson, whom your brother had received at the inn late on Tuesday, lodging him in the largest guest chamber.'
âHim with the blackie boy? What about him?'
âHe is dead, I'm afraid. Attacked and found murdered.'
Her eyes widened.
âMurdered? At the inn?'
âI don't know â he wasn't found at the inn and I doubt he was murdered there. But I want to know anything about his activities during the night. Did you see Mr Jackson, or his servant, at any time?'
âNo. They kept to their room.'
âYou didn't take them any food or go to their room for any reason?'
âNo. But you mention “activities”, Sir: I did hear them, you know, as I was passing by the door.'
âWhat did you hear of them?'
Looking downward, she began to blush and her cheeks dimpled.
âWell, I'm not sure I can say, Mr Cragg.'
âYou heard talking?'
She looked up at me again, her eyes lit by suppressed merriment. âYes, talking they were, in a way. They were saying things ⦠intimate things, if you get my meaning there. And making intimate sounds, too, if you get my meaning
there
.'
âI think I can, Mrs Ransom. But just to be clear, you are referring to Mr Jackson and his servant?'
âExactly, Sir. And if the master were murdered, well, I doubt he was killed by the blackie. That boy sounded like he were properly enjoying his'self.'
She retained a serious face, but somewhere behind her eyes that smile still lay concealed. She did not appear to disapprove of what she had heard through the door, even though she thought Jackson's âblackie' was a boy.
âWhat time did you hear this?'
âEight or nine o'clock, or between the two anyway. It was just dark.'
âHalf past eight then?'
âYes, about.'
âNow this is very important. Did anyone else come to the inn during the evening?'
âIt was quiet, it always is, but another gentleman did arrive later on, asking for a room. I said yes, if you have the money beforehand. He paid me sixpence and I showed him up to what's known as the Red Room. There's a lot of old bedrooms at the Lamb, but most of them's unfit. I had a job finding one that was not too bad.'
âWhat was this man's name?'
âSaid it was Moon. I laughed. I thought, that's a made-up name, or sounds like it. The man-in-the-moon! Anyway, it didn't matter, so long as he had the money.'
âDid he say where he had come from?'
âNo. I asked if he'd travelled far, you know, out of politeness, but he just said a day's ride.'
âA day's ride from where?'
âFor all he told me, it was
from
the moon.'
She laughed, and then as quickly grew serious.
âIs
he
the murderer, Sir? Oh, just to think I spent the night in the house with a murderer.'
âIt's much too early to say who was the murderer, Mrs Ransom. But can you describe Mr Moon for me?'
âIt were after dark so I only saw him by candlelight, and he did keep his hat on, which was a bit disrespectful â but as I say, so long as they have the moneyâ¦'
âWhat was his appearance?'
âHe was ordinary height, or a little above. Skinny. About thirty years old, maybe a year or two more.'
âHis face â was there anything to note about it?'
âNo, Sir. Not to notice. Except maybe for what you might call a thin nose. But it was a wide hat and I couldn't rightly see under it.'
âDid he have a beard?'
âNo, Sir, his chin were clean shaven.'
âApart from the hat, how was he dressed?'
âThere was nowt special about his clothing. I think he wore a green coat.'
âAnd his speech?'
âHe talked roundly, not exactly as a gentleman but like one that wants to impress you that way, if you understand what I mean.'
âAnd was he alone?'
âWell, he had a man with him.'
âA servant?'
âI don't know about that. He was just a chap carrying Mr Moon's valise.'
âCan you describe him?'
âNot really. I hardly looked at him and as soon as he dropped Moon's bag he left.'
âSo where was the room you showed Moon to in relation to the one occupied by Mr Jackson?'
âOh nowhere near. Red Room's round on the other side of the yard, though both of them look out on it.'
âThey both had windows commanding a view of the courtyard?'
âYes.'
âAnd the windows of the two rooms were visible to each other across the space between?'
âThat's right. I suppose this new chap could've seen what Jackson was up to if the curtains were not drawn.'
âAnd were they?'
She shrugged her well-shaped shoulders.
âI never did look, Sir,' she said.
âDid Mr Moon ask for anything â food, drink?'
âInk. He asked for a bottle of ink. I got him one and left him to it.'
âSo there were just three sleeping that night at the inn â or five if we count yourself and Houndsworth?'
âThat's it. Three more than usual, you could say.'
âAnd the newcomer was definitely alone. He had no servant or companion with him.'
âThat's right.'
âDid he have a horse?'
âYes Sir, but I told him we couldn't stable it, as we had no boy at the moment. So he took it up to the livery at the top of the street.'
âWhat baggage did he have?'
The question was not answered for we were interrupted by noises from the shop, a banged door and a shout. Immediately Mrs Ransom's manner towards me changed, her voice becoming formal and distant.
âThat will be my husband, Mr Cragg. I shall go and greet him and, if you wouldn't mind waiting here, you yourself shall meet him in a few moments.'
Hastily she snatched up the jug of wine and glasses and left the room. Moments later the couple's murmuring voices could be heard from the shop, and then Ransom came through to the parlour alone. He had on a pair of steel-rimmed spectacles fitted over icy blue eyes in a lean, narrow face. The set of his mouth looked uncomfortably tight.
âMy wife tells me you have come all the way from Preston, Sir.'
âYes, it is on Coroner's business. One that lodged a night at the Lamb and Flag has died rather suddenly.'
âOf the food, no doubt,' said Ransom drily.
âNo, not the foodâ'
âThen of breathing the air in the place. Fetid. I won't go there, and I won't have my brother-in-law here neither. I don't understand my wife's devotion to the wastrel.'
Ransom was hardly one for skylarking, I thought. Self-indulgence was not his ruling passion.
I told him I still had one or two questions for Mrs Ransom and wondered if he would be kind enough to call her to join us. But coming back in and sitting in the shadow of her husband's presence, Betty Ransom became a very different interlocutor. All sense of imparting confidences, of vivid recall, left her. The responses were stiff and as brief as possible.
âI was just asking about Moon's baggage. How much was there?'
âHe had only a single valise.'
âAnd next morning, what happened?'
âI rose at seven and left to come home.'
âIs that what you usually do?'
âYes. I catch a lift from carrier Johnson's cart, that always leaves for Kirkham at half after seven.'
âWho makes breakfast?'
âMy brother.'
âDid you see anyone at the inn that morning, before you left?'
âNo one. They must have been all asleep.'
âAnd in the night â did you hear any activity?'
âMy brother coming in. Nothing else. Nothing at all.'
âDo you generally sleep soundly at the inn, Mrs Ransom? I mean, if there is ever any disturbance in the night, do you hear it or sleep through it?'
âI sleep well enough. And I didn't hear owt unusual on Wednesday night. If a man truly was murdered in the dark hours, I didn't hear it.'
There seemed little more to extract from her, so I thanked them both and rose to leave. Ransom showed me back into the shop and he was about to open the street door to shuffle me out when a thought suddenly struck me.
âI wonder if you would look at something for me, Mr Ransom. I will need to fetch it from my saddle bag.'
I went out to the horse, which I had tethered by the door, and returned with the shoe that mistakenly we had thought belonged to Tybalt Jackson. I placed it in the cobbler's hand and, as he turned it over, I was most surprised to see a wiry little smile creep across his lips.
âIt's a few year since I set eyes on one of these,' he said.
âDon't tell me you know who wore it.'
âNot who wore it, who made it. See this?'
He pointed inside the shoe to the insole. It was impressed with the mark of a stamp â T.T.
âThat's his mark, is that.'
âWho is T.T.?'
âThomas Truss of Liverpool. I learned my trade for seven years as that man's apprentice. This shoe is typical of him. It's beautifully stitched and made of good leather. I don't get much chance to make shoes like this now. It's mostly boot-work and clogs for the likes of me out here. Primitive.'
âSo this is an expensive shoe?'
âNot very: middling. Thomas never asked prices anything like as steep as he could or should have. He were a master shoemaker â and I do mean a
master
â but he always endeavoured to keep the charge low. A fair fit at a fair price: that was his boast, and it's one I still try to live up to here.'
âSo what kind of person bought their shoes from Thomas Truss?'
âNot the richest. Not the poorest. Liverpool folk in the middle, with a taste for well-made sturdy footwear. And younger folk rather than older because â well, see this bit here? That fancy stitching wouldn't appeal to everybody, and especially not to those more set in their ways. The more adventurous types of men and girls liked our shoes, though, because they were a little bit different from the general.'
He sighed and gave me back the shoe.
âHe's retired two years now. The business on Dale Street was sold, so I heard.'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
The last service Joseph Ransom did for me was to direct me to the house of Mr Marmaduke Flitcroft, which was a solid building of the last century, overlooking the market square. Mr Flitcroft was a sleekly tailored old gentleman with a straight back and an equally straight manner. He received me courteously, putting me at my ease with a pinch of snuff and a small glass of port.
âI remember your father well, Sir. Old Sam! Such a character.'
I looked around the spacious room in which he had received me. There were objects set out on all the sills and tables â carved stones, ivories, bronze figures, medals mounted in frames, jars.