Read The Meaning of Night Online
Authors: Michael Cox
mourn him? How had he seen his life ending? (Not in a pool of gore in a public
thoroughfare, I warrant.) Did he have parents still alive whose hearts would break at the
terrible demise of their dear son? Like a soldier in battle, I had ignored such questions in
the heat of action, as being irrelevant to the task in hand; but now, as I stared at the little
spot of dried blood on my collar, I could not prevent them rushing insistently into my
mind.
Were there other traces of the crime that I had failed to notice? I hastily took my
great-coat from its peg and hurried into the sitting-room to spread it out on my
work-table, grabbing an eye-glass from beneath a pile of papers as I did so.
By the strengthening light of morning, I pored over every inch of the garment,
turning the material methodically, occasionally bringing a piece up close to my eye-glass,
like a jeweller eagerly examining some object of great worth. Then I removed my jacket
and trousers, then my waistcoat, shirt and cravat: all were subjected to the same frantic
scrutiny. Finally, I inspected my hat and placed my boots on the table, washed now in
pale sunlight. I went meticulously over the upper surfaces and soles of each boot with a
dampened handkerchief, using slow circular movements and stopping every few seconds
to see if the white linen had taken up any incriminating residue of blood.
Having satisfied myself that I could find no other physical traces that could link
me to my victim, I returned to the wash-room, where I diligently soaked my shirt collar in
cold water to remove the blood-stain. In a few minutes, washed, shaved, and combed, and
with a clean shirt on my back, I prepared to face the day.
It is the twenty-fifth of October, 1854 – St Crispin’s Day. Far away in the Crimea,
though we in England do not yet know it, Lord Cardigan’s heroic Light Brigade is
charging the Russian guns at Balaclava. For me, the day passes quietly. In the morning, I
occupy myself with the subject to which I have now devoted my whole being: the
destruction of my enemy. Of him, you shall learn more – much more – in the the course
of these pages: for now, you must take it on trust that certain events had made it
impossible that he should be allowed to live. The trial of my will that had its culmination
last evening in Cain-court had demonstrated to my satisfaction that I was capable of
doing what it was necessary to do; and the time was fast approaching when he and I
would meet face to face for the last time. But until then, I must think, and plan, and wait.
In the afternoon I had a little business to attend to, connected with my
employment, and did not return to my rooms until late, with evening coming on. There
was a copy of The Times on my work-table that had been left earlier by Mrs Grainger. I
can see myself idly turning the pages of the newspaper until my attention is suddenly
arrested by an announcement, and my heart begins to thump. Hands shaking slightly, I
walk over to the window, for the light is fading fast, and begin to read:
Last evening at about 6 o’clock . . . Cain-court, Strand . . . Mr Lucas Trendle,
First Assistant to the Chief Cashier of the Bank of England . . . Stoke Newington . . .
savagely done to death . . . distinguished public servant . . . Elm-lane Chapel . . . many
charitable works . . . horror of his many friends . . . authorities confident of success . . .
He had been on his way to a meeting in Exeter Hall of some charitable enterprise
dedicated to providing copies of the Holy Scripture and serviceable footwear to the
Africans. I now recalled a throng of clerical gentlemen in subfusc gathered outside the
grand Corinthian portico of the Hall as I’d passed down the Strand after leaving
Cain-court. It was clear from the report that the police could discern no obvious motive to
explain the crime, for nothing had been taken from the victim. I drank in the details of his
respectable and blameless life; but only one thing held me, and holds me still. He was no
longer the red-haired man. He had a name.
On first reading the report, I’d paced about the room somewhat in a sulk,
unexpectedly vexed by this knowledge. I had wanted him to remain eternally immured in
his former anonymity; now I could not prevent myself picturing the possibilities of his
revealed individuality. I began to find the confinement of my attic room intolerable. At
last, I could stand no more. In these moods, I need to have the raw taste of London on my
tongue.
With rain beginning to patter against the skylight of my little bedroom, I threw on
my top-coat and ran down the stairs into the gathering night.
And a merciless rain it soon became, pouring in thick frothy streams from
water-spouts and ledges, tumbling in vertical sheets from roofs and spires and parapets
high above the teeming city, turning streets and thoroughfares into evil-smelling streams
of filth and liquid refuse. I found my old companion, Willoughby Le Grice, lounging, as I
knew he would be at this hour, at the Ship and Turtle in Leadenhall-street. Le Grice and I
had been chums since our schooldays, though we were as different as could be. Whether
he had ever read a book through in his life, I beg to doubt; he did not care for books, or
music, or paintings – as I most certainly did; as for more advanced pursuits, I believe he
considered philosophy to be actively pernicious, whilst the mention of metaphysics made
him quite mad. Le Grice was a sportsman to his size-twelve boots: taller even than I;
thick tow-coloured hair above a four-square manly gaze, the neck and shoulders of a
young bull, and a luxuriant arc of curled hair above his top lip that made him look a very
Caractacus. A true Briton, and a good man to have by you in a dangerous corner, though
an innocent for all that. A strange pair, we must have made; but I could have wanted for
no better friend.
We ate the grilled fowl (Indian style), for which the house was celebrated, washed
down with gin-punch; then, ever biddable as he was on such occasions, Le Grice allowed
me to take him across the river to the Victoria Theatre,? just in time for the nine o’clock
performance.
There is no better place than the Victoria to watch the lower orders of the city
taking their pleasure; to me, it is a constantly fascinating sight, like lifting a stone and
observing the insect life beneath. Le Grice is not so charmed as I; but he keeps his
counsel and sits back in his seat, a cheroot clenched grimly between his teeth, whilst I
lean forward eagerly. Below our box, the coarse deal benches are packed to overflowing:
costers, navvies, lightermen, hackney-coach drivers, coal-heavers, and every sort of
disreputable female. A ferocious, sweating, stinking herd. Only the louder shouts of the
pigstrotter woman and the porter men who patrol the aisles and stairways rise above the
tumult of whistles and yells. Then, at last, the curtain rises, the master of ceremonies
finally subdues the mob, and the performance – sublime in its vulgarity – begins.
Afterwards, out in the New Cut, the rain had begun to ease, leaving the streets
awash with mud and debris brought down from roofs and gutters. Degraded humanity,
with its attendant stench, was everywhere: congregating on corners, or squatting beneath
dripping archways; sitting on doorsteps, hanging out of windows, or huddling in the
mouths of alleyways. Faces, hideously painted by the satanic light of the lamps and flares
and the glow of the baked-chestnut stoves that lit up the street stalls and public-houses,
passed by us like a parade of the damned.
Just after midnight we dropped into Quinn’s. I wished especially to go to Quinn’s.
On the excuse of attempting to locate a lost pocket-book, I sought out the waiter who had
served me the previous evening: it soon became perfectly clear that he had no
recollection of me; and so I returned, with a lighter heart, to Le Grice and we set about
the consumption of oysters and champagne with a will. But eating oysters, Le Grice
declared, only made him hungrier. He required meat and strong liquor, which, at this time
of night, only Evans’ could supply. And so, a little before midnight, we arrived in
King-street, Covent Garden.
The parallel lines of tables, laid out like a college hall, were still packed with
boisterous supper-goers. The air was cloudy with the smoke of cigars (pipes being
prohibited) and heavy with the aroma of grog and roasted meat. Adding to the convivial
din of conversation and laughter, a group of singers on the stage was lustily delivering a
six-part glee, their strong and splendid voices rising in a resonant crescendo above the
incessant clatter of plates and the rattle of cutlery. All about us, the tables were piled high
with steaming sausages, sizzling cayenned kidneys, leathery baked potatoes, and dozens
of glistening fried eggs, like so many miniature suns. We called for peppered chops and
bitter beer, but no sooner had they arrived than it was announced that Mr Le Grice – well
known to many of the company – would sing a comic song.
As Le Grice made his way tipsily towards the stage, to raucous applause, I slipped
quietly away. The rain was falling with renewed intent; but London, the unsleeping
Leviathan, with its incalculable surpluses of brilliance and vileness, together with the
undemanding company of dear old Le Grice, had done its work.
I was myself again. ?
3:
Praemonitus, praemunitus?
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The following day, Bella and I walked out in the Regent’s Park. It was an
unusually fine afternoon for October in London; and so, after looking at the elephants in
the Zoological Gardens, we sat for some time by the ornamental water, talking and
laughing in the pale autumn sunshine. Towards four o’clock, the air began to grow chill,
and so we made our way back towards the gates that lead out into York-terrace.
Near the entrance to the gardens of the Toxophilite Society,? Bella stopped and
turned to me.
‘Kitty wishes me to go with her to Dieppe tomorrow.’
‘Dieppe? Whatever for?’
‘Dearest, I have told you before. It is where her mother was born, and she has
determined to retire there. There is a house she has coveted this past year, and it is now
for sale. She wishes me to go with her to view it.’
‘And you will go?’
‘But of course.’ She laid a gloved finger gently across my cheek. ‘You don’t
mind, do you, dear? Say you don’t – it will only be for a day or so.’
I told her I did not mind in the least, though in truth the thought of not having the
comfort of her dear person near me at this time of impending crisis unsettled me. But I
hate to show weakness or dependence, even to those I am fond of – it is a fault of mine
that I have often tried to mend, without success; and so I told her, with convincing
nonchalance, that I would be out of town myself, managing thereby to insinuate that I
would be too occupied with my own affairs to give heed to any thought of her that might
arise. I feigned my indifference too well, however, for she instantly removed her hand
from my cheek and looked at me sternly.
‘Well, then’, she replied, ‘I may as well stay on in Dieppe a little longer, as Kitty
wishes me to. I’m sure there will be gentlemen aplenty who will be glad to entertain me.’
Now it had never before troubled me that Bella’s profession required her to be,
shall we say, companionable to other fellows; what services she performed for Kitty
Daley’s select circle of gentlemen had concerned me little. Not wishing to be possessed
by her, I had gladly acknowledged Bella’s liberty to follow her chosen employment for as
long as she wished. But this accommodating attitude, I already knew, had begun to irk
her somewhat, and from time to time lately she had tried to arouse in me some spark of
jealousy – which I believe ladies often interpret as a form of flattery. Her present attempt
was transparent enough, but the truth was that it was unnecessary. I could no longer
affect indifference: I was jealous of others enjoying that sweet body; and yet, once again,
my foolish inability to admit what I truly felt made me say entirely the wrong thing.
‘You must do as you please,’ I told her, in a hard, careless tone. ‘I have no hold
over you.’
‘Very well,’ said Bella, ‘I shall indeed please myself.’
With which she gathered up her skirts and walked angrily away.
Now this I could not allow, for I hated to see her upset and angry; and so I forced
myself – for some portion of me still revolted against any sign of capitulation – to call
after her.
She turned. Her cheeks were reddened, and I saw clearly that I had hurt her.
A quarrel was a new thing for us, and I did not well know how I could resolve
matters. We had rubbed along nicely in our present way of things for a year or so, with
neither of us expressing any wish to the other that the liberal basis of our friendship
should be altered to something of a more conventional character. But now I sensed a
change in Bella. She had taken to heart something she would formerly have brushed aside
with hardly a thought.
I tell you all this to show that I am not a monster. I could kill a stranger, but I