Read The Devil's Making Online
Authors: Seán Haldane
It was an easy matter to trace the ugly Sam who had visited the Indian camp trying to procure women for the âshipmen.' He was well known to the police as a âcrimp' who met sailors on leave with their pockets full of pay but limited time to spend it, and for a commission would find them liquor, entertainment, and whores.
I was told that Sam's usual haunt in the mornings was the Albatross Tavern, just off Wharf Street, a short stroll from the courthouse. The night had been cold toward morning (as I knew from being out in half of it) and there was a mist from the harbour, which had rolled in onto the lower streets of the town. It made me shiver, recalling my standing, a naked fool, in the moonlit stream. I was tired. But nothing could efface another feeling, of lightness and animal pleasure in my own movements, which I could not remember since childhood, running in the meadows in Wiltshire with the skylarks twittering above in brilliant skies.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
I have sinned. I don't believe in God for an instant but I have sinned. I have done what Aubrey did â to my mother. Lukswaas is not my mother. Oh God, Chad you are going mad, No she is not your mother. But she is my mother, in that I have never felt so quietly at ease with any woman â with any one
since
my mother. Lukswaas and I understand each other. Without even a common language. Chinook is like having to squeeze yourself through a door. Meaning drops off as you speak it, you are left with bare bones and no flesh. But it is good enough for Lukswaas and me. Language is bare bones. We communicate not in words but in the flesh. As she has already done with Wiladzap! She appears to care for him, to want him free. But she has given herself to me. And what if he is free? Do we all roll together in one foul bed? Madness, Chad. This is like Hamlet, a soliloquy but in bad verse. âwith anyone since my
mother
⦠We understand each
other
â¦' âShe has given herself to
me
. And what if he is
free?
'
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
I pushed open the swing door of the tavern. It smelled sour from spilled liquor and was already dense with smoke, although it contained only a few men, lounging in chairs near the bar, smoking cigars, their tall glasses of ale and small âchasers' of whisky in front of them on a table. Conversation stopped. I marched over to them, pulled out a free chair, and sat down. âWhich one of you is Sam?'
âMe,' one of them said laconically. He was indeed the ugliest of the group, with a scabrous complexion, nasty mouth like India-rubber gripping its cigar, and eyes like little brown beads. But he was also the best dressed, in a shiny frock coat with a yellow checked waistcoat and elaborate foulard. He puffed his cigar and waited.
âI need to ask you some questions in private. Do you want to come to the courthouse, or dismiss your friends so that we can talk here?'
âYou can't dismiss me,' one man said. âI own this place.'
âFair enough,' I said. âWe can talk down at the other end. But leave us alone please.' I got up.
Sam got up too. âMust be
extremely
important,' he said.
âIt is.'
Sam followed me to another table near the door and sat down opposite me, still taking puffs on his cigar, but with one hand rather uncomfortably stroking the table, as if it was unnaturally empty without a glass on it.
âWhat were you doing at the Indian camp out on Cormorant Point?'
âNothin'. Just rubberneckin'. Me and Bernie went out there, to take a look at the
view.
' He leered, as if imagining hundreds of bare-breasted women, Lukswaas among them. I surprised myself by leaning across the table and grabbing his sleeve quite viciously.
âLook,' I said, âI know what you were doing. I have a deposition from the Indians and I can send you up for attempting to procure women for immoral purposes.'
âThey ain't women, they're squawsâ¦'
I jerked his arm so that the cigar flew out of his hand and rolled onto the sawdust floor where it lay smoking. âThey're women,' I said. âNot only that, but
ladies.
'
âAwright, they're
ladies.
' Sam rolled his eyes to the ceiling. âSo what do you want? No squ ⦠no Injun woman's word is goin' to stand against a white man's, a white
American's,
in court. So what's the fuss about? You tryin' to change the world?'
âThe fuss is that a man, a
fellow American
in fact, was killed out there â as everybody knows. There's evidence that he too was procuring.' This was a risk of mine, and verged on slandering the dead. I might find it hard to justify in a court. But I was thinking of Wiladzap's remark about the âberdash.' âSo maybe we'll think
you're
involvedâ¦'
âBut the Injun did it, didn't he?'
âWhat was going on out there? Why did you go there? If you tell me, I won't hound you â
this
time â for crimping. Look, I'm not taking this down in writing.'
âIt was nothin'. Just the squaws â the women. I've got sailors â you wouldn't believe it, Sergeant, bein' a clean livin' man yourself â who come rollin' off them ships just wantin' one thing. They tell me, âI wanna bit of
smoked meat.
' You know what that is. Like in New Orleans they ask for
dark
meat, here they ask for
smoked.
But some of these men â from your Navy too â not that they're any better than our merchantmen, they're like animals if you ask me, they've got lotsa dols, they don't want just some poxed up tart from the shanties. So when I heard of them Northern Injuns comin' down, wantin' to trade, I went and saw them and offered them some trade, that's all.'
âWhat did they say?'
âThey weren't havin' nothin' to do with it. I dunno exactly why. Maybe it wasn't that they were so fussy about the work. Some o' them gave me the eye. Nice tall girls they were too. But they were afraid of gettin' the clap, so they said. “Piah sick”. The men weren't too keen on lettin' any o' that harem outa their sight, I guess. So after lookin' at the
view
for a while, Bernie and I rolled on back home. So what's goin' on? I done nothin'.'
âYou didn't see McCrory out there?'
âNah! First I heared he'd been out there was when I heared he'd been cut to ribbons. That made Bernie and me glad we'd had nothin' to do with 'em. We could of ended up the same way.'
âYou mean you think McCrory proposed to the Indians the same thing as you tried?'
âI dunno. Was he a real doctor or a fake?'
âSupposed to have been real.'
âThen what was he doin' hangin' around easy girls?'
âYou tell me.' I was trying not to reveal my ignorance of where Sam, who was now in a musing sort of humour, was tending.
âWaal, I seen him a lot at the Windsor Rooms.'
âYou bring your, er, clients there?' I had thought the Windsor Rooms might be at a level above Sam's.
âSure. I got some classy customers. With lotsa dols. Officers â Lootenants, midshipmen. Not all of 'em just want smoked meat.'
âWhat was McCrory doing there?'
âHey, why should I tell you all this?'
âBecause he's dead, and you and he may have been in the same line of business. What if the Indian didn't do it? What if somebody has it in for people like you? Anyway, where were you last Wednesday afternoon?'
âI was with a friend.'
âWho?'
âA lady. I don't need to say.'
âSo you can't prove it? Maybe you were a partner of McCrory's and you had a falling out.' I was calculating on a certain stupidity in Sam. I was not wrong.
âAwright! I'll tell you all I seen. If it's not the Injun who killed McCrory you'd better find who it is, I don't want no one gettin' the wrong idea ⦠Awright. The way I seen McCrory he was a sort of a high-class crimp. Like me, only with the people in town â the Nobs. Not that I seen him with his customers. No more than I'd see me, if you know what I mean, with mine. I don't follow my customers into bed with girls, I just make the arrangements. I won't say nothin' about financial arrangements, or you'll use it against me. But you won't often see me with my mark. Anyway it's dangerous. The longest time a man like me can be thrown in jail for in this town is for “enticin' sailors to desert”. They can allus accuse me of that. So, you'll just see me with a girl or a liquorman, because I'm doin' my investigation â and sometimes it's a very pleasurable task, I must say,' Sam leered â âof the services I provide. Likewise, I'd see McCrory at the Windsor Rooms now and then and I could tell he was like me. Not their customer. He was talkin' to 'em, workin' things out with 'em â arrangin'.
âWith any girls in particular?'
âNo. He musta talked to 'em all.'
âDid he come in there alone?'
âYeah. Now and then he'd see someone he knew and tip 'em a nod or a wink, or pass the time o' day. But no further than that. You know how it is.'
I did already know, from hearsay, that a place like the Windsor Rooms had its own code. Since well known men of the town might be found there, it was not acceptable for them ever to intimate even to each other, outside the place, that they had seen each other there. I had also heard that in such places only nicknames were used. Thus, in a town of 7,000 whites, the proprieties were observed. A professional man or business man could be walking down Government Street with his wife and encounter a pair of the Windsor Room ladies out shopping for clothes, and not a sign of recognition would be shown. Nor would a man whom he had met in the Rooms and nowhere else recognise him or greet him.
âIs that all?' said Sam, turning to look anxiously up the smoke-filled room to the table at the other end where his friends had been keeping up a steady level of boisterous conversation as if to make it known they were not listening.
âI'll let you go now. But if I find out you've kept anything from me about any transaction with the Indians, or McCrory keeping company with any particular person in your sight, I'll be back.'
âAwright, there was one fella I seen him with in the Windsor Rooms. I dunno who it was. Strong lookin' dark fella, well dressed. Could have been English, didn't look like an American. Too fussy-lookin'.'
âWhat do you mean?'
âKinda stiff lookin'. Embarrassed like.'
âDescribe him more. Tall? Short?'
âI only seen âim sittin' down at the other side o' the room. He didn't get up to dance, leastways not when I was there. I didn't get too close to âim.'
âDark eyes? Light?'
âI couldn't see.'
âAnd you didn't know who he was?'
âNope. Never seen âim around town. But I don't hang out in the best circles. You won't find me at the Governor's levees or whatever you call 'em.'
âBut this other man struck you as the kind of person who might be found at a levee?'
âYeah. Looked like an official of some sort.'
âWhy?'
âJust an impression. I hardly seen the fella. But since you're so worked up about me tellin' everythin', I thought I'd better not leave âim out.'
âAnything else you've left out?'
âNope.'
âThat's enough for now then. But I may be back.' I got up, called out a polite âGood morning' in the direction of the bar, and left. The fog was thinning and wispy, with streaks of blue shining through.
When Frederick had first told me about the Sunday afternoons at Orchard Farm, he had mentioned John Hadley the schoolmaster and his âequally mousy wife' as having been âfairly thick' with McCrory. Since the Hadleys were the only remaining association of McCrory's I knew of, I decided to interview them, late in the afternoon when Hadley would have finished teaching school. Then in the evening â a prospect which filled me with apprehension and some excitement â I would pay a visit to the Windsor Rooms.
I arrived at Hadley's at half past four. The house was a tiny one, near the wooden cathedral, not much more than a shack although neatly painted and with a kitchen garden and white picket fence. Hadley, a middle-sized man running to fat and with an air of shyness and plain looks, which indeed made him seem mousy, was sitting on the edge of the narrow plank deck which functioned as a âporch', smoking a pipe, and sipping from a large glass of what looked like spirits. He seemed miserable, standing up to greet me in a weary, clumsy way.
âI'm Hobbes. Police. I'm investigating the murder of Dr McCrory.'
Hadley's face became tight, his eyes screwed up. âThat bounder,' he said. âI'm glad somebody got him.'
âReally? Why?'
Hadley took his time in replying. He lifted his glass and gulped down some spirits, which made his eyes visibly water and his face grow red. He sat down with a bump on the edge of the porch. âBecause he was a bounder,' he said.
Not wanting to tower over Hadley, I sat down next to him on the edge of the porch. âWhere are you from?' I said. I had already found out that Hadley was a Cambridge man, but was better disposed towards Cambridge since my interview with my fellow Oxonian, Firbanks.
âBuckinghamshire. St John's, Cambridge. Got a poor degree. Too busy versifying. Came out here in '65 in response to advertisement. Took job at a school. Married Scotch girl I met here, daughter of HBC clerk. Separated. In process of becoming a drunk.' He took another swig of his spirits, and looked at me with an air of defiance in his eyes, which were pale and quite strong, but with a pouting expression of self-pity around the mouth.
âWhere's your wife now?'
âWith Daddy and Mummy. Name of Stevenson. Junction of Cook and View Streets.'