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Authors: Don Gutteridge

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BOOK: Turncoat
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“My God,” Marc said suddenly, “it was your man who shot Connors. Would you stoop so low to protect your own hide as to involve John Collins in your crimes?”

Child ignored the remark. “My point is this: why are you going to the fruitless trouble of concocting such a report and presenting it, with all its flaws showing, to a lieutenant-governor who will have been in office for less than a week?”

“Until Elijah Gowan is caught and offers up his confession, I may not have proof enough to satisfy a court,” Marc said, with more spite than he had intended, “but the evidence I do have, at the very least in these politically sensitive times, will throw serious doubt upon your character and on your probity as a justice of the peace. You are finished as a magistrate and as a pillar of this community.”

“Francis Head will laugh you out of his office,” Child
said, straining now to maintain his air of unconcern and suppress his rising anger.

“I have no alternative but to do my duty,” Marc said stiffly.

“Then you truly are a fool,” Child said.

Marc rose. He reached into his pocket and withdrew two letters. “I may know little of politics, sir, but of one thing I am absolutely certain. Joshua Smallman was no turncoat. I doubt even that he was a committed Reformer. What you didn't know, and what you would have learned if you had not been obsessed with seizing control of his farm and had given the gentleman the courtesy of an interview, is that he was a commissioned informant for Sir John Colborne, the governor's personal friend and a trusted confidant.”

Philander Child desperately tried to look amused. “Another bluff, Mr. Edwards?”

“Why don't you take a moment after I've left to peruse the last report he ever sent to Sir John? I had it from the governor's own hand, along with this detailed memorandum outlining the reasons why Sir John himself suspected foul play and chose me to come down here to investigate.”

Marc dropped the letters on the table beside Child. It took all the moral courage he could muster not to turn at the door and watch the magistrate as he read through the documents—whey-faced, stunned, all the pomp and pride leaching out of him as the contents of each successive page burned itself into his heart.

FIFTEEN

Marc was almost at the end of the winding lane that linked Philander Child's estate to the Kingston Road when he heard sleigh bells. He brought the colonel's horse to a halt and waited. Seconds later, Erastus Hatch's Sunday cutter passed by the entrance to Deer Park on its way to Cobourg, where the rituals and ceremonies of the sabbath would be played out as they had for generations of millers and other ordinary day-labourers. Thomas Goodall manned the driver's bench, cracking his whip above the ears of the horses and trying not to over-notice the erect and proper, but not unhandsome, figure of Winnifred Hatch seated at
his side and looking quite ready to take the reins should he unexpectedly falter in his duty. Seated serenely in the sleigh itself, cheek by jowl, were the stout constable of Crawford Township and his one-time scullion, Mary Huggan.

Marc waved but they did not see him.

Well, he thought, there was at least one truly happy outcome of his week in Crawford's Corners. Father and daughter had found someone besides each other to cherish and build a life with.

MARC LEFT A BRIEF NOTE ON
the table for Erastus, took a last, fond look around, and left the house. He threw his bedroll and pack over the horse, secured them, checked the saddlebags, and mounted. He nudged the animal around to the mill, then trotted up to the rear of Beth's place. A casual observer might have thought that the ensign, dressed for Sunday parade, was enjoying a leisurely morning ride along Crawford Creek. Not so. Marc's mind had raced and seethed since the confrontation with Philander Child. There was much to sift, assess, decide.

As he led the horse up to the house, Beth appeared at the back door. She ran towards him, hugging a sweater to her small body. “Elijah's gone,” she cried. “He never came home last night. I'm worried sick.”

Marc took her hand. “He's gone for good,” he said. “Let's go inside. I've got a lot to tell you.”

HOW TO TELL BETH, AND HOW
much, had occupied a good portion of Marc's thoughts since he had left Child. Even now, as they sat sipping tea, Marc was only half certain of what he needed to say. He had been brought up to believe that women were weaker than men, but more delicate, refined, and sensitive—and hence more vulnerable to poetry, music, art, the graces that make the world bearable. But the price of such sensibility was, alas, intrinsic frailty, the constant spectre of psychological disintegration. Here before him was a woman only two weeks into mourning the loss of a “father”; the shocks she had borne over the past year and those rude revelations of the last two days ought to have crushed her, left her emotionally maimed, utterly exhausted, dependent upon the strength of some consoling, masculine arm. And yet here she sat with a teacup on her knee, waiting patiently for Marc to say what she knew could not be kept from her, whatever her own wishes might be. (And, of course, though it would be much later when he had time and the predisposition to ponder the more eccentric aspects of his week in Crawford's Corners, he would be forced to admit that few of the women he had encountered here—Winnifred, Lydia, Bella, Agnes, or Mad Annie—fitted the comfortable cameo of womanhood presented to him by dear Uncle Jabez.)

Marc began. “After I left here this morning, I went straight over to Hatch's and told him my theory. But before I
could set off for Stebbins's place, Erastus showed me a document that completely altered my view of what happened to your father-in-law and why. I'm sorry to say that it pointed a finger at Elijah.”

“That can't be so. He's worked here without pay. He's been kind to me and especially to Aaron.” She looked truly bewildered for the first time since Marc had met her.

He swallowed hard and looked away. “I found a bible in his cabin. It had his name in it: Elijah Gowan.”

“Gowan?” She drew out the syllables of the name slowly, as light dawned in her eyes. “Like Ogle Gowan?”

“He's a second cousin, yes. And an—”

“—an Orangeman.”

“Apparently he believed that your father-in-law was about to throw his lot in with the annexationists. And to many Orangemen, that is an anti-monarchist act, an act of high treason.”

“But how?”

“How and why he came to believe Joshua had gone that far we'll only know when we catch him.”

She nodded, still perplexed. Marc told her about the matching pieces of clay pipe.

Beth sat very still, as if absorbing more than words. “Elijah couldn't have got Father out there in that blizzard,” she said.

“Yes, that is true. And that's why I'm convinced that a second person was deeply involved in Joshua's death. I
believe Elijah was to be made the instrument of murder, but someone a lot more clever and knowledgeable planned it, with cold premeditation.”

“Who?”

“I've identified the culprit,” Marc said, releasing each word carefully, “but so far I don't have enough evidence, and until I do I am honour-bound to keep the name to myself.”

“I understand,” she said, implying more than mere agreement.

“But as soon as Elijah is arrested, we'll have the means to establish the whole truth, and justice will be fully served. Joshua's murderers will not go unpunished.”

Beth smiled wryly, the hurt hidden in the humour: “It's been some time in this province since justice has been served.”

Marc could find no words to deny it.

Putting a hand on his wrist, she said, “It's not your fault—the bush, the politics, the mess we're in. You've done me a great service, so great that nothing I can do or say will ever be enough to repay you.”

Marc knew this was not so, but offered no suggestions.

“You've given me answers to questions that would've plagued me—perhaps for the whole of my life. You've given me back the father I loved more than any other, a man who did not wander foolishly to his death in a blizzard but died for what he was, what he stood for. And you've given me back a husband I can mourn and remember as I ought to.”

“I did my duty,” Marc said, “that is all.”

For the moment they both accepted the lie.

Marc shook hands with Aaron, and Beth accompanied him to the back door, where the colonel's horse waited.

“I'll write Erastus and James in detail as soon as I can, but I'd be obliged if you would, in the meantime, extend my sincere thanks to them for their many kindnesses.”

“They'll want to know about Elijah.”

“Yes. You may tell them anything I've revealed to you.”

“Still, they'll be disappointed not seeing you off.”

“Yes. I've grown quite fond of them. I have never made friends quickly, but this week has been like no other in my life.”

“Your long and interestin' life.”

“My short and boring life.”

“Till now,” she said, smiling.

“You won't be able to run this farm on your own,” he said softly.

“I know. But we'll be all right just the same.”

“You could come to Toronto. Open up a shop.”

“You mustn't talk like that. We're only allowed one hope at a time. You must go back to your regiment. I need time to grieve, and reacquaint myself with God after our recent quarrel, and be a mother to Aaron, who's never had one.”

“I understand,” Marc said, though he didn't. “But I'll come back, just the same.”

“Hush,” she said, laying a finger on his lips. “Don't make
promises you may regret having to keep. Remember, you're still a Tory at heart and I am not.”

Before he had a chance to argue his case, she eased the door shut.

He waited for the latch to click into place before he took three reluctant steps to Colonel Margison's second-best horse, which was already dancing with traitorous thoughts of an open road and the company of its own kind somewhere at the end of it.

EPILOGUE

Elijah Gowan was apprehended a week later, cowering and bewildered in a pantry off the summer kitchen of his cousin's house. He was eager—proud even—to make a full confession, viewing his actions as righteous and necessary. Moreover, he readily implicated Philander Child. In fact, he had kept the note he had removed from Joshua's body (telling Child that he had destroyed it)—the one in the magistrate's own handwriting. Gowan's trust in his benefactor, it seemed, had not been total: the note was his insurance against betrayal.

It was a clearly worded missive in which Child explained
that he had been approached by a mysterious stranger who wished to remain anonymous and who had information concerning the death of Jesse Smallman. The informant would agree to meet only in a safe, neutral spot—the cave at the end of the old Indian trail beside the lake. It was enough to lure Joshua to his death.

Child was subsequently arrested and bound over at Kingston to the spring assizes.

BOOK: Turncoat
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ads

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