“HE WAS A GOOD MAN, as quiet as a mouse. Never a moment’s trouble. He never complained about his meals like some of them do. I just can’t believe what you’re telling me.”
Swanzey’s landlady had been repeating variations on these words for the past ten minutes. Murdoch and Crabtree had gone to the dead man’s lodgings and had yet to get past Mrs. Kew’s disbelief and distress at what she’d heard from them.
“He was always so considerate. Why just last week I came down with a touch of phlebitis and he brought in my tea to me instead of me waiting on him. Then he sat and read aloud from the Psalms.”
The memory brought on more tears, and Murdoch edged toward the door.
“Mrs. Kew, I’m going to need to see Reverend Swanzey’s room. Constable Crabtree will stay here with you. I wonder if I couldn’t trouble you for a cup of tea? We could all do with one, I’m sure.”
Having something to do calmed the poor woman and Murdoch was able to go upstairs to the front room that had been Swanzey’s. He stood in the threshold for a moment. He had rather expected the room to be neat and austere and it was. Mrs. Kew’s taste ran to lace and red plush with a plethora of ceramic ornaments, but Swanzey’s was as plain as a monk’s. The room was quite spacious and the furnishings barely filled it. There was a narrow bed with a white coverlet beneath the window; a wardrobe; a bookcase, half empty; a washstand; and, in the centre of the room, a small round table with two wooden chairs. There were no pictures on the walls, the floor was uncarpeted. Murdoch could see an envelope propped up against the large bible on the table and when he went over to investigate it, he was startled to see that the envelope was addressed to him.
Murdoch was stripped to the waist, lying on his stomach on the kitchen table with brown paper across his lower back. Amy Slade was beside him, testing the iron for heat.
“Are you sure this will work?” Murdoch asked her.
“It’s a proven remedy for lumbago. You’ll feel much better afterwards.”
She brought the iron down to his back and started to iron as if he were a shirt or a sheet. Murdoch found it was not a disagreeable sensation, quite pleasant, in fact, although lying on his stomach was uncomfortable.
“Go on. I am quite able to iron and listen at the same time.”
“Swanzey started out by saying that if I was reading the letter it meant he was either dead or in prison. In either case he wanted to explain what he called ‘the regrettable occurrence,’ which is about the most ludicrous expression I’ve ever heard to describe a brutal murder of an innocent man. Regrettable occurrence, indeed. As I suspected finally, the pastor had discovered Swanzey was misusing his position to get sexual favours from the female paupers on his list. When he was confronted, Swanzey said, and I quote, ‘The devil threw a cloak of darkness over me.’ Apparently, he couldn’t bear the notion that he might not continue to be God’s voice and servant, something he said he had yearned to be all of his life.”
Amy pressed on the iron. “I can almost feel sorry for the fellow. He sounds like a tormented soul.”
Murdoch tried to turn his head to look at her. “This tormented soul, as you call him, killed five people.”
“I’m sorry, Will. I don’t condone in the least what he did, but it seems as if he was mentally imbalanced.”
“You’re more charitable than I am. I think he was a miserable worm of a man, obsessed with himself and what he saw as his spiritual struggles. He took no responsibility for murdering Charles Howard, blaming it all conveniently on the devil. The only reference to his preying on powerless women was what he called ‘the vices of my blood,’ which were again the result of the devil putting temptation in his way. He said the Tugwells were Lucifer’s agents and that it was God who arranged things so that Swanzey was present when Louisa Howard received the blackmail letter. That gave him a chance to cover his arse, excuse the expression, and silence them.”
“What was this letter? You haven’t told me.”
“I spoke to Mrs. Howard last evening and she acknowledged she’d received a letter from one of the Tugwells accusing her husband of improper conduct. I think that as soon as they knew the pastor was dead, one or the other of them cooked up a little blackmail scheme. As Olivia would tell me, it’s an old trick. The dead man can’t protest his innocence. She had wanted to show the letter to me, but Swanzey persuaded her to destroy it. He must have been afraid the Tugwells would betray him if pressed too hard, because of course, it was him, not Howard, who was the guilty party. So he immediately took steps to make sure they didn’t. He visited trusting, lonely old Thomas Hicks, put prussic acid in his tea, and as soon as he was unconscious, he blocked the chimney. He probably brought him the cheap coke as a gift. Fortunately for us, he made a mistake and left with the bottle of prussic acid; otherwise it would have been written off as the kind of tragic accident that is always happening to poor people. I wonder if that was God manipulating him or the devil? Carbon monoxide gas is indiscriminate, but Swanzey didn’t care if he killed a household of people as long as he silenced Esther and Josie. Ida Harper, another woman he coerced, said she never saw his face, but Josie must have.”
Murdoch felt his face going red at the anticipation that Amy would ask him how Ida could have had connections without seeing Swanzey’s face, but she didn’t.
“Poor Mrs. Howard, to get a letter like that.”
“She was relieved when I explained it to her. She said that she’d always found Matthew Swanzey to be rather repulsive, but I don’t know if that’s an opinion rewritten after the fact. As far as I can tell, he was a respected member of the church. Speaking of the church, according to Mr. Swanzey, the devil also seemed to have blinded the members of the congregation and the church Synod who chose Howard as their pastor and not him. Swanzey was convinced that he was truly God’s beloved servant and these things were sent to test his faith. The Almighty just wasn’t revealing his hand yet, but it was a matter of time before Matthew would be taken up and exulted as the supremely eloquent witness to the Good News gospel. Another quote from the letter, ‘The voice of the Lord is in my ear and I will heed his commands to the extent of my ability.’ What a colossal conceit. Strip away all that religious folderol and you’ve got a man seething with jealousy. Howard won the coveted appointment, he was handsome and charming. Women loved him. Swanzey could only get acquiescence from starving women. No wonder, he even took the dead man’s identity when he found himself succumbing, once again, to the vices of his blood, as he called it.”
Amy tapped him lightly on the back of the head. “Lie still. You’re tightening your muscles and you’ll make things worse.”
But Murdoch couldn’t stop. “I presume it was at God’s bidding that he murdered those four innocent people, including a crippled child. But he was completely silent on that little matter.”
He closed his eyes. “I should have been on to the man earlier. There was an overcoat hanging in Swanzey’s office. He must have come in, then been called to Howard’s office where the pastor was in the midst of writing a letter that would destroy Swanzey’s career. If I’d followed up on that bloody coat, I might have got him before he killed Hicks and the Tugwells.”
Amy paused. “You don’t know that, Will. He was cunning. He might have come up with a perfectly good explanation for the coat. What killed those people, alas, was that one of the Tugwells saw an opportunity to get some money. And the ultimate responsibility for their plight lies with society and our tolerating such poverty.” Amy came around to the head of the table and peered at him. “I know you don’t agree with me, but I’m not going to argue the matter right now. I need to get the other iron, this one is getting cold. Are you all right so far?”
“Quite, thank you. I’ve never felt like a shirt before, but now I know what that must be like.”
She laughed. “We’ll probably have to do this a few more times, so you’d better get used to it.”
She turned over the brown paper and applied the fresh iron to it. They were quiet for a few moments while she worked.
“He did say something at the end of the letter that has stayed with me. ‘If I am in the bosom of our Lord when you read this, I shall know what His judgment is and that is the only judgment that matters to me.’ Let’s hope he got a nasty shock. On the other hand, God has infinite mercy so who knows? But that’s a topic for another day.”
Amy returned the iron to its stand on the stove. “I think that’s it for now.”
“Can I sit up?”
“Yes, slowly though.”
He eased himself into a sitting position on the table. His lumbago did feel much easier.
Amy smiled at him. The warmth of the iron had brought a flush to her face and her eyes were shining. She hadn’t pinned up her hair and it was loose around her face. Murdoch was suddenly acutely aware that he was sitting in front of her in nothing but his undervest and trousers.
“Is there anything else I can do for you, sir?” Her voice was teasing.
“You could marry me.” His words popped out before he could stop them.
She started to laugh but stopped when she saw his expression.
“Will … I …”
“I mean it. Miss Slade, I, William Murdoch, would like you to be my wife. If I could kneel down I would, but I’m afraid I might not get up again.” He caught her hand and held it between his. “Please, dear Amy, do say yes.”
She pulled her hand away. “Oh, dear, I, er, no, I couldn’t.”
“I’m sorry, I –”
“No, please don’t look like that. It’s not you at all. But marriage … Will, surely you know how I feel about marriage?”
“No.”
“I suppose you could say, I’m against it.”
“I see.”
“No, you obviously don’t. Marriage isn’t entered into on an equal basis. Women give up their identity, men don’t. How would you feel if by marrying a woman you had to surrender your name, give up your job that you love, and be expected to wait on her hand and foot? And in addition you had to swear to obey her? What outdated nonsense that is.”
Amy was looking even more flushed at this point.
Murdoch reached for his shirt, “Thank you for the lecture. I’m sorry if I touched on a sore point, that was not my intention.”
“Will, I’ve hurt your feelings and I didn’t mean to. I’m so honoured that you asked me.”
“Even if it is an invitation to humiliation and servitude?”
“No, you don’t understand. Marriage as an institution I can’t abide, but marriage meaning a physical and spiritual connection between a man and a woman, I don’t disapprove of.” She ducked her head, suddenly shy. “Dear, honourable Will, so many times I’ve walked away from you rather than risk making a complete fool of myself because I so wanted to –” She stopped.
Murdoch stared at her, not initially comprehending, but Amy touched his arm.
“If you would consider me as your wife in that sense, I joyfully accept.”
“Are you saying what I think you’re saying?”
“Let’s put it this way. I won’t iron your shirts, but I will iron your back willingly and with love as long as you want me to.”
Her use of the word love almost made him want to weep. He tried to stand, but he couldn’t straighten up and he was forced to look at her with his head bent.
“Can you crouch down a little and seal that with a kiss?”
She obliged.