Part 7 (1/2)

”That's a stretch,” McCaggers said, as Zed wiped his forehead with the moist clean cloth. ”Did someone also wish Dr. G.o.dwin out of his position? I'm telling you, the same person has committed these crimes.”

”Really?” Grigsby might not have had a notebook at hand, but he was eager to record. ”You're positive of that?”

”Don't speak to him, McCaggers!” Lillehorne warned. Then, to Grigsby, ”I've told you to get out! If you linger one more minute, you'll stay in the gaol for a week!”

”You don't have that authority,” Grigsby said, in an easy voice. ”I'm breaking no law. Am I, Matthew?”

The furious sound of McCaggers drawing something on the easel-paper caught their attention. When he stepped back, they saw he'd used the red crayon to indicate the throat wound on the black-outlined figure. ”Here is my answer,” he said, and then he drew a red triangle framing each eye. When he marked the cut connecting them across the bridge of the nose, it was with such force that his crayon snapped.

”The Masker,” Grigsby said.

”Call him what you please.” McCaggers' face was nearly dripping in the yellow light; he looked almost dead himself. ”It was the same hand.” He changed to the black crayon and began writing notations alongside the body-figure that Matthew was unable to decipher.

”You're saying...the same person who murdered Dr. G.o.dwin murdered my father?” Robert asked, stricken anew.

”We're not certain of that.” Lillehorne fired a glance at McCaggers that said hold your tongue. ”There's still work to be done.”

”I'll keep the body through tonight,” McCaggers said, speaking to all and to no one in particular. ”Then to Mr. Paradine tomorrow morning.”

Jonathan Paradine was the town's funeral master, whose business stood on Wall Street near Trinity Church. When the corpse left here, wrapped in sailcloth, it would be delivered to Paradine for proper shrouding and fitting to a suitable casket of the Deverick family's choice.

Matthew had noted that, even as strong as he was, Zed was not required to carry the body up those steps. Instead, above the chute there was a system of pulleys and ropes constructed by the town's engineer for the purpose of hauling the deceased up the way he or she had arrived. By no means did all the dead of New York come to the cold room; most by far went directly from deathbed to Paradine. This was a place solely for the investigation-such as it was-of foul play, of which there'd been four instances since Matthew had been working with Magistrate Powers: the fatal beating of a woman by her peddler husband, the knifing of a sea captain by a prost.i.tute, the murder of Dr. G.o.dwin, and now Mr. Deverick.

”I'll have my report for you this afternoon,” McCaggers said to the high constable. He took off his spectacles and rubbed his eyes. His hands were still shaking. Matthew reasoned that he would never overcome his dread of blood and death, even were he to examine forty corpses a year.

”May I see that report as well?” Grigsby asked.

”You may not, sir.” Lillehorne turned his attention once more to the young Deverick. He handed over the wallet and gold pocket.w.a.tch. ”These are yours now, I think. I'll go up and speak to your mother with you, if you like.”

”Yes, I'd appreciate that. I wouldn't know what to say by myself.”

”Gentlemen?” Lillehorne motioned Matthew and Grigsby up toward the door.

Without turning from the notes he was writing, McCaggers said, ”I'll speak to Mr. Corbett.”

Lillehorne's backbone went rigid, his lips so tight he could hardly squeeze a word between them. ”I don't think it wise to-”

”I'll speak to Mr. Corbett,” came the reply, both an order and a curt dismissal. It was obvious to Matthew that in this lower realm McCaggers was king and the high constable at best a jester.

Still, Lillehorne had his ton of pride. ”I shall have a word with Chief Prosecutor Bynes over this misplacement of loyalty to the office.”

”Whatever that means, you may do so. Goodnight to you. Rather...good morning.”

With no further protest other than a little angry exhalation of air, Lillehorne escorted Grigsby and the young Deverick up the stairs. At the top, Grigsby reached back and firmly closed the door.

Matthew stood watching McCaggers write his notes, look at the body, write again, check with the calipers, write, and have his sweating face mopped with a wet cloth by the silent and impa.s.sive Zed.

”I attended the meeting today,” said McCaggers, when Matthew thought the man's concentration had forced out all memory of his being there. McCaggers continued to work as if indeed he, Zed, and the corpse were a trio. ”What do you make of Lord Cornbury?”

Matthew shrugged, though McCaggers didn't see it. ”An interesting choice of hats, I'd say.”

”I know some of his history. He has a reputation as a meddler and a buffoon. I doubt he'll be with us very long.” McCaggers paused to take another drink from his bottle of courage, and he allowed Zed to once more blot the sweatbeads from his forehead. ”Your suggestions were well-put. And well-needed, too, I might say. I hope they'll be implemented.”

”As do I. Especially now.”

”Yes, especially now.” McCaggers leaned over to peer closer at the corpse's face, and then he gave an involuntary shudder and returned to his writing. ”Tell me, Mr. Corbett. Is it true, what's said of you?”

”What's said of me?”

”The witchcraft business, in the Carolina colony. That you resisted the will of a magistrate and sought to have a woman freed from a death sentence?”

”It is.”

”Well?”

Matthew paused. ”Well what, sir?”

McCaggers turned to look at him, the candlelight sparking on his spectacles and his damp cheeks. ”Was she a witch?”

”No, she was not.”

”And you just a clerk? How is it you had such conviction?”

”I've never cared for unanswered questions,” Matthew replied. ”I suppose I was born that way.”

”A freak of birth, then. Most accept the easiest answer to the most difficult question. It's more comforting, don't you agree?”

”No sir, not for me.”

McCaggers grunted. Then: ”I presume Mr. Grigsby wishes to write another article in his sheet? On 'The Masker,' as he so colorfully states?”

”He does.”

”Well, he missed half of what I told him last time.” McCaggers put down his crayon and turned, with an agitated look, toward Matthew. ”How can a man publish a sheet if he has tin ears and his eyes can't see what's in front of him?”

”I don't know, sir,” said Matthew, becoming a little disturbed at McCaggers' sudden vivacity. Or perhaps more disturbing was the fact that Zed was staring at him with those black and fathomless eyes. Matthew understood that Zed had arrived tongueless at the marketplace; if one knew the slave's history, it might be a tale for a night's horror.

”I told him it wasn't an ordinary knife. It was a knife with a hooked blade. A backhanded strike, drawn from left to right.” McCaggers placed a finger on the red crayon of the throat cut to demonstrate the motion. ”This is a knife designed to slice through the throat of an animal. Drawn with no hesitation and with full strength. I would look for someone who has experience in a slaughterhouse.”

”Oh. I see,” said Matthew.

”Pardon me.” McCaggers, who had gone pale with his own recitation of violence, stopped to press the wet cloth up against his mouth.

”The cuttings around the eyes,” Matthew ventured. ”Do you have any idea what-”

McCaggers shook his head and held up a hand palm-outward to beseech Matthew's silence.