Part 24 (2/2)
I had planned to end my story here. I have spent so much time writing that I have neglected everything else. My hand is cramped from long hours holding a quill, my fingers stained indigo-black with ink. My past is written, but at the expense of my soul. Three others are set to hang with me tomorrow. While I have sat scribbling in my cell, they have spent long hours praying and begging G.o.d's mercy for their sins. They are ready for their journey.
In vain the Reverend James Guthrie has visited me each day. He is a pompous man, well-pleased with himself. No, that is not just. He has rescued countless souls from d.a.m.nation. I only wish he did not brag about it quite so much.
It is Guthrie's duty to write an account of every prisoner hanged at Tyburn. He recounts their short, squalid lives with gleeful disapproval, then casts himself as their saviour. By the time they reach the gallows they are weeping with grat.i.tude. They rejoice at their redemption, eager to leave this world so that their souls might fly to heaven.
These, at least, are the stories Guthrie likes to tell. There are some obstinate sinners who refuse to play his game. They repent in private or not at all drinking and whoring their way through their final days. He does not like these stories so well, but he can still bend them to his use. Examples of the witless fools who will burn in h.e.l.l for their ignorance and obstinacy.
But what is he to do with a man such as me? A man who refuses to confess? Who protests his innocence, even as he is led to the gallows? There can be no repentance without guilt. No salvation without guilt. Instead there is only doubt, thin but persistent. What if we are wrong? What if we are hanging an innocent man?
There are no lessons to be learned from such a story. At least, not the sort of lesson the Reverend James Guthrie wishes to teach.
Guthrie visits my cell not to offer comfort, but to seek resolution. And every day I disappoint him. He tells me I am bound for h.e.l.l. I correct his quotations from the Bible. He reminds me that Pride is the greatest of all sins, and leaves.
What will he write of me, I wonder?
This afternoon I summoned John Eliot and directed him to write my will. I do not have a great deal of capital ten pounds at most. It should be enough.
When I named the beneficiary of my meagre fortune, Eliot raised his eyebrows in surprise. 'How will I find the boy? He's disappeared.'
'Aye. He's good at that. He'll magick himself back once I'm gone.'
Eliot scratched the name onto the paper with a reluctant hand. Sam Fleet of St Giles, nr Phoenix Street.
Sam has not quite disappeared. I know this because he came to visit me this morning.
I was sitting alone on a bench in the press yard. I had paid Mr Rewse a bribe so that I might have some time to myself in the open air. I think he did it out of kindness as much as profit. Since my conviction, Rewse had allowed dozens of curious souls to tramp past my cell. They'd peered in through the grate, eager to see the gentleman as beast, trapped in his cage. They gossiped about me as if I could not hear or understand them. If I turned away it must be out of shame. If I held their gaze, they swore they saw the devil in my eyes. If I covered my face, or paced about the cell, or stared gloomily at the cold stone floor, then I must be in despair at my guilt, and the wretched state of my soul. Not one of them thought I looked innocent.
Mr Rewse was different. He has met more cut-throat villains than anyone in England. I am no murderer, and he knows it. He also knows the way of the world. He won't help me, but he is courteous, regretful. When I asked if I might sit in the yard for a while on my own he agreed and sent the turnkey to escort me out just before the dawn. I watched the light spread across the sky and felt the early spring suns.h.i.+ne upon my face. I closed my eyes. A few hawkers were calling their wares on the other side of the wall, but otherwise the city was at peace. And for once I liked it better that way.
'Your cousin,' the turnkey said.
I opened my eyes and there was Sam. He looked smaller than I remembered, and younger, more like the link boy who had scampered through the streets than the young man I'd come to know at the c.o.c.ked Pistol.
The turnkey strode away, calling over his shoulder. 'One half-hour.'
I had spent a great deal of time wondering what I would say to Sam should I ever see him again. I had ridden the waves of my feelings like a raft upon the ocean. Anger at his betrayal, naturally. Shame too, that I had let a boy of fourteen fool me for the second time. Most of all, I felt a profound sorrow for us both. I would most likely die for Sam's crime tomorrow. But he would have to live with it.
He was a boy a clever, capable boy. Had he been born into a different family I was sure he would not have killed Joseph Burden nor anyone else for that matter.
I gestured for him to sit, but could think of nothing to say. And so we sat in silence for a long time.
'Mr Hawkins,' he said at last. He twisted his body so that he could look hard into my eyes. 'I am very sorry.'
To my surprise, it was enough. And a whole sentence, indeed what progress! I put my hand on his shoulder. 'You still have a choice, Sam. Even now. You do not have to follow your father's path.'
His shoulder sagged beneath my hand. It must seem impossible a prison he could never escape.
'You know, my father wanted me for the Church. I defied him.'
Sam glanced at me, and then up at the walls around us, and the high windows barred with iron.
'Yes, very well. Perhaps I am not the best example.'
His lips twisted into a half-smile.
I lit a pipe, thinking about Sam and wondering how I might help free him from his father's murderous grip. My own life was ruined, but there was a chance I could save Sam's. Wouldn't that be the greatest revenge upon James Fleet? To turn his only son against him?
'If you could do anything in the world, Sam any occupation you wished. What would you choose?'
'Surgeon,' he replied, without hesitation.
I was pleased with his answer. It seemed fitting somehow, that he should atone for the life he took by saving others.
'I'd study the body,' Sam added, eyes brightening. 'Every detail. I think it is like . . . like a wondrous machine. Imagine a corpse, its parts cut free, laid out and-'
'-yes, yes,' I said hurriedly. If I hanged on the morrow, and no one rescued my body from the anatomists, this would be my fate. The very thought left me light-headed. 'A surgeon. Very good.'
'Pa would never allow it.'
I smiled to myself. Precisely.
The bells of St Sepulchre sounded across the yard. Sam rose and straightened his jacket, squinting in the sun. 'Mr Hawkins. Did you do it, sir?'
I frowned at him, confused. He could not mean . . .
We stared at each other. As the seconds pa.s.sed and the bells tolled, confusion turned to horrified understanding. No. No. Not possible. 'What do you mean?'
'Did you kill Mr Burden?'
I half rose to my feet, then sat down again, hard. I didn't know what to do or what to say.
Sam saw my consternation. 'You think I killed him?'
'You did not?'
'No.' He winced, as if ashamed.
'You swear, upon your soul?'
'I swear, sir.'
I lowered my head, trying to think, but all was confusion. How could this be? It made no sense. It wasn't possible. 'But your mother told me . . . your father says you are guilty.'
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