Just then, four men carried a heavy armoire out of the house to load it on the back of a cart drawn by two big draft horses. Mad Jack winged a plate at them but missed. One of the men swore loudly, but my father ignored this and just swirled his whisky glass. “Me da’ was an admiral,” he said. “He had to earn his rank in the Navy because his no-good brother got Newstead. Foul-weather Jack, they called my old man. He knew how to keep his keel level through twenty-foot swells. And look at me. I had to marry a disgusting cow like you to get the funds to keep myself soaked in spirits. And the son you gave me: he’s worthless, ain’t he?”
My mother braced my weight against her ample hip and pouted at my father. “I don’t see why you’re so horrible to me and the boy, so bent on destroying yourself. We had everything we needed to be happy, before things started falling apart.”
“Nothing fell apart,” he said. “I ruined it, intentionally and out of spite. None of it was worth preserving in the first place.”
“You ruined us, Jack.” She brandished me at my father. “What sort of future will there be for him?”
“There isn’t any future, not for him or anyone else.” He caught a glimpse of his reflection in the side of his glass; his nose webbed with broken red veins, his brown teeth protruding like desiccated stumps from the infertile clay of his purple-gray gums. “Ruin comes whether we court it or whether we cower. Might as well drink while we can afford a bottle. We’re all just staggering toward death.”
“Not you, Papa,” I said. “You’re going to live forever. You know the gypsy secrets. You know about the vampires.”
One of the workmen approached. “We’ve got to take the chair, too, Mr. Gordon,” he said.
“Mr. Gordon,” my father repeated, and he laughed. “I wasn’t born Gordon; I was Byron. Gordon is hers.” Here he pointed an accusing finger at my mother. “I had to take her surname to get her money. And now, of course, the money’s gone, and I’m left with nothing but a fat wife, a crippled son, and somebody else’s name.”
The man rubbed his hands across the front of his canvas trousers as he tried to decide what to say. He came up with: “Your name ain’t no concern of mine, sir. I just need the furniture.”
My father stood, his motion remarkably smooth and deliberate, considering his drunkenness. He drew his second pistol and fired it at the chair. The ball struck the place where the back met the seat, sending an explosion of slivers and cushion fluff into the air. My mother was hit by shrapnel in several places, and I got a thick chunk of wood stuck in my forearm, and another in my side. I began to cry.
“Have the sodding thing, with my blessing,” said my father to the workman, and he threw his crystal glass against the side of the house. Then, to my mother: “Take the child away. I can’t stand to look at it any longer, or listen to the sound of its mewling.”
At sunset, she brought my supper to my bedroom, and I ate it alone, as the governess had left several weeks earlier for want of pay. I did not see my father again that night, and when I awoke the next morning, he’d left us and fled the country. Had he stayed, he would have been imprisoned for his unpaid debts.
The castle at Gight, which had been Catherine’s inheritance, went to my father’s creditors. When she met Mad Jack, she was a wealthy heiress with a substantial income. Now, all that was gone. My mother was willing to give up everything for love, so love found her a match who was willing to take everything from her. My father, despite his other flaws, was not lacking in imagination, and he put his creative faculties to good use, devising new ways to spend money and accumulate debt. Once he’d stripped away her assets, my mother was no longer of any value to him.
Soon after he left, I heard he had died. There were rumors that he was murdered by the husband of his mistress. I never believed it, though. My father always said that only foolish men die. Whatever else he was, Mad Jack was no fool.
Chapter 8
I loved-but those I loved are gone;
Had friends-my early friends are fled:
How cheerless feels the heart alone,
When all its former hopes are dead!
Though gay companions o’er the bowl
Dispel awhile the sense of ill;
Though pleasure stirs the maddening soul,
The heart-the heart-is lonely still.
When I returned to my residence, the man from London was waiting there for me.
“I am Sir Archibald Knifing,” said my new friend as I entered. Joe Murray looked irritated; it was his customary duty to introduce guests, and it was rude of Knifing to dispense with proper etiquette. But Knifing didn’t seem like a man with much respect for protocol or much tolerance for inanities. He didn’t seem like the kind of man one wants to meet when one has just lugged a heavy wooden chair up several flights of stairs after stealing it, either.
I shrugged off my greatcoat, which Joe Murray retrieved from the floor, and I pushed the throne against a wall in the parlor. I draped my body over the seat, trying to look as impressive as I could under the circumstances. My clothes and hair were damp and clingy.
Knifing remained almost unnaturally still as he watched me arrange myself. He had a sallow and waxy complexion; skin like that of an embalmed corpse, except for a puckered pink scar that sliced diagonally across his face, from the middle of his forehead, through his milky left eye, and down the side of his cheek. His clothing bore the hallmarks of the finest London tailors, but his suit was black, which was out of fashion for social calls during daylight hours, and so snug around his emaciated, cadaverous form that I was surprised the man could draw breath. In his hands, he held a wide-brimmed black rabbit-felt hat, and a long-handled umbrella hung by its curved handle from his forearm, though it had not been raining. Joe Murray would certainly have offered to take charge of such objects upon a guest’s arrival. I assumed Knifing had refused to relinquish his accouterments, which was curious.
“Where did you get that?” he asked.
“Get what?” I asked in as nonchalant a manner as I could.
“The chair.”
“Oh,” I said. “I got it at the store.”
“What store?”
I knit my brow and let my mouth hang slack, in an expression of baffled innocence. “Well, the chair store. Obviously.”
He stared at me with his dead eye. “You don’t have the furniture you purchase delivered to your residence?”
I paused. I should have recognized the flaw in my explanation. But I was a poet, and possessed of uncommon mental agility. “Vigorous exercise is beneficial to a gentleman’s health,” I said.
He frowned and didn’t say anything.
“So, Mr. Knifing, that’s a fascinating name you’ve got,” I said, trying to control my heavy, ragged breathing. “Where does that come from? Is it Welsh?”
“I am here from London, at Lord Whippleby’s considerable expense, to investigate the murder of his beloved daughter, Felicity,” he said, curtly ignoring my question.
“Is it ordinary for knights to be engaged in the investigation of crimes?”
The corner of his mouth twitched with irritation. “I don’t concern myself with the ordinary,” he said.
“What should I call you, then? Sir Archie?”
“Mr. Knifing suits my purposes.”
“Very good, Mr. Knifing. You may refer to me as the Honorable George Gordon, Sixth Lord Byron.”
“I’d like to ask you some questions about the murder.”
“Leif Sedgewyck sent you, didn’t he?” I asked. “He’s the one who you should arrest.”
“I’ve spoken to Mr. Sedgewyck, and he told me about your strange preoccupation with this matter. I’m also aware of his interest in the decedent; an interest in her continuing to be alive. Angus the Constable mentioned you as well, and I’d like to know why you were loitering around my murder scene this morning.”