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The Children of Silence
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Текст книги "The Children of Silence"


Автор книги: Linda Stratmann



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Текущая страница: 4 (всего у книги 22 страниц)

‘It would be useful for me to know the dates on which the significant events occurred,’ said Frances. She rather hoped that Magrath might allow her to see the documents, but instead he studied them himself and she realised that the contents of the folder would be considered strictly private.

‘Yes, he was first brought here on 5 July 1877 after spending a month at the public asylum.’

‘So at the time of Mr Antrobus’ disappearance in October he was residing here?’

‘He was, yes.’

‘Are your patients ever allowed to leave the premises?’

Magrath paused. ‘I had assumed,’ he said cautiously, ‘that your interest in Mr Dromgoole related to discovering what information he might have about Mr Antrobus, but I am gathering the impression that you suspect him of being involved in that gentleman’s disappearance.’

‘I have to examine every possibility,’ Frances told him, ‘if only to dismiss them and move on. But so far I have found that Mr Dromgoole is the only person known to have had a disagreement with Mr Antrobus, and if, as you say, he is unstable, he might have done him harm.’

Magrath closed the folder and shook his head very emphatically. ‘Miss Doughty, our presence here would not be tolerated if we were to admit violent patients. We are an establishment for the very aged and those who are infirm and who, we can assure all the residents hereabouts, are no danger to anyone. Many of our patients are unable to walk unassisted and we take them out from time to time in bath chairs, where people can see for themselves that they are to be pitied and not feared. Mr Dromgoole is not an old man by any means, but he is quite frail. He suffered a serious injury to his head when in the public asylum which further added to his woes – an attack by another patient. He is quite incapable of harming anyone. He is permitted brief excursions when the weather is fine but always in the company of an attendant.’

‘Has he ever said anything on the subject of Mr Antrobus?’

‘Not that I am aware of.’ Magrath gave the question some further thought. ‘You say that he was Mrs Antrobus’ medical advisor?’

‘Very briefly, yes.’

‘I remember the heated correspondence in the newspapers between Mr Dromgoole and Dr Goodwin – there would hardly be a medical man in Bayswater who does not – although the patient was never named. And now I think about it I did once receive a letter from Mr Antrobus on the subject of admitting his wife here as a patient. I replied asking for a doctor’s report but heard nothing further.’

‘Mrs Antrobus, as her husband later understood, has a disorder of the ears and not the mind,’ Frances advised him.

‘Tinnitus aureum, perhaps?’ Magrath suggested. ‘Noises in the head which do not come from any outside source. It is often mistaken for insanity, especially when the patient hears voices. Doctors of medicine receive almost no education on these afflictions.’

‘I understand that Dr Goodwin is a highly respected man in his field of expertise.’

‘Oh, he is! I do not believe he would make such a mistake.’

‘I am pleased to hear it.’ Frances smiled and left a silence that she hoped would be filled.

Magrath looked thoughtful. ‘Although, and I hesitate to say it —’ He shook his head. ‘Perhaps there are some things best left unsaid.’

‘In my experience those are always the things most useful to a detective. Do go on.’

‘It may be strong meat for a lady.’ Frances waited expectantly, and he went on. ‘Before he was admitted here Mr Dromgoole was very insistent that he knew something against Dr Goodwin. Something concerning his personal life, which he believed to be very shocking. I do not know to what extent his allegations may be trusted. His opinions will of course have been coloured by his own state of mind and the quarrel, but, as I am sure you know,’ he added with a shrug and a sad smile, ‘bad words travel faster than good ones.’

Before Frances could say any more the maid returned to advise them that they could now see Mr Dromgoole, and Magrath led the way to a terrace looking out over a small but nicely laid out garden. Before they stepped outside, Magrath paused. ‘It might be best,’ he said softly, ‘if you were not to mention the names of any of the Bayswater medical men to Mr Dromgoole. It could upset him terribly. He was especially bitter about the correspondence in the Chronicle, and any reference to Dr Goodwin would be most distressing.’

The lawn was dotted with bath chairs whose occupants were very aged, shrunken figures hunched against the sunlight. Despite the warm air, their thin forms were wrapped in shawls and blankets, such that it was difficult to see whether they were men or women. A comfortable chair padded with cushions was on the terrace, and as Frances approached she saw that the man who sat there was very much younger than the other patients, perhaps little more than fifty, although it was hard to tell. His dark grey hair and beard were well trimmed and his blue eyes looked clear, but there was something fixed about his expression that did not bode well for the interview. There was a depressed star-shaped scar on the side of his head, suggesting an old fracture beneath. Beside him stood a slightly built man in his thirties, wearing a dark blue suit with embossed buttons and peaked cap, helping the patient drink from a cup of water.

‘Mr Fullwood, this is Miss Doughty who wishes to speak to Mr Dromgoole,’ advised Magrath.

‘Miss Doughty is very welcome to do so,’ replied Fullwood, with a polite nod in her direction. ‘I think new visitors do him good.’ He drew up a chair for Frances beside Dromgoole, and she was seated. The doctor and attendant both remained standing, observing the patient closely.

‘Mr Dromgoole?’ asked Frances, but there was no reaction. Recalling that he had had pretensions as a Doctor of Medicine, she went on, ‘or should I call you Dr Dromgoole?’

After a moment or two he turned his head towards her and slowly a smile spread across his features, a look of joy and hope. ‘Adeline?’ he said, ‘is that you, Adeline?’

Frances was about to explain that she was not Adeline, but then thought she might do better if she pretended she was. ‘Yes, I have come to see you.’

‘Oh!’ he exclaimed, and an expression of great joy lit up his face. He reached out and took one of her hands in both of his.

‘Do you remember Mr Antrobus?’ asked Frances.

‘Oh, Adeline, my Adeline!’ he sighed.

‘It is a pleasure to see you again,’ said Frances wishing she knew who Adeline was. She glanced up at the two men, but they both shook their heads. ‘I was hoping you could tell me about Mr Antrobus.’

Dromgoole said nothing but as he smiled, tears welled up in his eyes.

‘I think you had a quarrel with Mr Antrobus,’ Frances persisted, hoping that repetition of the name might produce some memory. ‘Do you recall that?’

The patient began to weep noisily and tried to pull her hand to his lips, but Fullwood came forward and gently disengaged the grasp. ‘I’m sorry,’ he murmured, ‘but I really think you will learn nothing.’

Frances could only agree. Even if Dromgoole could reveal some information she could not vouch for its reliability. ‘If he does say anything about Mr Antrobus, I would be grateful if you would write to me and let me know,’ she said to Dr Magrath as they returned indoors. ‘Who is Adeline?’

‘I’m afraid we don’t know,’ shrugged Magrath. ‘Mr Dromgoole was not married and we know of no relative of that name. A childhood sweetheart perhaps or a lady to whose hand he aspired.’

Adeline was not a common name, and Frances thought that if she could find the lady she might learn what concerned Mr Dromgoole.

Frances returned home to find a letter from Dr Goodwin consenting to an appointment the next morning. Sarah had good news: she had located Mrs Dean, the cook who had worked at the Antrobus house at the time of Edwin Antrobus’ disappearance, at which time they had employed her for some five years. A cook, especially a good one, was a person of value, and she had not been difficult to find. Ladies often exchanged confidences about their cooks, boasted of good ones or complained about the ones they had just dismissed. Any lady who prided herself on being something in Bayswater society knew where to find the best cook, even if it meant raiding the kitchen of a great friend, and agencies liked to know where they were and whether they were content.

As Frances had anticipated, Sarah reported that Mrs Dean’s duties had meant that she had seen little of her master and almost nothing of his wife and therefore had no information to divulge about Mr Antrobus’ disposition or state of health. She knew that her mistress had a strange affliction that meant that she kept to herself most of the time and had noticed that Mrs Antrobus liked to play the piano – ‘not proper music at all but bits of tunes that repeated over and over again’. They didn’t often have visitors to dine – there was Mr Antrobus’ business partner, Mr Luckhurst, and his brother, Mr Lionel, and his wife and son, and his mother-in-law, Mrs Pearce, though not so much in the last few years as she had been very unwell. His sister-in-law Miss Pearce called often, though never at the same time as Mr Lionel. The parlourmaid had told her that Mr Lionel and Miss Pearce didn’t ‘get along’ and it was thought better not to have them visit at the same time or there would be what Mr Antrobus called ‘an atmosphere’, something he wanted to avoid. Mr and Mrs Antrobus had not dined together for some little while. Mrs Antrobus usually took her meals in her parlour, and often Miss Pearce would join her there. Then when they had dined, Mrs Antrobus would play the piano and Miss Pearce sang or hummed songs in a strange deep sort of voice.

The cook was aware that medical men called, but she never saw them and they didn’t stay to dine. If Mr Antrobus had quarrelled with anyone she knew nothing about it. She could provide no information that would help locate the present whereabouts of the parlourmaid and the charwoman.

Sarah was not disheartened by this very modest success and felt confident that she would find the other two servants in time. Frances felt similarly confident. When, a year and a half previously, Sarah had asked to be an apprentice to Frances in her new business, the request had come not from a burning desire to be a detective but because she wished to remain loyally at Frances’ side. Since then she had not only proved to be a valuable assistant and an indispensable protector of her employer’s safety, but she was taking on cases of her own, ones appropriate to her very special talents. She had earned a formidable reputation in Bayswater for meting out justice in a robust manner.

Sarah had recently become the champion of a poor washerwoman who lived separately from her husband and supported four small children. Believing that the earnings of his wife were his own property to enjoy as he pleased, he had a habit of descending upon her when short of beer money, terrorising his family and taking away whatever he could find.

A neighbour of the unfortunate woman, hearing of her plight, suggested she employ Sarah’s services. The unhappy washerwoman had pleaded that she had barely enough to feed her children, but the neighbour had gone to Sarah and appealed to her good nature and general distrust of men. Sarah, whose relish at dealing with such a case was payment enough, realised that simply taking the husband to a private location and explaining to him the error of his ways, pleasurable as such a task would be, might not be sufficient. The fact that since 1870 married women had been entitled by law to keep their own earnings was something that had been lost on too many men, who had chosen to ignore the wishes of parliament and continued to cow their wives into submitting to their demands. Sarah decided to engage the services of Tom Smith, a young relative of hers and a junior businessman of extraordinary energy who was running a team of messenger boys he referred to as his ‘men’. Tom had the washerwoman’s husband followed and as a result, when he was about to raid his wife’s home once more, the police were summoned in time to witness the crime and arrest him.

Sarah’s only regret was that any respite for the wife would be temporary, and she was considering what to do about this when, to her relief, the husband suffered an attack of delirium tremens and was removed from the police cells to the public asylum.

Unusually for Frances, that evening was to be given over entirely to the pursuit of pleasure. She allowed herself not to feel guilty at such an indulgence since it was a special occasion marking the recent return to London of Frances’ near neighbour and friend Cedric Garton. Cedric was a dedicated man about town, suave and elegant in his clothing, amusing in his conversation and a great lover of all things artistic. He lived in a beautifully decorated apartment with his devoted manservant Joseph and, though widely considered to be both handsome and eligible, had never shown any inclination to marry.

He had spent the last few months travelling about the Home Counties – he refused to go north of Hertfordshire because of the climate – to give lectures on Classical Art to enthralled audiences of mature ladies and aesthetically minded young men, and he was currently delivering the same delightful treat in London, where he had become all the rage of a set of Chelsea poets.

Cedric had already attended several performances of Messrs Gilbert and Sullivan’s acclaimed Patience at the Opéra Comique. Having enthused about the delicious greenery-yallery of the decor, Mr George Grossmith’s velvet knee-britches and Japanese attitudes and the resplendent uniforms of the Dragoon Guards, he insisted on providing tickets for Frances, Sarah and Professor Pounder for what he promised was the gayest night to be had in London.

Frances was particularly interested since there had been several letters to The Times and the Chronicle from the minor and uncelebrated Bayswater poet Augustus Mellifloe, insisting that the character of Reginald Bunthorne was modelled upon himself; the fact that the piece was intended to be a satire having entirely escaped him.

‘I shall never write poetry,’ said Cedric, ‘it is far too exhausting. And Mr Mellifloe will never write poetry either, because he cannot.’

Cedric, for all his protestations of idleness and habitually languid manner, was actually a devotee of the manly art of pugilism as taught by Professor Pounder’s sporting academy, an exercise to which he brought both energy and finesse. When urgent action was required, he was as vigorous and active as any man in London.

It was a joyous evening, despite the hot and heavy atmosphere produced by the crowded theatre and the gas lamps. To Frances’ amusement one of the songs immortalised the skills of a private detective, Ignatius ‘Paddington’ Pollaky, and Cedric said he hoped that one day she too would be celebrated in song.

Sarah’s comment was that she could not see why the twenty lovesick maidens so doted on the namby-pamby poets when they might better have admired the muscular Dragoon Guards, and Cedric could only agree. Professor Pounder said nothing, but then he was a man of few words.

Frances was not very familiar with the world of the theatre but reflected that it was in some ways a miniature of life. Everyone on the stage was an actor pretending to be what he or she was not, and did not everyone do that all the time, including even herself? She tried her best to be honest but it was not always possible. She still awoke, perspiring, from those horrid nightmares, yet outwardly pretended that the brutal attack which she had only survived unscathed due to the intervention of Sarah’s firm fists, but which she seemed doomed to relive again and again, had not shaken her. She professed no more than curiosity about her absent mother, yet it was a constant and consuming mystery.

Frances also observed that the musical piece, though light, included double deceptions: not only was the actor Mr Rutland Barrington pretending to be idyllic poet Archibald Grosvenor but Grosvenor himself, at a moment’s notice, threw off what proved to be a pretence of which he had wearied and became what he wanted to be, a ‘commonplace young man’. In one very amusing scene the Dragoons donned aesthetic garments in an attempt to win the ladies but thankfully soon reverted to their uniforms. How much might be achieved with costume, Frances thought. How easy it was to put off one set of apparel and don another, and be seen differently by the world, which only took notice of exterior show.

CHAPTER SIX

Frances’ appointment with Dr Goodwin was at ten o’clock the next morning and this gave her the opportunity of rising early to visit the offices of the Bayswater Chronicle, which, apart from a tendency to sensationalise the commonplace and wallow in the sensational, was one of the more accurate periodicals. The detailed accounts of the arguments that so frequently broke out at meetings of the Paddington Vestry was one of the best guides to matters of public concern, as well as being very amusing. She was often assisted in her endeavours by the paper’s most active reporter, Mr Max Gillan, who understood the value of information as an item of commerce and appreciated that it passed in two directions.

On this occasion, Frances was not looking for anything in particular but simply wanted to examine all the newspapers for the few months before and after the disappearance of Mr Edwin Antrobus for any clues that might throw some light on the event. Since the finding of the remains in the canal the entire focus of the investigation had moved from Bristol to Bayswater, and who could tell what gem might be lying in plain sight, unclaimed because no one had looked for it?

Her arrival at the offices of the Chronicle always caused a stir of excitement, especially amongst the younger clerks, one of whom, Mr Gillan had once hinted, was ‘sweet’ on her. If he thought Frances would trouble herself to enquire as to which one then he was fated to be disappointed. In any case, she did not need to ask since a diminutive youth, who looked scarcely old enough to lace his own boots, jumped up as soon as she appeared, carried a small table and a comfortable chair into the storeroom where the volumes of bound papers were kept and volunteered to bring her anything else she needed. As Frances took her seat she explained that she needed a lamp, the 1877 Chronicle and solitude, in that order, and he hurried away to oblige. She did not flatter herself that she had aroused the young gentleman’s romantic feelings and suspected rather that he thought her peculiar and therefore interesting in a way that only a newsman would appreciate. The youth returned, pink-cheeked under the weight of the bound volume, and then scurried away to fetch the lamp. Before retiring to his desk he said shyly that his name was Ibbitson and if there was anything further she required she had only to ask.

Starting in June of 1877 Frances found the last rumblings of the debate between Dr Goodwin and Mr Dromgoole and was curious enough to go further back through the pages to its beginning. Dromgoole’s initial letter published in May was headed ‘Warning of the Dangers of Tobacco’:

For many years now the medical profession has subscribed to the view that smoking or chewing tobacco is harmful to the health of our nation, especially in the young. Consumption of tobacco, it is well known, affects the heart, the arteries, the teeth, the digestion and even the eyesight. But I have discovered that it can also affect the hearing and that it is not even necessary for the afflicted person to make use of tobacco but only to be in the constant company of a smoker. By inhaling another’s smoke, or even the aroma of tobacco that clings to the clothing of a smoker, substances deleterious to health will pass via the Eustachian tube to the middle ear. A gentleman, robust and mature, might not suffer any ill effects, but what of his wife and her more delicate constitution? How will she combat the vile poison nicotine? A case has recently come to my attention, and I am doing no more than my duty as a physician to announce it to the world, of an unfortunate lady married to a gentleman in the tobacco trade, whose organs of hearing are so affected by tobacco that she feels pain from even the smallest noise and cannot undertake many of the duties of a wife. This is, I believe, a new disease in the medical canon, unknown to the ancients and therefore wholly attributable to the effects of tobacco on the female. Women everywhere must ask their husbands to give up this noxious habit.

The letter was signed ‘Bayswater M.D.’.

Whatever the medical issues, Frances could see that this theory was unlikely to find favour with the Antrobus family.

A week later came the response from Dr C. Goodwin, M.D., consultant in otology at the Bayswater School for the Deaf and Dumb, and the Central London Throat Nose and Ear Hospital:

I must correct several errors in the letter signed Bayswater M.D., whose identity, wisely, in my opinion, he has chosen to keep secret. The affliction of the hearing he describes is not a new disease but has been well known to otologists, although not to the general medical practitioner, for many years. It is exhibited by both male and female patients, many of whom also suffer from tinnitus aureum, and is referred to in the literature as hyperacusis. The most usual causes, insofar as causes may be known, are loud noise and injury to the head. It has nothing whatsoever to do with tobacco.

And there a wise man should have quietly withdrawn from the fray, but Dromgoole was not that man. His response was a tart letter pointing out that Dr Goodwin, unlike himself, had not examined the patient in question and was therefore not competent to pronounce on the cause of her suffering.

Dr Goodwin replied, revealing that since the publication of his letter he had had the opportunity to examine the patient and had observed nothing to make him vary his original statement. He added that he had received many letters from other Bayswater physicians, all of whom had been eager to assure him that they were not the authors of the letter signed ‘Bayswater M.D.’ and suggesting who the actual author might be. All had put forward the same name. He had made enquiries and discovered that while claiming the distinction of the letters M.D. after his name, the individual had not been awarded them by any recognised body. He advised therefore that his correspondent cease to publish his medical opinions and also refrain from annoying the patient with unwanted visits or he would be obliged to make his information public.

The letter was followed by a note from the editor, who informed his readers that for legal reasons the correspondence on that issue was now closed.

Frances’ perusal of the papers for the last six months of 1877 revealed that nothing of any great significance had occurred. There were no violent street robberies, no stabbings, just the usual minor thefts, assaults and damage to property carried out while under the influence of drink, two small fires and an omnibus accident. None of these incidents had happened on the day or even the week that Edwin Antrobus returned to London, assuming that he had done so. There were a series of articles about Antrobus’ disappearance and appeals for anyone with knowledge of what had happened to him to write to the newspaper, followed by letters from humorists, frauds and people with fantastical imaginations as well as some honest speculation, none of which were remotely helpful.

Leaving the Chronicle offices, Frances walked along the busy thoroughfare of Ledbury Road and along Chepstow Crescent, passing the school where Dr Goodwin had once been a consultant and with which he was now in dispute. A tall white-fronted house, it was bounded by a low wall and ornamental gates, the path leading to the front steps flanked by stone urns filled with tumbling masses of colourful flowers. Frances smiled at such a thoughtful touch for children who could not hear, providing pleasure to their other senses. A signboard, still glistening as if freshly painted, announced that the school was now called The Bayswater School for the Deaf and employed the most modern and approved German methods of instruction under the guidance of headmaster J. Eckley, special consultant to the Society for Training Teachers of the Deaf.

The side of the school was close by a narrow lane leading to the cottages of Pembridge Mews, but a turn of the corner brought Frances to the more important properties of Pembridge Villas.

Dr Goodwin’s door was opened by a maid in her twenties, neat and smart, with an intelligent look. Frances presented her card, and the maid, who knew of the appointment, at once invited her in. A tall sturdy youth was standing in the rear of the hallway and not by chance: he was obviously curious about the visitor and looked at Frances very carefully. He ventured forward shyly and made a respectful little bow. He was a good-looking boy, with light brown eyes and bronze curls, on a fair way to becoming a handsome man.

‘Good morning,’ Frances greeted him. He smiled, but made no reply.

The maid turned to the youth and instead of speaking took a little notebook and a pencil from the pocket of her apron, wrote a few words, then showed him the page. He smiled even more broadly and nodded.

‘This is Mr Isaac Goodwin, Dr Goodwin’s son,’ the maid explained. ‘He is deaf, so we speak by writing our conversation. He can also speak with signs, and I intend to learn them so as to be more useful.’

Isaac wrote in the maid’s notebook.

‘He writes that he is very interested to meet you as he has read about you in the newspapers. If you go with him he will show you to his father’s study.’

Isaac bowed again, and indicated that Frances should follow him, which she did, feeling strangely tongue-tied. They reached a door and he knocked very deliberately three times. It was clearly a signal, one that he could not hear, but a means of telling the occupant of the room that it was he who was about to enter, no reply being appropriate.

After waiting a few moments, Isaac opened the door and they entered a comfortably furnished study. The gentleman who rose to meet them was about sixty, showing the rounded figure that often came unbidden with age, a pleasing though not handsome face, short whiskers and a ruff of grey hair around a bald pate. Frances, who was more than the usual height for a woman, found herself looking down on him as they shook hands. He did not, she thought, look like a man with what Lionel Antrobus had called ‘a reputation’ but, she reminded herself, cruel seducers and reprobates could be of any age and appearance. There was a conversation between Isaac and his father, carried out entirely in rapid gestures, before the youth, making another respectful obeisance to Frances, departed.

‘You are unfamiliar with the sign language of the deaf, I take it,’ observed Goodwin, ushering Frances to a chair and sitting at his ease. The wall behind the desk was lined with bookshelves closely filled with volumes, some of them, judging by the worn leather of their spines, of considerable age.

‘I am, yes. Is this something you have devised?’

‘Oh no,’ he assured her, ‘finger spelling and signs have been used since antiquity as the secret language of spies, and they have been employed for the education of the deaf for hundreds of years. The very youngest children quickly learn to converse and soon become proficient. By the use of signs a teacher can impart the skill of reading, and a complete education may be had.’

‘Your maid told me she intends learning the signs, I find that very commendable.’

‘Yes, she is a capable girl, who might yet become a valuable assistant.’

Frances approved his unusual insight. It was the habit of too many ladies and gentlemen to either ignore or underestimate their servants and assume a level of understanding less than their own, a capital error in her opinion. An individual from a family of substance might receive the best education money could buy and still be a fool, whereas his servant, who had not been so fortunate, could easily outstrip him in wisdom.

‘I see that you are admiring my library of medical works,’ smiled Dr Goodwin. ‘I have heard that you have some knowledge of medicine yourself.’

‘My late father was a pharmacist and taught me many of the skills of that profession. It was my intention at one time to study for the examinations, but it was not to be.’ Even as she spoke, Frances remained more than a little distracted by the expression ‘secret language of spies’, which had created some interesting thoughts. ‘Do you have any works on speaking with signs?’

‘I not only have them but I am the author of several, as well as volumes on the anatomy and diseases of the ear. It has been the one study of my life,’ he added, with some feeling. ‘My father was born deaf and my mother became deaf at the age of five after contracting scarlet fever. I owe it to their hard work, their struggle to provide me with schooling they could ill-afford, to do all I can for those similarly placed. Unfortunately the ear and its diseases is a subject largely neglected in the education of medical students. If as much effort was made to inform the medical profession as is expended in peddling the supposed cures of quacks and charlatans, we might have made better progress than we have.’

‘And you acted as medical advisor to Mrs Harriett Antrobus, whose husband has been missing for the last three years.’

Goodwin looked a little less easy in his manner and placed his fingers on the letter he had received from Frances, which lay unfolded on his desk. ‘I did. I am not sure if I can offer any information that can assist you in your enquiries but I will do my best.’

Frances took out her notebook and pencil. ‘Tell me about how you first met Mr and Mrs Antrobus and your impression of them.’


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