Automatic Woman Read online

Page 3


  I am a prisoner awaiting trial for the murder of Dr. James Saxon. Specifically, the grisly, crushing death of Dr. James Saxon.

  As far as I can tell, the prosecutor, Mr. Thomas Agrian, Esq.’s theory of the case is that I had some work-related breakdown and crushed Dr. Saxon with my arms and legs like a human boa constrictor. To the prosecutor’s credit, Dr. Saxon was found with broken arms and organs ground to stew. The prosecutor also believes that after I dispatched the kind doctor, I redirected my madness to the doctor’s creations, his automatic dancers. I apparently ran amok and broke to bits every dancing automaton, saving the Swan Princess, Dr. Saxon’s crown jewel, for my finale. The broken remains of Dr. Saxon’s fine creations were recovered from the orchestral pit of his theater. That is also where they found me, arms and legs wrapped around the inert body of the Swan Princess. If it hadn’t been a murder scene, I’m sure the laughter would have been uproarious instead of just a single snigger from some cold-blooded Met.

  I know this has come up before, but I am a fat man. This was not overlooked in Mr. Agrian, Esq.’s assessment nor the supervising inspector’s investigative report. The inspector considered this reasonable causation, but I consider it a shite presumption against the portly. Really, how many fat-man-crushing-deaths can there be in London for them to follow this logic honestly? My ear is pressed firmly to the underbelly of this city and I’ve never heard of a fat man crushing another man with arms and legs. Sure there’s the occasional beating fatality, but that is a thing common to all weights of men and even some women.

  A laughable theory is not the worst part of their case. The worst part is this: I have no motive. Dr. Saxon was my client, my record with the Bow Street Firm holds no past suspicions of homicide or fratricide or regicide or any other ‘cide. The lack of motive makes considerable sense when you factor in that I had nothing, or at least very little to do with the death of Dr. Saxon.

  Regardless, here I sit, in a bloodied up cell where the powers that be conspire to lead me to a hangman’s farewell. If I’ve had worse days than this, they exist in suppressed memories because I’d be buggered if I can find a lower point.

  I dipped the toe of my boot into the congealing blood pool and traced crimson lines. I drew first a cross, then an “x” over the cross, then the red lines of Union Jack, very patriotic. A jailor interrupted my artistic endeavor.

  “Jolly, you’ve got visitors.”

  I looked up at the jangler of keys. Jailor Portsmith was a blunt and unimaginative man. I’d met him before as we traveled in similar professional circles. It was professional courtesy that put me alone in this cell as opposed to the general population of Whitechapel’s worst.

  “Did you use the plural tense?”

  Portsmith looked confused. I felt bad. The man had done me a solid and here I was proving him stupid.

  “Do I have more than one visitor, Basil?”

  “Yeah, you got two. You’re Mr. Congeniality, I guess.”

  Portsmith popped the lock with a giant antiquated key. He held up a pair of manacles.

  “Basil, come on?” I said.

  “Policy, mate. While you’re here you’re one of the uglies. Now put on your clinkers.”

  I put the manacles over my wrists and clicked them nice and loose. At least I had that comfort.

  “Lead the way, then.”

  Portsmith let me walk ahead with a hand on my shoulder for direction. We came to a room with a steel table and two stools, all bolted to the floor with steel rivets. Portsmith guided me to a stool and motioned me to sit. It was a singularly uncomfortable metal disk. Portsmith took up my hands and popped the lock of my left manacle.

  “Thanks, mate.”

  “Don’t thank me yet.”

  Portsmith fed the chain through the stool and recuffed my wrist. I gave him a hard look.

  “You think that’s necessary?”

  “Not paid to think, mate.” And with that little tidbit of wisdom, Portsmith left me to wait for me visitors.

  The first was a dapper young dandy by the name of Abraham Silver. His true name had been Ibrahim Silverstein, but he’d filed for the change years ago so as to make himself a better social climber. Here was a man of no loyalties, not to name, not to God, not to family. Also, he was my co-worker at the Firm. I took his presence as a decidedly ominous sign.

  “Silver, good to see you. I’d stand to shake your hand, but circumstances being…” I rattled my manacle against the stool to emphasize my bondage. Silver ignored the little show.

  “Mr. Fellows, I regret to inform you that your position with the Bow Street Firm has been suspended pending further investigation.” Silver said this line of dialogue in a monotone that told me he had rehearsed it prior to coming.

  “That’s nice. Will you be posting a bond?”

  “No.”

  “Why not?”

  “Freeing you at this time would be bad for public relations.”

  “It’d be worse for public relations if I were found guilty.”

  Silver didn’t respond. I’m pretty sure the little wank was enjoying himself.

  “Who’s investigating me?”

  “Both coppers and firm reps are on the job. Who did you mean?”

  “From the firm. Like I give a bloody shite what Bobby is turning over my laundry,” I snapped.

  “Owens has your case,” he said.

  I sucked air through my teeth. Who had I pissed off enough to get Owens as a safety net? The man couldn’t find his own arsehole with a map, a donkey, and two Sherpas. His odds of success landed squarely between not likely and no fucking way. Timothy Owens had joined the firm as some manager’s cousin or nephew. A family hire. A tag-a-long relegated to group raids and jobs where numbers accounted for more than brainpower. I gave Silver my menace smile and leaned close, as close as I could. I reached up until the chains were taught and strained.

  “Come on then, shake my hand.”

  Silver looked at my mitt. His face revealed thoughts like gypsy palms, first fear, then shame for being afraid, then a forward resolve to face his fear and grasp my extended hand, then the realization that fear or not I was going to hurt him and he’d be a fool to take my offered shake. I credited his complexity of mind and the fact that he didn’t fall for my childish, petty trap.

  “We’ll be in contact, then,” he said.

  “I’m sure we will,” I replied and lowered my hand. I wish I could say that was the last I saw of Mr. Silver aka Silverstein. Of course it’s not, but aren’t wishes such wonderful things?

  I ran a list in my mind of who my second visitor could be. Work being accounted for, I couldn’t imagine who would take enough of an interest to appear. My football squad? Perhaps Morris Benny, the owner of the public house I lived above, wondering why his place was surplus eight pints above quota and no one had harassed his intolerable cook, who was also his intolerable wife.

  I should not have been surprised when Jacques Nouveau glided into my embarrassing predicament. He’d played a small role in my debacle. Also, he was the only other man, excepting the poor dead doctor, who knew of the Swan Princess’capabilities.

  Frenchy lit a cigarillo and sat on Silver’s stool.

  “We meet again, Mr. Fellows.”

  “Cut the niceties, Nouveau. What brings you to my happy domicile?”

  Nouveau drew long on his cigarillo and let loose a bluish cloud. The guard outside the door suddenly realized that he had something better to do and left me and Nouveau by our lonesomes. Nouveau made no motion to the guard, no gesture to me. To him it was a non-event. To me, it was a reminder of who had the taffy and who had none.

  “I saw that Mr. Abraham Silver just visited you.”

  “Yeah,” I said. “Fellows checking up on fellows.”

  “I also know that Bow Street will not be posting your bond.”

  I let silence be my voice. Nouveau was showing off, making a point that was unnecessary to make. Sure he had contacts, he could sway guards, he knew my privat
e business. So what? All those things are acquisitions of money, and I knew he had that well before his glamorous entrance.

  “Get to the point, Jacques.”

  “Do you want me to post your bail?”

  “Why?”

  “It is impolite to answer a question with a question.”

  He regarded my face as I regarded his. His eyebrows were plucked and shaped. His fingers were slender and delicate, nails perfectly trimmed and shaped. Two of those dainty little sticks held his cigarillo away from his face. The smoke reminded me of Benny’s public house, which reminded me that I was hungry and filthy and all around a pathetic creature of captivity. I let him win our little silent game.

  “Yes,” I said.

  “Yes what?”

  “Yes. I want you to post my bail.”

  Nouveau smiled. His teeth were straight and large and just a little green.

  “What do you want from me?” I asked.

  “Mr. Fellows, how can you put a price on liberty? For shame, John Locke would weep at your words.”

  “So I can go for nothing?”

  “Well, one cannot get something for nothing. How about we say your freedom is yours to claim and that in exchange you will grant me an unrelated nominal request, a favor to a friend who has done you a favor.”

  “What sort of favor?”

  Nouveau looked to the door. The guard had not returned. Regardless, Nouveau lowered his voice.

  “You must steal the Swan Princess for me.”

  I looked at Nouveau for a moment, a pause. I let his words swim around in my mind. Maybe I had misunderstood, or maybe he didn’t realize the implication of what he’d said.

  “You want to run that by me again?”

  “Steal the Swan Princess.”

  “You do realize that the Swan Princess, all of Saxon’s automatons in fact, are in evidence storage?”

  “Yes.”

  “That’s under lock and key?”

  “Yes.”

  “Those keys are held by guards?”

  “Yes.”

  “Those guards are big fuck-all Metro blokes who maybe just maybe won’t take a shine to me carting out their charges.”

  “Yes.”

  “There’s got to be someone better suited.”

  Nouveau’s laugh was augmented by blue smoke.

  “I disagree, Mr. Fellows. Anyway, I don’t want the other dancers, I just want the Swan. You know the Swan. You know what she is. You know how important it is that I receive all of her parts.”

  “How do you suppose I get the Swan?”

  Nouveau waved his fingers. “The trivialities I leave to you. Do whatever you like, as long as she is in my possession within fourteen days.”

  “What happens in fourteen days?

  “You go on trial for murder.”

  The date hadn’t been announced to me. Again Nouveau was a step ahead of me and playing puppeteer to my marionette.

  “You’re missing a piece, Frenchman. The Swan paid the Doctor’s butcher bill. She’s the only proof I didn’t kill Saxon. If I give her to you, no proof for me.”

  Nouveau drew on his cigarillo and spit a flake of tobacco from his tongue.

  “She is of no use to you, broken or otherwise.” Nouveau looked tired, exhausted in fact. “Your problem is not that she is your only proof; it is that you have no proof at all. To convince twelve of your peers that the Swan squeezed the blood and anima from Dr. Saxon is too great a task. You may as well blame the death on sprites or will-o-wisps. It’s no more far-fetched then an automaton going psychotic. Your defense is magic. Magic doesn’t win cases, even in London.”

  He was right. It was an obvious fallacy that I hadn’t let my mind dwell on. I had a fools’ defense. My chest burned with a thousand pricks of anxiety.

  “You look so piqued, Mr. Fellows. Do not fear, all is not lost. Bring me the Swan and all of her parts. Every last scrap you pulled from her in your barbaric little struggle. I’ll figure her out. I’ll find out what the doctor died with in his beautiful brain. If I have his secrets I can fix her. A fixed woman will move. A fixed Swan will show nicely to your jurors. Magic will turn to science and your life will be spared.”

  “How will I explain the theft to the court?”

  “You won’t hang for theft, Mr. Fellows. Explain it any way you like, just don’t mention my name.”

  “Can you post my bond today?”

  “I already have.”

  My eyebrows lifted a bit at that. The magistrate had set my assurity at ten thousand pounds; an impossible fortune. Nouveau had money, but not in that bulk and availability. The scale of this matter increased. Nouveau was no longer the top of the ladder. The money had to come from another source. Who?

  Nouveau stood and let his cigarillo fall to the floor. He didn’t bother crushing it. I imagine the ashes would have devalued his silk Japanese slippers. He extended those little fingers. I cataloged all the ways I could hurt what he offered, but resolved to meet his fish shake; soft, limp, without an ounce of man in it.

  “Do we have an accord?”

  “We’re in business.”

  “Of course we are.”

  Nouveau left. Portsmith returned and unchained me from the stool. Instead of my cell, Portsmith walked me to central booking, unlocked my manacles, and had me sign a standard bond contract and promissory note to appear in court fourteen days hence. After that, I was directed to the front door and set loose.

  I sucked in two nostrils of free, London air. It smelled less of piss than the jail air. Also, I noted hints of sulphur and stale lager. God I love this town. I’d only been inside for two days, but the world outside had the rose-colored beauty of a home not seen in decades. I stopped at the first public I crossed and tucked into a pint of dark and a plate of bangers. I wasn’t hungry but I needed to wash the taste of jail out of my mouth. Also, a drink never hurt a bloke. Neither did two, or three. Four maybe, but I took my odds and returned to my flat a braver man if not a smarter one.

  Of course my place had been turned over. Fortune smiles at a man on occasion, but misfortune rains down from on high with fury and volume. My dad used to say that.

  Turned over was an understatement. I had served in Her Majesty’s Excursionary forces in my younger years. I’ve marched hard through Afghanistan, India, Persia. The imperialists out there, the foreign mining crews, wouldn’t just dig into a mountain. They would dynamite it, wipe it off the map, and pull goods from the rubble. Called it strip mining. It would appear that whoever went through my home was a strip mining enthusiast, or maybe just a shite investigator. I once had a respectable sitting room, three chairs, a cozy table. All of it was broken to sticks and piled high in the center of the room. On top of the stick pile lay my book shelf in two pieces, and the shredded remains of a Persian rug that I’d bought in Palestine. My books were also gone, though I can’t fathom why the burglar would want to take my pulp books.

  I selected an intact chair leg and gripped it in two hands, hoping to God almighty that the culprit was still present and unawares. I searched my kitchen, found broken plates and a bloody huge crack in the porcelain sink. I searched my bedroom; I found the bed frame broken, mattress cut down the center with goose down layering everything like snow drifts, and my best hat gone. The job was such a haphazard mess I wasn’t sure if they were looking for something or just trying to make me mad.

  Someone knocked on my door. I gripped my stick tighter and prayed to God it was someone worth braining, because violence felt like an inevitability at this juncture. The knock sounded again. Not the polite or inquisitive knock of a neighbor or land lord, this knock was loud and insistent. An official knock.

  I opened the door to find Owens’ open-mouthed gob. His hand was raised for a third dash and did not lower at his discovery.

  “Evening, Owens,” I said.

  Owens closed his mouth but kept his fist hovering in the air.

  “Evening, Jolly.”

  “Something I can do for
you?” I raised the chair leg to my shoulder real casual like. Owens furrowed his brows.

  “I’m looking into your troubles for the firm. Thought I’d stop by and see what’s what. I didn’t know you got out.”

  “You were going to break into my flat?”

  Owens moved his already raised fist to his balding scalp and gave it a good scratch. He opened his mouth, almost let the lie escape but then closed his mouth in silence. He tried again.

  “Yes?”

  I’m sucker for blunt honesty. Maybe Owens wasn’t such a bad chap, if a bit dim.

  “Come in, then.” I stepped aside and Owens joined me in the remains of my living room.

  “Did you do this?” He pointed to pile of what was once furniture.

  “Sure, mate. I loathe my chairs, figured now was as good a time as any for payback.”

  Owens stood there. His mouth opened and closed again. Shite!

  “Come on, mate! Close the circuit. You’re not the only one up my buggering line.”

  “Who did this?” Now he was playing detective. Who the hell did I piss off in the firm to get this? Owens poked his hand into the rubbish pile and pushed over half of a book shelf.

  “I don’t know. I seem to have made new friends in the not too distant past. How are you getting back to the firm?”

  “I’ve a carriage waiting.”

  “Give me a lift?”

  I watched the cogs spin in his head. Obviously, I was not the first choice of people he wanted to be seen with at the home office, but he could find no diplomatic way to say so. I insisted, and off we went.

  The Bow Street Firm occupied a three-story structure. A converted tenement chosen strictly for its menacing gargoyles, voluminous storage, and the fact that it was situated on Bow Street, home of the original English thief catchers from whom we took our name. Inside people get the impression that they’ve entered a textile mill or button factory. The click, click, clicking of typewriters and Bouchon punchers competes only with the whirring of the Jacquard loom and the occasional swishing of pneumatic tube deliveries. A legion of secretaries and clerks sit in cubicles clacking away at their trade machines. The whole first floor is theirs. They are the gate-keepers. Floor two belongs to the field operatives and information analysts. Floor three is management and duffers, assuming a bloke can tell one from the other. We have two rooms in the basement, one we can talk about, storage, and the other we can’t talk about, non-storage.