Thaddeus Lewis Mysteries 3-Book Bundle. Janet Kellough
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What about the Caddick brothers? They peddled their wares themselves. They were the makers of the pins that had been found with each of the victims, and they had been part of the crowd of young men who had hovered around Rachel. Benjamin was often out on the road selling his portraits. Willet, he had been told, had not the personality of his brother and went less often, but still he went at times. He seemed so often in his brother’s shadow; had Rachel expressed a preference for Benjamin, unleashing a jealous fury in the younger boy? But the Caddicks gave the pins to Simms to sell, as a rule. Did they also commission others to sell them? And what about the books? Both were such popular items that almost anyone would have had access to them.
There was a key here, somewhere, a commonality that would point to the culprit, he was sure of it. His tired mind just couldn’t seem to find it.
As the year wore on, Lewis became increasingly convinced that his spiritual fatigue was related in some way to the conundrum. Night after night he studied the chapter in the Book of Proverbs. He felt sure that the words were somehow tied in with the murderer’s twisted motives. Why else would they have been left in the women’s laps, and open to the same place every time? He pored over the passage that seemed most appropriate:
For the lips of a strange woman drop as an honeycomb, and her mouth is smoother than oil: But her end is bitter as wormwood, sharp as a two-edged sword. Her feet go down to death; her steps take hold on hell.
It seemed almost a description of the murderer’s intent, except that when he read farther, the admonition was clear: “Remove thy way far from her, and come not nigh the door of her house.”
The killer had not removed himself — he had sought the women out, strangled them, and mutilated one. How had he misinterpreted the words so badly that he was driven to such horrific deeds? Lewis tried to put himself in the killer’s place, in his mind, to try to understand what it was that was driving him, but he got no closer to understanding. It only seemed to make his fever flare up again.
II
Lewis and Betsy fell into the habit of attending a different service every Sunday, at least any that were within reasonable riding distance. At some time, with any luck, in the not too distant future he felt he would be ready to take on his ministerial duties again, and he wanted to keep his hand in and make himself known to as many congregations as possible. He reflected that by the time his career was over he would probably be familiar to almost every Methodist society in the eastern part of Canada West.
Some weeks they would travel a considerable distance, visiting many congregations in turn. Other times they stayed closer to home. One of his favourites was at Millcreek. It was where he had grown up, and he still had many relations and old friends there. It was a comfort to him to be back among his own, to catch up on news of previous acquaintances, to hear of the milestones of births and deaths that lend a stately and measured pace to life.
As usual, Martha managed to charm everywhere they went, and the young women and girls would clamour to look after her. It was less “looking-after” than “doing-for,” with the girls competing with one another to amuse the child. Martha took it all in stride, looking as if all the attention was no more than she was entitled to. It was as well the child was so good natured, Lewis thought, otherwise she would become quite spoiled.
One fine fall Sunday, a day when the air was crisp with the demise of summer and the smell of ripening apples wafted around them, they rode once again to the little village of Millcreek, all of them looking forward to the occasion. They were met, not with the usual welcoming faces, but with grim and sorrowful ones. Another young girl was gone.
“It was Jemima Clark,” the miller informed Lewis when he asked what the trouble was. “You know her. She was Elias Clark’s daughter. She was one of the ones that played with your young one.”
Lewis recalled her, only vaguely, as having dark brown hair, maybe even chestnut. Beyond that he could form no clear vision of her features.
“What happened?” he asked. Let it be an accident, he prayed silently. Let it be fever, or a fit, or fire. Let it be anything but another murder.
“The family lives some way out of town. It’s pretty isolated. The rest of the family had gone off to visit an aunt, but the girl said she wasn’t feeling well, so they left her at home. When they returned, they found her dead in her bed.”
Lewis felt sick as he waited for the details he knew would follow.
“Her clothing was all rucked up and she had bruises round her neck. They think she was attacked by someone with ill intent, you know, with the clothing like that.” The miller blushed. “It was probably some outlaw — there are enough of them around, and their farm, as I say, it’s pretty far out with no one else around.”
“I heard it was Bill Johnston,” said a woman who was standing nearby listening to them. “He and Kate have been sighted down along the front. Who’s to say he wouldn’t head north and start attacking anywhere.”
Lewis gave this theory the short shrift he felt it deserved. “That’s nonsense. Bill Johnston is a thief and a pirate, but as far as I know he’s not given to attacking innocent girls.”
The woman opened her mouth to protest, but Lewis cut her short. “You’ll say nothing of this silliness to the family, do you hear me? They have troubles enough to deal with, without having to listen to wild speculation on your part.”
He had brought the full weight of his authority as a preacher to this pronouncement, and the woman abruptly closed her mouth.
For once in his life he was impatient to see the service at an end. The minister alluded to the girl’s death briefly, offering comfort to both the family and the church members. The group of Martha-minders was red-eyed and downcast, and not even the little girl’s antics could enervate them. They filed soberly out the door at the end, none staying behind to tease or play. To Lewis’s surprise, Isaac Simms’s red and blue painted wagon was pulled off the road just outside the gate, and Simms himself was leaning against it, waiting for the meeting to be over. Everyone clustered around him, for if anyone had the latest details of the crime, it would be the peddler.
“They think it was a thief who hadn’t expected to find anyone in the house,” he said. “Maybe one of the Patriot Hunters who escaped and is still roaming the country.”
This made no sense to Lewis. The Hunters who had been captured at Prescott had all been executed, transported, or returned to the States. Any who had avoided arrest would have melted back across the border as soon as they could. They wouldn’t have lingered long if they could help it, for every moment at large was a moment in which they could be seized.
“I heard it was Bill Johnston, or one of his men gone off on his own.” It was the same woman again, the one who had proffered this opinion before.
To his surprise, Simms seized on this statement. “It could well be,” he said. “Johnston is finding it harder and harder to get supplies. Everyone knows Kate and everyone is watching her every move. Maybe he got desperate and came in off the river. If that’s the case, we’d all better watch out.”
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