Gaslight Fantasy: A Ripping Yarn
by
Jaqhama
Part Two
“You’re American,” I exclaimed.
“Brilliant deduction. You should be a detective.”
“That’s his job,” I nodded at Frederick.
The other looked my companion. “Is that right?”
“Detective Inspector Frederick Abberline of the London Metropolitan Police Force. You’re under arrest.”
“Really?” The other seemed amused. “Under arrest for what?”
Frederick took a step forwards and raised his heavy cane menacingly. “For the murder and mutilation of three woman you bastard.”
The other waved his pistol slightly in Fred’s direction. “Easy on the names there amigo. I can see how this might look but you’ve got the wrong end of the horse.”
“You’re not Jack the Ripper?” I asked pointedly.
The man grunted. “Figured that’s what you hombres thought. Was I the Ripper all you folks are talking about, you think I’d be standing here jawing with you? You think I wouldn’t have plugged the pair of you by now?”
I had been considering this very thing in actual fact. “Frederick,” I said. “Frederick, I don’t think this is the scallywag we want.”
Fred looked between the other man and myself. “How can you be sure Allan? I can barely understand what he’s saying to start with.”
I noticed a slight movement from the body at the other’s feet. “She’s alive.”
“Sure,” agreed the man. “Just passed out is all.”
The tableau held for a moment. The fellow had the drop on Frederick and myself, no doubt of it. I felt sure that were he the murderer we sought his pistol would have done for us by now.
“Tell you what,” He suggested. “You leave that hog-leg in your pocket, keep the inspector there from ‘arresting’ me and I’ll put up my own iron. How’s that?”
The woman at his feet moaned and a hand flexed.
“Very well,” I agreed. I dropped the half drawn revolver back inside my pocket and showed a clean pair of hands.
Fred had his cane half raised still. He reluctantly lowered it and glared at the other.
“Fair enough,” that one conceded.
In a blur of motion he spun his pistol around on his finger and made it disappear back into its holster. The huge knife was more slowly re-sheathed in a scabbard on his left side. He then crouched down over the body of the woman and gently pulled the shawl away from her face. He slid an arm underneath her upper torso and turned her around, half supporting her as he sat her up. She moaned again and her eyelids flickered.
Frederick and myself took this opportunity to walk over to the pair of them. I being careful to keep my hands in plain sight all the time.
The man crouched before us stroked the woman’s brow. “Wake up ma’am. You’re safe. Come on now, wake up.”
Her eyes opened, in fact they sprung open and her face took on a look of absolute terror. She opened her mouth and I felt sure she was going to emit a most piercing scream.
The man tapped her on the end of her nose with a finger. She jerked back in his arms, startled. “No need for more screaming missy. You’re safe now. Feller what was chasing you is long gone. Lookee here, two other gentlemen are here with us. One of them is a lawman, a police inspector.”
The woman twisted her head and stared about herself. She caught my eye and I inclined my head and smiled at her. She blinked, took one more look around and then spoke. “The other,” she said. “The awful one. He’s gone?”
“Yes ma’am. He ran off when I came on the scene.”
She went limp in his arms. “I remember,” she said. “He was chasing me, I was running. I saw you coming towards us, out of the fog and I ran up to you.” She frowned. “That’s all I can remember.”
“You passed out when you saw him pull out his pigsticker, looked like a butchers knife to me.”
The poor woman put a hand to her mouth. “Gawd ‘an bennett I remember now. He pulled out the knife. The knife. Oh my Gawd it was the Ripper weren’t it? It was Jack Death himself weren’t it?”
“Don’t rightly know ma’am. I figure it might have been. Not having made the feller’s acquaintance I couldn’t rightly say.”
“Excuse me madam,” interrupted Frederick. “I’m a policeman, a detective, Frederick Abberline. I know this has all been a terrible ordeal for you, but please, if you could, please tell me exactly what happened.”
“Let’s get you on your feet missy,” said the man holding her. He stood up from his crouch. Lifting her along with him effortlessly. His lean frame was more powerful than it looked. She held onto his arm as she regained her feet, steadying herself.
Frederick was impatient. “Please madam, I desperately need to hear your version of the events. I have yet to be convinced that this…gentleman…isn’t in fact the man you were running from to begin with.” Fred I noticed, had taken up position slightly to one side of the pair. His right hand was clenched tightly around the top of his heavy cane. I had no doubt that he was quite willing to strike down the unknown man before us in an instant if he saw the need. For his part the stranger seemed completely unconcerned.
I now had the opportunity to look closely both at the woman in question and the man whose arm she still clutched. She was neatly dressed in a long dark skirt and short black coat. She wore polished ankle high boots and had wrapped herself in a thick woollen shawl. She was slim and had pleasingly pretty features. I judged her to be about twenty five years of age or so. The man who stood next to her was taller by a whole head. He was indeed wearing a long coat of black, waxed cotton, such as is popular with horsemen. He had tilted back his wide brimmed hat and I was startled to see that his unbound hair, dark and wavy, fell to his shoulders. His face was as lean as his body appeared. Lantern jawed and with high cheekbones. His eyes, like his clothes and hair were dark. He was clean shaven and both his face and hands were well tanned. A man who spent much time outdoors. Beneath the open coat I covertly eyed a wide belt of tan leather, with much engraving thereon. It had a big brass buckle and slanted downwards below his right hip, to where the holster for his pistol was attached. I knew now what sort of man I was looking at and felt at once both cautious but strangely excited. Such were the cast of his features that I was unable to make an estimate of his age. He might have been thirty or fifty; he had that kind of face.
I dragged my thoughts away from the man before me as, at Frederick’s urgings, the woman began to tell of her ordeal.
“I’d finished a dress for a lady what needed it for a ‘do’ tomorrow. I took it back to her at about nine o’clock. She invited me in for a cuppa and a bit of a chinwag. Must have been past eleven when I left. She pays alright, that one does. So I had a few bob spare ‘an thought I’d stop in the local on me way home.”
“You’re a seamstress?” Frederick asked, seemingly not convinced of the young woman’s story so far.
She gave him a disdainful glare. “Not every woman in Whitechapel is a bleeding whore Mr Police Inspector.”
Fred actually had the dignity to blush. “Ah, yes, quite so m’dear. I do apologise. Please continue.”
She sniffed. “Where was I? Oh yea…So’s I stopped in me local for a glass of port. Got chatty with a couple of friends and before you know it, it’s gone midnight. I’ve loads of sewing to do this week, so’s I said me goodbyes and took me-self off home. I know I shouldn’t have taken a shortcut through the alleys, not with Mad Jack lurking about, but it’s the quickest way see? I was walking along, quickly like, ‘an I heard something behind me-self. There’s a bloke in a top hat and a cape coming up behind me, real hasty he was. He had a scarf or something covering most of his face. Well straight away I didn’t like the look of him. I turned a corner and bolted as quick as I could. I looked behind me-self and there he was, running after me, not saying a word. I kept running and screamed. I mean really screamed. It was the Ripper himself, I’m bloody sure of it. I came out of the alley and into the square here. I was confused, I didn’t know which way to go. And the fog was so thick now, I could barely see a dozen steps in front of me-self. I looked up…and there was another bloke on the opposite of the square…he saw me and shouted something like, “Are you alright madam?” Behind me I could hear the Ripper getting closer. I ran across the square and grabbed hold of the other bloke…”
Here the young woman stopped her tale and looked at the man whose arm she still held. “It was you wasn’t it Sir? You was the gentleman what saved me?”
The lean figure grinned down into her upturned face. “I heard you scream from some distance away. I came a’ running and found you here. I shouted out if you were alright. You came running over to me like the devil himself was on your tail. Grabbed hold of me and started yelling that the Ripper was after you. Right about then a feller came out of the fog on the other side from us. Big hombre, bigger than me. Like you said he had a fancy hat and a long cloak or something, all wrapped around himself, even his face. He stopped when he saw you were with me. I pushed you aside and started to walk towards him. He reached under his cloak and came out with a knife. Big knife.” At this point the other grinned and reached under his own long coat. His left hand emerged with his own huge knife. The young woman let go of her rescuer’s arm and stepped back a pace. “Not as big as this though. Bowie knife. Lots of fellers carry these where I’m from. Handy things to have on you. Don’t be a’ feared ma’am, I reckon seeing this is what gave your Ripper pause for thought.” The man smiled and slid his weapon back into its sheath again. He continued.
“So when I saw the big feller pull his knife out I shucked my own steel. That stopped him in his tracks. (It was about then that you fainted right away ma’am, by the way.) I asked the feller if he cared to try his luck with me, ‘stead of a woman? For a moment there I thought he was all set to take me up on my offer, but then he kind of tilted his head, like he heard something, and next thing I know he spun around and ran back into the fog. That’s about when I heard the same sound he had. It was you two fellers, running hell for leather down the alley. I bent down to make sure the lady here was alright, that she hadn’t hit her head when she passed out, and that’s how you found us.”
“Good heavens,” was all I could think of to say.
“I see,” Frederick added. “I believe I may have been mistaken in my assumptions regarding you Sir.”
The other looked quizzically at the inspector. “And you say I talk funny?”
“He’s telling the truth Mr Abberline. I do remember the other bloke pulling out a knife, then this gentleman put me behind himself and pulled out one of his own…what is it with you blokes and your big knives?”
I couldn’t help myself, I laughed and quite heartily at that. It was infectious, the man standing next to the young woman joined in, and then the lady herself began to chuckle and after another moment Frederick also.
We all four were laughing and clutching our sides with mirth when two of Frederick’s constables found us. As one can imagine they looked at each other, and then us, with some amazement.
Fred managed to gain control of himself and said with a last chuckle. “Good morning lads. Don’t worry we’re all fine, honestly.”
“Glad to ‘ear it Sir,” said one of the pair. “Cathy Eddowes ain’t though. A Bobby found her body over in Mitre Square. Fair hacked to bits she is…the bloody Ripper’s done for two women tonight!”
* * *
The news of this second murder was grim indeed. After a brief conversation with his two constables Frederick came over and spoke to the three of us.
“I must make haste over to Mitre Square Allan. I trust that you and this gentleman will see the young lady safely home?”
I nodded. “Of course.”
“Sure,” said the American. “My pleasure.”
“You don’t wish me to accompany you to the second murder Fred?” I asked. “I’m happy to have a sniff around for you.”
“I would prefer to know that you had escorted this young lady safely to her home Allan. I trust you all realise that had it not been for the fortuitous intervention of our American friend here, this young woman would have been the Ripper’s second victim tonight, or this morning to be precise. Being deprived of his prey here, he obviously continued in search of it elsewhere.”
The lady in question clasped her hands together. “Ye Gods I didn’t think of that. Oh the poor woman…and it could just have easily have been me.”
Frederick nodded. “Indeed.” He then removed a small, leather bound notebook from an inside pocket of his coat. Producing a pencil he asked. “My dear I wonder if I might trouble you for your name and address, just for my records you understand?”
The young lady shrugged. “Susan Saunders Inspector. I live at number 6 Hastings Street. Boarding house it is.”
Fred scribbled in his notebook. “Thank you m’dear.”
He turned to the American gentleman and extended his had. “I didn’t introduce myself properly before Sir. Frederick Abberline.”
The other reached out and took Fred’s hand. “Noble Sackett.”
“Noble is it? You certainly lived up to your name tonight.”
Sackett grinned wryly. “Most folks just call me Bull. I kind of prefer that.”
“Then Bull it shall be. Might I also trouble you for your address Bull?”
“I’m staying at a place called the Ritz. Fancy hotel over that-a-ways.”
Frederick blinked. “The Ritz you say? Ah yes, nice hotel that. Bit expensive for my tastes I’m afraid.”
“When I’m flush I stay at nice places inspector. When I’m down on my luck dirt poor I stay anywhere that’ll have me.”
“A man after my own heart,” I agreed. I extended my own hand and introduced myself. Bull Sackett took my hand and clasped it firmly in his own. “Pleased to meet you Allan. You don’t sound like a Britisher yourself?”
“I’ve lived in Africa most of my life. I only come back to England to visit from time to time.”
“Africa hey? The Dark Continent. I bet you can tell some stories?”
“No more than yourself I should think. Am I correct in assuming that you would be what the penny dreadfuls call a Gunfighter?”
Upon hearing this Frederick looked slyly at our new friend.
“I wouldn’t call myself a gunfighter. I’m a peaceable feller. Happens that where I come from men settle their differences with a firearm is all. I’ve had to settle a few that way myself.”
“Yes, speaking of firearms Bull,” said Fred. “Might I point out that we here in the Sceptred Isle don’t approve of chaps running around willy nilly, carrying great big knives and large calibre revolvers on their persons. In fact I must ask why you were walking around with them on your person tonight?”
Bull looked Frederick right in the eye. “Inspector where I come from a man doesn’t step outside without his weapons strapped to him. Why, was I to walk around without my pistol and my knife I’d feel positively naked. And I might add that it was a good thing for this young lady that I was packing iron tonight.”
“I cannot argue with your last observation Bull,” Fred sighed. “If anyone asks tell them I said you have my permission to continue to wear them. But keep them under that coat, out of sight if you wouldn’t mind.”
Turning to face me Fred continued. “And you my boy? Since when have you been walking the streets with a revolver of your own may I ask?”
I grinned at my friend. “Frederick, I’ve never walked around anywhere without a pistol since I was old enough to know how to use one.”
“Good God…Do you mean to tell me that every time we’ve been out to dine with your uncle or our other friends that you’ve been armed? For all these years?”
I nodded. “Normally a small revolver, tucked away in a pocket. Not the big stuff I walk around with back home.”
The young woman, Susan interjected. “I say let the lads carry their guns around with ‘em Mr Abberline. Mayhap someone else what carries a gun might manage to shoot the Ripper dead one night soon.”
Frederick knew when he was outnumbered. “I must away. The sun is almost up and it’s going to be an awfully long day for me I’m sure. Perhaps Allan, you and your uncle might care to join me for supper at my club tonight? Say about eight p.m.?”
“I’ll tell uncle.” I promised.
Frederick turned to Bull Sackett. “You’re most welcome to join us if you wish Sir. Perhaps Miss Saunders might care to accompany you?”
Susan looked surprised. “Me? In a gentleman’s club Mr Abberline?”
“The dining room seats men and women Miss Saunders. And you will be my guest.”
She put a hand to her throat. “Why thank you Sir.”
Frederick nodded, heavily. “Goodbye then. Take that alley there, it will lead you directly back to a main thoroughfare.”
We all said our goodbyes and as Fred walked briskly away, with his two constables in tow, I turned to my new companions.
“Shall we be off then?” I suggested.
* * *
End of Part Two
To be continued tommorow