Bernard Cornwell - Gallows Thief

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Gallows Thief: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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It is 1807 and portrait painter Charles Corday, charged with the murder of a Countess he was in the process of painting, has only seven days to live. Political pressures make it expedient for the Home Office to confirm his guilt. The man appointed to investigate is Rider Sandman, whose qualifications for the job are non-existent and who is currently down on his luck. The offer of even a temporary post, promising a generous fee for not much effort, seems ideal. But Sandman's investigations reveal much that does not fit the verdict, and many people determined to halt his activities. Sandman has a soldier's skills and he has remarkable, if unconventional, allies. But ranged against them is a cabal of some of the wealthiest and most ruthless men of Regency England. Sandman has a mere seven days to snatch an innocent man from the hungriest gallows of Europe. The hangman is waiting. It is a race against the noose.

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'Corday.'

'He's condemned, is he? Then you'll find him in the Press Yard, your honour. Are you carrying a stick, sir?'

'A stick?'

'A pistol, sir. No? Some gentlemen do, but weapons ain't advisable, sir, on account that the bastards might overpower you. And a word of advice, Captain?' The porter, his breath reeking of rum, turned and took hold of Sandman's lapel to add emphasis to his next words. 'He'll tell you he didn't do it, sir. There ain't a guilty man in here, not one! Not if you ask them. They'll all swear on their mothers' lives they didn't do it, but they did. They all did.' He grinned and released his grip on Sandman's coat. 'Do you have a watch, sir? You do, sir? Best not take anything in that might be stolen. It'll be in the cupboard here, sir, under lock, key and my eye. Round that corner, sir, you'll find some stairs. Go down, sir, follow the tunnel and don't mind the smell. Mind your backs!' This last call was to all the folk in the lobby because four workmen, accompanied by three watchmen armed with truncheons, were carrying a plain wooden coffin out through the prison door. 'It's the girl what was stretched this morning, sir,' the porter confided in Sandman. 'She's going to the surgeons. The gentlemen do like a young lady to dissect, they do. Down the stairs, sir, and follow your nose.'

The smell of unwashed bodies reminded Sandman of Spanish billets crowded with tired redcoats and the stench became even more noxious as he followed the stone-flagged tunnel to where more stairs climbed to a guardroom beside a massive barred gate that led into the Press Yard. Two turnkeys, both armed with cudgels, guarded the gate. 'Charles Corday?' one responded when Sandman enquired where the prisoner might be found. 'You can't miss him. If he ain't in the yard then he'll be in the Association Room.' He pointed to an open door across the yard. 'He looks like a bleeding mort, that's why you can't mistake him.'

'A mort?'

The man unbolted the gate. 'He looks like a bloody girl, sir,' he said scornfully. 'Pal of his, are you?' The man grinned, then the grin faded as Sandman turned and stared at him. 'I don't see him in the yard, sir,' the turnkey had been a soldier and he instinctively straightened his back and became respectful under Sandman's gaze, 'so he'll be in the Association Room, sir. That door over there, sir.'

The Press Yard was a narrow space compressed between high, dank buildings. What little light came into the yard arrived over a thicket of spikes that crowned the Newgate Street wall beside which a score of prisoners, easily identifiable because of their leg irons, sat with their visitors. Children played round an open drain. A blind man sat by the steps leading to the cells, muttering to himself and scratching at the open sores on his manacled ankles. A drunk, also in chains, lay sleeping while a woman, evidently his wife, wept silently beside him. She mistook Sandman for a wealthy man and held out a begging hand. 'Have pity on a poor woman, your honour, have pity.'

Sandman went into the Association Room which was a large space filled with tables and benches. A coal fire burnt in a big grate where stew pots hung from a crane. The pots were being stirred by two women who were evidently cooking for a dozen folk seated round one of the long tables. The only turnkey in the room, a youngish man armed with a truncheon, was also at the table, sharing a gin bottle and the laughter which died abruptly when Sandman appeared. Then the other tables fell silent as forty or fifty folk turned to look at the newcomer. Someone spat. Something about Sandman, maybe his height, spoke of authority and this was not a place where authority was welcome.

'Corday!' Sandman called, his voice taking on the familiar officer's tone. 'I'm looking for Charles Corday!' No one answered. 'Corday!' Sandman called again.

'Sir?' The answering voice was tremulous and came from the room's furthest and darkest corner. Sandman threaded his way through the tables to see a pathetic figure curled against the wall there. Charles Corday was very young, he looked scarce more than seventeen, and he was thin to the point of frailty with a deathly pale face framed by long fair hair that did, indeed, look girlish. He had long eyelashes, a trembling lip and a dark bruise on one cheek.

'You're Charles Corday?' Sandman felt an instinctive dislike of the young man, who looked too delicate and self-pitying.

'Yes, sir.' Corday's right arm was shaking.

'Stand up,' Sandman ordered. Corday blinked in surprise at the tone of command, but obeyed, flinching because the leg irons bit into his ankles. 'I've been sent by the Home Secretary,' Sandman said, 'and I need somewhere private where we can talk. We can use the cells, perhaps. Do we reach them from here? Or from the yard?'

'The yard, sir,' Corday said, though he scarcely seemed to have understood the rest of Sandman's words.

Sandman led Corday towards the door. 'Is he your boman, Charlie?' a man in leg shackles enquired. 'Come for a farewell cuddle, has he?' The other prisoners laughed, but Sandman had the experienced officer's ability to know when to ignore insubordination and he just kept walking, but then he heard Corday squeal and he turned to see that a greasy-haired and unshaven man was holding Corday's hair like a leash. 'I was talking to you, Charlie!' the man said. He yanked Corday's hair, making the boy squeal again. 'Give us a kiss, Charlie,' the man demanded, 'give us a kiss.' The women at the table by the fire laughed at Corday's predicament.

'Let him go,' Sandman said.

'You don't give orders here, culley,' the unshaven man growled. 'No one gives orders in here, there aren't any orders any more, not till Jemmy comes to fetch us away, so you can fake away off, culley, you can—' The man stopped suddenly, then gave a curious scream. 'No!' he shouted. 'No!'

Rider Sandman had ever suffered from a temper. He knew it and he fought against it. In his everyday life he adopted a tone of gentle deliberation, he used courtesy far beyond necessity, he elevated reason and he reinforced it with prayer, and he did all that because he feared his own temper, but not all the prayer and reason and courtesy had eliminated the foul moods. His soldiers had known there was a devil in Captain Sandman. It was a real devil and they knew he was not a man to cross because he had that temper as sudden and as fierce as a summer storm of lightning and thunder. And he was a tall and strong man, strong enough to lift the unshaven prisoner and slam him against the wall so hard that the man's head bounced off the stones. Then the man screamed because Sandman had driven a hard fist into his lower belly. 'I said let him go,' Sandman snapped. 'Did you not hear what I said? Are you deaf or are you just a bloody God-damned idiot?' He slapped the man once, twice, and his eyes were blazing and his voice was seething with a promise of even more terrible violence. 'Damn it! What kind of fool do you take me for?' He jerked the man. 'Answer me!'

'Sir?' the unshaven man managed to say.

'Answer me. God damn it!' Sandman's right hand was about the prisoner's throat and he was throttling the man, who was incapable of saying anything now. There was utter silence in the Association Room. The man, gazing into Sandman's pale eyes, was choking.

The turnkey, as appalled by the force of Sandman's anger as any of the prisoners, nervously crossed the room. 'Sir? You're throttling him, sir.'

'I'm damn well killing him,' Sandman snarled.

'Sir, please, sir.'

Sandman suddenly came to his senses, then let the prisoner go. 'If you cannot be courteous,' he told the half-choked man, 'then you should be silent.'

'He won't give you any more lip, sir,' the turnkey said anxiously, 'I warrant he won't, sir.'

'Come, Corday,' Sandman ordered, and stalked out of the room.

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