The Last Days of Newgate - Andrew Pepper [96]
Later, in the front room of a village tavern, the priest took a sip of ale and said, ‘Back in the church, you told me you were a friend of Davy’s?’
‘In a manner of speaking.’ Pyke had the feeling the man wanted to tell him something important.
‘I’m afraid I wasn’t entirely honest with the magistrate and the constables. I wasn’t thinking straight at the time. I’m not certain I’m thinking straight even now.’
‘Finding a dead body can be a terrible shock,’ Pyke said.
‘Yes, it was.’ For a moment, the priest shuddered and looked down into his half-empty glass.
‘Davy told you something, didn’t he?’
Still unable to meet Pyke’s stare, the young priest simply nodded his head.
‘He told you what he had done. Confessed his sins?’
When the priest looked up, his eyes were clear. ‘Yes.’
‘But you can’t tell me what he told you.’ Pyke waited for a moment, before he added, ‘Or can you?’
‘I’m not a Catholic minister, if that’s what you mean. I’m an Anglican. We’re not bound by the confessional oath.’ That drew a frown. ‘But that’s not to say I don’t have a moral obligation to safeguard what has been told to me in the strictest confidence.’
‘Of course. I understand.’ Pyke tried to keep his tone as neutral as possible. ‘But what if I already knew what Davy had done? What he confessed to you?’
‘How would you know?’
‘When I told you I was a friend of Davy’s I was lying. I’m a Bow Street Runner. Does that mean anything to you?’
The young priest stared down at his trembling hands. ‘That’s like a London policeman, isn’t it?’
Pyke nodded. ‘I was the one who found the bodies.’
‘Oh God.’ The priest’s face whitened. For a moment, it looked as if he might pass out.
‘I understand that, first and foremost, you serve God,’ Pyke said, as gently as he could, ‘but you also have an obligation to see justice served in this world.’
‘I suppose.’
‘How about I tell you what I already know or think I know and, if I make a mistake, then you can perhaps point me in the right direction?’ Pyke smiled easily. ‘Does that sound acceptable to you or not?’
The priest nodded and took a long draught of ale.
‘I want to talk about the man who Davy went to work for, after he’d been dismissed from the police.’ As he pointed his pistol at Andrew Magennis’s eye, Pyke cocked the trigger, as though about to fire. He had found the old man sitting alone at the table, staring into space.
‘What do you want to know?’ This time the old man’s expression seemed placid.
‘His name, for a start.’
‘I can’t remember. I’m not sure I even found that out.’
Pyke brought the pistol closer to the old man’s eye. ‘The priest either didn’t know or wouldn’t give me his name.’
‘What priest?’
‘The one Davy confessed to,’ Pyke said. ‘He told me Davy’s former employer owns a few acres of land on the Armagh road just outside Market Hill.’
‘That sounds about right.’
‘I went looking for the house