The Flesh Market Read online




  Contents

  Copyrights

  Dedication

  The Old Man & The Wretch

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  The Old Man & The Wretch (cont.)

  Afterword

  Newsletter

  The Author

  Also by Richard Wright... Craven Place

  Also by Richard Wright... Thy Fearful Symmetry

  Also by Richard Wright... Cuckoo

  Copyright © Richard Wright 2015

  Cover design by snowangels.org

  Editing by Danny Evarts

  All Rights Reserved

  For Andrew Bartholomeou, a man of infinite enthusiasm and generosity whose support means more than he knows. Cheers Barty.

  The Old Man & The Wretch

  Tuesday, December 9th, 1862

  The old man slammed the book down on the table with what little power his enfeebled limbs would grant him. His heart laboured in his chest, and he closed his eyes to calm himself.

  With an effort of will that would have surprised few who knew him, he attacked the tightness in his chest by focusing on the cause of that very thing. Taking a scalpel's eye view, he imagined himself at the heart's edge. The pericardium was before him, the double-walled sac protecting the organ within, and he pictured it healthy, rippling with tensile flexibility, keeping him safe. Delving deeper, he dived into the flow of his own deoxygenated blood, returning depleted from its long trek around the body, flooding into the left atria. With a spasm he was pumped through the tricuspid valve, down into the larger left ventricle, and from there was shoved hard through the pulmonary valve and into the lungs.

  In the lungs the great exchange took place, the weary sludge of carbon dioxide trading places with the cool stream of incoming oxygen. Buoyed up with new energy, he swam the bloodstream through pulmonary veins back up to the left atrium, letting himself be hauled through the mitral valve into the massive left ventricle, largest and most powerful of the heart's chambers. When those walls spasmed he laughed as he was slammed out of the aortic valve and into the rubbery aorta, the hose through which oxygen would be delivered to gasping cells throughout his body.

  The old man opened his eyes, a hand on his chest, trying to assess whether he had done enough. The mental journey was one of many similar scenes he had conjured for himself during his life. The human body was known to him down to the tiniest detail, though it was dead flesh that he had spent his youth carving his way through. Through the power of his own imagination, he willed that dead flesh to life, put himself inside it, and understood it better. Now the images were a comforting familiarity, and if the weak but regular pulsing beneath his fingertips spoke true, they were as soothing as they had ever been.

  At times he had conceived of a device, some manner of medical instrument fitted with lenses, which could be inserted into a living body. How wondrous it would be to peer through and compare the pulsing reality with the fantasies he had built around dead flesh. Invention was never his forte though. His intellect was bound to the pursuit of knowledge rather than the development of tools to make the chase a little easier. It made him sad now, at the end of his days, that no more practical mind than his had conceived a similar notion, that he might benefit from the use of such a thing.

  Raising himself from the chair by the fire, taking care to keep his movements slow and his breathing steady, he shuffled towards the entrance hall of his Hackney home. The lights on the wall burned steady. A miracle in itself, gas lighting inside houses. Would he trade that for the dissectascope he had fantasised about? While his younger self would have made the switch on the instant, decrying convenience in favour of a revolution in understanding, he was older and wiser. Seventy-one, weak in both the muscles and spirit of the heart, there were many indulgences he would no longer be without.

  Drawing himself with care to his full height, he gazed at the tired old man in the oval mirror next to the front door. There had been greatness there once, worn with pride in his every sneer and gesture. Now little remained but memories, and even they were distorted half truths.

  Half-truths were better than the inflammatory lies Alexander Leighton had invented for his pitiful book. He watched his reflection's face crease with rage at the author's name, and forced himself to take measured breaths. It had been a mistake to take it off the shelf again. The fool had titled his effort Court of Cacus, and had the temerity to declare it a true and accurate account of the old man's darkest time. In classical mythology Cacus had been a monster who dined on human victims and nailed their heads by the doors of his cave. The allusion that it was he, the old man, who had played Cacus in real life was trite and absurd, but it cut him. Whenever those days were recalled, he took another wound. It was a torture he inflicted on himself often. Leighton's damned penny dreadful obsessed him, calling him to read and re-read it, making him snarl at fictions and half-truths. The book went so much further than other purported accounts, portraying him as a self-aggrandising necromancer, despicably cruel to those who deserved better. It made only the most flippant mention of the reason for his actions, the things he had sought to achieve.

  For all the good it had served the world. After his ruin, his work suffered the same fate. That he was right, that he had been pushing to achieve what nobody else at that time had envisioned, mattered little to the mobs, be they comprised of the incensed chattle of the streets or the ivory-towered cretins of academia.

  Although Cacus was not the first printed volume to commit slanders against him (the first, Murderers of the Close, had been published with indecent haste after the discovery of what he had been party to, and had been even more speculative for that), it carried a weight of imagined authenticity. Leighton had done his homework, actually claiming to have derived much of his new information from a person or persons who had been near the very heart of things. Although the source was never named it was apparent to him which puling cretin had spoken out. Long ago discredited, enough time had perhaps passed for the world to forget the proven lies already bandied about by that walking pustule. The old man stared at himself in the glass, wondering how he could ever have been foolish enough to place his trust there. Dark times made for poor judgements.

  Poor judgement. There was the rub, the constant thorn pricking at his conscience, diverting him from focussing on worthier matters. The world had declared him a thing of evil, no more than a butcher. They had forgotten the great terror that had fallen on Edinburgh then, and the solutions he had been endeavouring to find. Everything he had done had benefitted science and knowledge, or so he had told himself for three decades.

  Yet, what if he had been in error? What if there were boundaries that should not be crossed, even in the search for salvation?

  "Pah," he said to himself, a spray of spittle marring the mirror. Aware that he was cir
cling the same tired arguments with little hope of breaking the cycle, he went back to his study, intent on dousing the lights and retiring for the evening. The hospital appointment had taken a toll on him that afternoon, and though he had been well enough to return home, he was not yet recovered. That drew a smile, bitter though it tasted. The old man had watched people fade away before, and knew that recovery was a fool's dream. While his spiral towards death may have slowed, it could not be reversed.

  Perhaps there was still time to set the record straight. He had long kept his silence regarding the truth of that hellish year, but of late had considered putting his own pen to paper. He had no doubt that people would pay for the privilege of reading his account. Time had not diminished the gruesome fascination the public demonstrated regarding matters of death and rebirth. He had even mentioned to his few friends that he was toying with the notion. William, in particular, had been encouraging. While the younger man's own reputation had not been stained so deeply with bile and venom, his name was also attached to the tale and ever would be. An account from their side, a truth to float upon a sea of lies and misinformation, appealed to both of them. No excuses. No apologies. Just blunt facts.

  Futility had prevented him from taking action. Whatever he might say, he had long ago learned that the masses would latch on to more titillating accounts, regardless of their accuracy. Already a victim of much newspaper slander, he could expect no support from those journals of mediocrity, either. It took no great feat of reasoning to conclude that anything he might disclose, short of confessing to what the world wished to believe of him, would be mocked and scorned as a weak attempt at self-justification. While he had been tried by the press rather than the courts, he would not be granted an impartial right to reply in the same medium.

  As he muttered to himself, not realising that he was speaking aloud, the jangle of a bell sounded through the house. Somebody outside had yanked the door chime, and done so hard. The old man looked at the clock on the mantle of the room behind him. It was half past ten at night.

  He received few enough callers at the best of times, his reputation having travelled far, but those that remained would not call at so uncivilised an hour.

  The bell rang again. The old man was not taken to fear, feeling only irritation at the discourtesy. Straightening as best he could, he slid back the bolt and threw open the door with a snarl.

  It died on his lips. The bent and broken man on his step was twenty years his junior, but any casual witness would swear it was the other way round. Lamplight from the hallway played over his visitor's blind eyes, made stark the contrast between his filthy flesh and the old, pale alkali burns that marked his neck and cheeks. Smaller than the old man, his rag-clothed visitor looked to be the most loathsome beggar the streets could throw up, and had no place in the gentle village of Hackney.

  The beggar's head twitched, and despite his blindness, he gave a savage snarl of recognition.

  "I see," said the old man, and his heart began to race anew. "I wondered when you might arrive." Stepping back, he pulled the door further open. "You had better come in then."

  With a cruel twist of the lips, the wretch stumbled into the house, one hand smudging dirt on the wall as he leaned on it to guide himself.

  The old man closed the door behind them.

  Chapter 1

  The Cadaver Riots

  Sunday, September 17th, 1826

  "Dead men! Dead men rising here! Dead men on the rise! Citizens to the castle! Safety at the castle! Dead men rising here!"

  The cry went up across Edinburgh at twenty minutes past ten at night, soldiers and night watchmen bearing the message wherever they could, fighting the crowds already on the streets in a vain attempt to funnel them to the high ground where they might be defended. The castle was the uppermost point in the city, perched on ancient volcanic rock, brightly lit with lanterns and torches and already filling to capacity with the terrified poor. The riots below had been in progress for three hours before the city leaders took proper credence of the facts, incredible as they were, and began to organise.

  Where the shambling dead came from nobody could tell, but when squads of soldiers braved the graveyards they found the earth undisturbed, the corpses accounted for. All that could be ascertained in those first hours of screaming panic was that the riot had started amid the towering grey tenements of the Old Town during early evening, where whole families shared single rooms in filthy squalor, and death was a common caller. The subsequent investigation into what would be remembered as the Cadaver Riots of 1826 found little to suggest that those first few dead were native to Edinburgh, and much furious debate would ensue regarding their source.

  On the night of September 17th, 1826, there was little time to ponder cause and blame. The castle was a maelstrom of industry, as preparations were made to take in all who could reach it. The Portcullis Gate stood wide open at the front, guards manning it with weapons drawn. Within sat the Argyle Battery, cannons primed and manned, as were the other munitions across the castle. Only Mons Meg, the fifteenth-century siege cannon perched outside St Margaret's chapel on the high battlements, stood quiet, her burst barrel depriving her of the night's excitement. No orders to fire had yet been given, nor did the gunners have any idea of what the eventual target might be, for the cannons overlooked the gaslit Princes Street and the wealthy New Town to the East. So far no word had come that the walking dead infested those clean, symmetrical districts. Like all diseases, they had sallied forth from amidst the cluttered ranks of the poor.

  The road up to the Portcullis Gate was already filling with refugees, who were waved in by the troops. Castle Esplanade, the wide and sloping open ground separating castle and city, was more crowded still. The troops stationed there, charged with ensuring that only those with a pulse were allowed entry, had yet to lay eyes on the living dead. Screams echoed up to them from the city through the crisp night air, breeding panic and paranoia. Faced with oncoming hordes of the shrieking, despairing working class, more than one soldier discharged his weapon in terrified error, snuffing out innocent lives. A commendable, frantic effort by their sergeants and captains was all that prevented a hysterical escalation, and the gunning down of dozens.

  Only those escorted by armed guards were truly safe, including the surgeons and doctors who could be found and conscripted into service. Dragged from their homes an hour before on the most adamant of invitations, they were now ensconced in the castle hospital and working furiously through the new patients pouring in. Many were anatomists and lecturers, some of whom had not applied a bandage for many years. Despite this they gave graciously of their skills, though all the while their thoughts blazed and obsessions bloomed.

  Many lives were saved that night by the decision to send the citizens to the fortress. Since the dead had risen in Berlin two years before, city leaders across Europe had drawn up contingency plans they hoped never to put to use. With the North Sea standing sure between the United Kingdom and the foreign practises of Europe there had been a misplaced certainty that the unholy horrors would not be seen on British soil, but though devised as an afterthought Edinburgh's solution proved effective enough. From its vantage point on the rock, the castle was unassailable on three sides thanks to the sheer cliffs all about, challenging for an able-bodied man to scale, impossible for a wretched, uncoordinated cadaver. The only credible approach was from the East, up the Castle Esplanade and the long Royal Mile. The succession of streets making up the Mile slid down a steep tail of rock between the castle and the ruins of Holyrood Abbey. Narrower wynds of steep stone steps plummeted into the Old Town below. The Mile was often described as the backbone of a herring, with the castle as the skull, the abbey as a tail, and the streets and stepped wynds dropping off it acting as the many ribs.

  Leading down from the Esplanade, the narrow street of Castlehill, topmost leg of the Mile, was clogged with struggling citizens frantic for sanctuary. To that end St John's Church too had flung open its doors, alleviat
ing the pressure briefly as it filled to bursting, before shutting out hundreds more. Within, three young men worked with freezing fingers to sew and bandage what wounds they could. Still students of medicine, they had been called to join the makeshift hospital on the bowels of the castle but, with the escorted carriages reserved for more important men of medicine than they, had been able to force their way only so far as St John's on foot. With dark creatures seeking flesh outside, and the rank stench of the sweating dispossessed, they abandoned rational thought and took solace in endless repetitive action. None of them had seen the corpses attacking the living during the race from their homes, but fear is a disease, and the gabbled half stories they overheard as they were battered through the crowds took seed in their imaginations and blossomed.

  Further down the Mile, past the site of the linen market and into the High Street, all was darkness. The riot had begun before the Watch lit what streetlamps there were through this part of the city, and though attempts had been made to brave the chaos and do so anyway, rumours of the threat they faced forced the authorities to call back able-bodied men to assist with the futile effort to establish order. People streamed up the Mile like rats, joined along the way by hundreds more entering through the closes and up the wynds. They clambered over one another, darkness making the screams seem louder. The least robust were trampled underfoot, bones shattered, throats crushed, and in what little illumination was granted by the swinging lanterns of those few who carried them by hand, it was possible to see that some of the cooling bodies began first to twitch, and then to rise. Were a light held steady, it would have been possible to note that those reanimating husks each bore, somewhere about their persons, distinctive bite and scratch marks.

  Further still down the Mile, on the Canongate, a woman who had spent the last few months on the streets pleasuring men for pennies, backed away from four of the dead, too scared even to scream. Men and women ran from the shuffling horrors, seeing her plight and knowing her death would buy them distance, give them precious minutes more to wheeze up the steep street. Even in the darkness she could tell that three of the corpses were fresh, dead-eyed but still warm, chunks of meat missing from the necks and torsos where they had been fed upon. Blood still oozed from the wounds. She didn't know who any of them were, and was glad.