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  OTHER MARC EDWARDS MYSTERIES BY DON GUTTERIDGE

  Turncoat

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  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2003 by Don Gutteridge

  Originally published by McClelland & Stewart Ltd.

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  This Touchstone export edition January 2011

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  ISBN 978-1-4391-6370-2

  ISBN 978-1-4391-7267-4 (ebook)

  For Bob and George Clark

  and their many enthusiasms

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  Solemn Vows is wholly a work of fiction, but I have endeavoured to convey in it the spirit of the period and the political tensions that led to the Rebellion of 1837. The statements, actions, and character traits attributed to actual historical personages referred to herein—Sir Francis Bond Head, William Lyon Mackenzie, Allan MacNab—are fictitious, and readers will have to make up their own minds as to whether such characterizations are consistent with the historical record. (For the record, Head did dissolve the Legislative Assembly abruptly in 1836, he did campaign vigorously in the ensuing election, and he generally ignored advice from the colonial secretary.) All other main characters are the invention of the author, and any resemblance to persons living or dead is coincidental.

  While Danby’s Crossing is fictitious—as are the taverns and domiciles of the characters—the streets, landscape, and public buildings of Toronto in 1836 have been depicted as faithfully as my research would allow. Of particular value in this regard were: Gerald M. Craig, Upper Canada: The Formative Years, 1784-1841; Sir Francis Bond Head, A Narrative; J.M.S. Careless, Toronto to 1918; G.P. de T. Glaze-brook, The Story of Toronto; William Denby, Lost Toronto; and Lucy Booth Martyn, The Face of Early Toronto. Any errors of fact in the novel, deliberate or otherwise, are my own.

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  I would like to thank the members of my “focus group” for their encouragement and sustained support: Gene Burdenuk, Bob Clark, George Clark, John Gutteridge, Stan Atherton, Gerry Parker, Ian Underhill, George Martell, and Jean McKay.

  Thanks also are due to my agent, Beverley Slopen, for her tireless effort and wise counsel, and to Jan Walter, my editor for this edition, for her sensitive reading of the manuscript.

  PROLOGUE

  In June of 1836, the British colony of Upper Canada was once again in turmoil.

  The farmers of the province, still nursing their many unresolved grievances against the ruling Tory elite, had pinned their hopes for reform on the newly appointed lieutenant-governor, Sir Francis Bond Head. There were two important features that recommended him in their eyes: he was a Whig appointment after a long line of Tory nominees, and unlike his predecessor, Sir John Colborne, he was not a military man. In fact, he was an assistant commissioner of the Poor Laws and a travel writer with administrative experience in South America.

  But their hopes were soon dashed. Head decided almost immediately that the Reform Party was the real problem, infiltrated as it was by republican sympathizers like William Lyon Mackenzie who were openly advocating annexation to the United States. Head soon offered a drastic solution to the political stalemate wherein a Reform-controlled (and elected) Assembly routinely had its reformist bills vetoed in the Tory-controlled (and appointed) Legislative Assembly. When Reform members of the Executive Council had the effrontery to resign en masse at this thwarting of responsible government, Head dissolved the Assembly. He then called new spring elections, with a view to having Tories elected in the majority in that chamber.

  Moreover, he infuriated the Reformers by campaigning on behalf of the Tories, whom he renamed the Constitutionist Party. The implications were clear and were hammered home on the hustings in rally after rally: a vote for the Constitutionists was a vote for the Crown, while a vote for the Reform Party was tantamount to treason. The meddling of the lieutenant-governor in the colony’s politics was forbidden by law, but Head justified his actions by claiming that the future of British North America was in peril, especially with rumours of similar, serious unrest in the sister province of Lower Canada.

  Whatever the outcome of the election, the process itself was bound to heighten tensions and invite even greater dangers.

  ONE

  June 1836

  Lieutenant Marc Edwards wiped the sweat off his brow with the sleeve of his tunic, but not before a rivulet had slid into his left eye and two greasy drops had plopped onto the shako cap cupped between his knees. The afternoon sun of a cloudless June day was pouring a relentless heat down upon the hustings and its well-fed, overdressed occupants.

  Surely, Marc thought, the grandees of Danby’s Crossing (or pompous old Danby himself) could have had the foresight to erect the rickety political scaffolding under the shade of the maple trees drooping at the northwest corner of the square, or at least close enough to Danby’s Inn for its two-storey veranda to provide some merciful relief. Such was not the case, however—here or anywhere else in the backwater province of Upper Canada, where, it seemed to Marc, elections were considered life- and- death affairs, and high seriousness and bodily suffering prime virtues. And such discomforts invariably included a shaky platform groaning with dignitaries, each of whom managed to “say a few words” in as many sentences as were consonant with their social standing or the patience of the throngs.

  At the moment, Garfield Danby, the self- appointed chairman of the day’s proceedings, was droning away at what he took to be a stirring introduction of the guest speaker, Sir Francis Bond Head, lieutenant-governor of the province, who was seated next to Marc directly behind the podium. As Marc gazed out at the dusty square and the several hundred people gathered there on a sweltering Tuesday afternoon in the middle of the haying season, he marvelled at their perseverance, their dogged insistence on hearing every word offered them, as if words themselves might somehow right their many grievances against the King’s representatives, grievances that had bedevilled the colony for half a generation.

  Not two days ago, many of these same folk—farmers, shopkeepers, dray men, and their wives or sweethearts—had stood in this same spot to listen to platitudes from politicians of both parties, right-wing Constitutionists (as the Tories were now styling themselves) and left-wing Reformers. And today they had come back to hear the most powerful man in the province, King William’s surrogate in this far corner of his realm. They came to listen and, from what Marc had learned about them in the twelve months since his arrival in Toronto, to judge. Hence their willingness to stand quietly during Danby’s ill-grammared maundering. Sir Francis would speak, eventually—if the heat didn’t liquefy them all before sundown.

  Marc could hear the governor shuffling the several pages of notes he had prepared with the help of his military secretary, old Major Titus Burns, and of Marc, who was now his principal aide- de- camp. This speech, like all the others over the past week, would simply repeat his unvar
ying themes: public order before any redress of acknowledged complaints; a stable government to assure justice and to effect lasting reforms; a purging of extremists of both left and right (Sir Francis being, after all, a Whig appointment in a Tory domain); reiteration of His Majesty’s opposition to republicanism and the “American party” led by William Lyon Mackenzie; and a direct appeal to the common sense of the yeomen who peopled the colony and whose roots lay deep in the soil of the motherland. With Major Burns’s rheumatism acting up more frequently, Sir Francis had been calling more and more upon Marc, whose days as a law student had left him proficient in English, to help him in speech writing and, on occasion, to draft official letters to the colonial secretary in London, Lord Glenelg.

  While Marc had chosen the action of a military life over the tedium of law, he was happy to sit at a desk and write because he was, by and large, in agreement with the governor’s sentiments and strategy. Even though Marc knew that the grievances raised by the ordinary citizens were valid, mainly as a result of the winter weeks he had spent at Crawford’s Corners and Cobourg where he had carried out his first investigative assignment, he had little sympathy for the Reformers. He believed, as did Sir Francis, that because these grievances were of long standing and had been noisily protested by the “republican” immigrants from the United States, the first priority was to calm the waters, reassert the King’s authority with a firm and fair hand, and then one by one deal with the people’s complaints in an atmosphere free of partisan rant and rhetoric. This message, cunningly couched in the rhetoric of regal prerogative, seemed to be having a positive effect on the electorate. (That the lieutenant- governor was by tradition supposed to be neutral in election campaigns was being conveniently overlooked.)

  On the bench directly behind the governor, Langdon Moncreiff—the newly appointed member of the Executive Council—slumbered noisily. Above Danby’s drone and the rush of a sudden breeze through the far maple trees, the councillor’s snores rose as strident and nozzling as any hog’s. Sir Francis shuffled his papers again; Danby appeared to be running out of inspiration. The crowd below fidgeted in anticipation.

  Remembering that he was on the hustings to ensure the governor’s safety, Marc put his shako back on, leaned forward, and scanned the village square. He knew that immediately behind the platform, where the path south began, two junior officers stood watch, their horses tethered nearby. Marc swept his eyes over Danby’s Inn, where the entire entourage, like a royal progress, had arrived at midmorning with flags flying and carriage wheels clattering. Ensign Roderick Hilliard, fresh- faced and keen to please, stood stiffly at the entrance and gripped his Brown Bess tightly. The platform dignitaries—including three merchants, a brace of lawyers, and a rotund banker—were less than twenty yards from the balustrade of the inn’s upper veranda. Hilliard gave Marc the briefest of nods. Beyond the inn, the wide corduroy road that led west to Yonge Street was fringed on the north with several tall maple trees, now sporting a dozen youngsters who had climbed among the branches to “get a gander” at the vice-regal personage or simply to make a happy nuisance of themselves. Opposite the hustings, the general store and a sprawling livery stable merited only a cursory glance. On the east side, the smithy was now fireless and quiet, and in front of the harness shop next to it, the proprietor and his family stood in the sun, smiling as Danby wound up his introduction. Above the harness shop was an apartment with glass windows and, higher still, a gabled garret. Marc spotted nothing unusual.

  Half- throttled by his own snores, Councillor Moncreiff let out a gasp and a purging cough before the snorts started up again. Marc suspected that the other self- invited platform guests were likely dozing as well. It was not yet three o’clock, but everyone here had already put in a full day. For those travelling in the governor’s retinue—Ignatius Maxwell, the receiver general and veteran Executive councillor, his ample wife, and his debutante daughter, along with Langdon Moncreiff and the governor’s physician, Angus Withers, and their escort, Lieutenants Edwards and Willoughby, and a company of eight mounted and fully armed junior officers—the day had begun at nine o’clock outside the garrison at Fort York. After a lurching ride up dusty Yonge Street, past Blue Hill, Deer Park, and Montgomery’s Tavern at Eglinton, they had travelled the quarter-mile east to Danby’s Crossing.

  Upon arrival, Sir Francis and the Toronto worthies had been greeted by the local gentry and their ladies (from as far away as Newmarket), several of whom had got into the Madeira sometime earlier. Danby had laid on a stultifying midday meal, with wine, several desserts, and cigars. If Sir Francis had been shocked by the presence of the ladies throughout the meal, by the ingratiating speeches of welcome, or by the port- and- cigar aftermath, he was too well mannered to show it. Marc and his second-in-command, Colin Willoughby, had led the troop into a back room, where more modest fare awaited them.

  Willoughby had given Marc a look that said quite plainly, “Did we really leave England for this?” which made Marc grin. He liked Willoughby. The young man had arrived with the governor in January, suffering terribly from a luckless love affair. Sir Francis had taken Colin under his wing and had asked Marc to assist him. Marc found it easy to sympathize with the pain of unrequited love, as his own attempts to win over Beth Smallman, a widow he’d met in Cobourg, had had little success. None of his letters had been answered. Marc now glanced down at Willoughby, whose scrutiny of the crowd in the square was as keen as Marc’s had been upon the peripheral buildings. When Marc caught his eye, Willoughby nodded reassuringly and turned his eyes back to the crowd.

  “Ladies and gentlemen,” boomed Danby at last, “I present to you this afternoon, Lieutenant- Governor Sir Francis Bond Head!”

  A gust of wind swept across the platform, and one of the sheets of notes fluttered out of the governor’s hand just as he was about to stand. He reached down to retrieve it before it reached the floor, as did Marc. There was an embarrassing collision of heads, followed by a loud cracking sound somewhere beyond them, a muted thud close behind them, then silence. Marc turned to see Councillor Moncreiff sit bolt upright and flick open both eyes—eyes that saw nothing. The old gentleman was already dead, his blood and lungs beginning to ooze through the gap in his waistcoat.

  Marc froze. Then everyone seemed to move at once. Angus Withers threw his bulk over a crouching Sir Francis, the other dignitaries flailed for cover, Willoughby vaulted onto the platform, and Langdon Moncreiff’s body slumped to the floor. The confusion of noises struck Marc a second later: women screaming, men shouting, the governor hissing to his protector to get the hell off him.

  “He’s dead,” Marc said to Dr. Withers and Sir Francis as they untangled.

  Beside him, Willoughby went pale and the whites of his eyes ballooned. Marc steadied him, then leapt up onto the bench and peered across the crowded square. The throng had not yet panicked; they were either too shocked or too curious to move. The members of Marc’s contingent appeared to have recalled the training he had given them before the governor’s patriotic rallies had begun a week ago. Several of them were already mounted and scanning the crowd and buildings for the source of the gunshot or some glimpse of a fleeing assassin.

  They had not long to wait. A man’s cry, sharp enough to carry over the excited mutterings of the crowd, soared out of a treed area on the northwest corner of the square. This was followed by the sounds of branches snapping and a body hitting the ground. Marc looked over in time to see a rough-clad farmer stagger to his feet, gaze around him with brilliant, stunned eyes, and then scurry towards the general store. In his right hand he carried a large hunting gun.

  “There he is!” Marc yelled to two of the ensigns who had just ridden up to the hustings. “Apprehend him!”

  The crowd now turned to face the latest commotion, and they, too, began screaming for someone, anyone, to block the assassin’s flight.

  “Stop that man!”

  “He’s getting away!”

  But no one stopped him as the assassin d
ashed past the general store and down the side of the livery stables towards the trail that led into the back townships of York County. He had tied his horse just behind the stables and now he swung into the saddle and, gun in hand, raced away into the bush.

  “Detail! Form up and pursue!” Marc called out to his men. “Willoughby, bring up our horses and we’ll follow.”

  Willoughby was trembling. Marc gave him a furious shake, anxious that the governor not see what looked like cowardice in the face of danger. Willoughby was no coward: Marc would have staked his life on it. “We’ve got to go, Colin,” he whispered fiercely. “Now!”

  Fortunately, Sir Francis, Dr. Withers, Ignatius Maxwell, and others on the platform were still crouched around Moncreiff’s body, and Marc was able to pull Willoughby away from the hustings. At last the frightened man began to take gasping breaths.

  “I’m all right now,” he said to Marc as Ensign Hilliard trotted up beside them with the horses in tow.

  “Then let’s be off,” Marc said as he hit the saddle. “We can’t let him get away!”

  WHEN SIR FRANCIS HAD GIVEN MARC the task of forming a guard for his political forays into the hinterland, he had spared no expense. Marc had chosen eight young and eager subalterns from his regiment at Fort York (Colin Willoughby was put forward by Sir Francis) and armed them with Brown Bess muskets in addition to the traditional sabre and pistol. The horses now galloping along the trail of the assassin, no more than a hundred yards ahead of Marc, were the best that York County could provide. The pounding of their hooves around the next bend could be heard clearly.