Forty-Two
Gordon Mahoney held the brandy glass in his hand and swirled the amber fluid around gently before sipping at it.
The dining-room was almost empty; just one other couple occupied a table on the far side of the room now. Mahoney felt exhausted, as if he hadn’t stopped talking since he sat down earlier that evening. Donna’s questions had been unceasing, her curiosity boundless. He regarded her over the rim of the brandy glass, captivated by her looks. She certainly was a beautiful woman. As she drank her coffee Mahoney looked at her, studying the smooth contours of her legs, noticing the way the dress clung to her slim hips and waist. He felt an embarrassed stirring in his groin and shifted position in his seat.
‘Did Dashwood ever come to Dublin?’ Donna asked.
Mahoney sucked in a deep breath, preparing himself for the next round of questions.
‘I would think so. Like I said to you earlier, he visited the cells all round the country. Parsons spent some time in England, too. They were powerful men. Dashwood was Postmaster-General of England at one time. Most of the members were wealthy young men. They were bored, I suppose. Nowadays the rich snort coke; in those days they got drunk and had orgies.’ He smiled.
‘What about the witchcraft side of it?’ Donna wanted to know.
‘They were perverts. It just gave them an excuse to do what they wanted in the name of the Devil. A lot of what went on was based on gossip, most of it spread by members themselves.’ He drained what was left in his glass.
‘What happened to Dashwood and Parsons?’ Donna wanted to know.
‘No one knows for sure. Parsons just disappeared, not long after the fire at Mountpelier lodge. Dashwood died, supposedly, of syphilis. The clubs broke up when too much political pressure was put on them, when it came out that some of their leading members were important social figures. The scandal ruined them.’
Donna nodded slowly, drawing her finger around the lip of the cup.
Mahoney watched her intently.
‘Could there be a Hell Fire Club today?’ she asked finally. ‘Now, in the twentieth century?’
Mahoney shrugged.
‘Anything’s possible, but if there was I think The News of the World would have found them by now.’ He chuckled.
‘I mean it,’ Donna snapped.
The Irishman was surprised at the vehemence in her voice.
‘A group of men meeting together to get drunk and cavort with women? I should think that happens quite a lot, but I doubt they’d call themselves The Hell Fire Club. You can see that on any guy’s stag night.’ He shrugged. ‘Dashwood and Parsons had political objectives; they wanted to do genuine damage to society. The clubs helped them recruit supporters.’
‘So you’re saying that couldn’t happen now?’ she said challengingly.
‘No, I’m not saying that. All I’m saying is, I doubt if there are men practising the Black Arts and meeting on a regular basis for drunken orgies the way Parsons’ and Dashwood’s men did. I said it was unlikely; I didn’t say it was impossible. Supposedly there was a Hell Fire Club in London in 1934, but what they were getting up to no one knows.’
Donna reached for her handbag and took the photo out. She pushed it across the table towards Mahoney.
‘That’s my husband,’ she said, jabbing a finger at the image of Chris. ‘I don’t know who the other five are.’
Mahoney inspected the faces carefully, pausing at the two blurred images.
‘Look,’ said Donna, pointing at the first of the fuzzy figures. ‘The ring on the left index finger. It’s the same as the one worn by Parsons in that painting you showed me. The other man is wearing one, too.’
Mahoney frowned.
‘They certainly look alike,’ he mused.
‘They’re the same,’ she snapped angrily.
‘What are you trying to say, Donna?’ he asked.
‘Identical rings, one worn by a man in a painting done two hundred years ago, another worn by a man photographed less than six months ago. It’s a hell of a coincidence, isn’t it? I think that someone found the rings that belonged to Parsons and Dashwood. Those men in that photo. I think my husband knew that. I think he knew who they were. I’m sure that’s what he was working on. All the places you mentioned that they used to meet, my husband had been there recently. I think he’d found a new Hell Fire Club.’
Mahoney didn’t speak, mainly because he wasn’t sure what to say. He could see the sincerity in her expression and hear the belief in her voice.
‘I’m going to drive out to Mountpelier Lodge tomorrow,’ she told him. ‘Will you come with me?’
‘What are you hoping to find there?’
‘I don’t know. Some answers?’
Mahoney exhaled.
‘I told you, it’s just a ruin,’ he said wearily.
‘Will you help me? Yes or no?’
He nodded.
‘Pick me up at eleven,’ he said. ‘At the Gallery.’
‘Eleven.’ She nodded. ‘Gordon, there’s something else.’ She licked her lips before she spoke. ‘Were women allowed to join The Hell Fire Club as members?’
Could Suzanne Regan have introduced Chris to the others?
‘No. It was strictly a male preserve,’ he said, smiling. ‘A couple of the high-ranking members like Parsons or Dashwood had what they liked to call “Carriers” but that was it. The carriers were women chosen to be impregnated, made pregnant by members. The children they bore would be used in ceremonies.’
‘Jesus,’ murmured Donna, taking a sip from her cup and discovering that the coffee was cold. She winced and pushed it away from her. She glanced up at the clock on the wall opposite.
It was 11.46 p.m.
‘Gordon, I don’t know how to thank you for your help,’ she said.
‘I could think of a couple of ways,’ he said, smiling.
Donna looked at him coldly.
He raised his hands as if in surrender, then got to his feet.
‘Shall I get them to call you a cab?’ she asked.
‘I’ll be okay. The walk will clear my head.’
She walked to the main doors with him and said a quick ‘Goodnight’, reminding him that she’d pick him up at eleven the following morning.
Mahoney thanked her for the meal and left, stepping out onto the pavement. The fresh air hit him and he sucked in lungfuls and drank them down. After a few moments he began walking, pausing once to look up at the grand fagade of the Shelbourne. He wondered which room she was in. Mahoney smiled to himself and set off. He should be home in less than thirty minutes.
Not once did he notice that he was being followed.