by Bill Kirton
My model of The Scottish Maid |
I’ve mentioned the ship with the clipper bow
before. She features briefly in The
Figurehead and was designed, built and launched in Aberdeen . Her name was Scottish Maid. In those days, ships were taxed according to the
depth of their hull and boat builder Alexander Hall reduced this depth by
extending the bow above the water line. The result was not only lower taxes but
also a sleeker, faster, more efficient bow.
The LaFarges were around at the same time as the
Scottish Maid – Marie for rather longer than her husband because she was tried
for his murder in 1840. And that was also the period at which melodrama was
thriving in France , the UK and
elsewhere.
So those are the ingredients and when you put them,
The Figurehead, its sequel and me
together, you get the subject of this blog, of which the title is a dictionary
definition. In a word, coincidence, which is rife in melodramas, most of them
relying on unexpected family relationships, birthmarks, people turning up at
exactly the right time and so on. For me, an unrepentant cynic, atheist and believer
in common sense, most events that seem to reveal some hidden plan or underlying
structure are coincidences. But I do prefer the happy ones.
So what?
Well, this morning, I was just finishing chapter six
of the sequel when I decided to change the way the victim had been killed. I’ve
been struggling a little with it because the crime part of it all is less
interesting than the other themes – Helen's first steps in her father's
business, a new, unusual figurehead commission for John, and the visit of a
theatre troupe to Aberdeen to perform nautical melodramas. I was trying to
achieve too many things through the way the victim died so it was muddled and
the clues and red herrings weren’t easy to find. So I decided to poison her
instead. Arsenic was a favourite poison for the Victorians. They could buy it
at the apothecary's and no records were kept of purchases or sales. It was also
an ingredient in various medications, including a cream used by actresses (and
ladies in society) to lighten their complexions and, fortuitously, my victim is
an actress.
Back, for the moment, to The Figurehead. When I was writing it, two striking coincidences
occurred, one of which was to discover that I shared a birthday with Scottish Maid. She was launched on
August 10th 1839, exactly one hundred years before I arrived. Pure
coincidence, but it gave me a childish pleasure.
And the pleasure was repeated today. You see, I
needed to find out how they performed autopsies in 1842 and how they discovered
that the death might be due to arsenic poisoning. My luck was in. A Scottish
chemist, James Marsh, had devised a test for it in 1836 and 'The Marsh Test'
was used in court cases thereafter as an almost infallible technique. Its most
famous case was that of Marie LaFarge . In 1840, the year in which the action
of the first novel takes place, she was accused of murdering her husband,
Charles. I read all about it on several sites and it gave me all the
information I needed to check the authenticity of the case I was building.
And on what date did Charles and Marie marry? Yes,
of course. The same day that saw the launch of the Scottish Maid, August 10th
1839, exactly one hundred years before a screaming, wrinkled me emerged in a
Plymouth Nursing Home.
Coincidence or all part of God’s plan? You decide.