Charles Jessold, Considered as a Murderer

Charles Jessold, Considered as a Murderer

by Wesley Stace
Charles Jessold, Considered as a Murderer

Charles Jessold, Considered as a Murderer

by Wesley Stace

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Overview

One of The Wall Street Journal's Best fiction books of 2011

England, 1923. A gentleman critic named Leslie Shepherd tells the macabre story of a gifted young composer, Charles Jessold. On the eve of his revolutionary new opera's premiere, Jessold murders his wife and her lover, and then commits suicide in a scenario that strangely echoes the plot of his opera---which Shepherd has helped to write. The opera will never be performed.

Shepherd first shares his police testimony, then recalls his relationship with Jessold in his role as critic, biographer, and friend. And with each retelling of the story, significant new details cast light on the identity of the real victim in Jessold's tragedy.

This ambitiously intricate novel is set against a turbulent moment in music history, when atonal sounds first reverberated through the concert halls of Europe, just as the continent readied itself for war. What if Jessold's opera was not only a betrayal of Shepherd, but of England as well?

Wesley Stace has crafted a dazzling story of counter-melodies and counter-narratives that will keep you guessing to the end.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781429929264
Publisher: Picador
Publication date: 02/01/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 389
Sales rank: 229,593
File size: 573 KB

About the Author

Wesley Stace is the author of the international bestseller Misfortune and by George. He has released fifteen albums under the name John Wesley Harding, and he lives in Philadelphia.

Read an Excerpt

Charles Jessold, Considered as a Murderer


By Wesley Stace

Picador

Copyright © 2010 Wesley Stace
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4299-2926-4


CHAPTER 1

I met Charles Jessold, the murderer, on 21 May 1910, the day after King Edward's funeral. We were guests at a Hatton Manor Saturday-to-Monday, and it was on that very first evening that I had occasion to tell of Carlo Gesualdo, the composer whose story made such a lasting impression.

I had just entered the room, a quick inventory of which revealed: three composers (one of note, two of naught), a conductor, and a miscellany of vicars, musical scholars and enthusiasts; not to mention Cedric Mount (our most esteemed member) and of course Antic Jackson who, despite arriving on the same late train from town, had managed to beat me downstairs. I was, as ever, the token musical critic.

The only stranger was a young man standing over the piano. In impeccably creased grey flannels and gaudily striped tie, he was our junior by some years. His face, a pick-and-mix assortment, conformed to no classical ideal. His forehead was too broad and his lips too mean for his fleshy cheeks, although the ever-glimmering smile at their left corner gave an impression of geniality. His thick black hair was slicked lavishly with pomade.

His eyes, later described as devilish, were nothing of the kind; rather they were beady, though being a lucid emerald green, not unattractively so. In conversation, they spoke directly to you, a somewhat unnerving compliment that turned a stranger into a confidant whether he cared to be or not. When it was his turn to listen, those eyes never strayed from yours. To avoid his gaze, one sought refuge in the perfectly straight line from the top of his nose to the cusp of the chin that he was later to disguise with a goatee (interpreted as Mephistophelean, of course). Above his eyes, that pale billboard of forehead advertised his every flicker of emotion.

This newcomer leaned in rapt attention, back arched to a stylised forty-five degrees, his elbow on the lid of the piano, hand to his chin, thumb tucked under: a remarkably self-conscious pose. I found myself wondering whether he was perhaps used to being observed. He certainly 'lit up' a room. Any producer worth his salt would have plucked him from a crowd.

I realised that someone was playing the piano only when he stopped. The pianist, Mark Wallington, rose and with a sweep of the hand surrendered his stool to the young man, whose mask of deliberation disappeared into a broad smile that bared unruly teeth dominated by handsomely vampirical incisors. He raised his hands, as if to demonstrate that there was nothing up his sleeves, and played what he had just heard to an astonishing degree of accuracy. The performance, brought off with some relish, was greeted by applause from a group by the fireside.

'The arrangement and harmonisations to boot!' proclaimed St John Smith à la ringmaster. 'Will anyone else try to stump him?' The young man bowed. Not so self-conscious after all; just youthful, serious, in the spotlight.

I called casually to our host, the fifteenth Viscount Hatton, who met my eyes with a raised finger implying that I was far more interesting than whatever minor obstacles stood in his path. He was known as 'Sandy' for his sun-freckled, desert complexion, though all he knew of the Sahara was a bunker at Sunningdale.

'You're like a German verb, Leslie,' he said when he finally materialised. A calculated insult. 'Always last.'

'But just on time, and like a French adjective, agreeable.' I waved a vague finger towards the young man: 'Who's the performing seal?'

'Now now.'

'Can he balance a red ball on his nose?'

'Probably.' Sandy surveyed his domain with satisfaction. Jackson and I were the last pieces in his weekend's jigsaw. 'A pleasure, Leslie.' I bowed. 'Ah,' he said with an approving smile at the cabal in question. 'A reprise of the star turn.'

Again a somewhat tuneless original was rendered; again the young man duplicated it, as though the first player had printed a piano roll and he merely pedalled it through. It seemed the Memory Man had reached the climax of his act.

'I didn't know there was to be a music-hall turn in addition to our fishing expedition,' I said pianissimo as we broadcast smiles about us.

'A mere trifle. The pièce de résistance is yet to come.'

'Oh, I am disappointed.'

'I believe he was something of an ... infant prodigy.' He savoured the words for my benefit.

'Played Three Blind Mice in all keys by the age of four? Wrote his first sonata in utero?'

'Very possibly. But his days of prodigiousness are done. He is unhappily studying composition under Kemp at St Christopher's, Cambridge ...'

Kemp's was a name I was known to pooh-pooh at every opportunity, so I instead indicated the wunderkind's tie. 'Are those Kit's colours?'

'No, I believe that may be the tie of ...' he paused for comic effect ... 'the Four Towns Music Festival in Kent. There's a mother, I am told, to whom he is very loyal, and she has him work as accompanist at that august provincial gala. Jessold may not strictly be from the top drawer, dear Shepherd, but I saw a young man of promise.'

'You invited him.' I thought we had been speaking of an interloper, an extraneous other making up numbers in the back of someone's Bentley. Sandy waved away my apology.

'He is going down this year, and when Kemp asked me to speak to the University Madrigal Society I unavoidably met Jessold, its president.' The keen madrigalist was currently attacking a bit of ragtime with venom, pounding the keys into submission.

'What's he got against the piano?'

'His touch is a little agricultural, probably years of banging out "Poor Wandering One" for the daughters of the local clergy, but then Jessold has no pretensions to be a concert pianist.'

'Eureka! He has pretensions to be a composer?'

'Yes.'

'He angled for an invitation to mingle with the great and the good?'

'Far from it. Kemp can't speak highly enough of him. So I convinced Jessold that the one that got away was lurking here in the Lower Thames. And lo! There he sits! The very image of the young composer, earnestly ingratiating himself to the crowd as a child seeks to please his parents. He'll get over that. I have yet to hear any work.'

St John extricated himself from the knot around the piano. 'Racket rather sets my teeth on edge,' he said with a grimace. 'It's so desperately jaunty. Youth must, I dare say.'

Sandy slipped off his signet ring, tinkling the side of his champagne flute. Glasses of Oeil de Perdrix were raised towards him in toast. 'Hatton welcomes you. I welcome you. Tomorrow we work; tonight we play. But first, I know Jessold, new of this parish, has been diverting some of you. We'll let the boy take a breather ... but I'd like to make him sing once more for his supper. Freddie, to the piano.'

Fat Frederic Desalles was so cruelly camouflaged by his jacket that his head appeared to be peeking from behind the cushions of the sofa. He struggled to attention and made his way to the piano. We held our breath nervously on the stool's behalf. Landing was achieved.

'I am here.' He played a little something that he intended us to imagine effortlessly thrown off, but even this little doodle bore the tragic hallmarks of his many other failures. Some thought Freddie's sole qualifications to be a composer were that he believed in God and his name sounded foreign; but he could Handel a religious theme as well as any man in Britain. 'At your service!'

'Jessold, make yourself scarce,' commanded Sandy.

The butler escorted Jessold from the room. I looked at the young man as he left; he glanced over his shoulder, catching me, as it were, red-handed. A departing star knows there is always someone looking.

'When they are at a suitable distance,' Sandy continued, 'I will ask Freddie to play a melody, of say four or five lines, unknown to Jessold. Perhaps one you might like to improvise for us now, maestro; perhaps a little something from your redoubtable arsenal.'

No one could doubt the size of Desalles' arsenal. Drinks, pale and pink, were replenished as he sketched his rough draft. It was typically Desallesean (there is certainly no such word, nor ever shall be): churchfully plain, easily ignored.

'We shall now bring Jessold back into the room.' Sandy tugged the bell pull imperiously. 'And you, Freddie, will play him the first half of your melody. But no more than that.'

On his return, the young man again assumed that study of trance-like meditation as he refined the music's possibilities in his mind. Desalles ended his rendition on a suspended D minor, an appropriately haunting chord for this demonstration of Cecilian clairvoyance. Jessold did not move. He was not yet ready.

'Once more, Freddie, please,' asked Sandy.

This time, when Desalles reached that inconclusive D, Jessold took his place, played the first three lines, and elided effortlessly into the next two, melodically twinned, if not identically harmonised, with Frederic's originals. We've all heard pieces where the composer's next thought was predictable (and Desalles was not the most unconventional), but this was something quite apart. Jessold, alert to every possible melodic path, had narrowed it down to one: this one. It was more akin to the reduction of a mathematical equation.

His final flourish was a plagal chord of amen that parodied Desalles' Messiah complex. No one clapped more enthusiastically than Freddie himself. I willingly joined in, delighted that the boy had none of the fear of self-expression endemic in those schooled in composition. One marvelled at the strength of character that had escaped unscathed from Kemp's clutches!

'Rather better than the prototype,' I muttered.

'Ask him how he does it,' said Sandy as the bell rang for dinner.

* * *

The first toast was to the departed king; the second, to the new George. I had feared that the funeral and its surrounding sea of dark blue serge might spell the postponement of our weekend's pleasure, but our party was of sterner stuff.

My reward for years of uninterrupted friendship with our host was a seat next to the man of the moment who boasted the unseasonable glow of a cross-country runner on a freezing December morning, with babyish skin that seemed ruddy with overly zealous shaving. A tureen hovered to my left as a ghostly consommé, complete with ectoplasm, was ladled into my bowl. I introduced myself to Jessold by name.

'Of The World?' he asked without a semiquaver rest.

I nodded, flattered. 'I know you only as Jessold.'

'Charles Jessold.'

A smile, perhaps a little reptilian, slid across my face. 'Charles Jessold?'

'I hope you are not going to ask me if I am the Charles Jessold, for I am almost certainly not.' There was a forthrightness about him: nothing ungracious or rudely done, but he spoke his mind. 'I am a composer, but I have yet to trouble the critics with anything worth their ink.'

'I look forward to the imposition. Does anyone remark on your name?'

'Never. Jessold is rare, apparently, almost extinct in Britain except in parts of Suffolk.'

'No. It is the two names in tandem ... not merely Jessold.' He looked at me uncomprehending. 'Together they put me in mind of a composer. You have perhaps never heard of Carlo Gesualdo?' His expression did not change. 'Being the president of a madrigal society, and being a Charles Jessold, you ought.'

'Well, I already feel an etymological kinship with him.'

'Ha! Have a care, Jessold. His is not a name to take in vain.'

As I installed myself to tell Gesualdo's remarkable story, I uttered the composer's name as a bold headline.

'Carlo Gesualdo!' hooted Forbes, our pet literarian, eavesdropping. Forbes and I enjoyed a cantankerous relationship, taking nothing personally: we were used to riding against one another. 'Carlo Gesualdo! Beware of the Shepherd, young Jessold. Behind his public face, that of an unassuming, if violently nationalist, musical scribe, lurks a ridiculous antiquarian. Inky-fingered goeth he, under a layer of dust, slicing through the musty cobwebs of our musical history as he may.' All good-natured, no doubt, but I did not care to be the butt of his chaffing when I had such a story to tell. I turned back to my food, mindful not to give an impression of pique. On blundered Forbes, undaunted: 'Whatever made you think of that ghoulish character, Shepherd? The vaguest coincidence of two names? Please spare our young friend that Halloween horror. At least while he's eating.'

I had barely noticed the arrival of the chaud-froid, a Hatton favourite. The promise of conversation had withered like Klingsor's garden so I took a momentary, dignified vow of silence, content to postpone my revelations. Sandy had referred to Jessold's promise. I had scoffed, but I could feel it too.

Talk fell to the next day's expedition. It might have seemed to the unenlightened ear that, with our boasts of previous successes and our territorial disputes, we were preparing for a day's fox hunting. The drawing of straws followed, and, as if by providence (I assume no human agency would answer to it), I was paired with Jessold. My partner said he hoped our excursion might provide the opportunity to hear more of his namesake. Gratifyingly, Sandy had overheard.

'No one,' roared our host, 'will be kept from telling a story at Hatton, particularly one with as much potential as Gesualdo's. Not even by a naysayer of your stature, Forbes!' Forbes raised a hand of apologetic submission. 'We shall take our port next to a roaring fire and Leslie Shepherd will tell his tale. And if the story isn't up to snuff, we shall burn him.'

* * *

I have always been rather admired as a raconteur. I like to inject drama into my tale and I am no stranger to exaggeration, to bending the truth so the story goes as it ought to. There are elements of truth (for example) to the tale I tell of the night that the insufferable Kenneth Smart allowed me to stand with him on his podium, but it wasn't quite like being a second in a duel, nor did I narrowly avoid having my eye poked out. I can eke that story out for many a round, depending on how many tangential conducting anecdotes the occasion inspires.

When I tell a story, it remains told. But with Gesualdo, I am straitjacketed by facts. His tale is so bizarre, so sensational that the truth needs no embellishment. Little was known of him at this time. Keiner's Leipzig dissertation was still a full four years away; there was almost nothing in English, and he went completely unmentioned even in Grove. I'd first taken note of the composer during my researches for an intended slim volume to be called Curiosities of Music. His story demanded magnification from a footnoted tit-bit to an entire chapter. My Curiosities went unpublished (this is no place to air my grievances with the publisher), but that night, as I told his tale, I was quoting from an unwritten book in its pristine state of Platonic perfection.

The room had settled. The floor was mine. A blanket of smoke, from hearth and pipe combined, laid itself wreath-like around us. The enveloping smell was tobacco and Mr Penhaligon's Hamman Bouquet.

'Gentlemen, my text today is Carlo Gesualdo, Prince of Venosa: musician, madrigalist ... and murderer.'

'Murderer?' asked Sandy, perking up. 'I should warn faint hearts that on the last occasion we gathered Shepherd regaled us with the unsavoury tale of Frantisek Kotzwara, the Czech composer, who offered a London prostitute two shillings to castrate him ...'

I cleared my throat. 'Act one, scene one. The setting, eponymous: Gesualdo, a remote comune in the province of Avellino, sixty miles from Naples. The landscape is undulant, exuberantly green; houses cluster hilltops as if volcanically spewed. We find ourselves not only in a kind of heaven, but surprisingly near hell itself: Virgil's famous "Mouth of Hell where Agony and Vengeful Remorse made their beds; where pallid Disease and erm, miserable ... er, tum-tum-titty-tum-tum". I've been, and it certainly smells devilishly sulphurous.

'The year is 1566. Born to Fabrizio Gesualdo and Geronima Borromeo, the second of four children, named for his uncle Carlo Borromeo (canonised in 1610), a son: Carlo Gesualdo.'

'An almost exact contemporary of Shakespeare,' interjected Forbes, daring me to rise above his trademark ostinato.

'As a boy, the young Carlo, second son rather than heir, led a relatively carefree life. His father was a well-known patron of the arts with an academy of musicians at his disposal. This cultured atmosphere so fired the young man's imagination that he became a virtuoso on various instruments, publishing his first composition at the age of nineteen. But in 1584 Luigi, his elder brother, died unexpectedly, and with him, Carlo's carefree youth: the responsibility for the Gesualdo line and ultimately the running of the estate, now fell on him. It was time to become a man.

'He chose as his wife his first cousin Maria d'Avalos – considered a great Renaissance beauty, though the portrait I saw in San Domenico Maggiore does not support this. Tastes change. Although only twenty-four, she'd already been twice married: one of her previous husbands had died of an excess of connubial bliss!'


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Charles Jessold, Considered as a Murderer by Wesley Stace. Copyright © 2010 Wesley Stace. Excerpted by permission of Picador.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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