The Cast of a Hand
At dawn on the outskirts of Paris in 1869, Hortense Kinck lies buried alive and surrounded by five of her children. Violently attacked, tormented and trapped, she sifts through the truths and deceits of her marriage to self-made industrialist, Jean Kinck. Why had he lied?
France, snug in the prosperity of Napoleon III’s Second Empire, is shocked by the vicious destruction of the bourgeois Kinck family. Under pressure from his superiors, the Chief of Police, Monsieur Claude, must unravel the baffling connections between the family and a mysterious young man, Jean-Baptiste Troppmann, a cold case, a famous palmist and France’s rising tide of dissatisfaction with the Emperor Napoleon III.
The Cast of a Hand is an unforgettable love story and a murder mystery based on one of the most shocking crimes of 19th century Paris. GS Johnston’s razor sharp prose interweaves and cross-pollinates the two narratives, both desperately trying to arrive at the truth.
To Read or Not to Read - guest post by author Greg Johnston
One
of the greatest pieces of advice I’ve ever been given was that I owed it to
myself to read. At the time, I didn’t
understand why and being so diffident to authority I would never have had the
courage to ask. But I did obey and
read. Harry the Dirty Dog led to The
Famous Five, The Guns of Navarone
to Great Expectations, Middlemarch to Bridget Jones Diary. Whilst
I don’t know what the person meant exactly, when I offer this sage advice to
others, I want people to experience taking up other subjective positions. Through reading fiction, I’ve an
understanding and insight into other lives in disparate times and places. I’ve been an Afro-American woman who murdered
her child so she wouldn’t endure slavery.
A young tom-boy in the syrupy language of Southern USA confronting every
type of bigotry. I’ve been a 14thC
Franciscan novice, touched for the very first time in a wealthy Italian abbey.
Imagine
not being able to read?
With
this question in mind, I approached the major female character of my new novel,
The Cast of a Hand. Hortense Kinck (née Roussell) was born on the
31st of June 1827 (this isn’t a typo, it’s on her birth certificate)
to a family in Tourcoing, Nord-Pas-de-Calais.
Far from her usual ken, at dawn on the outskirts of Paris in 1869, Hortense
was found buried alive and surrounded by five of her children. The attack had been violent and
sustained.
Initial
research sources repeatedly stressed she was illiterate. As my research plodded on, I found her
marriage certificate to Jean Kinck, a self-made industrialist who had moved to
the area of Nord-Pas-de-Calais from Alsace.
When she married Kinck, she signed the certificate with a bold X. This suggested she was in fact
illiterate. But interestingly, the
certificate listed her as a seamstress.
During
the Second Empire, the area around Tourcoing and Roubaix was full of mills
churning out endless metres of fabric, one of the major industries of the
area. So rather than working in a mill,
as her father did, she worked in a business, a producer turning the fabric of
the area to clothing. How she followed
directions or read patterns I don’t know but she was 25 when she married,
indicating a possible decade of work.
Clearly she worked to some level of proficiency. Did her lack of literacy really impede her
life?
But
I think as I grew closer to some version of Hortense, it was clear she could
not “read” her husband. In the initial,
limerance-flush of marriage, she probably had to do as she had always done –
accept people at face value, on other people’s recommendations and trust. But after nearly 20 years of marriage and the
rush of seven children (one boy died in infancy) when her husband started to
change and refused to explain why, she was unable to “read” and
understand.
The
new business Jean had become involved in was outside Hortense’s experience,
outside her list of words, outside her subjective experiences. In many ways, Jean deluded her, took
advantage of her naiveté until it was too late and he realized, perhaps, that
he had deluded himself as well.
Monsieur Claude, Paris Chief of Police |
I
wonder how she would have fared in these slings and arrows had she been able to
read. Would she have found some
insightful parallel in fiction? She was
no Emma Bovary or the Marquise Isabelle de Merteuil, but I wonder, would she
have avoided this most ghastly of fates?
Or were the forces that moved against her too beyond conception and too
large to anticipate? She couldn’t read
the letters and telegrams her husband sent her, instead reliant on her children
to read them. But I also wonder how
skilled she was, or wasn’t, to recognize her husband’s voice in these
letters. This secondary reading skill is
something we perhaps take for granted, that we can judge the authenticity of a
voice. Had she this skill, would she have
recognized her husband?
I
have two photographs of her which I’ve spent an inordinate number of hours
staring at. One is the autopsy
photograph, her body on a slab in the Paris Morgue. In the normal sequence of events, the morgue
left unidentified bodies on public display.
This public display is described in Zola’s Thérèse Raquin when Laurent searches for the body of Camille as
proof that he is dead. Fortunately such
was the outcry in this case, Madame Kinck and her children’s were removed from
public display. In The Cast of a Hand, I forced Monsieur Claude, the Paris Chief of
Police, to “read” her body closely, to note the condition of her hands and make
suppositions about who she was. I can’t
garner much from the gruesome photograph.
Is it a smile or a snarl?
But
I have another photograph, given to me by a distant relative of the
family. From the age of the female child
on Hortense knee, I would say the photograph was made about 18 months before
the murders. Photography in 1867 was
still prohibitively expensive and the realm of Vicomtes and Princesses. Hortense is not as bold as her husband or two
younger male children, Achille and Alfred, who look the camera square in the
eye. Nor is she as distracted or
listless as her younger child, Marie.
Hortense’s gaze is off slightly to the side of the camera. I’ll never know what she was looking at or
why. Maybe the elder boys, Gustave,
Emile and Henri, were off screen and she was monitoring them. But I think she was wary of this new
technology, possibly disparaging of the need to make the photograph. By all reports she was a frugal woman but
having made a lot of money, Jean had changed, buying things she thought
unnecessary.
Aldolphe Desbarolles |
As
my research went on, it was clear the novel was going to be in part about
reading. The second narrative stream of The Cast of a Hand involves the
investigation by Monsieur Claude, trying to “read” and interpret the pieces of
evidence he had. During this time, he
became more intimately involved with a chiromancer, Aldolphe Desbarolles, who
claimed to be able to “read” a person’s character and disposition in the shape
and lines of their hand. The movement of
chiromancy was part of the greater investigation of phrenology. Had they met, I wonder what Desbarolles would
have seen in Hortense hand?
Was
her fate written there for the knowledgeable to read?
Greg Johnston
The Cast of a Hand is out today, October 1st 2015
About the author
G.S. Johnston is the author of three historical novels, The Cast of a Hand (2015), The Skin of Water (2012) and Consumption (2011), noted for their complex characters and well-researched settings.
In one form or another, Johnston has always written, at first composing music and lyrics. After completing a degree in pharmacy, a year in Italy re-ignited his passion for writing and he completed a Bachelor of Arts degree in English Literature. Feeling the need for a broader canvas, he started writing short stories and novels.
Originally from Hobart, Tasmania, Johnston currently lives in Sydney, Australia.
He would be impressed with humanity if someone could succeed in putting an extra hour in every day.
4 comments:
Having read about people being mistakenly buried alive - obviously not in this case- I do have a an irrational fear of this happening to me - my husband has instructions so this doesn't happen!
I love true crime novels. As a sociologist/psychologist, deviance has always fascinated me. Also, having been an avid reader since I first began reading at the age of three, it's hard to imagine living the life of a woman unable to read. How horrible that would be. This book sounds absolutely fascinating. I look forward to having the chance to read it.
What an intriguing case! Paris has it's fair share of strange murder cases.If the husband was an industrialist, he seems to have married below his station. Was this premeditated from the start?
Hi Vesper, Michelle and Denise,
It's an interesting point you make Denise and one that Hortense asked herself. I guess you'll have to read the novel to know why Jean married her. The fact Hortense couldn't read was really part of her undoing - it left her guileless to large degree. And the buried alive motif was one of the first things that attracted me to the story - high Gothic - but a dreadful fate none-the-less. It is an horrendous story. She made so many bad choices, so many points that if she'd questioned something or done the other she may have avoided it.
Greg
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