Mark Chadbourn - The Silver Skull
The actions were strange enough to bring the band of thugs to a puzzled halt.
As Will studied the Silver Skull, a barely perceptible change came over the mask, perhaps a slight change in the quality of the moonlight it reflected, or a barely audible noise as though it were a tuning fork vibrating.
The scarred man flinched, his hand involuntarily going to his throat. He coughed once and spluttered. When it passed, his mocking smile returned. But only for a moment. Within seconds he was reeling, tearing at his face and arms and fighting for breath, eyes wide with panic.
The rest of Pickering's men were rooted in horror. The hands holding Will fell away, and he stepped quickly back through their ranks into the shadows at the edge of the alley.
The scarred man's skin blackened as if burned by an invisible fire. It spread quickly across his face, then down his arms, and his skin cracked like a muddy track beneath the hot sun. Blisters erupted everywhere, covering every part of him within seconds, forcing his eyes shut and deforming his lips. One by one the blisters burst to release foul yellow pus. As blood streamed from the corners of his eyes, his nose, his ears, his flesh began to liquefy, and he fell to his knees in a growing puddle, clawing at the areas where sticky bone was now visible.
Watching his death throes, Pickering's men crossed themselves or whispered prayers, but the spectacle kept them fixed.
Finally, the scarred man pitched forwards onto the cobbles and lay still. Will had observed something similar, in a village not far from Darmstadt when the plague had struck. But there the death had been slow, over days, not a matter of seconds. Yet he could see now what the Silver Skull was: an engine of disease, powered by the will of the one who wore it. All it required to operate was the key: the jewel the Hunter had fitted to it.
His impression was proved correct when first one, then ten, then all of Pickering's men began to experience the initial symptoms. In no time at all, the disease had leapt among them, driving them to their knees in an agonising death.
With horror, Will realised why the Enemy was so determined to gain the Skull: if thirty men could be brought down so quickly, where was the end of it? A street? A city? An entire country? Perhaps even the greatest army could be wiped away in the blink of an eye. With the Skull under their control, all Dee's defences amounted to nothing, and England was left naked and on the brink of becoming a charnel pit.
A tingling began in the tips of his fingers and his throat began to close. The Silver Skull looked directly at him. Before the disease rushed through Will, Don Alanzo caught the Skull's arm and guided him away with a gentle tug. The Hunter and his dog were nowhere to be seen. Don Alanzo gave Will a slight bow, the scales now balanced, and moved quickly away across the courtyard into the dark beyond, with the Skull beside him.
Will attempted to give pursuit, but his head was swimming and his legs were like jelly, even at the merest touch of the Skull's power. By the time he had recovered, Don Alanzo and the Skull had disappeared into the maze of Alsatia, and within moments, the whinny of a horse was followed by the crack of a whip and the rattle of carriage wheels.
Miller stumbled over, unscathed, a deep-seated horror burned into his eyes. "Will, I failed you," he croaked.
"You did what you could, as do we all. Come." As they headed back, Will added, "Whatever he said to you, ignore it. They lie. That is what they do."
Miller did not respond.
At the scene of the Thieves' Fair, Will was surprised to find that Marlowe and a group of the queen's men had rounded up the collection of rogues in one corner of the courtyard, where they were being held at sword point. Several bodies of those who had resisted lay on the cobbles as a lesson to the others.
Grace ran over and grasped Will's hand tightly. "You are safe," she said with relief. "I prayed for your return."
"You should not be here Grace," he scolded. "But I am glad to see you well." He motioned to Nathaniel to take Grace to one side.
"She only wished for knowledge of her sister," Nathaniel said quietly. "Do not treat her harshly."
The weight of what he had witnessed lay heavily on Will. With the weapon in the Enemy's hands, time was rapidly running out. He sought out Marlowe and said, "Kit, I thank you for coming to my aid. Now, bring me Pickering, the King of Cutpurses. I have some hard questions for him."
Marlowe motioned to Pickering's costume topped by the bird mask lying in a heap on the cobbles. "Mistress Seldon tells me this was his disguise."
"Then once again he hides among his people." Will eyed the sullen mass of rogues.
"If you do not know his looks, then you will never find him among that rabble, Will."
Will considered his options, and then said, "Bring the men to me one at a time."
As the pageant of glowering men trailed past, Will studied the size, the gait, and most importantly the eyes: Pickering's unwavering stare was unforgettable. Many he dismissed immediately, too squat, too large, too grey. A few he spent a moment considering. But there was one who at first appeared wrong, until Will realised he was feigning a limp and walking with his left shoulder stooped. He kept his gaze down, until Will forced him to look up. The unblinking black eyes were coldly familiar.
"The King of Cutpurses," Will said wryly. "Your nobility is about to be tested."
Pickering responded only with a defiant stare.
Will turned to Marlowe. "Take him to the Tower."
CHAPTER 18
lady, in Alsatia, amid the greatest rogues of London? What did you expect?" Will said angrily as he marched down the Long Corridor from the State Rooms to the wing set aside by Walsingham. "And this is where I hear your lecture about recklessness again, I suppose?" Grace responded without flinching.
He could see her temper was hot and she would fight him every step of the way, as always. "You risked a great many things, including death."
"If you kept me informed, I would not have to take risks."
"So it is my fault?" he blazed.
"Stop treating me like a little girl."
"Then trust me. If I discover anything about jenny, I will tell you."
She grew sullen. "It is not simply about jenny, and you know that."
His own anger drained away as he saw clearly the young girl who raced to him through the garden whenever he visited jenny. "You cannot protect me in the work I do," he said.
"And you cannot bring jenny back by protecting me. Nor can you erase the pain of her loss. But we cannot help ourselves, can we? We are both cursed to repeat our mistakes, trying to save the one person who reminds us of that time when all was right with the world."
She looked away sharply. He knew it was because tears had sprung to her eyes, but she would not show him what she perceived to be a weakness. Much of what she said was true, he knew, but Grace was more to him than a symbol of what had been lost. In the midst of his own grief, he had been devastated to see the effect of jenny's disappearance on her. It had torn out her heart at first, and then replaced her happiness with a slow-burning bitterness. He cared for her deeply, and he would not have her suffer any more.
Grace saw him wrestling with her account of his motivations and softened. "Jenny haunts us both. The manner of her passing ... here one moment and then gone, no body to bury or grieve, no truthful account, only guesses and hints and what-might-have-beeps ... Neither of us can find rest while there are so many questions still to answer, and no likely answers forthcoming." She bit her lip and looked away out of the window to where the servants carried cuts of ham to the kitchens from the back of a wagon.
"This is not the life either of us would have chosen, but it is the one we have," he said. "You have accepted that jenny is gone for there is no evidence to show otherwise. That is sensible. I believe she is still alive because there is no evidence to show she is dead. Less sensible, perhaps, but it is all I am capable of doing. Whatever happened that day is lost to us. For now. But I have seen ..." He caught himself. "I do not believe the world is as simple as most people accept. There are spaces in it for strange things to happen."
"For jenny still to be alive?" she mocked.
"Perhaps."
"You hold on to a ghost and it slowly sucks the life from you. You will never find peace, or happiness, while you look back, and while you grip tightly to fantasies, and ask question upon question. You are here, now. You must take some joy ... some love ... or all will be wasted."
"I only ever wanted my jenny. She was right for me. There will be no other."
Grace turned away from him, pretending to examine the servants once again.
"Whatever happened to her, she is still with me every day," he continued, "here and here." He touched his temple and his breastbone. "I would not give up that to dull what pain I feel."
"If one of us is the child here, wishing and hoping, it is not I," she said brusquely. "I will continue to search for answers in my own way. And if you continue to keep secrets from me, I will be forced to go to even greater lengths."
Watching her march back along the corridor, head down, cheeks burning, Will felt a deep sadness for what she had lost, and a determination that she would, at least, have a happier life ahead. If he failed Grace, he failed Jenny; he failed in everything.
Putting aside his emotions, he made his way to the Tryst Rooms, where Henry had attempted to woo Ann Boleyn, away from the scrutiny of his wife. They were now set aside for Walsingham's use, and lay on the second floor above the hall that Dee had christened the Black Gallery.
Nursing their wounds, Mayhew sat gloomily in one corner, drinking wine despite the earliness of the hour, while Launceston and Carpenter ate bread and sausage as they turned over the previous night's events.
"Where is Tom?" Will asked.
"Away brooding," Launceston replied.
"I would not have him on his own after what he saw."
Mayhew let out a theatrical sigh. "We cannot mollycoddle the boy. He must learn to deal with these things, as we all have."
"He did not have the benefit of a slow admission to the secrets of the world, as we have," Will replied. "Find him and bring him here."
Cursing quietly, Mayhew levered himself from his chair and sloped out.
Carpenter pushed his plate away and growled, "At least the failure of this mission left no one dead. Or scarred."
"There are no failures, and no victories either, you know that. Just a constant shifting back and forth, with casualties on both sides. That is the true tragedy of our war: it will never be won."
"Defeatist." Carpenter sniffed. Then: "I presume Walsingham will want to hold someone accountable for our failure to recover the Silver Skull."
"Again, John, no failure, however much you want to apportion blame. This struggle continues. We have reached a turn in the road, and we must embark on another direction."
"Yet we still do not know what this Silver Skull does," Launceston said, or why it is so important to the Enemy. Perhaps it is simply meant to distract us from the real threat."
"All will become clear in time," Will replied. So far he had only told Walsingham what he had witnessed of the Skull's capabilities, and Miller had been sworn to silence, although the disease-powers appeared to be the last thing on his mind.
Nathaniel appeared at the door to the Tryst Rooms and summoned Will over. "Lord Walsingham is ready for you now," he said. "Should I be prepared for fanfares and fawning crowds?"
"Not this time, Nat. This matter is still a tangled web, which requires some unpicking."
Nathaniel held the door open. "A case not concluded in time for an ordinary in the tavern? Your reputation is in danger."
"We all have our bad days, and I fear this one will get worse before it gets better."
They took Walsingham's black carriage and followed the cluttered, noisy streets east to the Tower. As was often the case, Nathaniel pretended to show no interest in the matter under investigation while asking oblique, circuitous questions in an attempt to assuage his curiosity. And as was usual, Will pretended not to notice, and batted them away with an insouciant manner. It was a game between friends, but with serious intent: in his ignorance, Nathaniel rattled the cage door, but Will had made it his business never to let him realise what beast lurked within.
The carriage was admitted through the main gates of the Tower into a furious hive of activity, the like of which Will had not seen before. Soldiers brought weapons from the Tower's armoury, while other groups escorted bruised and battered prisoners to the cells for interrogation.
Will ordered Nathaniel to stay with the carriage, and then sought Walsingham out in his rooms in the White Tower. In a room filled with charts and documents, Will found him making plans for England's defences with a small army of advisors. The atmosphere was strained, the advisors failing to grasp the urgency of Walsingham's requests. By their reckoning, an invasion was weeks away, at the earliest, and his suggestion that disaster could strike within hours or days filled them with incredulity. Will realised he had never seen Walsingham lose his temper, but there was a frightening intensity about him that Will had witnessed before on occasion; in those times he appeared capable of anything.
Once the advisors had been dismissed, Walsingham led Will along the corridors and down the winding stairs into the bowels of the White Tower.
"It would be easier if you could guide them with more than hints and innuendo," Will said.
"That is our burden," Walsingham replied. "Only a very few understand the true nature of the war we fight. The rest must accept our guidance on faith alone."
"No sign of lion Alanzo or the Silver Skull?"
"Our informants watch all the highways out of London, and the ports of Kent and Norfolk, Sussex and Dorset. They have vanished like the mist."
"You have informed the queen?"
"Of only the most basic details. One must walk a line between providing an adequate summation of the threat facing the nation and leaving the monarch paralysed by fear." Walsingham waited for the guards to unlock a large, iron-studded door before continuing. "We have struggled with the outbreak of disease many times during Elizabeth's reign. The thought that such devastation could be unleashed by an enemy in the blink of an eye, in one of our cities, perhaps even in London itself, is beyond the comprehension of most minds. But we know the depths to which the Enemy will go to destroy us. And the Spanish, of course, would seize upon such internal chaos to launch an invasion from without. We are in a state of high alertEngland's future hangs by a thread. Never have matters been so critical."
"Then we cannot afford to delay here," Will said. "Pickering is our only link to the Skull, and the Enemy's plans."