The Claws of Evil

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The Claws of Evil Page 12

by Andrew Beasley


  “It frightens me too,” she said. She had hoped that she would not live to see the day that a Judas Coin was at large in London. One of those bloodstained pieces of silver was enough to turn a man from saint to sinner. How would a poor red-headed boy cope if it came within his grasp? “And do we know where Benjamin is?” she asked.

  Moon shook his grizzled head. “We saw him go into the Under but no one has seen him emerge. We’ve got scouts watching the entrances that we are aware of, but you know as well as I do that there are hundreds of secret ways into that cesspit.”

  Mother Shepherd could hear the anger and fear churning together in her old friend’s voice. “Have faith in Benjamin,” she said. “He’s young and foolish, but you told me yourself that he has a good heart. Just because he is with the Legion at the moment, it doesn’t mean that he has joined them.”

  Moon made a scornful noise at the back of his throat and she chose to ignore it.

  “If I sit down and dine with pigs, does that make me a pig too?” she asked.

  “No, Great Mother,” Moon conceded, “but you can’t eat with pigs without getting covered in...”

  “Shame?” she offered. “I take your point, old friend. We need to get Ben to a place of safety as soon as possible.”

  “Lucy has taken out a party to search for him,” said Moon, happier now that he was talking about action, “and Josiah, and Ghost. I’ll be setting out again too, as soon as we’re done.”

  “I never doubted it,” she said. “And what about Jonas Kingdom?”

  “He’s still out there looking for Ben, according to Nathaniel.”

  “Then we’re doing everything we can,” said Mother Shepherd. I only pray that it is enough, she added silently.

  If Ben Kingdom made the wrong choice, if he listened to the Legion’s lies and sided with them, then it wasn’t only his soul that would be lost. It would begin with tens of thousands in London, and end with millions across the British Empire. And now one of the Judas Coins was at large and every eye in Hell would be drawn to it. If Ben was carrying the Coin and in the clutches of the Legion, what chance would one young boy have against such corrupting power?

  And if he yielded to it, what chance did any of them have?

  What have I gone and done this time? Ben asked himself, too late.

  He was naked to the waist, and bound to a chair, hand and foot. Mickelwhite had taken a certain glee in making sure that the ropes bit deeply into his flesh and Ben had smiled at him as he did it, just to let Mickelwhite know that he would remember the favour and repay it one day. Meanwhile Munro, the hunchback, was somewhat gleefully pumping the fire back to life with a pair of bellows, while the other members of the strange band looked on with a mixture of excitement and fear.

  Where Ben felt he might have been really unwise was that he had let them do this to him willingly, just to prove a point about not being scared.

  He glanced over to where his shirt and tatty waistcoat had been flung on the floor. Prior to the ceremony, Carter had taken the opportunity to search his pockets. And inside his boots. And socks.

  Good old hat, thought Ben, as he saw it sitting quietly, drawing no attention to itself. You keep that Coin nice and safe.

  The boys gathered around him then, jostling for a better position, and the uncomfortable heat of the fire was only partially responsible for the sweat that was starting to roll down his body.

  At least Ruby Johnson had the decency to stand at the back, he thought. She hadn’t said a word to him since she’d returned with Carter, and he hadn’t spoken to her. It was clear to Ben that yesterday she had merely been acting under Carter’s instruction; none of it had been real. She had suckered him into the Under and delivered him into Carter’s hands. Or hand, that should be, thought Ben with a wry grin.

  If only she had been upfront with him, he probably would have gone with her anyway. Damn it, why did she have to be so pretty?

  When the coals were almost white, Carter took a branding iron and thrust it into the heart of the furnace. He let it rest there until it was glowing fiercely and then withdrew it slowly. Ben could feel the stinging heat of the brand but it didn’t burn as ferociously as his anger towards the Watchers at that moment.

  When Professor Carter had spoken about the war it had sounded like a game for gentlemen; we block their move, they take our pawn. But Mickelwhite and the boys had explained in no uncertain terms; the Watchers were evil. They told him the stories of the Witch Queen of Spies, about her cruelty and the sacrifices which she demanded for her spiteful god. And about her servant, the Weeping Man, who crawled the backstreets searching for lost children that he could bring to her as an offering.

  “So, Benjamin,” said Carter solemnly, “do you choose to join us of your own free will? Do you choose to be bound to us as a brother, to serve with us as a soldier?”

  As Ben gazed at the smouldering tip of the branding iron, he saw clearly for the first time exactly who was to blame for the misfortunes that had been blighting his life. He thought of the wreckage of his room and the destruction of his few meagre possessions, and knew that it had been the work of the Watchers. He thought of Mr. Smutts and the fire which almost consumed him and knew that the bird-headed demons must have been summoned by the Witch Queen. He thought of little Molly Marbank, and shuddered at her fate in the clutches of the Weeping Man.

  So why was there still a small nagging voice at the back of his mind, warning him that he was about to make a terrible mistake?

  Ben thought of his brother, Nathaniel, prisoner of the Watchers and the doubt was silenced completely. “Ask me again!” Ben snapped.

  “Do you choose to join the Legion of your own free will?”

  “I do,” said Ben firmly.

  “To be one with us until death and beyond?”

  “Till death and beyond.”

  Carter gave a nod and Mickelwhite took Ben’s left hand and turned it over so that the palm was facing upwards. “This is going to sting,” Mickelwhite hissed in his ear.

  “Welcome to the Legion, Ben Kingdom,” declared Claw Carter, pressing the branding iron into the soft flesh of his upturned hand.

  Ben’s world turned white with pain.

  “Hello, sleepyhead,” said a gentle voice.

  Ben opened one eye, unsure of where he was. Then he felt the raw throbbing of his left hand and it all came rushing back.

  “You,” said Ben, as he saw Ruby Johnson leaning over him. “I don’t need your help.” And to prove his point, he swung himself out of the bunk and promptly fell over.

  “Take it easy,” said Ruby softly, bending down to help him back up. “Nobody gets up quickly after they have taken the Mark.”

  Ben drew away from her touch as if she were a leper and struggled back onto the bed under his own steam.

  They sat for a while in awkward silence.

  “Why didn’t you tell me that you were following Carter’s orders when you brought me here?” asked Ben. “Why couldn’t you have been honest with me instead of going through that whole ridiculous charade of being my friend?”

  “I am your friend,” she replied.

  Ben winced as the pain in his palm really began to kick in.

  “Here,” she said, “let me take a look at that. I’ve got some salve here that will help the stinging.”

  Ben examined his hand for the first time. Burned into the skin was the image of a gauntlet, an armoured left fist. It hurt like anything, but it was a strong emblem, Ben thought. He took Ruby’s pot of greasy ointment and tentatively began to rub it in, doing his best not to wince.

  “We all have one,” said Ruby, drawing off her glove to show her own hand. “It stands for strength and power,” she explained. “It reminds us that wherever we are, we will always be part of the Legion.” She trailed off slightly as she said it, m
aking Ben wonder whether Ruby thought that was a good or bad thing.

  Ben looked at the mark burned indelibly into his flesh. Despite the pain, he liked it. It reminded him of the tattoos that soldiers brought home from the wars; a sign of their brotherhood and adversities overcome.

  “It shows that we belong,” said Ben.

  “And that we can never leave.” There was definitely a sombre note in Ruby’s voice now, but Ben didn’t have time to question her because the barracks door opened and Mickelwhite strode in.

  “Finally come back to the land of the living, have you?” said Mickelwhite.

  “How long have I been asleep?” Ben asked Ruby.

  “Hours,” she said. “You’ve missed a whole day. It’s getting dark outside again now.”

  Ben shook off his fatigue and forced himself to stand.

  “Report to the armoury in ten minutes,” snapped Mickelwhite. “Miss Johnson can fill you in on the way.”

  “Where are we going?” Ben asked, still disorientated.

  “To rescue your brother,” Mickelwhite answered, “and make the Watchers regret the day they ever heard the name ‘Kingdom’.”

  Nathaniel Kingdom was standing on the roof of the Royal Albert Hall. A small pennant snapped in the wind, bearing the symbol of an open right hand; the sign of the Watchers.

  There were lookouts high up on the dome itself, but Nathaniel was with the rest of the encampment, safely on the lower tier below. The Watchers had made him welcome, and yet he was still a stranger in their strange land. He wandered around, trying to make sense of everything that the Watchers had told him. He still couldn’t quite believe that the Watchers thought Ben was some sort of leader-in-waiting; if only they knew how often Ben was in trouble they would soon change their tune. What Nathaniel had no difficulty accepting was that Ben was in great danger if he was in the hands of the Legion. If even half of what the Watchers had explained to him about the Legion was true, then Ben was literally in the jaws of wickedness.

  And then there was the Coin; a Judas Coin, Mr. Moon had thought. A Coin that had been steeped in blood down the ages and had the power to lead even the strongest will down the path to wickedness. If Ben was carrying the Coin, Nathaniel couldn’t imagine the mental torture he must be going through.

  Nathaniel’s own head began to spin uncomfortably, and he didn’t know whether it was shock or vertigo; either way he decided to stay well away from the edge. He had begun to pace restlessly again, when to his delight his eyes picked out a familiar face.

  “Molly Marbank!” he shouted with delight, and went to join the girl in her sheltered spot, in the lee of a wall.

  Molly smiled at him. She was bundled up in a blanket to keep her warm and was slurping happily on a bowl of hot soup.

  For a while they just sat. It was Molly who broke the silence.

  “Why do you look so sad?” she asked sweetly. “Everyone is so kind here.”

  “I miss my family,” he said. “My brother is lost and my pa has gone looking for him. I’m afraid that...” His voice cracked and hot tears welled in his eyes. “I’m afraid that Ben might die without knowing how much we love him. I know that I don’t always treat Ben the way I should, I know that sometimes Pa can hardly bring himself to look at him...” Nathaniel couldn’t have stopped the stream of words even if he’d wanted to. “It’s Ben’s hair,” he continued, sniffing, “and his face and his uneven smile that me and Pa find so hard to cope with.”

  Molly looked confused.

  “Ben looks just like our mother,” Nathaniel explained. “Every time Ben smiles at Pa, it breaks his heart again.”

  Across the city of London, several Kingdoms had already been hastened to their deaths.

  Grey Wing gave the tally, while Carter listened impassively.

  Tobias Kingdom, a wig-maker, fell to his death from his upstairs window; Jonathan Kingdom, bookkeeper, drowned in his shaving bowl; Emma Kingdom, match-seller, died in flames. Samuel Kingdom, barrister-at-law, was stabbed in the back, before being dropped into the silent waters of St Katharine Docks.

  “And you didn’t eat them this time?” asked Carter.

  Grey Wing made a shrugging motion with his vast shoulders. “Only the hearts,” he said, “and some of the eyes.”

  “How positively restrained of you.”

  Carter had to admit that the Feathered Men had been busy. It was just a shame that all their interrogations had failed to provide so much as a single clue that would lead him closer to the Coin. He was convinced that if Ben had hidden the Coin, he would have let something slip by now; for all his qualities, the boy didn’t seem to have a very tight rein on his tongue. That meant that either the Watchers did have the Coin, which Ben had maintained all along, or that Ben’s father, possibly even his brother, was still in possession of that benighted piece of silver. However, in spite of the Feathered Men’s efforts, Jonas and Nathaniel Kingdom seemed to have slipped off the face of the map.

  The one consolation as far as he was concerned was that Benjamin Kingdom had taken the Mark. His left hand belonged to the Legion now. All that Carter needed to do to complete the boy’s transformation was to ensure that his soul belonged to the Legion too.

  Ben had so many questions that Ruby could hardly keep up with them.

  He seemed to have forgiven her entirely for bringing him into the Under on false pretences and, for reasons that Ruby couldn’t explain, that meant a lot to her.

  “Can you tell me more about the Legion?” he asked.

  She wasn’t sure where to start. “I suppose the first thing you should understand is that not everyone in the Under is part of the Legion.”

  Ben showed his surprise. “So why do you let them live here?”

  “When Alasdair Valentine began work on these tunnels, he saw a use for them straight away, making them far more valuable than the simple bolt-hole the King intended. Valentine imagined a place of sanctuary,” she continued, “a place of refuge for all those who couldn’t go running to the Crown or the Church. That principle holds true to this day.”

  “And so all the families down here, they’re just refugees?”

  Ruby nodded. “And escapees, or runaways or throwaways. All welcome. If someone wants to live among us, all they have to do is look after themselves and accept Legion rule.”

  Ben listened with rapt attention.

  “Probably only a third of the denizens of the Under are Legionnaires. Of those who have taken the Mark, the bottom rank are serfs; that’s what you are.”

  “Thanks,” said Ben. “It’s always nice to hear that you are the lowest of the low.”

  “Most of the young ragamuffins you see running around the place fall into that category too,” Ruby went on. “Above them come certain young ladies and gentlemen such as Munro and Jimmy Dips who have shown themselves worthy and willing to work hard; they become squires. A squire will serve under a knight or a captain for a time, possibly years, learning more about the ways of our Order. Then come the knights, such as yours truly, organized into small brigades. There are reconnaissance brigades like ours, skirmish brigades and heavy-battle brigades. Each brigade is led by a captain – you’ve already met Captain Mickelwhite.”

  Ruby could see from his face exactly what Ben thought of Captain Mickelwhite, as he marched along in front of them, leading the way to the armoury.

  “Yes, well,” said Ruby. She didn’t always see eye to eye with Mickelwhite herself. “Be careful, Ben,” she warned under her breath. “He’s been watching you.”

  “Yes, I know,” said Ben.

  “No, you don’t, Ben,” she corrected him. She took his arm and allowed Mickelwhite’s long stride to lengthen the distance between them. When the gap was wide enough, she spoke low and quickly. “None of us have ever known Professor Carter to initiate someone into the Legion so q
uickly. It’s obvious that he thinks highly of you and Mickelwhite is jealous. You must be careful not to antagonize him.”

  She had meant it as a warning, but Ruby could see that it had had the opposite effect.

  It won’t be long before I’m Captain and he’ll have to be careful of me,” said Ben, his eyes agleam.

  Mickelwhite brought them to a halt outside an impressive bronze door, inlaid with images of strange creatures: lions with wings, humans with the faces of animals, snakes that coiled round each other so that it was impossible to tell where one ended and the other began.

  “Say nothing and follow my lead,” Mickelwhite said curtly. “We are about to meet the Egyptian.”

  “And who’s he when he’s at home?” said Ben.

  “He’s the Legion quartermaster,” Mickelwhite explained. “Before any brigade is sent out they have to report here to be equipped, and then return it all afterwards.”

  “So why mustn’t I speak?” asked Ben.

  “Because the last mouthy street boy who spoke out of turn to the Egyptian didn’t come out alive,” Mickelwhite replied.

  The door opened with a sigh and the Egyptian appeared. He was a tall man, made taller by his blood-red hat, which Ben had heard called a “fez”. He literally loomed over them, his head almost reaching the top of the door frame, his neck bent to observe them, like a heron watching fish. Widthways, the Egyptian was almost too narrow, and yet Benjamin suspected that he had a strong wiry build hidden beneath the folds of his purple silk robe, which was drawn at the waist with a tasselled belt.

  It was impossible to guess the man’s age but his skin was the brown of dead leaves and covered with a map of fine lines, especially around the eyes and across his broad, high forehead. The cheekbones were high as well, as if his skull was too close to the surface, leaving deep hollows in his cheeks and pits for his eyes.

  Those eyes scared Ben more than anything. The coldest December night was not as cold as those two black pearls.

 

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