The Scar-Crow Men

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The Scar-Crow Men Page 14

by Mark Chadbourn


  The revelation that Devereux had been a spy had a queasy inevitability, Will felt. Their business burrowed into the flesh of life like ringworm, corrupting and destroying everything. His anger flared, but he was brought up sharp when he saw the prisoner observing him with a sly smile as if his inner thoughts were laid bare. ‘And this was when you first met Kit?’ the spy demanded.

  ‘It was. He was a different man, then. He had hope, and his future lay ahead of him, long and bright. That changed, of course, as it did for all of us.’

  ‘Tell me of this occasion on which you met Kit.’

  Smiling, the prisoner clasped his hands together. ‘You move too quickly, Master Swyfte,’ he said with a shake of his head. ‘Let us savour our time together. There are things I would speak of. I receive little news within these four walls, less entertainment, no joy. Allow me some simple pleasure.’

  This incarnation of Devereux had a sly wit about him that the other two did not exhibit. Will tried to understand the origins of these characters; they were each undoubtedly Devereux, sharing many of the same mannerisms, yet each also definably different. Had the original Griffin Devereux been shattered by his experience in Norfolk into fragments of his true self, each with a life of its own? Was it some product of the magic he attempted? The curse of seeking to achieve forbidden wisdom?

  Certainly, this third incarnation had the part of Devereux that was dangerous, black depths hidden beneath shifting surfaces.

  ‘I hear you are a man forged by your own hardship,’ the man said.

  ‘We are all shaped by the obstacles we encounter in our life.’ Leaning against the wall with studied nonchalance, Will folded his arms.

  ‘Shaped, yes, but not made. Your experience created a new man. You are not the Will Swyfte you once were, I hear.’

  ‘From Kit?’

  ‘No.’ Devereux paused playfully. ‘I hear whispers that never reach the ears of most men.’ Cocking his head to one side curiously, he appeared to be listening to those whispers there and then. ‘A woman, hmm? Stolen from you. For a long time you hoped she was still alive, despite all evidence to the contrary, and now you are sure. But you still do not know where she is, or how you can reach her. You do not know if she is suffering at the hands of her captors, and that question torments you. Perhaps it destroys you a little with each passing day? Am I correct?’

  Ignoring the question, Will responded, ‘There is only one source that could have provided you with that information, and they are masters of lies.’

  Devereux flicked the toe of his leather shoe towards an inquisitive rat. It scurried away. ‘Why, I thought that was the work carried out by you and your kind, Master Swyfte. Untruths. Deceit. Subterfuge. Are you saying I heard this talk from one of your own?’

  ‘You twist words and thoughts deftly,’ Will noted. ‘You know of whom I speak.’

  ‘The Unseelie Court.’ The prisoner gave a faint, teasing smile. ‘The ones who have tormented Englishmen since the Flood. Shadows on the edge of all we do, guiding us, shaping us, running us for sport. Slaughtering us. Stealing the babies from their cribs, and poisoning the cattle in the fields, as they crawl out from beneath their hills or lakes, or wander from the deep, dark forests, or dance like ghosts in the stone circles thrown up by the giants of long ago.’ Devereux traced one long finger along his chin thoughtfully. ‘Those?’

  Refusing to play the man’s game, Will waited patiently.

  ‘But they have not been heard from for long months, Master Swyfte?’

  ‘And that absence is as worrying as if they were here with us. More so. The Unseelie Court never leaves us, Master Devereux. If they are not actively destroying lives, then they are planning to do so.’

  ‘Ah.’ The prisoner’s tone was mocking.

  Will’s voice hardened. ‘Now, I have had my fill of your games. Kit Marlowe has been murdered. I will not rest until I find who was behind that crime, though I have to hunt down the highest in the land.’

  ‘The highest in the land? The Queen herself?’

  ‘I will follow the trail of blood to its source.’ Will fought to keep the emotion out of his voice. ‘I care not for my own safety. Justice for my friend is my sole motivation. You know more than you say. Speak now.’

  ‘Or what? Where is the gain for me?’ the prisoner replied, holding his head at a haughty angle.

  Will’s eyes narrowed. ‘The gain? When I leave this foul-smelling cell you will still be alive.’

  With snake-like speed, Devereux sprang close to the bars. Will stood his ground. Though the mercurial man’s smile remained, his eyes darkened in response to the threat. The spy realized it was the first sign of honesty this incarnation had exhibited, the briefest glimpse of the true, chilling nature that hid deeply beneath layers of distraction.

  ‘You think you could kill me?’ the prisoner growled.

  ‘You make a play of black magic, but a blade would loose your blood as it would that of any other man.’

  Devereux searched the spy’s face for a hint of weakness, and found none. ‘But I have powerful friends.’ His true nature slipped beneath the surface once more.

  ‘I told you. In this instance, I care little for the powerful, and what they can and cannot do to me,’ Will replied.

  ‘You ride towards the edge of a cliff, Master Swyfte,’ the prisoner cautioned, ‘and I fear you do so wilfully.’

  In anger, Will lunged, gripping Devereux’s worn doublet and yanking him forward so hard his head crashed against the bars. The iron rang gently with the impact. With his left hand, the spy whipped out his dagger and pressed it against the other man’s pale neck. ‘If you cannot give me the answers I require, delve into yourself and pull out one of the shadows that can,’ Will snarled, his forehead pressed against the cold iron bars so his eyes were only inches from Devereux’s roving gaze.

  ‘Do you really want me to do that, Master Swyfte?’

  ‘I need information, Master Devereux, and I am in no mood to wait.’

  ‘And you will accept the consequences?’

  ‘In the work I do, the price is always high. Do what I ask.’

  ‘Very well.’ The man’s head dropped as if he were in thought, but when he glanced up again, Will involuntarily flinched. Once again, Devereux’s face had altered, this time substantially. The muscles pulled the mouth wider and down at the ends, the cheeks hollower; the eyes had retreated into pits of shadow, and when the candlelight caught them, Will saw the black pupils had expanded to cover the irises and most of the whites. There was nothing in them that was recognizably human.

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

  DEVEREUX PULLED HIMSELF FREE FROM WILL’S GRIP AND RETREATED to the centre of the cell where he squatted like an ape, his breath deep and rumbling. For long, silent moments, his head on one side, he levelled an unblinking gaze. Will felt as if it was delving deep into his thoughts.

  ‘Who are you?’ he asked. He shivered. The room appeared to have grown colder.

  ‘Your friend called me Mephistophilis.’ The squatting man’s voice was hoarse, strained and crackling like an old man’s, the words formed as if he was unused to speaking. Chilled, Will felt it was as if some beast had slipped beneath Devereux’s skin and now wore his appearance like clothes.

  ‘Is that your name?’ he demanded.

  ‘There is power in naming, and power in words. A word turns something into what the word says it is, not what it is in essence. That is a form of magic, is it not? To shape the world without by a conscious thought within?’ With a long thin finger, Devereux traced an arc in the straw. He looked as if he was preparing to pounce, desperate to tear Will limb from limb.

  ‘I am angel or devil, whichever you choose to call me,’ the prisoner added.

  ‘I could never imagine you an angel.’

  The slow rumble of Devereux’s breath was the only reply. Will could now see the cloud of his own breath.

  ‘Then I will address you as Mephistophilis, if that is your wish,’ the spy said,
‘though I wonder if you are truly a devil, or some terrible part of Devereux himself, released from the depths of his mind by the atrocities he committed.’

  ‘A good question. You must decide upon the answer for yourself.’ Its black eyes did not blink.

  ‘You came to Devereux after he murdered all those poor souls in Norfolk?’

  ‘How could I not answer when the summons was so loud and clear?’

  ‘And now you ride him like a mare.’

  ‘I am always with him. Sometimes near, sometimes afar, but always there. To the end. And beyond. Once summoned, we cannot be dispatched until the deal is complete.’

  Devereux continued to trace a pattern in the dirty straw with the tip of his index finger, but his intense gaze never left Will’s face. Still biding his time, the spy thought. Waiting for him to take a step too close to the bars, to drop his knife or bare his neck. ‘Then I know you, and I can weigh the value of your words,’ Will said.

  ‘Oh, you do not know me,’ the crouching figure mocked. ‘You will never know me.’

  ‘Who killed Kit Marlowe?’

  ‘He killed himself, through his actions.’ The beast-like figure continued to breathe heavily, the rumbling echoes rolling around the cell.

  Holding Devereux’s gaze, Will rested a hand on the cold hilt of his rapier. ‘So, we are to play games with words.’

  ‘Words are nothing but games,’ the prisoner growled.

  ‘Kit came to you to learn an incantation for summoning a devil. Why?’ the spy demanded.

  ‘To aid you, his most beloved friend. Even in the face of his own death, he thought of you.’

  Will knew Devereux’s words were designed to sting, but that didn’t lessen their impact. ‘To guide me towards the one who has been killing England’s spies, and the plot now unfolding. And his final act was a success, which I would imagine troubles you greatly. There would be no joy for you in a selfless act. But there is a greater mystery here than murder, and it involves the Unseelie Court. You have knowledge of the nature of that plot?’

  ‘Before they wanted only their revenge for England’s grand betrayal and the capture and imprisonment of their beloved Queen. Now their ambitions have grown.’

  ‘How so?’

  The beast smiled.

  Will closed his fingers around his dagger, but kept it hidden from view for the moment. ‘I see I am not to get answers out of this conversation. Perhaps it would be better if I finished it now, and ended your own miserable life in the process.’

  ‘It is possible to learn without gaining answers. If you listen with care.’

  ‘Clues, then. Hints.’

  ‘Here is a hint, little man. This time you cannot stop the Unseelie Court until you find them. They are as close as a whisper and as far away as the stars. Close enough to step into the place you consider safest when the time is right. Sometimes you even look into their eyes and do not know.’ Devereux gave a low, mocking laugh.

  ‘I thank you. I will reflect on your hint at my leisure.’ Will noticed the prisoner’s breath did not cloud like his own, even though the temperature had fallen so steeply there was now the sparkle of hoar frost on the cell walls. ‘And the murders of England’s spies – it is by the hands of the Unseelie Court?’ he added.

  ‘It is by the hands of a man who serves the purpose of the Unseelie Court, although he may or may not be aware of that.’

  ‘And they kill the spies who know of their existence, the soldiers in this long war, to hide their path.’

  ‘Very clever, Master Swyfte. You have pieced together some parts of this great puzzle with no little skill. The very essence of the Unseelie Court’s plot is that they become, once again, invisible and unknown,’ the threatening figure replied. ‘But a death is not always simply a death.’

  ‘A riddle. I am told children and fools enjoy them.’ When the spy took an unconscious step towards the bars, he saw Devereux’s muscles tense. Quickly, he stepped back. ‘So they have not been killed simply because they are spies. Their deaths serve another purpose for the Unseelie Court.’

  ‘Three purposes, in fact. One: the murders mask the larger trail of those Good Neighbours. Two: they mask a smaller trail that may, perhaps, lead to the heart of their plot and the way to bring it all crashing down. And three …’ Halfway between grin and snarl, Devereux’s lips curled back from pointed teeth.

  ‘Three?’

  ‘The Fay, as they have been called and sometimes call themselves, destroy England’s hard-won defences by degrees. Soon there will be nothing to keep them out in the night. And then …’ The prisoner clapped his hands with dark delight.

  Will shuddered. He pictured Gavell’s flayed body in the deadhouse, the strange mark upon his back. Now he understood. The Unseelie Court were using the deaths of the spies in some ritual that would peel back the magical defences the court astrologer Dr Dee had put in place all those years ago. That was why Carpenter and Launceston had encountered that vile thing in Bankside in broad daylight. As the defences yielded, the Enemy would be able to move more freely, until they could strike with impunity anywhere, at any time, liberate their Queen … The spy had a terrifying flash of the beautiful, terrible Fay monarch walking free from the Lantern Tower at Whitehall, boiling with anger after years of imprisonment, fire and blood and destruction blooming in her footsteps like summer flowers.

  ‘How many more murders before it all falls apart?’ Will whispered.

  ‘Three. Only three. Each life must be taken at the right time, in the right place.’

  Will clenched his fist in defiance. ‘Then we must stop more blood being spilled. I suppose you could not tell me the identity of the face behind the devil-mask?’

  ‘In his appearance you already know his nature, and through nature one can divine a man.’ The hunched prisoner levelled his gaze at a scurrying rat. It stopped in its tracks, held fast by the glare. After a moment, it fell on its side, dead. Devereux tossed it into a corner where it landed with a dull thud. ‘I know many things, but I have little to gain by telling you,’ he said, wiping his mouth with the back of his hand.

  ‘You are scared of them, then. The Fay,’ Will taunted, hiding his frustration.

  The prisoner gave a broad, dark grin. ‘Their agents dare not come near here,’ he whispered.

  ‘Who are their agents?’ Will’s eyes narrowed. He felt his anger grow at each of Devereux’s new obfuscations and deceits.

  ‘There is a play, performed in recent times at the Rose Theatre—’

  ‘If it was staged in recent times, how do you know of it?’ the spy interrupted sharply.

  Devereux huddled even closer to the stinking, straw-covered floor and intoned in a low, resonant voice:

  ‘Here, said they, is the Terror of the French

  The Scar-Crow that affrights our children so.

  Then broke I from the officers that led me,

  And with my nails digged stones out of the ground,

  To hurl at the beholders of my shame.

  My grisly countenance made others fly,

  None durst come near for fear of sudden death.’

  ‘More riddles,’ Will said scornfully. ‘You waste my time.’

  ‘Do I?’ The prisoner began to crawl around the cell, flashing occasional glances back at him. ‘There is a school that meets at night, wise men, artists, thinkers, and your good friend Kit was one of them. Yes, he had a secret life you never knew about. And they plot and they plan and they know more than you. And the writer of those words had heard of these agents, though he likely did not know the full truth, or he would have run screaming from his room and created no more fictions.’

  Will laughed. ‘These are your fictions.’

  ‘Mine? No, all true.’ Devereux pressed his hands together in a mockery of prayer. ‘And here is another: if you would stop the agents you must find the Corpus-Scythe.’

  ‘And what is that?’

  ‘A tool, a weapon, a way for the Unseelie Court to control their puppe
ts. For if the agents ever turned they could destroy all things, even the Fay.’

  The spy listened to the cryptic comments Devereux made – the Terror of the French, the school that meets at night – and while they all hinted at a greater mystery, he felt only anger at the elusive nature of what he had been told.

  Will stepped close to the bars.

  The beast-like man turned suddenly, leaping like a cat towards the spy, mouth torn wide, spraying spittle and rat-blood. A rolling, ferocious snarl echoed off the brick walls. Will stood his ground, watching the prisoner rush towards him, hands like claws to tear out his throat.

  At the very last, the spy stepped back. As both of Devereux’s hands reached through the bars, Will grabbed the wrist of one with his left hand, and with his right drove his dagger through the protruding palm. He continued his thrust, forcing the blade through the palm of the hand he gripped and continuing upwards with all his weight behind it until he had both of the prisoner’s hands impaled high over his head.

  Roaring in agony, the creature realized he couldn’t escape, but still he writhed and tore until the blood rushed down his arms.

  Will pressed his face close, smelling his opponent’s meaty breath. ‘I care nothing for you, or your life,’ he growled. ‘I have no time for your games. I seek only revenge for my friend’s death, and I will not be deflected.’

  Those hideous black eyes loomed ever closer. ‘I will tell you nothing,’ Devereux snarled.

  The spy twisted the knife.

  Though he convulsed in pain, the possessed man remained silent, and when the agony passed he was eerily calm.

  ‘Who are the Unseelie Court’s agents?’ Will asked, just as calm.

  Defiant, Devereux held his gaze for a moment, and then replied, ‘The Scar-Crow Men, and they are everywhere.’

  ‘How do I know them?’

  ‘You do not. They look like people you know, perhaps your own friends. But they are not. They are made of straw, or clay, or this, or that. You can trust no one. No one.’

 

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