The Last Apprentice: Complete Collection

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The Last Apprentice: Complete Collection Page 88

by Joseph Delaney


  I looked up and saw spread wings—another lamia gliding down toward me with death in its ferocious eyes; in that instant the lightning flashed directly above so that those wings became translucent and I could see the network of veins within. Sharp claws slashed and the feet hooked into the second witch, dragging her hand away from my staff. Then the wings were still no more; faster and faster they beat, becoming a blur, as sharp claws lifted and tore before hurling her away.

  People were running then. Not toward us; they were fleeing, holding their arms high to ward off the terror that fell upon them from out of the darkness. Ahead, I glimpsed the Spook. He was running hard toward the southwestern edge of the plateau. He was chasing Wurmalde. I glanced around, looking for Alice, but could see no sign of her. Witches were scattering in every direction, and cries of pain and terror filled the air.

  So I followed the Spook. After all, Wurmalde was the key to all this, the one who had brought the covens together. He might need my help. I still had my staff and my chain. If anything went wrong, I might still be able to bind the witch.

  As we ran, the heavens opened and a deluge began, the rain driving in hard from the west. We soon slowed down; the slope was steep and slippery with the rain. I kept losing my balance and falling. Most of the time I struggled downward in darkness, but then, in the far distance, I saw two small specks of light. Even when lightning flashed, there was no sign of Wurmalde; the Spook was getting farther and farther ahead despite all my efforts to keep up. But finally, after what seemed like an endless desperate and difficult descent, the incline became less steep, and in a flash of sheet lightning, I saw the witch some way ahead of the Spook.

  Far beyond her, waiting on a narrow track, was her black coach. The specks of light I’d seen were the two lanterns, one on either side of the driver, who was twisting round in his seat, staring back up the hill at us.

  Now that the ground had leveled out somewhat, the speed of the chase increased dramatically. The Spook was still way ahead of me, his cloak billowing behind him as he ran. His legs seemed to be flying across the grass, and I was struggling to keep up. With every stride, he was gaining on the witch as she ran desperately toward the coach. Cobden looked back at her briefly but made no attempt to get down and assist her. He was staring up at the low clouds boiling overhead and his whip was raised, ready to drive the horses forward.

  As she grasped the handle and pulled open the door, Wurmalde almost fell, but a moment later she was inside. The Spook had reached the coach and was actually reaching for the handle and raising his staff when Cobden cracked his whip in the air to send the team of horses plunging ahead. His whip cracked again, its tip making cruel contact with the animals’ backs; whinnying with pain and fear, they accelerated away while the Spook came to a halt, baffled.

  “She’s gotten away!” he said, shaking his head in frustration as I came to his side. “So near. We almost had her! Now she’s free to work her evil again!”

  But the Spook was wrong. There was another flash of sheet lightning directly above, and out of that light dropped a dark shape. It swooped low over the coach and seemed to strike Cobden from behind. He thrust up an arm to defend himself but had already lost his balance. He fell forward onto the horses, then slipped between them. The hooves trampled him momentarily before the wheels ran over him. I heard the beginning of a scream, but it was drowned out by the thunder.

  Driverless, the horses plunged on, carrying Wurmalde’s coach faster and faster down the steep track. Illuminated by another brilliant flash of lightning, the dark shape plunged downward again to land heavily on the roof of the coach, and in the succeeding darkness I heard its claws begin to rip into the roof before the sound was drowned by thunder once more. I’d seen that coach by moonlight and knew it was constructed from heavy, strong wood. But now, again lit by lightning, it seemed to splinter and collapse like an eggshell. Moments later the lamia took to the air again, but this time its flight was more ponderous. Round and round it spiraled, slowly gaining height as, dragged by the terrified horses, the wreck of the carriage continued down the hill, rocking violently from side to side, as if about to overturn at any moment.

  I’d been close to the eighteen-pounder—the County cannon that had fired upon Malkin Tower with such a tremendous roar—but that was nothing compared to the way the elements behaved now. Flash after flash filled the heavens while forked lightning rent the sky over the hill. It was as if this were God’s cannon, explosion after explosion hurling down wrath upon the witches of Pendle.

  I looked up and saw the lamia carrying Wurmalde, its insectoid wings whirring desperately as, buffeted by the wind, it strove to gain height. Now it began to move back toward the hill.

  “Gore Rock!” cried the Spook, his voice just audible above the tumult of the elements.

  For a moment I didn’t know what he meant, but then the lamia released Wurmalde and I heard her scream as she fell through the turbulent air. I didn’t hear her hit the rock because the sound was drowned out by thunder, but I knew what had happened. Shuddering at the thought of what we would find, I followed the Spook to the sacrificial boulder.

  “Stay here, lad,” he commanded, going forward to investigate.

  I didn’t need telling twice and waited there, shivering, until he returned to my side.

  “So much for immortality!” he said grimly. “She won’t bother us again. It’s over at last.”

  But it wasn’t, and I feared the worst. It was only when we met some of the others coming down the hill that the truth was confirmed. Alice was among them, but she was limping badly.

  “Are you all right?” I asked her.

  “Ain’t nothing to worry about, Tom. Just twisted my ankle running on the slope, that’s all.”

  Then I realized that there was no sign of James, and even before she spoke again I knew by her face that something terrible had occurred.

  “Is it James?” I asked, horrified at the thought of what might have happened to my brother.

  Alice shook her head. “No, Tom. James is all right. Nothing worse than a few cuts and bruises. He’s helping to carry some of the injured off the hill. It’s you, Tom. You’re in terrible danger. Tried to catch Mab, I did, but she got away. But not before she boasted that they’d won; that they’d already carried out the ritual on Gore Rock as the sun went down. I believe her, Tom. So we were already too late when we climbed the hill.” Alice’s face was twisted with anguish. “Old Nick’s crawled through the portal. He’s in the world already, and you’re the one he’ll be coming for. Run, Tom! Run—please. Back to the farm! Back to your mam’s room—before it’s too late.”

  The Spook nodded. “The girl’s right. That’s all you can do now. There’s no refuge safe enough for you here. And those two lamias will have no chance at all against what’s coming. I don’t know how long you’ve got—it’ll take the Fiend some time to adjust to this world and gather strength. Just how long before he comes after you, I wouldn’t like to guess. Here,” he said. “Take my staff. Use the blade if you have to! Use it against anyone or anything that gets in your way! We’ll follow on after you as quickly as we can. Just as soon as we’ve sorted things out a bit here. And once in your mam’s room, stay there until it’s safe.”

  “How will I know when it is safe?” I asked.

  “Trust your instincts, lad, and you’ll know when it’s safe. In any case, don’t you remember what that foul creature told us? Creatures of the dark often lie, but I suspect that Tibb was telling the truth about the limits of the power the witches have over the Fiend. For just two days he’ll be in the power of the covens, bound to their will. Survive that long, and he’ll no doubt have mischief of his own to carry out on the third day and will leave you alone. Now get you gone before it’s too late!”

  So we swapped staffs, and without a backward glance I set off at a run. Mam had been proved right. The dark made flesh would now walk the earth. I was scared and I was desperate, but I kept my pace steady because it was a long
way back to Jack’s farm.

  CHAPTER XXIII

  Blood Moon

  I moved west, trying to get as far away from the hill as possible. The witches had fled the summit, and there was a risk that I might encounter one or more of them at any point.

  I couldn’t wait to be clear of the Pendle district altogether. The storm was dying down and moving away to the east; now the flashes of lightning were more distant, the gaps between these and the subsequent rumbles of thunder growing. Darkness was both friend and enemy: friend because it aided my swift, secret passage across witch country; enemy because out of it at any second might emerge the Fiend, the Devil himself.

  A dark wood lay in my path and I paused, listening carefully before I moved on into the trees. The wind had died down completely, and everything was very still. Not a leaf moved. All was silent. But it didn’t feel right. My instincts warned me of danger waiting within. I turned and decided to make a detour round the outside of the wood, avoiding meeting danger head on. But it didn’t help. Whatever it was came looking for me.

  A dark shape stepped out from behind the trunk of an ancient oak and moved into my path. Trembling, I lifted the Spook’s staff and pressed the secret lever so that, with a click, the blade emerged from its recess.

  It was very dark beneath the tree, but the figure that confronted me and the pale glimmer of the face—most of all, the bare feet—were familiar to me. Even before she spoke, I knew that it was Mab Mouldheel.

  “I’ve come to say good-bye,” she said softly. “You could’ve been mine, Tom, and then none of this would have happened. You’d have been safe with me, not running for your life like this. Together we could’ve sorted the Malkins once and for all. Now it’s too late. Soon you’ll be dead. You’ve got a few hours at the most. That’s all that’s left to you now.”

  “You don’t see everything!” I said angrily. “So get out of my way before—”

  I raised the staff toward her, but Mab just laughed. “I’ve seen where you’re going now. It wasn’t too hard to see that. Think your mam’s room’s going to save you, do you? Well, don’t be so sure about that! Nothing stops Old Nick. His will be done, on earth as it is in hell. The world belonged to him in the old days, and now it’s his once more and he’ll do what he wants with it. King o’ the world, he is, and nothing stands in his way.”

  “How could you do it?” I asked angrily. “How could you be part of that madness? You told me yourself that the Fiend can’t be controlled. He’ll control you and threaten the whole world. What you’ve done is insane. I can’t understand why you’d do it!”

  “Why? Why?” shouted Mab. “Don’t you know why? I cared about you, Tom. Really cared. I loved you!”

  I was stunned by her use of the word “love.” For a moment we both fell silent. But then Mab’s torrent of words continued.

  “I trusted you. Then you betrayed me. But now we’re finished forever, and I don’t care what happens to you. Even if you escape Old Nick, it’s odds on that you’ll never get home anyway. You’ll be dead long before then. The Malkins aren’t taking any chances. Want you dead real bad. To make doubly sure, they’ve set Grimalkin on you. She’s after you now, and not too far behind. If you’re lucky, she’ll kill you quickly and there won’t be too much pain. Best turn round, go back toward her, and get it over with, because if you make it hard for her, then she’ll make it hard for you. She’ll kill you slowly and painfully!”

  I took a deep breath and shook my head. “You’d better hope that you’re right, Mab,” I said. “If I survive, you’re going to be very sorry. One day I’ll come back to Pendle for you. Especially for you. And you’ll spend the rest of your life in a pit eating worms!”

  I ran straight at her, and Mab flinched to one side as I sped past. I was no longer conserving my strength now. I was running hard through the darkness. Running for my life, imagining Grimalkin closing in on me with every stride I took.

  At times I was forced to rest. Running made my throat hot and dry, and I had to stop occasionally to slake my thirst from streams. I couldn’t afford to halt for long, because Grimalkin would be running, too. They said that she was strong and tireless. My knowledge of the County wouldn’t help me too much either. No advantage in taking shortcuts. Grimalkin was County, too—and a skilled assassin, able to track me whichever obscure path I chose.

  Soon I had another problem. Things started to feel very wrong. Since becoming the Spook’s apprentice I’d often been scared, and mostly with good reason. I had two very good reasons now: My pursuit by Grimalkin, and the threat conjured up by Wurmalde and the three covens. But it was more than that. I can only describe it as a sense of foreboding and anxiety. The feeling that usually only comes in nightmares—an extreme dread, a mortal fear. One moment the world was the way it had always been; the next, it had changed forever.

  It was as if something had entered my world as I ran toward Jack’s farm—something as yet invisible—and I knew that nothing would ever be the same again.

  That was my first warning that things were terribly wrong. The second was to do with time. Night or day, I’ve always known what time it is. Give or take a minute or so, I can easily tell the time by the position of the sun or the stars. Even without them, though, I always just know. But as I ran, what my head told me didn’t match what I could see. It should have been dawn, but the sun hadn’t come up.

  When I looked toward the eastern horizon, there wasn’t even the faintest glimmer of light. There were no clouds now—the wind had torn them to tatters and wafted them east. But when I looked up, there were no stars either. No stars at all. It just wasn’t possible. At least, not possible in the world as it had once been.

  But there was one object very low in the sky: the moon—which shouldn’t have been visible. The final stage of the waning moon is a very thin crescent with its horns pointing from left to right. I’d seen that yesterday before the storm struck Pendle. Now the moon should have been totally dark. Invisible. Yet there was a full moon, very low on the eastern horizon. A moon that didn’t shine with its normal silvery light. The moon was blood red.

  There was no wind either. Not a leaf moved. Everything was utterly still and silent. It was as if the whole world was holding its breath and I was the only living, breathing, moving creature on its surface. It was summer, but it suddenly became very cold. My breath steamed in the freezing air, and the grass at my feet whitened with hoarfrost. Hoarfrost in August!

  So I ran on toward Jack’s farm, the only sound that of my boots beating a rhythmical tattoo on the hardening earth.

  I seemed to be running for an eternity, but at last I saw Hangman’s Hill ahead of me. Beyond it was the farm. Soon I was jogging up into the trees that shrouded its upper reaches. I was so close now; so close to the refuge that Mam had prepared. But the moon was red—so red, bathing everything in its lurid, baleful light. And the hanging men were there. The ghasts. The remnants of those who had been hanged long ago, during the civil war that had torn the whole land asunder, dividing the County, ripping families apart, setting brother against brother.

  I’d seen the ghasts before. The Spook had made me confront them as we set off from the farm in the first minutes of my apprenticeship. As a young lad, I’d heard them from my bedroom. They were a fact; they scared the farm dogs, keeping them from the pastures immediately below. But even when I’d confronted them with the Spook, they had never seemed so vivid, never so real. Now they groaned and choked as they slowly turned, suspended from the creaking branches. And their eyes seemed to be staring toward me in accusation—eyes that seemed to be saying that it was somehow my fault; that I was to blame for them hanging there.

  But they were just ghasts, I told myself, remembering one of the very first things the Spook had taught me. They weren’t ghosts—lingering sentient spirits, bound to the scene of their death. They were just fragments, memories remaining while their spirits had passed on, hopefully to a better place. Still, they stared hard at me, and their gaze chi
lled me to the bone. And then there was a sudden alarming sound: Someone was running up the hill toward me, feet thundering on the hard, frozen ground!

  Grimalkin, the witch assassin, was behind me, and she was closing in for the kill.

  CHAPTER XXIV

  Despair

  THE witch was chasing me through the dark wood, getting nearer and nearer by the second.

  I was running as fast as I was able, weaving desperately, with branches whipping into my face. Twice I ducked aside as cold, dead fingers brushed my forehead. Ghast fingers. The fingers of the hanging men.

  Ghasts were mostly phantasms—images without substance. But fear gave them strength and solidity, and I was terrified: terrified of the assassin, terrified of the death that chased me through the wood. And my terror was feeding the dark.

  I was tired and my strength was failing, but I drove myself harder and harder toward the summit of Hangman’s Hill. Once I’d reached it, a faint hope quivered within me. Downhill, the going was easier. Beyond the trees was the fence that bordered the northern pasture of the farm. Climb over that fence, and it wasn’t more than half a mile or so to the farmyard and the back door of the house. Then up the stairs. Turn the key to Mam’s room. Get inside. Lock it behind me. Do that and I’d be safe! But would I have time for any of that?

  Grimalkin might pull me back as I climbed over the fence. She could catch me crossing the pasture. Or the yard. Then I would have to wait while I unlocked the door. I imagined my trembling fingers trying to insert the key into the lock as she ran up the stairs behind me.

  But would I even reach the fence? She was getting nearer now. Much nearer. I could hear her feet pounding down the slope toward me. Better to turn and fight, said a voice inside my head. Better to face her now than be cut down from behind. But what chance did I have against a trained and experienced assassin? What hope against the strength and speed of a witch whose talent was murder?

 

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