“He’s an inquisitive young man,” Woodward said. “And very bright, as well.”
“Uh huh.” Shawcombe’s gaze turned on Matthew again, and Matthew had the distinct and highly unsettling sensation of facing the ugly barrel of a primed and cocked blunderbuss. “Best take care somebody don’t put out your lamp.” Shawcombe held the penetrating stare for a few seconds, and then he started in on the food Matthew had pushed aside.
The two travellers excused themselves from the table when Shawcombe announced that Abner was going to play the fiddle for their “entertainment.” Woodward had tried mightily to restrain his bodily functions, but now nature was shouting at him and he was obliged to put on his coat, take a lantern, and venture out into the weather.
Alone in the room, rain pattering from the roof and a single candle guttering, Matthew heard Abner’s fiddle begin to skreech. It appeared they would be serenaded whether they liked it or not. To make matters worse, Shawcombe began to clap and holler in dubious counterpoint. A rat scuttled in a corner of the room, obviously as disturbed as was Matthew.
He sat down on the straw mattress and wondered how he would ever find sleep tonight, though he was exhausted from the trip. With rats in the room and two more caterwauling out by the hearth, it was likely to be a hard go. He decided he would create and solve some mathematics problems, in Latin of course. That usually helped him relax in difficult situations.
I don’t suppose it really matters, he’d told Shawcombe in regard to Magistrate Kingsbury’s travelling alone. But it seemed to Matthew that it did matter. To travel alone was exceptional and—as Shawcombe had correctly stated—foolhardy. Magistrate Kingsbury had been drunk every time Matthew had seen the man, and perhaps the liquor had enfeebled his brain. But Shawcombe had assumed that Kingsbury was alone. He had not asked Was he alone or Who was travelling with him. No, he’d made the statement: Man travellin’ alone…
The fiddling’s volume was reaching dreadful heights. Matthew sighed and shook his head at the indignity of the situation. At least, however, they had a roof over them for the night. Whether the roof held up all night was another question.
He could still smell the girl’s scent.
It came upon him like an ambush. The scent of her was still there, whether in his nostrils or in his mind he wasn’t sure.
Care for a toss?
Yes, Matthew thought. Math problems.
She’s ripe as a fig puddin’.
And definitely in Latin.
The fiddle moaned and shrieked and Shawcombe began to stomp the floor. Matthew stared at the door, the girl’s scent summoning him.
His mouth was dry. His stomach seemed to be tied up in an impossible knot. Yes, he thought, sleep tonight was going to be a hard go.
A very, very hard go.
three
MATTHEW’S EYES OPENED with a start. The light had dwindled to murky yellow, the candle having burned itself to a shrunken stub. Beside him on the harsh straw, Woodward was snoring noisily, mouth half ajar and chin flesh quivering. It took Matthew a few seconds to realize that there was a wetness on his left cheek. Then another drop of rainwater fell from the sodden ceiling onto his face and he abruptly sat up with a curse clenched behind his teeth.
The sudden movement made a rodent—a very large one, from the sound—squeal in alarm and scurry with a scrabbling of claws back into its nest in the wall. The noise of rain falling from the ceiling onto the floor was a veritable tenpence symphony. Matthew thought the time for building an ark was close at hand. Perhaps Abner was right about it being the end of the world; the year 1700 might never be marked on a calendar.
Be that as it may, he had to add his own water to the deluge. And a bit more as well, from the weight of his bowels. Damned if he wouldn’t have to go out in that weather and squat down like a beast. Might try to hold it, but some things could not be constrained. He would relieve himself in the woods behind the barn like a civilized man while the rats did their business on the floor beside the bed. Next trip—God forbid—he would remember to pack a chamberpot.
He got out of the torture apparatus that passed as a bed. The tavern was quiet; it was a slim hour, to be sure. Distant thunder rumbled, the storm still lingering over the Carolina colony like a black-winged vulture. Matthew worked his feet into his shoes. He didn’t have a heavy coat of his own, so over his flannel nightshirt he donned the magistrate’s fearnaught, which was still damp from Woodward’s recent trek behind the barn. The magistrate’s boots, standing beside the bed, were clotted with mud and would bear the administrations of a coarse hog’s bristle brush to clean. Matthew didn’t want to take the single candle, as the weather would quickly extinguish it and the wall-dwellers might become emboldened by the dark. He would carry a covered lantern from the other room, he decided, and hope it threw enough illumination to avoid what Woodward had told him was “an unholy mess” out there. He might check on the horses, too, while he was so near the barn.
He placed his hand on the door latch and started to lift it when he heard the magistrate cease snoring and quietly moan. Glancing at the man, he saw Woodward’s face wince and contort under the freckled dome of his bald head. Matthew paused, watching in the dim and flickering light. Woodward’s mouth opened, his eyelids fluttering. “Oh,” the magistrate whispered, very clearly. His voice, though a whisper, was wracked with what Matthew could only describe as a pure and terrible agony. “Ohhhhh,” Woodward spoke, in his cage of nightmares. “He’s hurting Ann.” He drew a pained breath. “Hurting he’s hurting oh God Ann…hurting…” He said something more, a jumble of a few words mingled with another low awful moan. His hands were gripping at the front of his nightshirt, his head pressed back into the straw. His mouth released a faint sound that might have been the memory of a cry, and then slowly his body relaxed and the snoring swelled up once again.
This was not something new to Matthew. Many nights the magistrate walked in a dark field of pain, but what its source was he refused to talk about. Matthew had asked him once, five years ago, what the trouble had been, and Woodward’s response had been a rebuke that Matthew’s task was learning the trade of judicial clerking, and if he did not care to learn that trade, he could always find a home again at the orphans’ refuge. The message—delivered with uncharacteristic vinegar—had been clear: whatever haunted the magistrate by night was not to be touched upon.
It had something to do with his wife in London, Matthew believed. Ann must be her name, though Woodward never mentioned that name in his waking hours and never volunteered any information about the woman. In fact, though Matthew had been in the company of Isaac Woodward since turning fifteen years old, he knew very little about the man’s past life in England. This much he did know: Woodward had been a lawyer of some fame and had found success in the financial field as well, but what had caused his reversal of fortune and why he had left London for the rough-hewn colonies remained mysteries. At least Matthew understood from his readings and from what Woodward said about London that it was a great city; he’d never set foot there, or in England either, for he’d been born aboard a ship on the Atlantic nineteen days out of Portsmouth.
Matthew quietly lifted the latch and left the room. In the darkened chamber beyond, small flames still gnawed at black bits of wood in the hearth, though the largest of the coals had been banked for the night. Bitter smoke lingered in the air. Hanging from hooks next to the fireplace were two lanterns, both made of hammered tin with small nail-holes punched in the metal for the light to pass through. One of the lanterns had a burnt candle stuck on its inner spike, so that was the illuminator Matthew chose. He found a pine twig on the floor, touched it alight in the remains of the fire, and transferred the flame to the candle’s wick.
“What are you about? Eh?”
The voice, cutting the silence as it did, almost lifted Matthew out of his shoes. He twisted around and the lantern’s meager but spreading light fell upon Will Shawcombe, who was sitting at one of the tables with a tankard before him and a black-scorc
hed clay pipe clenched in his teeth.
“You up prowlin’, boy?” Shawcombe’s eyes were deep sunken and the skin of his face was daubed dirty yellow in the candlelight. A curl of smoke oozed from his mouth.
“I…have to go out,” Matthew replied, still unnerved.
Shawcombe drew slowly on his pipe. “Well,” he said, “mind your legs, then. Awful sloppy out there.”
Matthew nodded. He started to turn toward the door, but Shawcombe spoke up again: “Your master wouldn’t want to part with that fine waistc’t, would he?”
“No, he wouldn’t.” Though he knew Shawcombe was baiting him, he couldn’t let it go past. “Mr. Woodward is not my master.”
“He ain’t, huh? Well then, how come he tells you what you can do and what you cain’t? Seems to me he’s the master and you’re the slave.”
“Mr. Woodward looks out for my interest.”
“Uh huh.” Shawcombe tilted his head back and fired a dart of smoke at the ceiling. “Makes you cart the baggage, then he won’t even let you dip your wick? All that shit about wolves and how you ought to be guarded. And you a twenty-year-old man! I’ll bet he makes you scrape the mud off his boots, don’t he?”
“I’m his clerk,” Matthew said pointedly. “Not his valet.”
“Does he clean his own boots, or do you?”
Matthew paused. The truth was that he did clean the magistrate’s boots, but it was a task he did without complaint. Some things over the years—such as organizing the judicial paperwork, keeping their living quarters in order, darning the clothes, packing the trunks, and arranging sundry other small affairs—had fallen to Matthew simply because he was much more efficient at taking care of details.
“I knew you did it,” Shawcombe went on. “Man like that’s got blue blood in his veins. He don’t want to get them hands too dirty, does he? Yeah, like I said, he’s the master and you’re the slave.”
“You can believe what you like.”
“I believe what I see,” Shawcombe said. “Come over here, lemme show you somethin’. You bein’ a slave and all, you might well want to have a look.” Before Matthew could decline and go on his way, Shawcombe lifted his right fist and opened it. “Here’s somethin’ you ain’t never seen before and ain’t like to see again.”
The lantern’s light sparked off the surface of a gold coin. “Here!” Shawcombe offered it to Matthew. “I’ll even let you hold it.”
Against his better judgment—and the urge to pee pressing on his bladder—Matthew approached the man and took the coin from him. He held it close to the lantern and inspected the engraving. It was a well-worn piece, much of the lettering rubbed off, but at its center was a cross that separated the figures of two lions and two castles. Matthew could make out the faint letters Charles II and Dei Grat around the coin’s rim.
“Know what that is?” Shawcombe prodded.
“Charles the Second is the King of Spain,” Matthew said. “So this must be Spanish.”
“That’s right. Spanish. You know what that means, don’t you?”
“It means a Spaniard was recently here?”
“Close. I got this from a dead redskin’s pouch. Now what’s a redskin doin’ with a Spanish gold piece?” He didn’t wait for Matthew to venture a guess. “Means there’s a damn Spanish spy ’round here somewhere. Stirrin’ up some trouble with the Indians, most like. You know them Spaniards are sittin’ down there in the Florida country, not seventy leagues from here. They got spies all in the colonies, spreadin’ the word that any black crow who flies from his master and gets to the Florida country can be a free man. You ever heard such a thing? Them Spaniards are promisin’ the same thing to criminals, murderers, every like of John Badseed.”
He swiped the coin from Matthew’s hand. “If you was to run to Florida and your master was to want you back, them Spaniards would jus’ laugh at him. Same’s true of somebody done a stealin’ or a murder: get to Florida, them Spaniards would protect him. I tell you, once them blackamoors start runnin’ to Florida by the scores and gettin’ turned into free men, this world’s gonna roast in Hell’s fires.” Shawcombe dropped the coin into the tankard, which still had liquid in it, judging from the sound of the wet plop, then sat smoking his pipe with his arms crossed over his chest. “Yeah,” he said with a knowing nod, “a Spanish spy’s out there, payin’ the redskins to get up to some mischief. Hell, he might even be livin’ in Fount Royal, an Englishman turned blackcoat!”
“Possibly.” Matthew’s need for relief was now undeniable. “Excuse me, I have to go.”
“Go on, then. Like I say, watch where you step.” Shawcombe let Matthew get to the door and then said, “Hey, clerk! You sure he wouldn’t part with that waistc’t?”
“Absolutely sure.”
Shawcombe grunted, his head wreathed with blue pipesmoke. “I didn’t think so,” he said in a quiet voice.
Matthew unlatched the door and went out. The storm had quietened somewhat, the rain falling now as misty drizzle. In the sky, though, distant lightning flashed through the clouds. The mud clasped hold of Matthew’s shoes. A half-dozen steps through the mire, Matthew had to lift up his nightshirt and urinate where he stood. Decorum, however, dictated that he relieve his bowels in the woods behind the barn, for there were no leaves or pine needles nearby with which to clean himself. When he finished, he followed the lantern’s glow past the barn, his shoes sinking up to the ankles in a veritable swamp. Once beyond the forest’s edge, he gathered a handful of wet leaves and then crouched down to attend to his business. The lightning danced overhead, he was soaked, muddy, and miserable, and all in all it was a nasty moment. Such things, however, could not be rushed no matter how fervently one tried.
After what seemed an eternity, during which Matthew cursed Shawcombe and swore again to pack a chamberpot on their next journey, the deed was completed and the wet leaves put to use. He straightened up and held the lantern out to find his path back to the so-called tavern. Once more the waterlogged ground opened and closed around his shoes, his knee joints fairly popping as he worked his legs loose from the quagmire. He intended to check on the horses before he returned to the so-called bed, where he could look forward to the magistrate’s snoring, the rustling of rats, and rainwater dripping on his—
He fell.
It was so fast he hardly knew what was happening. His initial thought was that the earth had sucked his legs out from under him. His second thought, which he barely had an eye-blink of time to act upon, was to keep the lantern from being extinguished. So even as he fell on his belly and the mud and water splashed around him and over the magistrate’s fearnaught coat, he was able to lift his arm up and protect the light. He spat mud out of his mouth, his face aflame with anger, and said, “Damn it to Hell!” Then he tried to sit up, mud all over his face, his sight most blinded. He found this task harder than it should have been. His legs, he realized, had been seized by the earth. The very ground had collapsed under his shoes, and now his feet were entangled in something that felt like a bramble bush down in the swampy muck. Careful of the lantern, he wrenched his right foot loose but whatever held his left foot would not yield. Lightning flared again and the rain started falling harder. He was able to get his right leg under him, and then he braced himself as best he could and jerked his left leg up and out of the morass.
There was a brittle cracking sound. His leg was free.
But as he shone the lantern down upon his leg, Matthew realized he’d stepped into something that had come out of the earth still embracing his ankle.
At first he didn’t know what it was. His foot had gone right through what looked like a mud-dripping cage of some kind. He could see the splintered edges, one of which had scraped a bleeding gouge in his leg.
The rain was slowly washing mud off the object. As he stared at it, another flash of lightning helped aid his recognition of what held him, and his heart felt gripped by a freezing hand.
Matthew’s anatomy studies did not have to be recollect
ed to tell him that he’d stepped into and through a human-sized rib cage. A section of spinal cord was still attached, and on it clung bits of grayish-brown material that could only be decayed flesh.
He let out a mangled cry and began frantically kicking at the thing with his other shoe. The bones cracked, broke, and fell away, and when the last of the rib cage and vertebrae had been kicked loose Matthew crawled away from it as fast as the mud would allow. Then he sat up amid leaves and pine needles and pressed his back against a tree trunk, the breath rasping in his lungs and his eyes wide and shocked.
He thought, numbly, how distraught the magistrate was going to be over the fearnaught coat. Such coats were not easy to come by. It was ruined, no doubt. A rib cage. Human-sized. Ruined beyond all hope of cleaning. Damn this rain and mud, damn this wild land, and damn Shawcombe and the chamberpot he should have had.
A rib cage, Matthew thought. Rain was running down his face now. It was cold, and the chill helped him organize his mind. Of course, the rib cage might’ve belonged to an animal. Mightn’t it?
The lantern was muddy but—thank providence!—the candle was still burning. He stood up and made his way over to the broken bones. There he knelt down and shone the light upon them, trying to determine what animal they might’ve come from. While he was so occupied, he heard a soft slithering sound somewhere to his right. He angled the lantern toward it and in a few seconds saw that a gaping hole some four feet across had opened in the boggy ground; the slithering sound was mud sliding down its sides.
Matthew thought it might have been what had collapsed under his feet and caused him to fall, for the earth itself was rebelling against this incessant downpour. He stood up, eased to the edge of the hole, and directed the lantern’s light down into it.
At first he saw what looked like a pile of sticks lying in the hole. Everything was muddy and tangled together into an indistinct mess. The longer he stared, however, the more clear came the picture.