Chapter 16

IT WAS A moonlit night. Boltfoot was cold to the bone. His throat was thick and painful. His neck was stiff and aching, as were his arms, shoulders and chest. He fought to keep from coughing, but it was not easy.

He was well concealed, behind a low pigsty wall about twenty yards from the door of the Black Moth. Watching, waiting. The minutes turned to hours. He had to get this right. There would be one chance only.

The card players came out in ones or twos, presumably when their wages were gone or when they decided they really needed a few hours’ sleep before dawn. He watched them and studied their faces by the moon, cursing his luck that he had caught this damnable ague.

The last watch had come by with his lantern at midnight, but still the muffled sounds of games came from the dismal alehouse. At about two of the clock, in the early hours, he saw him: the man with the smirk. He was alone. He bade the landlord goodnight and said something that made them both laugh. Boltfoot bridled, certain that he was the object of their ridicule.

The smirking man walked off down the street, away from the straggle of houses towards the countryside. Boltfoot eased himself from the pigsty and followed him, padding silently on bare feet. He had left his hard-soled boots by the horse, which was tethered in a spinney. He could not afford to be heard or seen.

From the way he walked, it seemed that Boltfoot’s quarry had not been drinking heavily. Either that or he could hold his ale well, for he did not stagger or weave, but walked firmly and with purpose.

Twenty minutes later, just over a mile from town, the man turned right through a gap in the hedgerow and went down a farm track between two ploughed fields. Boltfoot would have to act fast. Up ahead he could see the dark outline of a small cottage – clearly the man’s home. Any number of people could be there.

Boltfoot’s foot dragged through the rutted path. He should have been in great pain, but he would not acknowledge it and drove himself on, faster, as silent as a cat. His caliver was in his arms, fully loaded and primed with powder. His finger was on the trigger. He was no more than ten feet behind the smirking man.

The man stopped, alert as though he had heard something. He twisted around and recoiled in shock. Their eyes met, then the man’s eyes lowered and he realised he was staring into the muzzle of a gun. Boltfoot took two steps forward and pushed the gaping barrel full into his face.

‘One word and you are dead,’ he growled.

The man tried to step back and flee, but Boltfoot pushed forward again, smashing the stock into his nose. The man grunted, fell backwards, into the ploughed earth, gasping for breath, clutching at his bloody broken nose. Boltfoot was on him, his gun full on the man so that he could not move nor yell without bringing on his own demise.

‘If you cry out, it will be my pleasure to kill you.’

‘I—’

‘Say nothing. I will ask questions. You will give answers. I saw the way you looked, back at the Black Moth. You know what happened to Mr Ivory. Where is he?’

‘I don’t know—’

Boltfoot smacked the barrel of the gun into the side of the man’s face. More blood spilt from a gash, just below the ear.

‘Speak. You have little time.’

‘He was a bastardly cheat. Got his deserts.’

Boltfoot hit the man again, on the other cheek, with the butt of the gun, making him gasp with pain.

Boltfoot raised the caliver so that the butt hovered over the man’s head. ‘The next blow will crush your face deep into your miserable brain.’

‘I’ll talk. I’ll talk, Mr Cooper.’

‘Is he dead?’

‘No. No – I don’t think so. I pray not …’

‘Take me to him.’

Boltfoot pulled the man to his feet and began pushing him back along the track, the gun in his spine, prodding him forward.

‘He’s a-ways from here.’

‘Then you had better walk fast and hope to God my finger doesn’t get an itch.’

Ivory was lying on his back at the bottom of a dyke, six feet deep with steep sides. He was still, his head to one side, his limbs at strange angles.

‘You better hope he’s alive, or I’ll see you hanged for murder. Now, how are we going to get him out of there?’

‘You’ll have to go down and get him, Cooper.’

‘We’ll need a rope. Hoist him up.’

‘I got no rope, so you’re out of luck.’

The horse stood quietly by. They had gone to the spinney to get it on the way here. Their trek had been about three miles, skirting the town. The smirking man – who said his name was Stonebreaker – had become increasingly defiant. It occurred to Boltfoot that he perhaps did not believe he would use his gun. Either that or he saw how slow and weak Boltfoot had become.

‘No, Mr Stonebreaker, it’s you that is out of luck. Take off your clothes.’

Stonebreaker folded his arms across his chest and jutted his chin forward. He was a brawny farmhand, with a face weathered by a life lived in the outdoors. His eyes were brutish. Boltfoot felt pity for the man’s wife. He shrugged his shoulders and took out his razor-edged dagger.

‘Your life hangs by a very thin thread, Mr Stonebreaker. You will remove your clothes, alive, or I will remove them, dead.’

The man looked at Boltfoot’s caliver, slung casually in his left arm, pointing directly at his belly, and at the deadly blade in his right hand, glinting in the moonlight, and suddenly lost his confidence and courage.

‘All my clothes?’

‘You may keep your under-breeches if you have any.’

Slowly, he began to undress. First his rough cassock coat and the narrow cord that tied it, then his shirt and undergarment and nether-stocks. He stood shivering at the edge of the ditch, arms folded across his broad, hairy chest.

‘Now, down into the ditch.’

‘I’m not going down there.’

Boltfoot lunged forward and pushed him. Stonebreaker was taken by surprise and lost his footing. He tumbled backwards into the long, narrow trench, landing awkwardly in the thin puddle of mud and water that lined the bottom of the ditch. He yelped with pain.

‘See if you can wake Mr Ivory while I make a rope, which you will attach to his arms.’

Boltfoot began to cut the man’s clothes into strips, which he wound and tied with secure sailors’ knots until he had a rope fifteen or sixteen feet in length. He looked down into the ditch.

‘Well, how is he?’

‘Alive, Mr Cooper. But he does not move.’

‘Are his bones broken?’

‘I cannot tell.’

‘I’m going to throw down one end of the rope. You will loop it under his arms. If you do that faithfully and assist me to raise him, and if he survives this night and regains his mind, then I promise you in the name of Christ that you will live, too. You know the alternative.’

Boltfoot tossed down his makeshift rope, holding one end back, looped tight around his wrist so that no sudden tug should let it slip from his grasp. Stonebreaker raised Ivory’s head and fed the rope under his arms.

‘Be careful with him,’ Boltfoot ordered sharply.

‘I am being as careful as I can, Mr Cooper.’

‘Now put a good knot in it, as if you were tethering a farm beast. A knot that won’t slip.’ He looked down at Stonebreaker’s work. It was dark in the trench and difficult to see much, even by moonlight. ‘Is that strong?’

‘Yes. Strong enough.’

‘Lift him to his feet, like a sack. Then the horse will drag him up.’

‘What about me?’

‘You stay down there till I tell you otherwise.’

Boltfoot attached his end of the rope to the horse’s saddle strap, then drove it forward. Ivory came up from the trench easily and lay, still, on the grassy verge of the ditch. Boltfoot went back to him and listened to his breathing. Even in this dim light, he could see that he had been badly beaten. His face was swollen and bruised, his eyes puffed up. Blood crusted around his mouth. Boltfoot’s hand slid across Ivory’s ribcage and felt the comforting tubular mound of the perspective glass. It seemed to be intact. Thanks be to God. What was it John Shakespeare had said before sending him on this mission? Do all in your power to keep the glass safe and Ivory alive. But remember this: the instrument is more important than the man.

Boltfoot undid the cord from about Ivory’s armpits and shoulders. He held a flask to his lips and poured a little clean water into his parched mouth. Ivory groaned, but his eyes did not open.

Stonebreaker was trying in vain to scramble out from the ditch. Boltfoot stood and watched him as he slid back down the slippery sides, bringing a tumble of mud cascading down with him. Boltfoot laughed, though it hurt his throat.

‘I would leave you there, except I have one more task for you. Here.’

He flung the end of the rope to him, then led the horse forward again, pulling Stonebreaker up.

He lay on the earth, panting.

‘Get up. I want you to put Mr Ivory over my horse.’

Stonebreaker stumbled to his feet. ‘Why should I do that?’

‘You have been a sound man thus far, Mr Stonebreaker – like a mule and almost as clever. Don’t do anything foolish now and make me spill more of your blood.’

Stonebreaker wiped his bare arm across his damaged face where Boltfoot’s gun had struck him. ‘It wasn’t just me, you know.’

‘I do realise that, Mr Stonebreaker, but, in faith, I care not.’

‘There were six of us. He cheated us all, took our money by trickery.’

‘I’m sure I would have done the same to him myself. I am not judge, nor jury. But whatever he has done, I must have him back, for reasons that I am not at liberty to explain. Now put him on the horse and be done with talking.’

Stonebreaker grumbled, but his eyes never left Boltfoot’s formidable array of weapons and he did as he was told, lifting Ivory like a sack and slinging him over the horse. There was no smirk on his face now.

‘You’re as strong as your name, Mr Stonebreaker. Well done. But I fear I shall now have to ask you to stand against yonder tree.’

Once again, he did as ordered. Boltfoot tied him securely, but not so tight as to hurt him. ‘You will doubtless be found soon after daybreak.’

‘God blind you, Cooper.’

‘And you will see that, unlike Ivory, I am not a cheat, nor a thief, for I have left you bound with your own clothes. A little sewing should fix them well enough.’

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