Read V 02 - Domino Men, The Online

Authors: Barnes-Jonathan

V 02 - Domino Men, The (20 page)

The equerry backed toward the door.

“There’s just one more thing.”

“Sir?”

“What do you make of this Streater fellow?  Seems a rum sort.”

He does not appear to be a man in whom I would be altogether happy to place my faith, sir.”

“Oh?”  Strangely, the prince seemed almost affronted by this.  “Well, I’ll say this for him.  He makes an uncommonly good cup of tea.”

“Is that so, sir?”

“I’m seeing him later, as it happens.  He’s in the midst of telling me the most extraordinary story.  Something about my great-great-great-grandmother.  Something about a contract.”

“Good Lord, sir.”

“Good Lord, indeed, Silverman.  It’s all madness, of course.”

“Indeed, sir.”

“I don’t suppose you’ve heard of something like that?  Any rumors of that nature?”

“There are always rumors, sir.”  Silverman bowed his head.  “If there’s nothing else?”

Arthur Windsor waved the fellow away and sat in silence for a while, alone with his boiled egg, his suspicion, his storm-cloud thoughts.

 

 

An hour or so later, he left his room and, brushing aside offers of assistance from various members of his household staff, walked swiftly to the old ballroom, not stopping to question his haste or wonder why he was hurrying with such rapidity to meet a man whose company, in the normal course of life, he would have found distasteful in the extreme.

Arthur arrived at the appointed time to discover his host already waiting for him, drinking tea and smirking.

Streater didn’t bother to get up when the prince walked into the room, just grunted once and slurped noisily at his cup.

“Mr. Streater?”

There was another lip-smacking sound before the sharp-featured man looked up.  “Be with you in a minute, chief.  Just having my brew.”

“I’m thirsty.”

“Thirsty?”

Arthur Windsor became uncharacteristically.  He seemed to shrink back, withdraw into himself, a royal snail edging into his majestic shell.  “What I mean to say is that I’d really like some tea.”

Streater drained his cup and set it on the table beside him.  “What was that, mate?”

“I said I’d really like some tea.”

“Bad luck, chief.”  Streater sounded not in the least apologetic.  “Think I’ve just had the last of it.”  He belched expansively.

The prince looked stricken.

“Sorry about that.”

“Are you quite sure?” Arthur said, his voice wavering under the weight of disappointment.  “Might there not be a little left behind?”

Streater shrugged.  “Doubt it.  But I’ll check anyway.”  He popped the lid off the teapot, peered inside, paused, wrinkled his nose and said:  “You’re in luck, chief.  There’s a few dregs after all.”

Arthur’s voice was glutted with relief.  “Dregs will be fine.”

Streater poured out about half a cup and passed it to him.  “Happy now?”

Arthur gulped it down in one.  “Much better.  Thank you, Mr. Streater.”

The blond man flashed his sharky smile.  “We ought to crack on with your education.  Your mum doesn’t want us to drag our heels.”  Like a ringmaster about to introduce the prize of his menagerie, he clapped his hands and the room instantly grew dark.  “Tea down, chief.  It’s look-and-learn time.”

 

 

By now it had started to become almost predictable — the past shimmering into existence, coalescing and becoming real before the prince’s eyes.  There was his great-great-great-grandmother,, sat behind her desk.  There was Mr. Dedlock, founder of what (according to Streater) was to become the implacable enemy of his family.  And there, marching through the doors like the spearhead of some bureaucratic army, were the Englishman, the Irishman and the Scotsman, the triumvirate who constituted the firm of Wholeworm, Quillinane and Killbreath.  By their side was someone the prince had not seen before, an adolescent boy — squat featured, his face pocked with acne, his hair in hopeless clumps, his mouth twisted into a vacant leer.

“The long-dead Queen bared her teeth in welcome.  “Is this the child?”

The Englishman, Mr. Wholeworm, spoke first.  “It is, ma’am.”

Next, the Irishman stepped forward.  “And he was exactly where Leviathan said he’d be.”

Strangely, the boy seemed unafraid, allowing himself to be herded into the presence of the monarch, his expression fixed and incurious.

Dedlock, who had until now been standing at the Queen’s right hand, moved into the light.  “Why is the boy so quiet?  Why does he not scream and mewl?”

The Englishman spoke up.  “He has been bred from birth to act as a vessel for Leviathan.”

Impatiently, the Queen waved away the explanation.  “Bring him to me.”

The boy was ushered forward.

“Gentlemen,” purred Arthur’s great-great-great-grandmother, “I think this child should kneel before his Queen.”

The Irishman placed a hand on the boy’s head and guided him down onto the floor.

“You’ve done well,” said the Queen.  “Now give me his wrists.”

Quillinane nodded.  Almost tenderly, he took the child’s hands and turned them palms-outward toward the monarch.

“Gentlemen, what I am about to do may cause you some distress, but I wish you to know that however my actions appear to you, they are executed for the greater glory of our empire and for the continued inviolacy of these shores.  Stiffen your sinews, gather up your resolve, harden your hearts.  Leviathan has warned me that there may be those amongst you who suffer from nerves or who lack the stomach for necessities.  I only hope that we are man enough to stand the sight of blood.”  Whilst she had been speaking, the Queen had teased out a slender knife from a hiding place in her left sleeve — a sleight of hand which had gone entirely unnoticed by all who were present, meaning that what happened next took everyone by surprise.

In two swift motions, the head of the British Empire slashed into each of the child’s wrists.  Blood bubbled up.

“Come here, boy,” she said, dropping the knife, seizing the boy’s wrists and pressing down hard.  “Now, bleed,” she hissed.  “Bleed!”

 

 

Later, bringing to bear all the logic and common sense which had fled in the face of the horror in the ballroom, Arthur realized that pressing down so vigorously upon the boy’s wrists ought rightfully to have staunched the bleeding.  It should have stopped the flow of blood, not the opposite.  Certainly, it shouldn’t have sprayed out in the way that it did, not in those nightmarish geysers of iridescent crimson.

Dedlock ran toward the Queen.  “This is monstrous, Your Majesty?”  He tried to wrest the boy free, but against all logic, the woman’s grip proved too strong.

Wholeworm, Quillinane, and Killbreath merely looked on, swapping the occasional anxious glance between them, content on this occasion simply to observe.

“Silence!” barked the Queen.  “You are all of you accomplice to this day.”

Dedlock’s face was purpling in rage.  “I will not condone such butchery!”

The boy crumpled to the floor, scarlet pooling fast around him.

“What have you done” Dedlock said.  “What have you become?”

The Queen seemed unmoved by his appeal, fired up as she was, supercharged by passion.  “Hush,” she said, her voice trembling with fervor.  “Leviathan is here.”

The boy sat up straight, a human jack-in-the-box in a spreading lake of blood.  He made a noise when he moved.  They all heard it — a sticky, fleshy popping sound, like the noise one hears on pulling the heads off shrimp.

He smiled.

“Good morning,” he said, although the voice did not sound altogether like that of a child.  “Greetings to you all.”

The Queen’s left hand hovered near her mouth in a posture of girlish excitement.  “Leviathan?”

The boys lips twitched upward.  “I am here, Your Majesty.”

“Then everything was true?”

“All true.  All quite true.”

Dedlock approached the child. “Leviathan?”

“You must be Mr. Dedlock,” said the boy.  “The doubter.  The cynic.  Not that Dedlock is your real name.  Why not tell us the name you were born with, sir?  Surely it is not a thing of which to be ashamed?”

“What are you?” Dedlock asked.

“A higher being, sir.  One who moves amongst the angels.  One who hears the music of the spheres.”

“You’re not human?”

“I am a creature of air and starlight, Dedlock.  A thing of clouds and moonbeam.”

“What is it you want?  What do you want with London?”

The boy turned toward the Queen.  “Shall we tell him, Your Majesty?”

She giggled.  “The excellent firm of Wholeworm, Quillinane and Killbreath has drawn up our contract.”

The Scotsman stepped forward.  “All above board,” he purred, his voice full of Caledonian pride for a really well-crafted legal document.

“Ma’am?”  Dedlock’s voice bristled with barely suppressed fury.  “Surely you cannot be ready to sign away the city to this monstrosity?”

Behind them, the boy was laughing, blood and mucus in his throat conspiring to lend the sound the quality of a struggling cistern.  Raising himself to his feet, the child clip-clopped over to the monarch.

Dedlock looked as though he was going to throw up.  “Majesty?”

The boy reached the desk and placed a hand on top of it.  Blood oozed around the inkwell, spread fast across the blotter, seeping scarlet into the walnut wood below.  “Dear lady.  Please sign.  Feel at liberty to use my blood.”

The Queen took out a pen and dipped it in front of him.  “So kind.”

“No!”  Dedlock was so close to the monarch that, for a moment, it seemed as though he might strike her.

“Leviathan wishes only to guide us,” said the Queen.  “This is simply his due.”

The boy squirmed over the desk.  “Sign, Your Majesty!”

“Ma’am,” said Dedlock.  “I implore you not to sign that paper.  And I tell you again that this being is not what he claims.  What god has need of signatures and contracts?”

“Time grows short,” wheedled the boy.  “Sign the paper.”

“Ma’am!”

The child smiled.  “Without my help, by the end of the century, this country will be overrun.  Foreigners everywhere!  Savages in the gates!  The streets crimson with the blood of innocents!  Sign, Your Majesty!  Sign!”

Dedlock was near to begging.  “Majesty, please.  What does the creature want with London?  What will it do with the city?”

“My mind is made up, Mr. Dedlock,” she said — and the Queen of all that is pink on the map scrawled her sanguinary signature.

“Ma’am!”  Dedlock was distraught.  “I cannot — will not — tolerate this.”

A royal glare.  “You have little choice, sir.”

“On the contrary, I will devote every fiber of my being to stopping you.  I will dedicate the whole of my life to bringing this Leviathan to justice.  I shall pit every resource of my organization against your house of malice.”

“You would declare civil war?  War between crown and state?”

“It grieves me to say so, ma’am, but you have left me with little choice.”

Just as Mr. Dedlock strode from the room, self-righteous wrath in every strutting step, the boy toppled forward, face-down, onto a floor sticky with blood, the last flicker of life in him extinguished.

 

 

It was over.  Streater stuck his hands together, the room blazed with light and the outlines of the spirits faded into dust and sunshine once again.

Arthur, his eyes stinging from the glare, craned his head to look at his mother’s messenger with piteous confusion in his face.  “Is this the truth?” he asked.

Streater grinned.  “All true, chief.  All true.  But the really juicy question is — what happens next?”

 

 

 

Chapter 15

 

When I was summoned the following morning, into the presence of Mr. Dedlock, I found him to be quite unlike his usual self — pensive, melancholy, consumed by a bleak nostalgia.

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