Read The Devil's Apprentice Online

Authors: Edward Marston

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Historical, #MARKED

The Devil's Apprentice (14 page)

Gloom descended on the actors like a pall. As they gathered at the Queen’s Head on Monday morning, they were in a state of disarray. Firethorn was not merely their leader, he was the single biggest reason for the troupe’s success. With him, they could outshine any other theatrical company in the land; without him, they were palpably weakened. His absence would take the glow off their welcome at Silvermere. In the new play, in particular, he would be sorely missed. Concealing his own fears, Nicholas tried to fend off questions and still the pessimists.

‘When is Lawrence going to join us, Nick?’ asked Owen Elias.

‘Soon,’ said the book holder. ‘Very soon.’

‘Today? Tomorrow?’

‘I can’t give you a date, Owen.’

‘Is it that serious?’ said Hoode.

‘He’s on the road to recovery Edmund.’

‘But he should be on the road to Essex with the rest of us. I know Lawrence. Only plague, palsy or death would keep him away at a time like this. What’s wrong with him?’

‘He’ll be fine,’ said Nicholas, raising his voice so that all could hear. ‘And he implores you not to be downhearted. We’re to go on ahead and he’ll follow.’

‘Supposing that he doesn’t?’ said Barnaby Gill, irritably. ‘It throws our choice of plays into the melting pot. How can we play
Vincentio’s Revenge
without Vincentio? Or
Henry the Fifth
without a king? Changes will have to be made.’

Elias was aghast. ‘Surely,
you
don’t want to take over those roles, Barnaby?’

‘Of course, not,’ retorted Gill. ‘I recommend that we insert
Cupid’s Folly
into the list.
I
carry that piece so Lawrence will not be needed.’

‘I’ve a better idea,’ said the Welshman scornfully, ‘why not cancel all the plays we chose and give six performances of
Cupid’s Folly
instead? Will that content you, Barnaby? Fie in thee!’ he exclaimed. ‘Lawrence lies sick and all that you can think about is trying to advantage yourself. It’s despicable.’

Gill was unmoved. ‘It’s practical.’

‘Practical but unnecessary,’ said Nicholas firmly.

‘We must have contingency plans, Nicholas.’

‘We have them, Master Gill. We leave without him.’

Nicholas clambered up on to the cart to supervise the last of the loading. George Dart and the four apprentices were to travel with him. The rest of the company had brought their own horses except for Owen Elias who had borrowed one from an unnamed lady. Since the husband
of the Welshman’s earlier benefactor had returned home, Nicholas surmised that he had prevailed upon another of his conquests. It did not matter. The book holder had enough to worry about without speculating on Elias’s extraordinary private life. It was the fate of Lawrence Firethorn that dominated Nicholas’s thinking. A singularly healthy man had been struck down twice by a mystery illness in less than a week. Whatever was wrong with him?

‘It was frightening,’ confessed Richard Honeydew, standing beside him.

‘Was it?’ said Nicholas.

‘He stood up in the middle of the sermon and shook all over. I’ve never heard such a cry of pain. Mistress Firethorn fears that he may die.’

‘That’s not what she told me,’ said the other, anxious to suppress the suggestion. ‘She knows her husband better than any of us and assured me that he would be back on his feet in no time at all.’

‘The whole congregation prayed for him yesterday.’

‘There you are, Dick. That’s bound to help his recovery.’

The apprentice was sceptical. ‘It hasn’t worked so far.’

‘Give it time, lad.’

Departures from London were usually occasions of hope tinged with sadness as the members of the company set out on a new adventure, bidding farewell to their wives and children, or their lovers and friends. Emotions of a different kind now prevailed. The shortness of their stay in Essex made for less tearful scenes with their loved ones but there was none of the sense of curiosity with which they invariably set out. A misery verging on despair touched all
but a few of them. Instead of delighting in the fact that they were to perform to a select audience in a beautiful country house, they feared that their chances of theatrical triumph had gone before they had even left. Only one thing could have made the scene more depressing and he stepped out of the inn to oblige. Surveying them with hangdog disgust, Alexander Marwood, the egregious landlord who had tried so many times to evict them from his premises, now had the gall to berate them for deserting him and taking a major part of his custom away.

‘I deserve better than this!’ he said in a voice like a wailing wind. ‘What will you find in Essex that I cannot offer you here?’

‘Decent beer!’ shouted Elias. ‘And an audience.’

‘Warmer weather will soon come.’

‘Yes, Master Marwood, but you’ll stay as cold as a block of ice.’

Muted laughter greeted the exchange. The landlord normally provoked scorn and derision among the actors but the sight of him merely depressed them even more on this occasion. He was a symbol of woe, a harbinger of ill fortune. Nicholas decided that it was time to get them on their way, resigned to the fact that he could take them free of the watching Marwood but he couldn’t dispel the heaviness in their hearts. After making sure that his passengers and cargo were secure, he got into the driving seat and used the reins to flick the two massive horses into motion. As the cart rumbled noisily across the yard, the rest of the company mounted up and followed it. The clatter of approaching hooves brought them all to a halt. A horse
came cantering into the yard before being reined in by its rider. Lawrence Firethorn saluted them with a raised arm and gave a chuckle.

‘What’s this, you rogues?’ he said. ‘Do you dare to go without me?’

 

They had rested at a wayside inn several miles out of London before Nicholas had the chance of a private word with him. Until then, Firethorn had concentrated on trying to reassure his fellows, talking enthusiastically about the performances that lay ahead of them and shrugging off suggestions that he had been seriously ill. Though the apprentices had reported him incapacitated when they left the house earlier, he maintained that he awoke refreshed and restored. He had even claimed that his seizure during the church service was partly a protest against the sustained boredom of the sermon. The actors gradually relaxed, pleased that he was back with them in such patent good health. When they paused at the inn, Firethorn was in such a benevolent mood that he bought them all food and drink at his own expense.

It was only Nicholas Bracewell in whom he really confided the truth.

‘Thank you for coming so promptly last night, Nick,’ he said.

‘It was the least I could do.’

‘I’m sorry that I couldn’t stay awake longer.’

‘So was I,’ admitted Nicholas. ‘It’s so unlike you.’

‘I know, I know. I can carouse until dawn as a rule. But not yesterday, as you saw for yourself. I felt as if I just wanted to curl up and go to sleep for a whole month.’

‘Why?’

‘That’s what I want to talk to you about.’

Claiming that he wanted to discuss some aspects of staging the plays, Firethorn had detached the book holder from the others. They sat at a table in the corner. The actor did not want anyone else to guess at his predicament. Seen in profile by the others, he appeared a happy man, talking business with a colleague, and he deliberately peppered his conversation with animated movement and laughter in order to deceive those who might be watching. The substance of his confession was far from comical.

‘I’m terrified, Nick,’ he said.

‘Are you?’

‘Can’t you see what’s happening?’

‘Yes,’ said Nicholas. ‘You’ve made another wonderful recovery.’

‘But from what? Doctor Whitrow didn’t have a clue what brought me down this time. Nor did he really explain what prompted that terrible fever last week. The doctor was worse than useless yesterday.’

‘He gave you that sleeping draught.’

‘That was no cure, Nick. It merely eased the pain so that I was no longer lying there on the rack. When I first woke up, I still felt desperately ill.’

Nicholas was anxious. ‘What, then, revived you?’

‘I’ve no idea. The sickness just vanished as if it had never been there. Margery insisted that I stay in bed while she called the doctor but I knew how worried everybody would be by my absence. They needing cheering up,’ he said, looking around to distribute a warm grin among the
others, ‘and so did I.’ He turned back to Nicholas. ‘You know who’s behind all this, don’t you?’

‘Who?’

‘Egidius Pye.’

‘That’s an absurd idea,’ said Nicholas.

‘Is it? Have you ever met a man as robust as me?’

‘No, I suppose not.’

‘Have you ever seen one with the same energy, the same commitment, the same burning love for the theatre and all that goes with it?’

‘I don’t believe that I could.’

‘Then where did it all disappear yesterday? Why did I succumb to that fever last week? These are not natural happenings, Nick.’

‘Then what are they?’

Firethorn spoke in a whisper. ‘Witchcraft.’

‘I didn’t think that you believed in such things.’

‘I didn’t until this happened to me,’ agreed the other, ‘but I’ve changed my mind now. I’ve had to. Remember
The Witch of Colchester.

‘That’s only a play.’

‘I wonder. It’s turning out to be more of a prophecy.’

‘In what way?’

‘What happens to Lord Malady when his enemy decides to attack him?’

‘A spell is cast and he’s …’ Nicholas paused as he heard what he was saying.

‘Go on. Finish your sentence.’

‘A spell is cast and he suffers this strange illness. A high fever.’

‘Just like the one I had.’

‘When he recovers from that,’ said Nicholas, going through the play in his mind, ‘he upsets Sir Roderick Lawless again and is struck down by a more serious complaint.’

‘Just as I was.’

‘But there can’t possibly be a connection,’ argued Nicholas. ‘
The Witch of Colchester
is no more than a series of words on a page.’

‘So is a spell.’

‘I put the whole thing down to coincidence.’

‘If only
I
could do that, Nick,’ sighed the other, ‘but I can’t. Everything that happens to Lord Malady has so far happened to me. My fear is that there’s more to come. What about that scene where my character loses his voice completely?’

‘Only for comic effect.’

‘It may be comical on stage but it would be a catastrophe off it. This is Pye’s revenge,’ he said darkly. ‘Because I didn’t let him watch the rehearsals, he’s getting his own back on me by means of a spell.’

‘That’s ridiculous. Nobody is more eager to see that play acted well on the stage than Master Pye. Why should he disable the one man capable of doing justice to the role of Lord Malady? No,’ insisted Nicholas, ‘you can rule out the author here and now. He’s a kind, gentle, benign fellow.’

‘With a passion for witchcraft.’

‘Well, yes, that’s true.’

‘My opinion is that the kind, gentle, benign Egidius Pye has powers over which he has no control. In the act
of writing that play, he cast an unintended spell and I’m its principal victim.’

‘You’re its only victim,’ Nicholas reminded him. ‘If the play has such danger lurking in it, why wasn’t Edmund struck down as well? He’s actually amended some of its words and scenes. If anyone would be likely to suffer, it would be him.’

‘Edmund Hoode is not a character in the play, Lord Malady is. And I, alas, have agreed to take the role. That means there’s more agony in store for me.’

‘I beg leave to doubt that.’

‘It’s as plain as a pikestaff, Nick. I regret I ever agreed to play the part.’

‘If you’re so worried about it, why not assign it to someone else? Owen, perhaps. He’d lack your fire but he’d be a convincing Lord Malady.’

‘No,’ said Firethorn bravely. ‘I’ll not give in. In any case, I love Owen too much to foist a Malady on him that might bring a string of maladies in its wake. All I ask you is this, Nick. Watch over me. If anything happens, call no doctor. Just look to the play. It will be positive proof of what I claim.’

‘And what’s that?’

‘I’m bewitched.’

 

They were over half a mile away when Isaac Upchard saw them. Swinging his horse round, he galloped back to the place where Reginald Orr was waiting for him. Both men had divested themselves of their Puritan attire to wear nondescript doublet and hose. Orr was breathing hard and resting on an axe.

‘They’re coming,’ warned Upchard.

‘How fast?’

‘At a walking pace. We’ve time to finish here.’

‘Take over, Isaac,’ panted Orr. ‘It’s almost done.’

Upchard dismounted and took the axe from him. While Orr tethered both horses in the safety of a nearby copse, the young man swung the implement with precision, cutting into the trunk of a tree all but ready to fall. As the last few chips of wood went spinning in the air, there was a loud creak. Upchard pushed hard against the trunk with the flat of his hand then leapt back quickly as the tree was toppled, crashing down across the track and making it impossible for anyone to pass. The two men withdrew to the safety of the copse to watch unseen. Sheaves of dry hay lay at their feet.

It took some time before the little cavalcade came round the bend and started to descend the slight gradient. Driven by Nicholas Bracewell, the cart was leading the way with Lawrence Firethorn and the others riding in pairs behind it. Unaware of what lay ahead of them, they were all chatting happily. It was only when they came right around the bend that they saw the obstacle ahead of them. Nicholas pulled hard on the reins to stop the horses but he was too late. They had already walked past the trap. The hole that Orr and Upchard had dug with such difficulty in the bone hard earth had been covered with branches to conceal it. One of the cartwheels rolled on to the scattered branches and they gave way at once, dropping the wheel so deep into the hole that the cart lurched over at an angle and shed half its cargo and most of its occupants. Bruised apprentices cried in pain
as Nicholas struggled to control the neighing horses.

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