Scar Tissue. Narrelle M Harris
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‘And I’m William Hawk. The friends I once had called me Will.’ He sat next to Thomas Rowan by the fire.
‘You once had?’
‘Most are dead now,’ Will said. ‘Famine and disease, mostly, though sheer cold took its share. My fellows in music. They froze to death on the road a week ago. I dared the charge of heresy and witchcraft to keep us warm and alive, but they fled in terror of me.’ Will stared into the fire. ‘And therefore are too dead to denounce me a heretic.’
Thomas shifted restlessly. ‘My brother had a lovely voice,’ he said at last, his own dark with sorrow. ‘He tried to sing some safety for us in Lord Hanley’s hall, but Hanley hadn’t enough to feed us either, so now Dickon is lying with all the others at Spitalfields, waiting for the ground to thaw enough for burials. I hoped to find some other fortune before I joined him as food for worms.’
‘I’m sorry for your grief, brother Thomas.’
‘And I for yours, brother Will. Where are you going now? Or are you, like me, walking towards death rather than wait for it to come hunting?’
‘Walking towards death, I suppose. This winter’s taken everything I had, but there’s a cause for this bitter season. Something sits in the mud beneath the Thames. I fear it’s addled with some ancient, raging sorrow. I feel it when I play the earth. I don’t think it means to destroy us, but this strange winter has woken it.’
‘You sound sorry for it.’ Thomas was not pleased.
‘Not really,’ said Will. ‘The death it brings may not be its intent, but death it brings all the same.’
‘You think to kill it?’
‘I don’t know what it is; still less if it can die. I thought I might try to sing it back to sleep.’
‘And if it doesn’t want to sleep?’
‘I die. But I’ll die regardless, in this cold. I’d rather die trying to live.’
Thomas considered this philosophy with a frown.
‘How will you make it sleep?’
‘I could sing a cradlesong to it. I’ve sent many to sleep in my time as a minstrel, but that’s only ale and my voice.’ Will laughed wryly and his breath puffed in cloud. ‘I can sing a little magic, but it speaks best through my tabor. Usually I use it to keep bugs from biting, or dry the ground when it rains. Little tricks that hurt none and comfort only me. But I once drummed a stalking wolf into curling like a puppy at my feet, and when I was a boy, a spirit rose from a ruined hall and tried to possess my father. I beat the stones with my hands and sang the ghost to pieces. This thing is doubtless stronger than wolves and ghosts, but I’ll die fighting it rather than starve or be frozen blue at the side of the road. What say you?’
‘My pipe isn’t as clever as Dickon’s voice was, but it’s yours for this. I’ve a knife as well.’
‘Any tool is useful,’ agreed Will.
The city gates were open but untended. Will and Thomas, filled with disquiet, passed through the Ludgate without hindrance. Without fish to sell, the old fish market was silent. Theirs were the only footprints in Thames Street. The only sound was the caw of a raven to the northwest, where Wall Brook was as frozen as the rest.
The quality of the milky light seemed unchanging, but Will thought he felt the dusk descending by the time they reached the place where the riverbanks crackled with wrongness. The Thames was frozen from shore to shore. Spanning the ice was the London Bridge, built in stone under the reign of King Henry’s father, King John. The Chapel of St Thomas on the Bridge stood lonely in the centre. The Brethren of the Bridge who prayed there were either all at prayer or huddled before fires in their Bridge House. Or perhaps they were dead like so many others. Will saw none, wherever they were.
Thomas had shoved his gloved hands into his armpits in an attempt to keep warm.
‘Where is it then, this angry, grieving monster?’ Thomas’ scowl suggested he had an angry, grieving monster of his own, furled underneath his heart.
‘Somewhere near. I can feel it when I drum.’
Thomas stamped his feet on the snow. Nothing came to the summons. ‘You say the strange winter woke it,’ said Thomas. ‘Didn’t the monster cause this hell?’
Will knelt on the ground with his drum. ‘That’s not what the earth tells me.’
For a man who had woven fire out of air with a fife, Thomas was sceptical. ‘You talk to the soil often, do you?’
‘The earth’s a good listener,’ replied Will, unruffled. ‘She holds many secrets, and sometimes she shares them with me.’
‘What’s the secret of this killing winter, then?’
Will pushed the snow aside, took off his glove and placed his hand on the bare ground. ‘The earth is round, did you know? Full ripe round like an apple but she has a fire at her heart. Sometimes the fire bursts through her skin. She has burning mountains that birth burning rocks, and the smoke of her womb covers the sky.’
‘Mountains have burned and spat rocks and smoke before,’ said Thomas, ‘but winter has only been winter.’
‘This particular mountain burst like nothing before it,’ said Will solemnly. ‘Do you remember the red sunsets in the spring? Colours as violent as blood, the sun lighting on the smoke from the other side of the world? In that fire’s wake, summer never came; then winter came and stayed.’
‘I was here for those sunsets too,’ said Thomas drily. ‘For the failed harvests, the dying cattle, the floods that washed away what little had grown, and then froze the rest.’
‘Well, that’s what woke the thing that slept in the river’s mud. It’s been here longer than that, of course. Hundreds of years.’
‘Does the mud tell you that?’
‘It does.’ Will rested his hands on his haunches and cocked an eye at Thomas, who glared at the road of ice where a river once ran. ‘Curb your anger, brother Thomas. I didn’t make the mountains burn, the skies turn red or the river freeze. I only listen to what the magic tells me.’
Thomas’ eyes did not shift from the Thames. ‘Shall I tell you what the air says?’
‘I’d be most interested to hear.’
‘I hear a lament, William. A voice colder than the frozen wastes of the Viking north cries for Baldr, whoever that may be. It begs forgiveness and for punishment for Hoor. For itself.’
Will listened with all his body and thought he heard something of the lament. A cry crackling with cold; the sound of ice breaking like a heart.
‘I hear it. It must have done something terrible, to sound so.’
‘I’d offer it punishment, if I could,’ said Thomas.
‘You