Barak shaded his eyes with his hand, looked again at Hugh. ‘That is no girl. It can’t be.’
‘Keep your voice down. No, you wouldn’t think so. But a girl may learn skill at the bow, may be educated as well as a man. I think that is why the time I met Lady Elizabeth kept coming back into my mind. She too is a good archer. And if a girl has learned to walk as a boy, dress as a boy, behave as a boy and shoot arrows like a boy, then among strangers the deception may be kept up for years. If she is tall, that helps too.’
‘But her breasts? And the stubble – Hugh gets shaved regularly.’
‘Breasts can be flattened with padding. And though they have taken trouble to tell us Hugh is shaved regularly I have never seen any stubble on his face. Have you?’
‘But he had shaving cuts – ’
‘He had cuts on his face. Or rather, hers. Those are easy enough to make.’
‘No Adam’s apple – ’
‘Some boys have a prominent one, like Feaveryear. Others have one that is barely noticeable. And her scars prevented anyone from looking too closely at her neck.’
Barak stared harder. ‘But to keep it up for years – ’
‘Yes. It must have been a terrible strain on them all, one that unbalanced Abigail and David. They told Fulstowe, of course – his help was essential. And that gave him a hold over the family. The Hobbeys must soon have realized they were caught, trapped for ever. Because once it started there was no going back. If they were found out they could have ended in prison.’
‘But why would Emma keep up the pretence now? Jesu, he – or she – wants to go and be a soldier!’
I said angrily, ‘Perhaps by now she scarcely knows who or what she is.’
‘Listen. I know it fits, but you’d better be sure – ’
I said sadly, ‘I looked at Hugh properly for the first time, on the steps when we arrived. Full in his scarred face. Then I saw he could easily be a girl.’
Barak turned to me. ‘Did Hugh – Emma – kill Abigail?’
He spoke too loudly. The slim, lithe figure at the butts had just risen to fire another arrow. He – or rather she – lowered the bow and turned to face us. We stood quite still for a moment, all three of us, like some strange tableau. Then, in seconds, the person we had known as Hugh had strung an arrow to the bow, raised it and taken aim at my chest. I knew there was nothing Barak or I could do; before we could run a few paces Emma Curteys could loose the arrow, string another, and shoot us both dead.
I raised my arms, as though I could ward off that steel-tipped shaft. ‘Don’t!’ I shouted. ‘You will gain nothing!’
I could not see her face properly at that distance; it was shaded by the hat, which I realized now was one of the many ruses, like putting her hand to her scars, that Emma had developed over the years to prevent people looking her fully in the face. I saw the bow move slightly and stepped back with a cry, but then I realized it was trembling, shaking slightly from side to side in her hand though she still aimed at me.
‘Run!’ Barak cried.
I seized his arm. ‘No! Don’t do anything sudden!’ I called out to Emma. ‘I’m your friend!’ I called steadily. ‘Haven’t you realized that? I will help you!’
Still she stood, the bow trembling gently. The whole thing can only have lasted ten seconds but it seemed like an age. Then I saw a figure on the edge of my vision, a dark solid shape running towards the archer.
‘Hugh!’ David shouted out – he still called her Hugh – ‘stop! It can’t help you! They know, it’s over! Put the bow down!’
Emma turned, pointing the bow at David as he ran towards her. The arrow hit him in the side, its force sending him staggering. He toppled over onto the lawn, moaned once, then was silent. Then, no doubt drawn by the shouting, Fulstowe appeared in the doorway. David had lied, he was in there after all. He stepped out. A gaggle of servants followed as Fulstowe began walking towards David. Emma reached back, flicked another arrow on to her bow, and aimed at the steward. Fulstowe stopped dead in his tracks. One of the women servants screamed. I thought Emma would shoot Fulstowe down but instead she retreated backwards, step by step, to the gate, still keeping him covered. Only once did she glance across to where David lay on the lawn, quite still now. All this time she had not uttered a single word.
She backed out of the gateway, then turned and ran. Fulstowe and some of the other servants raced over to where David lay. Someone screamed, ‘Murder!’
Chapter Forty-two
DAVID, THOUGH, was not dead. From where he lay on the grass I heard a faint, desperate moan. Fulstowe turned from the gate and ran across to him, Barak and I following. Blood was pouring from the wound in David’s side, from which the arrow shaft protruded obscenely.
‘Help me,’ he whimpered.
‘Still, lad,’ Barak said gently.