Heartstone

WEST STOOD before us, fists clenched at his sides. His deep-set eyes were bloodshot. ‘You,’ he said thickly.

Peel bowed and held out the letter. ‘From Sir Richard Rich, sir.’ West tore the seal and read it, then stared at me, perplexed. He said quietly, ‘Rich says you are to fetch back one of the archers that came on board today.’

So he did not know Hugh was really a girl. Rich had not told him that, perhaps fearing he would put him off the ship anyway.

I looked at the man who had ruined Ellen’s life. ‘That is right, Master West. In accordance with your bargain.’

‘I must talk to the master. He is in control of this ship, not Sir Richard. He will need persuading to let an enlisted man go.’

‘If we tell him something I know about Hugh Curteys, he will let him go.’

He glanced again at the letter, then at me. ‘Sir Richard says that you and he have made a bargain. About the – the other matter.’

‘We have. A bargain of necessity.’

West looked at Peel. ‘You are one of Sir Richard’s bodyservants?’

‘Yes, sir.’ Peel lowered his gaze.

‘Then you will know how to keep your mouth shut.’ West had spoken quietly. Now he looked at the men around us. ‘Come with me, Master Shardlake, let us find somewhere quiet to talk, see how we can best get this Curteys back on shore.’ He looked up at the forecastle, then said, ‘Not my cabin, we’ll get no peace. I’m waiting for food supplies, they should have been here by now. I know a place.’

He began walking across the crowded deck to the hatch below the aftercastle, near the huge mainmast, which I had descended before. A group of sailors stood on deck, hauling at the rigging to the sound of a beating drum. I looked up at the aftercastle again, wondering if Leacon could hear the sound which brought back the siege of Boulogne. A sailor knelt, carefully lighting the candles inside a row of lanterns on the deck. West took one and then, with a flinty look at me, turned and began descending the ladder. I took a deep breath and followed him.

We went down to the gundeck. West stood at the foot of the ladder as Peel and I followed. There was nobody there. I looked again at the double row of cannons facing the closed gun ports. Cannonballs and other equipment were stacked neatly by the guns in battens. A barrel was tied securely to the wall. It was marked with a white cross: gunpowder. The light from the grilles in the deck hatches above us was dim, bare feet padded to and fro across them. The floor planks were swept clean.

‘Ready for action tomorrow,’ West said grimly. ‘Come with me. There’s a storeroom up here. Thanks to the disorganization on shore there’s nothing but a barrel of rotten pork in it.’

It was well he had the lamp, for he led me to the part of the gundeck that lay right under the aftercastle. Between an iron gun and a large cabin projecting out onto the gundeck was a small room. It had a sliding door secured with a padlock; West produced a key and slid it open. It was a tiny storeroom, barely five feet square, empty save for a large barrel secured to hooks on the wall with ropes to prevent it sliding with the movement of the ship. There was a lid on it, but the smell of rotten meat still escaped.

Once inside, West looked at me in silence for a moment. Sounds rose up through the planks from the orlop deck below, muttered voices and scrapings and curses. ‘I have taken care of that woman for nineteen years,’ he said. ‘Rich would have had her killed.’

‘I know.’

‘I protected her.’ He spoke with sudden fierceness, his voice shaking.

‘You raped her.’

‘She provoked me.’

I felt my face twitch with disgust. I said, ‘I have made the bargain. Your secret is safe.’

‘Yes.’ He nodded. ‘It is.’ He stared at me a moment longer, then reached back and slid the door open. Peel was standing outside. Somehow it was a different Peel, the blank, deferential servant’s expression replaced by a wide, smiling leer. He stepped inside as West pushed me back against the wall. There was barely room for the three of us, but they managed to twist me round and force my arms behind my back. West slid the door shut again with his foot as Peel brought a handkerchief from his doublet and thrust it in my open mouth, nearly choking me. Then West pulled out a dagger and held it to my throat. ‘Move and we’ll kill you now,’ he said quietly. ‘You, tie him up.’

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