"Each mann they saye, and evry childe,
Must hys own choyces meke,
An sew they strugle al lif longe,
Each with handes of blake."
Edward and the Moor become friends as they travel, recognizing each other as brothers beneath the skin, and each resolves to see the other treated kindly, with humanity, should they be found by his own countrymen. Unfortunately for the Moor, they stumble across an encampment of English soldiers first, who toy with the Moor brutally for long hours before finally killing him.
Eduard than entreats the peeres
To putte awey ther swordes,
Let the Moor go wit them than
A prisonner at hi worde.
The peeres thoght hi wordes a gest
An bede him meerey speke
An geve the Moor unsemely dethe
An cut Eduard on his cheke.
It is at this point that Edward abandons forever his dream, his hope, of becoming a knight. He now has something grander, more noble, towards which to strive. He leaves the English camp that night, the blood hardly dried upon his face, and makes his way home, alone, to England. Arriving at his father's home, he finds the old tailor three winters dead, his mother nowhere to be found.
Came Eudward to the taylor's home
Wher lyved hys parens bothe
An founde he ther no livynge sole
Nor sygne they lyved for sothe.
Away a fro the home he fonde
Depe in the grate grene wode
The plece his fader restes hi hede
Beneth a crude woden rode.
Hi mother he could fynd no synge
Nor any grave she laye
Butte kne he than she too had mete
Her oun tru dyeing daye.
Kne he than that bothe had fel
Benethe som cutthrotes sworde
The work of som vile bishoppes hande
Or els some crule landelorde.
Edward, born the son of a simple tailor, trained as a soldier by the Kingdom's finest, dedicates his life and all his efforts to the opposition of tyranny and injustice, both at home at abroad. Having seen too many sons of peasant families fall under the Saracen's spear in a war few of them could even hope to understand, Edward sees the leaders of his own country as a greater threat to liberty than a foreign king in far-off lands could ever be. Inspired by the Moor's tales of his country's legendary order, he ceases to be Edward Tailor, and ever after is known only as the Black Hand.
Sew Eduard than he left that plece
Cladde in livrey al of blake,
An toke him to the grene wode,
To fyghte for al mens seke.
An from that daye onne,
In evry cornere of the lande,
The people loved an nobles feyred
The name of the Blake Hande.
The
SIXTH DAY
I woke folded double in the cramped seat as the bus pulled into the station in El Paso. I'd slept a little, fitfully, dreaming in Middle English, but didn't feel at all rested. Coaxing my aching muscles and groaning joints into motion, I managed to climb out of the seat, get the bag, book, and box arranged in an awkward hold, and stumbled from the bus and out into the stale morning air. It was just past dawn, and already I was remembering why I didn't like El Paso.
Not bothering with a cab or rental car, I hoofed it the few blocks from the bus station to the nearest flea bag motel. I checked in under the name of Richmond Taylor, and lugged my things up rickety metal stairs to my shoebox room. The bed looked like it had been used as a prop in one too many professional wrestling bouts, and the sink in the bathroom wouldn't stop dripping, but the air conditioner seemed to work and the door locked solid.
Dropping my things unceremoniously on the floor and stripping to the waist, I struggled hard against the urge to a) shower, b) shower and then sleep, or
c) screw the shower and go right back to bed. I didn't feel like I'd really rested in days, which I hadn't, but my nagging conscience told me I had important things to do before I even thought about rest.
First, I had to call Tan and give him a heads up that he might be expecting trouble. He'd known it was coming, naturally, having passed me the invite to the auction and given me the skinny on Carerra. Still, it was only good form to let him know that I was out of it, and that there was a chance there might be some ill will directed his way after vouching for me. Ill will, to say the least.
The phone rang at Tan's place a good six times before anyone answered, which was unusual enough in and of itself. More unusual still is that it wasn't Tan who answered, a first.
"Hello, who is this?" came a frantic voice on the other end of the line, a woman's and in no mood for niceties.
"Who is this?" I echoed, and then added. "Cachelle, is that you?"
"Spencer, baby, I'm so glad you called," she answered in a rush. "I've just been worried sick, sick I tell you, and I didn't know what to do. The doctors are no good, and the police are even worse. I oughta throw a hex on the whole lot of them, watch me if I don't."
I settled back on the bed, cradling the phone against my shoulder, and pulled off my boots.
"Slow down, Cachelle," I said. "Take it slow, from the top. Where's Tan?"
Cachelle let out a heavy, rattling sigh and continued.
"Tan's in the hospital, sugar, and he's in a bad way. Somebody broke into his place late last night and made a mess of him and his rooms. I heard the crashing around and called the cops, but by the time they showed up whoever it was had already gone. That ambulance took its own goddamned sweet time to get here, pardon my French, and I'm surprised Tan didn't just up and die on us before we got him to the hospital."
Two questions were jockeying for first position in my head, waiting to jump.
"How is he?" won the race by a nose, with "Who did it?" following close behind.
"Well," Cachelle answered, breathy, "Tan is… well, he could be better, sugar. They've got him all hooked up to monitors and computers and wires and tubes, and they're breathing for him and pushing his blood around and listening to his insides, but he hasn't woke up yet. They don't know for sure yet if he will, or if he does whether he'll still be… still…" Her voice broke, and I didn't have the heart to make her go on for a second. I just sat on the edge of that crappy bed, one boot off and the other on, naked to the waste and unable to feel a goddamn thing. I was numb, empty, and I could hardly hear her talking for the noise all the screaming thoughts in my head were making.
I steadied myself and tried for a follow-up.
"Okay, Cachelle, I know." I was trying to stay calm, trying not to blow up and set her over the edge. "Do the police know who did it? Did they get them?"
"No, no, no, they don't know who did it, they don't have any damned idea," she wailed. "Somebody just busts into somebody's house and messes them up like that, and the police don't even know where to start. They were asking
me
if I knew who did it!" She snuffled loudly into the phone. "Then there was that note this morning, and they didn't even know
what
to do with that."
"Note?" I repeated. "What note?"
"I found this note this morning on his bed stand, right next to his hospital bed, and it hadn't been there fifteen minutes before because I'd looked. I'd been up in that room with Tan all night, and I know
I
didn't put it there."
"What did the note say? Do you have it with you?"
"No, the police took it, ignorant know nothings, but I can see it still like it was right in front of me, I don't think I'd ever forget."
I pulled a ballpoint and a spiral out of the side of my suitcase, and propped the spiral open on my knee.
"What did the note say, Cachelle?" I repeated.
"It said, '
They were able to break your bones, but we
can hurt you worse
.' And it had a phone number across the bottom. The police tried calling it or tracing it down, but nobody answered, and they can't even figure out who has that number."
I took a deep breath, and held it.
"Is there any chance you remember the number?"
"It's burned in my eyes, Spencer; I couldn't forget it if I tried." Then she rattled off the numbers, a tollfree 888 prefix and the full seven digits.
I gave Cachelle the number of the hotel and asked her to call me as soon as she knew more. If she couldn't get me at the hotel, she should call my home number and leave a message, and I'd get back with her as soon as I could. Cachelle insisted we pray together before hanging up. I couldn't argue, and once we'd done our Amens she was off to try to clean what was left of Tan's place. It was the only thing she could think to do, and to be honest I was kind of wishing I was there with her to help. The only thing I could think to do was to call that 888 number, and I would have taken cleaning up over that in a heartbeat.
It took half an hour of planning and replanning, but in the end I figured out what had to be done. Still on the edge of the bed, still with one boot and no shirt on, I punched in the first of two numbers I needed to call and crossed my fingers. I just hoped he was back in town, and that it was still early enough that he hadn't left for work yet.
"Yeah," came the groggy voice on the other end of the line.
"Amador," I sighed. "Great. Stay right there, I'm going to call you back."
"What? Do you know what time it is?"
"Early," I answered. "Now don't go anywhere."
"I've got to talk to–" I heard him say, but I clicked off the line before he could finish.
Next up came the hard part. I pulled a cigarette from my suit coat, lighting it with my Zippo, hoping to soothe my nerves, or least give my hands something to do. Cradling the receiver against my ear, I punched in the 888 number and held my breath. My hands were shaking, so much so that the smoke rising up from the cigarette jetted into tight spirals that almost circled back on themselves above me. It occurred to me that I was putting myself in a considerable amount of risk for a single story, but realized at this point it wasn't even
about
J. Nathan Pierce anymore, or shady land deals, or any of it. I just wanted
answers
.
The line rang once and then clicked on. I heard silence on the other end.
"H-hello," I said, putting my bravest face forward.
"Mr. Finch," came the answer, a man's voice like nails on a chalkboard.
"That's me," I answered, trying for glib, "who are you?"
"That's not important, Mr. Finch. I assume you received our… message?"
I tightened my grip on the receiver, white-knuckled and sweaty palmed.
"Don't touch my friends again," I barked, "or I will find you and kill you myself."
The voice on the other end laughed mirthlessly.
"Charming, Mr. Finch," he said, "but hardly germane. You have something we want, and to be quite honest we'll do whatever we like to you or your friends until we get it."
I forced myself calm, aiming for collected and reaching just short of "not panicked," which would have to do.
"What's in it for me?" I blustered. "I've been through a lot of trouble to get this thing."
"You'll go through quite a lot more if we don't get it, Mr. Finch. What's in it for you is the continued well being of yourself and your friends. Need I point to a certain Mr. Marconi as a rather unpleasant object lesson?"
That clinched it. I just hoped my plan would work.
"Alright, what do you want me to do?" I answered. I was trying to put a hint of desperation into my tone, and found I was hardly faking at all.
"We would like to meet, Mr. Finch, to arrange a transfer of the item from your care to ours. Where are you now?"
"California," I lied. "Los Angeles."
Again the mirthless chuckle, and chills ran down my spine.
"A nice try, I suppose," he continued, "but I'm afraid the Caller ID on your phone places you squarely at a hotel near the center of El Paso, does it not?"
Now I was panicking for real, all thoughts of acting gone. I snapped back open my Zippo and held it up to the phone.
"Hear that?!" I shouted, rolling the wheel and setting up a flickering banner of flames. "That's my trusty all-weather lighter, and if anyone fucks with me here I'll introduce it to your little book club member and see how well they get along. Do you get me? I'll fucking burn it if you come near me!"
"Calm yourself, Mr. Finch," he answered. "No one would dream of intruding on your privacy. Shall we arrange a more neutral location to meet, then? At some later time?"
I breathed deep, relieved. So far it was going fine.
"Tomorrow night, six o'clock," I answered firmly. "San Antonio. In front of the Alamo. It's then and there, or nowhere, and I burn the damned thing right now."
The voice on the other end of the line sighed dramatically.
"Very well, Mr. Finch," he answered reluctantly. "Tomorrow night at six o'clock in San Antonio. We shall speak further then."
"Don't forget," I shot back, leaning forward, trying to regain a bit of my lost self-respect. "The Alamo."
"I shall remember," he answered, but I got the impression he hadn't caught the joke.
I paused only to relieve my overburdened bladder, which had threatened to give way at least twice in the course of the conversation, before calling back Amador at home. The way he answered, you would have thought it had been years.
"Shit, Finch, what the hell is going on…?" Amador began, practically shouting before I cut him off.
"Hang on, Lover, I've got to run something down for you quick, and then you can say whatever you like. This thing that started with Marconi has gotten really messy, really quick, and I've ended up with something that these fuckers want. I've arranged to meet them tomorrow night in front of the Alamo to hand this shit over, and I'm pretty sure once they lay hands on it I'm going down like a shot. They've already put Tan in the hospital, beat half to death, not to mention Marconi, and I don't really think they'll have that much problem with adding me to the list. I need you to pull whatever strings you can, get the Feds there in force, and pick these fuckers up before they pick me off. The Bureau'll be able to solve a string of murders and beatings, and I'll get to go on breathing. What do you say, man, can you do that for me?"