Jack Lark: Rogue (10 page)

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Authors: Paul Fraser Collard

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Historical, #Historical Fiction

BOOK: Jack Lark: Rogue
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Lampkin turned as soon as he heard Jack enter the yard. He was in his shirtsleeves, his uppermost buttons undone to reveal the thick pelt of hair on his chest. He was hatless, his short-cropped hair glistening in the fine rain that had begun to fall. He did not seem concerned to see Jack.

‘Fuck off, boy.’ The command was short and sharp, the words spat out.

Jack looked down at Lampkin’s fists. There was a gas light just the other side of the gate at the back of the yard, put there by his mother to make loading and unloading the brewer’s cart possible even in the worst of the particulars. Now it cast an eerie light in the gloom of the fine mist, enough for Jack to see the blood that stained Lampkin’s hands, and the crumpled body on the ground. He heard Sir Humphrey gasp as he saw his son lying in a bloodied heap, but he held out an arm and kept the older man at bay. Edmund’s fate was now bound to his own.

‘Why?’ He asked the question as much for Sir Humphrey as for himself. ‘Why beat him?’

Lampkin barely glanced at the young man he had battered into bloody submission. He shrugged. ‘He had it coming. Lording it in here. Taking Mary like he bloody owned her. Besides, he’ll be easier to manage now he’s been taught his place.’

‘You could’ve just taken his rhino.’ Jack was bitter. He knew what was coming and he was wrestling with his fear. Part of him longed to leave, to abandon Sir Humphrey and his son to their fate. But for a reason he did not fully understand, he stayed where he was. It was time to finish it with Lampkin, one way or another. Neither of the Ponsonbys mattered. It was about Jack and his master.

‘And where is the fun in that?’ Lampkin sneered. ‘Ain’t what I’m about, you know that. A man who ain’t feared ain’t nothing.’

‘And you like being feared. You like to see it in men’s eyes when they pass you.’ Jack sighed. The time for talking was done. ‘But I ain’t afraid of you. Not any more.’

Lampkin laughed. ‘I don’t reckon you are. But others will be, when they see what I done to this toff. When they see what I’ve done to you.’

Jack felt a chill run down his spine. Yet still he turned his back on the man he feared. ‘Step inside, sir.’ He gestured for Sir Humphrey to go back into the scullery.

‘I shall not leave.’ Sir Humphrey hissed the words. ‘My son is my concern.’

‘Are you going to get him, then? Are you going to fight?’ Jack’s fear made him cruel. ‘No? Then stay out of my way.’ He lifted a hand and shoved Sir Humphrey. ‘You hear me. Keep out of the fucking way.’

‘My son . . .’ Sir Humphrey stepped back, driven by Jack. Yet still he pleaded, begging Jack to act.

‘I’ll bring you your son.’ Jack forced the confidence into his voice. ‘I give you my word.’ He thought Sir Humphrey would continue to resist, but this time he moved away, ceding the ground to Jack.

‘God give you strength.’

Lampkin cackled as Sir Humphrey invoked the name of the Lord. ‘Ain’t no God round this parts, your honour. There’s just men like me, and we ain’t beholden to no one but ourselves.’

Jack turned to face the man who had ruled his life for the past ten years. ‘Let me take the toff. It doesn’t have to end like this.’

‘Fuck off, boy.’

‘I ain’t your boy, not any more.’

‘Is that right?’ Lampkin stepped forward, flexing his powerful shoulders, turning his head on its thick neck first one way, then the other. ‘I reckon you had better prove you’re a man then, don’t you?’

Jack moved fast, darting forward even as Lampkin was speaking. Fear surged through him, settling deep in his gut like a lead weight, but it did not stay his hand. He punched, his right hand shooting forward, bellowing as it caught Lampkin on the cheek, snapping his head back. The sound of the contact was loud in the cramped yard.

He followed up with his left, driving the blow at Lampkin’s throat. He felt detached, as if watching the fight from afar. This time he missed his target but still landed a stinging blow on the side of Lampkin’s neck.

‘Come on!’ he roared, and struck again, going for the body. He felt the madness then, the searing joy of the impossible fight. He punched again and again, solid, driving blows to Lampkin’s chest, forcing him backwards, the grunts of pain the only sound that greeted the onslaught. His soul thrilled with the joy of landing the blows, his hatred unleashed into every punch. He savoured each one, the years of misery leading to this moment of victory.

Lampkin’s head dropped as he doubled over, and Jack smashed his knee forward, catching him full in the face, pulping his nose. It was a dreadful blow, Lampkin’s face a mask of blood. He fell backwards, his arms windmilling around him before he smacked down on to his backside.

Jack stayed where he was, his chest heaving with the exertion of the fight. He lifted his bloodied fists, holding them ready.

‘Get up. I ain’t finished with you yet.’ He snarled the words through gasps for air. The madness was upon him. He wanted to fight on, to pummel his fists into the man who sat and stared back at him through bloodied eyes. He wanted to kill.

But Lampkin was not done. He moved quickly, bounding to his feet in one lithe movement. A knife was in his hands, its sharp edge catching the light.

Jack saw the weapon, but he had no time to think as Lampkin charged at him, the blade aimed at his guts. He twisted to one side, his body reacting automatically. Lampkin saw him move and lunged again, aiming the blade at Jack’s throat.

Jack threw up an arm. The knife was moving fast, and it drove deep into his forearm. The pain flared white hot across his vision. He staggered, the agony like a living thing feasting on his flesh. Lampkin laughed, and came at him again, the knife stabbing at Jack’s eyes.

Jack felt the terror then. He ducked away, dodging the knife. But Lampkin was quick, and he slashed it back across Jack’s chest. The blow cut through his jacket, peeling back a flap of cloth, the tip scoring across his ribs.

Jack heard the whimper escape from his own lips as he felt the blood run down his side. He could not beat the knife. He knew then that he would die.

Lampkin pulled away, his breath laboured. His bloody face cracked into a hideous smile. ‘You always was a fool, you fucking by-blow of a doxy. Now I reckon you’ll die a fucking fool.’

Jack wanted to scream, his terror bubbling away just below the surface. His mind recoiled from the idea that he might be about to die. He stepped back and the rapier caught at his heels. He stumbled and nearly fell, but his hands grasped its hilt, and in desperation he tugged it free of its scabbard.

He turned back, hefting the strange weapon. His fear burned bright, but the weight of the rapier felt snug in his hand. ‘Come on then.’ He fanned the flames of his hatred. ‘You want to fucking dance: let’s dance.’

There was time to see a flicker of fear on Lampkin’s face before Jack slashed the rapier in a wild arc, cutting it through the air in front of him.

Lampkin laughed as he watched the blade go wide. He was still laughing as he stabbed the knife forward, driving it at Jack’s chest in a short, economical strike that was so much more effective than Jack’s wild swing.

Jack could do nothing but throw the rapier back across his body. He had no idea how to fight with a blade, but by some miracle he caught the knife, deflecting it away.

Lampkin’s eyes went wide as his attack slid past its target. Jack saw the opening and punched the hilt of the rapier forward, smashing it into Lampkin’s face, every ounce of strength he possessed behind the blow. The heavy hilt ripped a great flap of skin from Lampkin’s cheek. The big man staggered, the power of the blow rocking him back on his heels. Jack went after him, punching the hilt forward, smashing it into the same spot before bringing his arm back and lashing out again. Blood splattered across his hand, but still he attacked, bludgeoning Lampkin to the ground, beating aside the hands that lifted in a pathetic defence. Again and again he punched down, using the rapier like a cudgel, the steel edge forgotten as he beat Lampkin senseless with the heavy hilt.

‘Stop it! Stop it! You’re killing him.’

Jack felt small hands pulling him back. He staggered away, his breath coming in ragged gasps.

His mother pushed past. She dropped to her knees beside the body Jack had left on the ground, sobbing as she bent low and scooped up the battered head. Blood smothered her skirt and ran over the hands that cradled Lampkin’s face, yet she still leant forward, holding him close and pressing the ruin of his flesh to her chest.

‘You’ve killed him!’ She screamed the words, her face lifted towards her son, the accusation stripping away her dignity. She sobbed then, great shudders coursing through her body.

Jack felt nothing. He had never seen so much blood, yet it did not cause him an iota of dismay.

‘He would have killed me!’ He spat out the defence, the anger that had driven him in the fight slow to depart. ‘It was him or me.’

‘Get out! Get out!’ His mother was raging now. Her face was smeared with tears and with Lampkin’s blood, but her eyes were sharp and they stared in accusation at her son. ‘Get out!’

Jack could not move. He stared at the blood splattered over his hands, the evidence of his crime revealed.

Lampkin groaned. The sound wavered, like the first wail of a newborn. Somewhere underneath the mask of blood, he was alive.

Jack felt his mind harden. He had administered the beating, and now he would face the consequences of his actions. ‘You have to choose, Ma. Him or me.’

His mother paid him no heed. She bent her face low, murmuring, her lips brushing against Lampkin’s cheek.

‘You’ve got to choose, Ma.’ Jack raised his voice, forcing the issue. ‘Right here and now. Him or me.’ He spoke slowly, his words falling into the silence.

At last his mother turned to face him. She looked from her son, and the man he had become, to the man he had left broken in the dirt. She took a breath. ‘I choose him.’

Her words were like iron. Jack felt them hit him harder than Lampkin’s fists. They settled deep.

He did not wait to hear any more. He pushed past a stunned Sir Humphrey, who had moved forward to attend to his son, and slid back the bolt that secured the rear gate. He turned as he opened it, taking one last look at his mother. Her eyes lifted to meet his. They were glazed, the horror of the night engraved upon them. She held his stare, looking deep into his soul before she turned away, breaking the bond once and for all.

‘Go. Do not come back.’ She spoke the words firmly. She did not look at him again.

Jack knew that his days at the gin palace were over. He bent low and got his good arm under Edmund’s shoulder, his left on fire from the wound he had taken from Lampkin’s knife. With Sir Humphrey taking Edmund’s other side, they hauled the boy to his feet, draping his arms around their shoulders. Then together they began the long journey to Bishopsgate, and the hackney carriage that would take them away from the place that had been the only home Jack had ever known.

Epilogue

‘I’m looking for Sergeant Tate.’

‘Over there, old son.’ A short, pugnacious sergeant looked Jack over like a man appraising a horse. ‘You taking the shilling?’

Jack held his breath. He glanced across and spotted Sergeant Tate sitting at a corner table, a young boy staring sadly at the quart of ale in front of him. Tate looked as smart as ever. The immaculate scarlet uniform was just as Jack remembered, the same undress hat with its three ribbons perched at a jaunty angle on his head, its thick gold chin strap held in place beneath his bottom lip.

‘A lad like you should join the dragoons, not the bloody foot-sloggers.’ The stout sergeant reached out and clapped Jack on the shoulder. ‘You get your own horse in my lot. Can you imagine that? Like a lord you would be.’

‘Leave him be, Sergeant Flynn, one of mine he is,’ Tate’s familiar voice called out.

Jack saw the smile as his presence in the Mitre and Dove was spotted. ‘Come and take a pew, Jack-o, my lad.’ Tate waved him over. ‘We’ve got space for one more.’

Jack did as he was bid. He moved more freely now his wounds had healed. The Ponsonbys had been good to him, but their charity had to come to an end, and so Jack had said his goodbyes and stepped back into the world, ready to fend for himself again. Now he slipped on to the bench next to the whey-faced young lad, who stared at his beer as if it were the source of all his suffering.

‘I knew you’d come, Jack-o. Didn’t I always say it?’ Tate seemed pleased to see him. He reached out a hand and laid it on Jack’s arm. ‘I heard about you and your ma. I reckoned you’d come to me. You want that shilling, old son?’

Jack nodded. He felt the claws of the future take their grip around his soul.

Keep reading for an exclusive extract from the third in the Jack Lark series

THE DEVIL’S ASSASSIN

Out in January 2015

 

You can also follow Jack Lark as he becomes THE SCARLET THIEF, out now

1854: The banks of the Alma River, Crimean Peninsular. The men of the King’s Royal Fusiliers are in terrible trouble. Officer Jack Lark has to act immediately and decisively. His life and the success of the campaign depend on it. But does he have the mettle, the officer qualities that are the life blood of the British Army?

And in his adventures as THE MAHARAJAH’S GENERAL, out now

Jack Lark barely survived the Battle of the Alma. As the brutal fight raged, he discovered the true duty that came with the officer’s commission he’d taken. In hospital, wounded, and with his stolen life left lying on the battlefield, he grasps a chance to prove himself a leader once more. Jack will travel to a new regiment in India, under a new name. . .

Chapter One

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