Authors: Virginia Boecker
grass is too low to offer cover. The only trees are in the
distance, but if we’re fast enough we might make it.
I grab Fifer’s sleeve and start towards them when I hear
it. Softly at first, then louder: the unmistakable thundering
noise of horses, their hooves pounding through the mud.
Whoever’s coming, they’re close. We won’t make it to the
trees before we’re spotted.
Fifer grabs my arm and yanks me to the ground.
‘What are you doing?’ I say. ‘They’re going to see—’
‘No, they’re not.’ She reaches into her cloak and pulls
out a long silk cord with three knots tied in it. I recognise it
immediately: a witch’s ladder. Witches use them when they
need to perform difficult or time-consuming spells quickly.
Their energy and power are stored in the cord, and they’re
released whenever a knot is untied. Blackwell showed us
what they were in training, how they worked.
I suppose he would know.
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Fifer yanks a small tuft of grass from the ground and
starts to untie one of the knots from the cord, her fingers
trembling as the sound of the hooves grows louder.
‘Enlarge.’ She flings the grass into the air. The
blades expand and shoot upward, forming an enormous
overgrown hedge. It’s at least four feet high and ten feet
long. The grass is so high it curls over on itself, thick enough
for us to hide under.
We crawl beneath it, pulling our cloaks and bags tightly
around us so they can’t be seen from the road. In the
distance, I see them: four men riding under the king’s
standard. Fifer watches them, wide-eyed. We both go still
and wait for them to pass.
They don’t. The horses slow to a canter, then a trot, then
stop completely, less than fifty feet from us.
‘I’ve had to piss for miles!’ grumbles one man. I hear his
feet splash in the mud as he dismounts his horse.
‘Hurry up and have done then. Nothing here is
stopping you.’
‘I’m coming, too,’ says another, slipping from his saddle.
The two men make their way across the field, heading
in our direction. They march straight up to our hedge, stop,
and proceed to unbutton their trousers. Fifer grimaces;
she looks horrified. I smile a little. I can’t help it. Pissing
men don’t bother me in the slightest. I was the only girl
among twenty other male witch hunters. I’ve pretty much
seen it all.
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‘So what do you think?’ one guard says.
‘Dunno,’ says the other. ‘Ten more miles, maybe?’
He shakes his head. ‘Bloody Stepney Green, middle
of nowhere—’
‘Not that. I’m talking about her.’
Her. They’re talking about me. Fifer shoots me a look.
She knows it, too. I stare at the guards through the hedge,
willing them not to say more.
‘Aye. But I wouldn’t worry too much,’ the guard
continues. ‘D’you really think Pace would send us if there
was any chance of her being there?’
Fifer’s expression turns to confusion.
Shut up, I plead silently. Shut up, shut up…
The other guard looks doubtful. ‘If you say so.’
‘I do. Look, she can’t be in three places at once. And if
you ask me, Stepney Green’s the least likely of all.’
Three places? Where else does Caleb think we are?
‘Even still. You’d think they’d at least send a witch
hunter with us.’
‘What for? You don’t think we can take a little girl?’
‘She’s not just a little girl.’
Fifer narrows her eyes at me. I shrug, as if I hear this sort
of thing every day. But my heart is pounding so hard it’s a
wonder they all can’t hear it.
‘She’s dangerous,’ the guard continues. ‘Who knows
what she’s capable of now that she’s with Nicholas Perevil.
I say we search the place as we’re supposed to and get out
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of here. If we find her, we’ll let Pace take care of her.’
‘You don’t have to tell me twice.’ The men button up
their trousers and turn to walk away.
I breathe a sigh of relief. That was close, I think.
Too close.
‘Hard to believe, isn’t it? That she’s a witch hunter and a
witch?’ He tuts. ‘Blackwell ought to be more careful about
who he recruits next time.’
Damnation.
I look at Fifer. She stares back at me, her expression
blank as a fish’s. I open my mouth to say – I don’t know
what – but she turns away, either in fright or disgust.
Probably both. She sits, unseeing, unmoving, as the
two guards join the others in the road. They mount their
horses and ride away, kicking up a fountain of mud in
their wake.
Damned bigmouthed idiots! I should have taken them
out when I had the chance. Well, it’s too late now. Nicholas
won’t be happy that Fifer found out about me, and neither
will George. Where is he, anyway? I’m going to need his
help managing Fifer when she snaps out of this daze she’s
in. She’s still staring blankly through the hedge. I slide out
from under the hedge to look for George. The second I do,
she pounces.
‘You’re a witch hunter!’ She shoves me to the ground
and jumps on top of me. ‘A goddamned witch hunter!’
‘Fifer! Stop!’ She’s hitting me now, punching my arms,
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my stomach, my face. I can’t fight back, not really. I’ll just
hurt her. Or worse, I’ll kill her. I grab her wrists to try to
stop her, but she yanks away and slaps my face and rakes
her fingernails down my cheek.
‘I could kill you! I will kill you! You—’ She lets out
a string of obscenities so blistering and outrageous I
actually start to laugh. Until she grabs a hank of my hair
and pulls. Hard.
I let out a yelp, and for a moment I forget I’m not
supposed to fight her. I grab her shoulders and fling her off
me. She tumbles into the grass, but she’s up in a flash,
cuffing me across the head so hard my ears ring. I jump on
top of her, and we start rolling around on the ground, both
of us slapping and pulling hair and screaming.
There’s a streak of movement in the distance, and
suddenly George is there, standing over us with a horrified
expression.
‘Oi!’ He hops around us, dodging our flailing bodies.
‘What the hell is going on?’
We keep fighting.
‘Would you two stop? Stop it, I say!’ George takes me by
the waist and pulls me off Fifer. She jumps up and flies at
me, her hands spread like claws. I catch her wrists, and the
three of us stagger around, reeling like drunkards in a brawl
before tumbling headlong into the hedge.
‘Peace, for God’s sake!’ George shouts, prying us apart.
‘What the hell is going on?’
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Fifer scrambles to her feet. ‘She’s a witch hunter!’ She
lunges for me again, her hands tightened into fists.
George grabs her before she can get to me.
‘What are you doing?’ she shrieks. ‘Go and get John!
We’ve got to kill her. Right now! He can, or you can. Or I’ll
do it myself!’ She pulls out her witch’s ladder.
‘You can’t kill her,’ George says.
‘Yes, I can!’ Her fingers fumble around a knot. ‘I’ll curse
her into a thousand pieces—’
George yanks it out of her hands. ‘D’you want Nicholas
to die?’
‘What?’ Fifer looks horrified. ‘No!’
‘That’s what will happen if you kill her. She’s the only
one who can find that tablet. You know that. So it shouldn’t
matter to you what she is. Witch hunter, demon, she could
be the devil for all you care.’
‘She is. She is the devil.’ Fifer seethes. ‘And you,’ she
rounds on George, jabbing her finger at him. ‘You’re awfully
calm about this. So help me, if you knew she was a witch
hunter and didn’t tell us…’
George and I exchange a rapid glance.
‘You knew,’ Fifer whispers. ‘You knew and you didn’t
tell me. Why? How could you do that to me? Or John?’ Her
eyes go wide. ‘Nicholas—’
George holds up a hand. ‘He knows. Of course he knows.
I didn’t tell you because he told me not to. Didn’t see any
reason for you to know.’
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‘No reason?’ Fifer screeches. ‘No reason to tell us she’s a
vile, lying, barbaric bi—’
‘Fifer.’ George raises his eyebrows.
‘You don’t really believe she’s going to help us, do you?’
Fifer says. ‘She means to run us in circles long enough for
Nicholas to die, then turn us over to her friends!’
‘I’m not going to do that,’ I say.
‘She’s not going to do that,’ George repeats.
‘I don’t believe you,’ Fifer says. ‘I don’t believe her.
I don’t believe any of this.’ She’s pacing back and forth,
shaking her head. Finally, she stops. ‘I’m telling John.’ She
turns and heads for the road.
‘No,’ George grabs her sleeve. ‘We keep this among us.’
‘No!’ Fifer says. ‘He needs to know. Do you know what
he’ll do if he finds out?’
‘Aye. I do know. Which is why he can’t.’ Fifer opens her
mouth to argue, but George shakes his head. ‘The main
thing is finding the tablet. You know that. Right now, we
can’t afford it to become about anything else. If we tell him,
that’s exactly what will happen.’
Fifer doesn’t reply.
‘Look, when we get to Humbert’s, you can write to
Nicholas,’ George continues. ‘Ask him yourself. He’ll tell
you the same thing.’
‘Why would he keep this from us?’
‘He has his reasons.’ George holds the witch’s ladder in
front of her. ‘Do we have a deal?’
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Fifer lunges for the ladder, but George yanks it away.
‘Fine,’ she rages. ‘It’s a deal.’
‘Good. Now wipe that murderous look off your face.
Here comes John.’
I look over the hedge and see him coming towards us in
a slow run. He’s completely coated in mud.
‘Oi, man. What happened to you?’ George says, looking
him over.
‘Jumped in a ditch.’ John wipes his face with his sleeve.
‘Nice hedge,’ he says to Fifer. She shrugs and doesn’t reply.
‘Those guards, they’re headed the same way we are. I
suppose they’re looking for us.’ He looks at each of us in
turn. ‘Did you hear them say anything?’
None of us reply.
‘I could have sworn I asked that question out loud,’ John
says wryly. ‘Fifer?’
‘Oh, don’t ask me! I don’t know anything!’
John raises his eyebrows. ‘What’s wrong with you?’
‘Everything! Nothing! I don’t know!’ She gives her
witch’s ladder a little shake. ‘It’s just… I’m upset because I
had to use one of my knots. I only have three. I didn’t
want to waste it on something so stupid.’ She gestures at
the hedge.
‘It’s not stupid; it saved you,’ John says.
‘It doomed us!’
‘Don’t be such a tragedy queen,’ I say irritably, rubbing
my scalp. It smarts from where she pulled my hair. ‘So you
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used a knot. You can make another at Humbert’s.’
Fifer glares at me, and without a word, she stalks off
towards the road. George hurries after her.
I look at John. ‘What was that about?’
‘Fifer didn’t make those knots – Nicholas did,’ John
replies. ‘She’s not quite powerful enough for that yet. He
was going to make more, but…you know.’
‘Oh,’ I say. ‘That’s too bad.’ I can see how those knots
would come in handy.
But it’s good to know Fifer isn’t as powerful as she
pretends to be.
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Another hour passes, and the sky begins to grow dark. The
rain that has dogged us most of the day has turned back
into snow, coming at us in gusts and swirling around our
feet. Eventually we reach a crossing, the road splitting into
two lanes. One is wide and well paved, leading into town.
The other road is barely that – footprints in an expanse of
knee-high grass that looks as if it’s been walked on maybe
twice in the last month. John checks his map again and, of
course, that’s the road we take.
The snow falls faster and harder, and what little path we
had is swallowed by snow and darkness. Every now and
again I catch a flash of red in the sky, blinking in the
darkness like a crimson star. Spook lights, I suppose; we
must be nearing a bog or a marsh of some sort. I just hope
we don’t have to cross it. While bog spooks aren’t dangerous,
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they are very irritating. They’ll make you play a thousand
stupid games before letting you cross the water in peace.
I’m too tired to deal with that right now.
Finally, we come upon a series of hills, each steeper than
the last. I lose my footing on the icy ground a few times, so
John walks beside me, holding my arm to keep me steady.