Authors: Virginia Boecker
knight, I mean? I’ve never seen anything like that before.’
‘Me neither,’ Fifer says. ‘But it was definitely a curse.
Either from the sword or from the witch who entombed
him. Did you see that slab on top? All the marks on it?’
‘Yes,’ I say, shifting my attention to the treetops ahead of
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us. I just saw a pair of owls shoot into the sky. Might be
nothing; owls hunt at night. But birds flying out of trees are
also nature’s way of telling you there are people nearby.
Maybe it’s just us. ‘It was a curse tablet.’
Fifer nods. ‘You never see them disposed of that way.
They’re usually thrown in wells, dumped in lakes, rivers.
The ocean. You know. But to put one in a tomb—’
I feel a jolt of warning down my spine.
‘Tomb?’ I stop and grab Fifer’s arm. ‘What happens if
you put one in a tomb?’
Fifer frowns. ‘For one, it makes for a more effective
curse. The tablet draws upon the dark energy of the dead
and strengthens the magic. Especially if the person died
violently.’
‘Violently?’ I feel cold, sick.
‘But it’s crazy,’ Fifer continues. ‘I mean, it’s one thing in
theory, burying a curse tablet with a corpse. Entirely another
in practise.’
‘Practise?’ I’m starting to sound like a popinjay, those
ridiculous talking birds that pirates sometimes have. They
can’t really talk, of course. All they do is repeat the last few
words you say to them. Stupid, useless creatures.
‘Well, yes. Think about it. To do it you’d almost have to
plan it all along – perform the curse, kill someone, and then
bury the tablet in with the person you just killed. How
would you do it otherwise? Not many people are going to
run around town looking for freshly dug graves to put their
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curse tablet in, keeping their fingers crossed that the person
buried there died a violent death. No one wants to get their
hands that dirty, pardon the pun.’
My head is spinning. Inside, words float around,
disjointed and nonsensical. Curse tablet. Tomb. Violent
death. Plan. Corpse. Grave. Dirty hands. But then they
start to weave together like a tapestry, forming a picture I
wish I didn’t see.
Come third winter’s night, go underground in green.
What holds him in death will lead you to thirteen.
Fifer was right, but she was also wrong. It wasn’t what
the knight holds in death; it was what holds him in death.
Not the sword, the tablet. The stone slab that entombed
him. Just like the stone slab that nearly entombed me.
Suddenly, I know. I know where the Thirteenth Tablet is.
‘Fifer,’ I whisper. My mouth is dry as dirt. ‘The Thirteenth
Tablet. I know where it is. I—’
I hear it whistle through the air before I feel it: the fist
attached to the arm of the guard that just connected with
my face. There’s a sickening crunch as my nose breaks and
a gush of hot blood comes pouring out.
Next to me, Fifer screams.
‘This was almost too easy,’ the guard mutters, shoving
me aside before going after Fifer. The skirt on my dress
is so tight I lose my footing and stumble to the ground,
sprawling face-first into a pile of leaves and dirt. My
stigma fires hot against my abdomen as my nose snaps
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back into place. I barely feel it.
Before I can get up, two of the guards flip me over and
grab my wrists while a third clamps a pair of manacles
around them. I recognise them immediately: they’re the
guards we ran into on the road to Humbert’s.
‘Not so dangerous now, are you?’ one of them mutters.
I struggle wildly, trying to get to my feet. But my
hands are bound in iron, my legs in silk. The guards force
me back to the ground, one of them driving his knee into
my spine, hard.
‘You’re not going anywhere,’ he says. ‘Except to prison,
where you belong.’
I struggle more. He slams my face into the ground; the
force of it makes my head spin. ‘We’ll stay with her,’ I hear
him call out. ‘You and go help with the other one.’
I hear a shuffle of leaves, then Fifer’s panicked scream. I
turn my head to the side and see the guards circle around
her, taunting and laughing.
‘Get away from me!’ Fifer shrieks, holding the sword in
front of her. She jabs it at the two men but keeps missing.
‘Look at that little girl with the big sword!’
‘You know, witch, you’re lucky we caught up with you
instead of Blackwell’s boys. Your pretty face would be
roasting on the spit before sunrise.’
‘Isn’t that going to happen anyway?’ The other guard
says.
They laugh some more.
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I’ve got to get us out of here. I’ve got one guard on
my back, the other standing next to me. I’ve got that
triple dagger in my boot, but since my hands are pinned
beneath my chest, what good is it? I’m almost tempted
to call for Schuyler. Then I remember the necklace
and realise he won’t hear me. Which means I’m on my own.
I’ve got to get out of these manacles, but I don’t
know how.
Then I get an idea.
Quietly, slowly, I break my own thumbs. First one,
then the other, gritting my teeth against the pain. I slip my
hands out of the bindings, hear a quiet crack as the bones
snap back into place. Then I go still. Have the guards
noticed? No, they’re too busy calling encouragement to the
ones still teasing Fifer. They’re such idiots. Now they’re
going to pay for it.
I flatten my hands underneath me. In a flash, I buck the
guard off my back. Land in a crouch and yank the dagger
from my boot. The guard who rolled off me, I grab him by
the hair and stab him in the neck. He falls back to the
ground, dead. Before the other one can open his mouth in
protest, I pull the dagger from the dead guard’s neck and
send it flying towards him. It lands directly between his eyes
and he slumps to the ground. Also dead. The whole thing is
over in seconds.
The sudden silence gets the other guards’ attention.
Their eyes go from me to the two dead men and back to me
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again. They look stunned. I yank the blade from the guard’s
head and start towards them.
‘Fifer, get behind me.’
She stands there, dazed.
‘Fifer! Now!’
Slowly, she steps around the guards, lowering the sword
a little as she goes.
‘Don’t!’ I shout, but it’s too late. One of the guards leaps
forward, grabs a hank of Fifer’s hair and punches her square
in the face. Then he drives his fist into her stomach and she
drops to the ground. The sword falls limply from her hand.
The other guard picks it up and rounds on me.
I lunge forward and seize his free arm, twist it behind
his back and jerk it upward, hard. I’m rewarded with
a loud snap as the bone breaks. Still holding his wrist,
I yank him to me and drive my dagger into his gut. He
falls to the ground as the other guard leaps forward and
snatches the sword before I can get to it. He swipes at
me with it and I pull back. He does it again, then again,
missing me both times.
I drop to the ground, swinging an outstretched leg
underneath his feet, swiping them out from under him.
As he crumples to his knees, I jump up and smash my
foot along the side of his kneecap. I hear a crunch and he
screams in pain. He falls towards me and takes a final swing
with the sword.
The blade slashes across my abdomen, the cold silver red
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hot as it sears through the silk, all the way to my flesh.
Immediately, it starts gushing blood. I feel the flash of heat
in my abdomen and wait for the familiar, tingling healing
sensation. But it doesn’t come. Just more heat. And a lot
more blood. I clutch my hand to my side and feel it spurt
between my fingers.
It’s not healing.
The guard lies awkwardly on the ground, his injured
limbs sprawling uselessly beneath him. I stumble to him,
snatching the sword from his hand and thrusting it into
his chest. He gives a muffled grunt and falls back into the
grass. Dead.
I hear Fifer groaning. I stagger to her side.
‘Are you okay?’ Her eye is starting to swell, and even
in the pale predawn sky I can see a bruise blooming under
the skin.
She looks at me, her pupils dilated so large her eyes look
nearly black.
‘You’re hurt.’
I nod. ‘I guess the sword has some power after all.’
‘Will you be able to make it back?’
‘I think so.’ The blood is flowing hot and fast now,
spilling through my fingers. I’m starting to shake. Fifer
wraps her arm around my shoulders and, slowly, we make
our way back to Humbert’s.
I don’t speak at all. Whether from pain or terror, I don’t
know. All I do know is that my stigma isn’t healing me.
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What does that mean? Is it just this wound that won’t heal?
Or what if the Azoth has somehow undone the stigma’s
power permanently? If I’ve lost my stigma, I don’t stand a
chance of getting that tablet.
I may as well die right here.
Dawn breaks, weak threads of light pushing through the
thick blanket of clouds that is already filling the sky. As we
reach the edge of Humbert’s property, Fifer is practically
carrying me. I’ve lost a lot of blood and I’m so dizzy I can
hardly walk. The ground swoops in giant waves below me,
and things start to blur around the edges.
Soon we see the turrets of Humbert’s house in the
distance, poking up through the treetops like tiny teeth.
As we draw closer, I can see servants in the courtyard,
already going about their morning business. And I hear
Humbert shouting.
‘Keep your eyes peeled! If you find them, bring them to
me, sharpish! I won’t have them ruining my roses again,
climbing down the bloody wall—’
Fifer shoots me a look. For the first time since we left
the party, I start to worry about what waits for us inside.
This might be bad.
Bridget is in the courtyard as we walk up. She takes one
look at me and screams.
‘Master Pembroke! Come quickly!’ She rushes over to me.
‘Oh my goodness, miss, what’s happened to you? So much
blood…’ She clucks around me like an overexcited hen.
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Humbert comes barrelling through the door, his plump
face flushed with anger. He’s still wearing the clothes he
had on last night, a bright silk doublet over a ruffled
linen shirt, both now wrinkled and wilted. His spare grey
hair sticks up at all angles, revealing patches of baldness
underneath. He looks completely mental. I might laugh if I
weren’t about to faint.
He takes one look at us and stops dead in his tracks.
‘My God,’ he stammers. ‘What – what happened? My
God,’ he repeats, his eyes darting back and forth between
Fifer and me in horror. He seems not to notice the enormous
sword she’s holding at her side.
Between the two of us, there’s a lot to be horrified by.
Fifer’s red hair is matted and dirty, embedded with grass
and twigs and broken leaves. Her shirt is mud-stained
and her skirt hangs in tatters. But none of that compares
with her face. Her eye, nearly swollen shut now, is a
brilliant shade of purple. It stands out like a beacon against
her pale skin.
But however bad she looks, I look a hundred times
worse. I catch a glimpse of myself in one of Humbert’s
many diamond-paned windows and start at the reflection.
My face is coated in blood and dirt. My arms are covered in
moss and mud. But my stomach is the worst. Fifer’s
beautiful white dress has been torn clear open, revealing an
enormous, oozing slash across my midsection. She said
she’d kill me if I ruined her dress, but I’m wondering if the
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sword might beat her to it. My stomach lurches and the
ground slides precariously under my feet.
‘John!’ Humbert rushes to my side. ‘George! Come
quickly! We need help!’ He and Fifer slowly lead me inside
the house.
John and George run into the hallway. I lift my head to
look them over. Unlike Humbert, they’ve changed into
fresh clothes from yesterday, both wearing long wool coats,
heavy gloves, and boots. Their faces are flushed with cold,
as if they’ve been outside for a while.