A Prisoner in Malta (21 page)

Read A Prisoner in Malta Online

Authors: Phillip Depoy

BOOK: A Prisoner in Malta
13.81Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Even more apparent was the cool way Frances held herself: assured, capable—complete. Her father had trained her well. She needed no one. Marlowe feared that Tin's pronouncement was accurate: he and Tin were doomed to love someone who would not love them in return.

Half an hour and three more ales later, decisions were made.

First, Ingram was not to be trusted. Second, Zigor had to be found. Third, Frances and Tin were to return to Coughton.

That was a risk, but Frances would go as herself this time, a lady-in-waiting to the Queen. Even if Throckmorton was certain of her dual identity as Richard, he would hardly be so bold as to threaten Lord Walsingham's daughter. Frances would say that she had need to speak with her acquaintance Elizabeth Throckmorton about some fabricated, slight matters of court. Tin would resume her place as her father's daughter. Their goal would be to discover further details about the plan to murder the Queen in her own chambers; even, if possible, to uncover the identity of the Queen's killer.

Marlowe would remain in Cambridge. The Pope's assassin close at hand and the local law out to arrest him, it was clear that his freedom, and his life, depended on finding Pygott's killer.

 

EIGHTEEN

The streets of Cambridge looked foreign to Marlowe in the dark of the moon. Every shadow was a lie, every sound a threat. Ominous figures moved just at the edge of his sight. Men were after him, for reward or for the law. The riverside shambles that passed for homes all seemed animated with menace, and nothing could completely eradicate the premonition that he would die that night.

What surprised him was how comforting he found the prospect of death. Dying was only a chance to sleep, and he was mortally tired. His discomfort lay more in the dread of what might happen if he were arrested or killed before he could succeed in his task. Harm could come to Frances. The Queen might be killed. The country would be overtaken by Spain. And he would be remembered as a murderer, not a poet.

So staying alive, finding Zigor, and forcing him to admit that he murdered Pygott was, for the moment, the only task in the world.

Thanks to Pinch, whose hulking manner and slack-jawed mien belied a keen mind and a great wealth of information, Marlowe had learned that an enclave of Basque sailors and criminals infested an encampment somewhere in the Coe Fen south of the city.

As he drew nearer the fen, the unmistakable smell of
marmitako,
the Basque fish stew with potatoes, onions, tomatoes, and peppers, filled the air. In the distance he could hear the faint singing of
bertsos,
Basque improvised melodies. In short, Pinch's information was accurate.

Marlowe had already doffed his cumbersome cassock in favor of the sleeker black pants and tunic that had been hidden underneath. The ginger beard was still in place, and still just as irritating.

He walked along the edges of the path, keeping clear of sucking mud, noisy stones, and, as was sometimes the case in these more unsavory environs, small steel traps.

As he drew closer to the singing, he could see several open fires. Men were gathered around them, mostly eating, some sleeping. The seated singer was extemporizing with equal fervor and concentration, and the men closest to him were rapt, oblivious to anything else.

How to proceed?
Marlowe wondered.

Stealth seemed the most sensible bet, but to what end? He could approach the men silently, but he would have to confront Zigor at some point, and any furtive behavior would be seen as a threat by the rest of the men. Better to be bold.

Just as he made that decision, he recognized the singer in the flickering firelight. His pulse quickened. His blood heated and made his face red. His hands began to shake ever so slightly.

He took a deep breath and then several quick, loud strides toward the encampment. His voice booming a deliberately joyous greeting.

“Argi! You're in England!”

Argi stopped singing, leapt to his feet, a dagger in his hand.

The rest of the men turned toward Marlowe. Most of them were armed as well. One of them was Zigor, who tried to hide his face in the shadows.

Argi twisted his neck several times, squinting, trying to recognize the man coming toward him.

Marlowe rushed to Argi's side, brushed the knife to one side, and embraced the smaller man.

Argi was momentarily taken aback, until he felt the point of a blade at his spine.

“If you move or cry out an alarm, you're dead,” Marlowe whispered in his ear.

“So are you,” Argi answered. “These men will kill you.”

“The difference is,” Marlowe snapped fervently, “I don't care, but you do. A man who sings the way you just did? He loves life.”

Argi recognized something in that voice.

“Marlowe?” Argi exhaled. “Is it you underneath this ridiculous beard?”

“Yes.”

“What do you want?”

“I came here for Zigor.” It was only half the truth.

There was a moment of stillness, followed by great mock joy on Argi's part.

“My friend!” he bellowed.

The men around the fire relaxed; most of the weapons were put away. Marlowe stood back from Argi and beamed.

“Let me look at you,” he said.

As he did, he saw Zigor out of the corner of his eye. He wheeled around.

“And Zigor!” he shouted. “I thought I might find you here.”

Zigor stood, uncertain of what was happening.

“One word from me,” Argi warned softly, “and these men will kill you and cook you for stew.”

Marlowe grinned, turned madly about to address all those men.

“Men of the Pyrenees,” he began, “you whose ancestors protected your homeland from Visigoths of Iberia and Muslims to the south, Franks from the advancing north, and Satan from hell itself, you would know my struggle! You whose forefathers survived the bloody partisan War of the Bands and resisted the rule of any tyrant, you must hear me. I come to you now because my home is threatened by those same forces that have plagued your families for a thousand years. I need your help. You must come to my aid!”

His impassioned speech was met with stunned silence.

Argi leaned close to Marlowe's ear.

“They told me you like to write plays,” he whispered enthusiastically. “I think you would be very good at it.”

Marlowe nodded, keeping his eyes on the audience.

“I thought it was worth a try.” He shrugged. “They don't seem particularly impressed.”

“Well,” Argi allowed, “it would have had great success if any of these men spoke English.”

“They don't speak English?”

“Not a one of them,” Argi grunted. “Just Zigor and me. That's all.”

“But it was good speech,” Zigor said.

Marlowe turned his attention to Zigor alone. “You know why I'm here.”

“No.” Zigor seemed completely at sea.

“Pygott,” Marlowe snapped.

“What?” Zigor squinted.


Tu não sabes?
” Argi said to Zigor. “
Este
é
o homem
—”

“Say no more,” Marlowe interrupted. “Not here, and not in Portuguese. I would prefer that the rest of these men did not know my name, or my predicament.”

“I know who you are now,” Zigor finally understood. “I see that you are not this
Greene
.”

“We should take a walk,” Argi said.

Without another word, Argi headed out of the circle of men. Marlowe and Zigor followed.

Back on the path that skirted the fen, away from the fires, Marlowe once again found it difficult to see anything but vague shapes in the darkness.

After a few moments of silence, when they were far enough from the camp, Argi spoke up.

“It really was a good speech,” he said. “Of course, it would have been much more effective in Portuguese. How do you know so much about my people?”

“You killed my friend, Rodrigo Lopez,” Marlowe rasped.

Darkness prevented Marlowe from seeing what Zigor did, but the sound of a pistol cocking was unmistakable. In the next heartbeat, the point of Marlowe's dagger was pressed into the back of Argi's neck, just below the skull.

“If you don't throw your pistol into the water,” Marlowe said to Zigor, “I'll kill Argi now, instead of asking him why he murdered Dr. Lopez.”

“My friend, my friend,” Argi gasped quickly. “What are you saying? I did not kill Lopez!”

“You may not have done it alone,” Marlowe snapped bitterly, “no single man could have. Captain de Ferro was a part of it, I'm certain of that.”

“No,” Argi pleaded, “you have it wrong.”

Marlowe heard Zigor's shuffling steps move to his left side. The man's leather cape made a distinctive sound.

Marlowe countered, keeping Argi's body between himself and the shadow form.

“Shoot if you want to,” Marlowe warned, “but you'll just be killing your cousin, here.”

Argi stopped struggling a little, and Zigor stood completely still.

“How did you know we are cousins?” Argi asked.

“I know everything.”

A guess, a bluff, a brag—Marlowe acknowledged these as the best tools of any good actor, and every great spy.

“So then why is it that you don't know about Lopez?” Argi asked, almost argumentatively.

Unfortunately, Marlowe spoke again before he thought.

“What about him?”

“Ah, there, you see.” Argi's voice was genial. “You do not know everything. Let us talk, yes?”

Marlowe let Argi go. A second later he heard the sound of the pistol uncocking.

“Let's walk this way, toward town,” Marlowe suggested, heading toward the outer streets of Cambridge, and torchlight. “I want to see your faces.”

The cousins exchanged a few words in a language that Marlowe did not understand.

“What is that?” he asked. “What are you saying?”

“Oh,” Zigor answered, “we are trying to say if we kill you or no.”

“I see.” Marlowe took a few more steps. “What's the decision?”

“For the moment,” Zigor said calmly, “we talk.”

Only a few minutes later they were near a small dock where lamps were lit. No one seemed to be there at the moment, but the lamps meant someone would be returning soon.

The trio stood in the street, near enough to see one another, far enough away to avoid being too well seen by others.

Softly, and in English that was occasionally impossible to follow, Zigor related a brief portion of his story.

“In July of last year,” Zigor began, his English strangely improved, “I am fighting with my cousin, Argi, in the Battle of Ponta Delgada.”

“This is to keep Portugal out of the Spanish Empire, you understand,” Argi added.

“We sailed on an English mercenary galleon captained by de Ferro,” Zigor went on. “In the ocean near the Azores, off São Miguel Island, we were severely defeated; taken prisoner by Spanish forces.”

“I manage to escape with Captain de Ferro,” Argi said solemnly, “but Zigor is not so lucky.”

“They take me to Spain.” Zigor looked about suspiciously, making certain he was not being overheard. “The Inquisition, they make me their spy.”

“Zigor is a well-known assassin,” Argi interjected, a strange pride in his voice.

“I am to go to England, meet Ingram Frizer, a Catholic spy, and enlist him in the cause: to rid England of a Protestant Queen.”

“Zigor had to agree,” Argi insisted. “The pay was good and the alternative was death.”

“I make my way to Cambridge and meet Frizer at the Pickerel Inn, as they tell me to do. He has found two other men to help. One is a brute whose skull is thicker than armor; the other is an excellent man with a knife.”

“Both local,” Argi added.

“But what was your assignment, you and Frizer?” Marlowe asked, certain he did not believe Zigor's story.

“A Bible,” he answered. “An illegal book, hidden in St. Benet's Church. I don't know why it's important. Frizer says that strangers and foreigners breaking into a church would be suspected. So we find a student at the college to get it.”

“And Frizer picked me.” Marlowe took in a deep breath. “He suspected that my father might be amenable to the Catholic cause, and he had no idea that I would soon be working for—”

Marlowe stopped short of saying Walsingham's name, though he was certain that Argi knew it.

“One of the others, the knife man Frizer hired, he insist that we should not let you go, so we set out to kill you, but that was the day Lopez came to visit. No one wants to fight that man in an open yard. So. We follow the carriage and attack it. But Lopez, he kill the thick-skull, Marlowe stab Frizer and then throw a knife at me.”

Zigor pulled back his sleeve, revealing a significant wound. Marlowe smiled.

“Are we ever going to get to Walter Pygott?” Marlowe asked.

“Oh. Yes. I know that Pygott is the one who brings the Bible to the church in the first place,” Zigor went on, “so we go back to Cambridge and get him.”

“How did you know he was the one who delivered it?” Marlowe asked.

“It doesn't matter,” Zigor said quickly, “but when we find him, he says that he delivered the Bible to someone in the church. Frizer told Pygott that he was to go back into the church; get them back.”

“You realize that most of this doesn't make sense,” Marlowe objected. “Why deliver something to the church just to steal it back?”

“Because someone in the church has hide this Bible,” Zigor explained. “And will not give them to anyone.”

“And you thought
Pygott
could find it?”

“Pygott knows the man who has hide it,” Zigor said, “and would offer him money, which was all the man in the church wanted. So. It is arrange that we meet him in the garden behind the church. But when we get there, we find Pygott dead, but the Bible is tuck into his pants.”

Other books

After The Dance by Lori D. Johnson
Lady Eve's Indiscretion by Grace Burrowes
7 Souls by Barnabas Miller, Jordan Orlando
Dual Assassins by Edward Vogler
Jonah and Co. by Dornford Yates