Read The Dagger X (The Dagger Chronicles) Online
Authors: Brian Eames
Poor Julius, ever confused and enraged by the mob of people all looking at him, did something Duck had never seen him do. Julius reached toward his backside, defecated, and with a whip of his bony hand, he hurled his excrement at the grinning crowd.
The effect was instantaneous and horrifying. Stricken men and women recoiled in disgust. Cheers turned into
howls. Jackets, dresses, and several cups of coffee were ruined.
Duck turned and ran. He reached the corner of the coffeehouse and veered down the lane.
“What did you do that for?” he said, but Julius just growled ominously in his arms.
Run!
Duck had a lead of just thirty yards when the marine officer and sailors rounded onto the lane in time to see the boy’s heels disappear around the next corner. The chase was on.
Duck, of course, had no idea which way to turn. But he was no stranger to a sprint, and what he lacked in speed he made up for in quickness, darting down the lanes without losing a single step. Once he doubled back on his path by traveling the entire perimeter of one building, thinking it might throw off his pursuers, but a stolen glance over his shoulder told him that he had neither gained nor lost ground.
Duck knew now it was only a matter of time. They would catch him. What would they do to him? Tears filled Duck’s eyes anew, and he careened around another corner and into a wide lane. Toward him walked a woman, an older woman judging by her wrinkles and the wisps of gray that peeked out beneath her bonnet. She wore an elaborate white and gray dress that billowed out wide at the bottom, and she held up a white parasol to ward off the sun.
She turned surprised eyes upon Duck.
“What’s the hurry, little man?” she said. Duck ran straight for her.
“Oh, please, Gran,” he said. “Please don’t let ’em take me away to that awful Henry Morgan!” he said, and with that, Duck reached down to the woman’s feet and grabbed a handful of the hem of her dress. Before the woman had even the time to respond, Duck had tossed the many layers up and over his and Julius’s heads and hunkered down behind her legs.
“Now hush, Julius!” the woman heard the boy say. Then she felt a strange, tiny set of hands clutching at the soft flesh behind her knees.
“Oh, my,” she said, bemused. She looked up to see the handful of men round the corner, led by the officer.
“Ma’am!” the man said to her. “A boy, running this way,” he panted. “Which way did he go, if you please?”
“A little boy, you say?” the woman said, a slight smile on her lips. “With some sort of creature in his hands, perhaps?”
“Which way, madam!”
The woman turned behind her, careful not to move her feet. She shifted the parasol to her right hand so as to point with her left.
“Down that lane, I believe, although the habits of young children are hardly my concern. Good day, officer.” These last words were thrown to the backs of the men now sprinting past her. They rounded the corner and the woman now stood alone, so to speak.
“A nefarious brigand you must be, young man, to
attract such powerful enemies,” she said. Beneath her she heard a sniffle. The woman bent at the waist and pulled up her dress high enough to have a peek. Fresh tears carved clean lines down the boy’s soot-covered cheeks.
“Now, now, lad, all is well. You are in safe hands. Or something like that.”
A movement ahead caught the woman’s eye, and she let go her dress. She stood still, pretending to admire the flowers of a mahoe tree that towered nearby. Two men, well dressed, walked the lane in the opposite direction.
“Dame Bethany,” one of the men said as they passed. Each tipped his hat.
When they had moved beyond earshot the woman said, “Can you scoot yourself along with me, then?”
“Yes, Gran. I’ll just stay hidden right here.”
“Very well. We have not far to go. Keep your little friend from tearing my stockings.”
Duck found the going rather difficult, trying to walk and squat at the same time while keeping Julius tucked in one arm and pulling down at the folds of fabric concealing him with the other. Any keen observer would not have failed to notice the bulge at the back of Dame Bethany’s dress, but the lane was empty, and soon they had turned from it to one even less traveled.
Duck kept his eyes trained on the black boots in front of him. When they climbed a set of wooden stairs, he climbed with them. Now they stood on what appeared to be a porch of some sort. A door opened.
“Richard, is the upstairs parlor occupied, perchance?” the woman said.
“No, ma’am, all occupants are out and about at the moment,” said a man.
“Very well.” The woman swept back her dress to reveal the boy clutching her leg.
“Ma’am?” said Richard.
“Stand up, young man,” Dame Bethany said. Duck stood. Julius climbed up to his shoulder. The man standing before Duck had the very dark skin denoting African descent, and watery black eyes.
“This is Richard,” the woman said. “He takes care of things for me. Tell him your name.”
Duck pointed up. “Well, Richard, this one here is Julius, and he’s usually very well behaved, but he did just throw his business at some decent people, and I am sorry for that. My name is Elias, but everyone calls me Duck.”
“Have you no surname, Duck?” asked Dame Bethany.
“I do, ma’am, or I think maybe I have two. I am not so sure.” This was a point Duck had not fully sorted out from Kitto’s explanation back on the
Blessed William
. “It was Wheale—and maybe it still is, but I know it is also Quick. That’s what my brother Kitto told me anyways, but I will believe it for sure when my mum—”
“What did you say? That name?” Dame Bethany had gone rigid. Duck looked up at her. There was some sort of fearful look in the old woman’s pale blue eyes.
Duck began again. “Well, my name was always Wheale, but then—”
“No.” The woman cut him off again. “Your brother. ‘Kitto,’ you said.”
“Yes, ma’am. It stands for—”
“Christopher. ‘Christopher Quick’ is his name?”
“Yes, ma’am.” Duck turned to Richard, but the aging man gave no sign of recognition. The woman clutched Duck by the wrist.
“We must go up. At once!”
D
uck lay back on the sofa in the parlor, his mouth and cheeks smeared with powdered sugar and the juices of unfamiliar fruits. Dame Bethany had blanketed her chair with an old tablecloth in the hopes of protecting it from the ashes that clung to Duck’s clothing. His every movement left smudges on the worn fabric. He had been offered a wet rag as well to make himself more presentable, so his face was clean enough of soot, but for two dark marks at his nostrils and the corners of his eyes. Richard had brought up a tray loaded with pastries and cut melons, and with no mother there to tell him he had eaten enough, Duck ate until he felt his stomach would surely burst. Julius hunched in a corner of the room, nibbling at a white chunk of coconut.
“Your appetite has not suffered from your journey, I see,” Bethany observed. She sat on a chair opposite the low-slung table that held the diminished tray of sweets.
“But, Duck, you have kept me in suspense too long. I said after your treats you would have to tell me your story and spare no details. Please, lad.”
Duck looked over at her through drooping eyes. “I think I could nap,” he said.
Bethany poured him a cup of tea. “Sit up.” Duck did as told. The woman tilted the cup to his lips and he took a sip.
“I don’t like tea,” he said.
“Now don’t be rude. Did not your mother teach you better?”
It was the wrong thing to say. She could tell it by the hangdog look that overtook the boy’s face.
“I don’t know where Mum is, or if ever I’ll see her again.”
Dame Bethany moved from her seat and came around the table to sit next to the boy. She put her arm around his shoulders and did not protest when Julius hopped up onto the sofa and curled into Duck’s lap.
“Have it out, son.”
And Duck did. He told it all, or at least so much as he understood, and not necessarily in the order that it happened. Duck told her about the uncle named William who had arrived in Falmouth, how bad men named Morris and Spider were following him. He told Bethany about the dagger, and his ship journey, and how he was nearly sold off into slavery. He told her about his father’s fate, or at least what Kitto had told him. He told her about Kitto saving him and about the battle during which he cowered in the barrel as Kitto and Van had told him to.
At one point Richard knocked softly on the door
and peeped his head in. Bethany went to him, and the old man whispered in her ear for a few minutes, then closed the door again. Duck resumed his tale.
The little boy was not one for excessive speeches, and this one might well have been his longest. As he neared the end of it he reached out for a jam-filled pastry to give him the support he needed to finish.
“Your father was a cooper?”
“Yes, Gran. Did I say that part?”
“And your brother. His foot?”
“I didn’t tell you that! Do you know him?” Duck brightened. “Yes, it’s all crooked like, but he’s the best brother. You haven’t seen him here, have you?”
Dame Bethany stood. She nearly pinched herself.
Can it even be possible? That dear boy . . . I lost Mercy, but is it possible that Kitto I have not lost?
Bethany walked to the window overlooking the lane. She lifted a hand to pull back the curtain and noted that it shook.
“I did know your brother, some years ago, when he was about your age and he lived in Jamaica.”
Dame Bethany watched a horse-drawn carriage roll past on the paved road. It did not seem so many years ago to her now. The depth of her loss felt raw, and more than that, the ache of her own guilt gnawing away at her as it had these last seven years felt as fresh as it ever had.
Her beloved Mercy. Like a daughter to her, the daughter that she had never had, the daughter who wanted to leave her and take away little Kitto, too.
Dame Bethany had suffered before. She was married once as a young woman and lost her husband to war. She had carried a child, but that child had not survived. She had endured long nights alone in the strange and sometimes ugly city that was Port Royal. But there was never any pain that stung like the rejection of when Mercy had told her she would leave Jamaica forever, following the cooper and taking young Kitto with her.
I should have let them go. I should never have informed Morgan,
she told herself for the thousandth time. Bethany turned around to look at the little boy who was trying to lick the end of his nose with his tongue. Her heart quickened for a moment.
Could it be that into her lap had fallen the opportunity to redeem herself for her crimes? Her sins?
“Morris knows you to see you, Duck? He would recognize you?”
Duck nodded. “I’d recognize him first. And Spider, too, and the whole crew.”
Bethany sat down next to the boy. She removed the remainder of the pastry from his hands and set it back on the tray. She took Duck’s hands in hers. The feel of such small fingers startled her memory. How long had it been . . . ?
“Look at me, lad.” Duck lifted his chin. “I was a dear friend to Kitto’s mother. She was . . . I thought of her as my daughter. But I did her a great wrong, and your being here might just allow me to right that wrong.”
“Yes, Gran. Can I call you that?” Duck said. “If it
don’t bother you, I mean. I don’t mean as if you was really old.”
Bethany grinned. “Of course you can. But hear me, Duck. Port Royal is not safe for you, not if all that you tell me is true.”
“I swear it is true.”
“Then you are going to have to trust me.”
“Already do,” Duck said. And that was true as well.
“I shall try to visit your uncle,” she said. “You must stay here, not even go outside. Not until I come back. You made a bit of a scene, I hear, when you arrived.”
Duck hung his head. “Am I in trouble bad?”
“If they find you, yes. And worse, if all of Port Royal knows of your arrival, then surely Henry Morgan will too, and it will not take him long to connect you with William Quick.”