The Scar-Crow Men

The Scar-Crow Men by Mark Chadbourn Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: The Scar-Crow Men by Mark Chadbourn Read Free Book Online
Authors: Mark Chadbourn
Tags: Historical, Fantasy
missed him by a finger’s-width, gouging a furrow in the wall plaster.
    Will lashed out at his attacker’s groin. When the masked man danced away, the spy found a moment to leap to his feet.
    ‘You are confused,’ Will mocked. ‘A devil or an angel?’ He couldn’t see any sign of the masked man’s true identity, or guess the purpose of the attack.
    From the yard in front of the stage came relieved chatter and the hearty laughter that is heard only after the release of fear. The audience was creeping back inside. The theatre manager loudly directed the throng to their positions, promising wonders to come.
    Lunging forward, the knife-wielding foe drove Will back against the wall, and with a strength as demonic as his appearance, crushed the breath out of him. Gradually, the attacker increased the pressure. Fire burned in Will’s chest.
    ‘Will? Are you here?’ Nathaniel’s voice echoed along the walkway.
    Distracted, the devil-masked attacker flinched. Will head-butted his opponent, smashing the mask from the top edge to just above the painted, grimacing mouth. As the man threw himself back, clutching at his crumbling disguise, Will glimpsed wild eyes filled with fury. He lashed out, trying to knock the mask away. It slid off further, revealing a hint of a familiar face, but before Will could fathom the man’s identity, he stumbled back, dragging the mask into place.
    ‘Will!’ Nathaniel’s concerned voice rang out closer.
    ‘Show yourself. I would know what name to carve upon your gravestone,’ Will growled, drawing his rapier.
    Closing the rift in his mask with his left hand, the murderous foe bolted from the room.
    Will pursued the man into the walkway, ignoring Nathaniel’s surprised cry. The angel wings shimmered in the half-light, creating the illusion that the devil-masked man was flying just above the mortar floor.
    Ahead, excited chatter filled the passage. A group of five players in garish make-up and wigs hurried back to their rooms from the front of the stage, eager to return to their performance. The masked attacker darted in front of them into a corridor to his left. Barely noticing his drawn rapier, the players swarmed around Will. Roughly, the agent thrust them to one side. Turning left, he was confronted by a large door hanging open.
    Will raced out into a small area of hard-packed chalk where the wagons were unloaded. The sweet-apple scent of horse dung filled the air.
    Night had fallen, hiding whatever path the devil-masked man had taken from the Rose. In the distance, the lights of Bankside gleamed. Clouds obscured the moon, and the wind took away any sound of disappearing feet.
    A breathless Nathaniel arrived at Will’s side. ‘Thank God you are alive,’ he gasped. The young man was flushed and his clothes were dishevelled from fighting his way through the milling crowd.
    ‘I was caught up in the business of devils and angels, Nat,’ Will responded, trying to make light. His heart ached with memories of Jenny, close enough to touch yet as far away as ever. His thoughts spun with the echoes of his vision, tinged with dread by the still-clear sight of the living scarecrow.
    ‘You were the intended victim this night.’ Nathaniel stepped in front of Will, his expression grave.
    ‘How so?’ Will asked.
    Before his assistant could reply, a breathless Carpenter and Launceston raced out of the theatre door. The spy could see in the scarred man’s face that something was very wrong. ‘What is it?’ Will demanded.
    Unsure how to reply, Carpenter’s gaze flickered to his emotionless companion for support. ‘Word has just reached us from Deptford,’ he stuttered. ‘A body has been found. Murdered.’
    A silent scream of despair tore through Will’s head. He knew what was to come an instant before Carpenter spoke again.
    ‘Christopher Marlowe is dead.’

CHAPTER SEVEN
    ‘THEY’RE KILLING ALL THE DOGS. WON’T BE A HOUND LEFT IN ALL London soon,’ Henry Cressy muttered, flicking

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