The Bones of Avalon

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Authors: Phil Rickman

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BOOK: The Bones of Avalon
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Copyright

First published in the UK in 2010 by Corvus, an imprint of Grove Atlantic Ltd.

Copyright © Phil Rickman, 2010. All rights reserved.

The moral right of Phil Rickman to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents act of 1988.

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

This is a work of fiction. All characters, organisations and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

Corvus

An imprint of Grove Atlantic Ltd

Ormond House

26-27 Boswell Street

London WC1N 3JZ

www.corvus-books.co.uk

First eBook Edition: January 2010

ISBN: 978-1-848-87789-4

Contents

 

Cover

Copyright

JOHN DEE

Matters of the Hidden

PART ONE

I: Lest Graves Be Open

II: Hares

III: His Second Coming

IV: Stability of the Realm

V: Bones

VI: The Holy Heart

VII: Awe and Stupor

VIII: Without the Walls

IX: Called into Service

PART TWO

X: Relics

XI: Delirium

XII: Watchtower

XIII: Elixir

XIV: A Mortifying of the Flesh

XV: Maggots

XVI: Love the Dead

XVII: Crazed Bitch

XVIII: The First Age of Light

XIX: Beyond Normal

PART THREE

XX: Our Sister

XXI: What Constitutes Sorcery

XXII: Black as Pitch

XXIII: Lowest Form of Doctoring

XXIV: Fungus Dust

XXV: Trade

XXVI: Le Fay

XXVII: A Sister of Venus

XXVIII: The Great Unspoken

XXIX: The Storm

XXX: Like to the Sun

XXXI: Haze

PART FOUR

XXXII: The Word

XXXIII: A Man’s Path

XXXIV: Venus Glove

XXXV: Black Energy

XXXVI: What’s Coming

XXXVII: The Heresy

XXXVIII: Old Bones, New Bones

XXXIX: Nothing to Hide

XL: A Different Canon

XLI: Who Fears For His Immortal Soul…

XLII: Twin Souls

XLIII: Drawings for Children

XLIV: Harlot

XLV: Eye

XLVI: The Vision of Heaven

XLVII: Little Bear

XLVIII: Black Hearts

PART FIVE

XLIX: His Diversion

L: Emanation

LI: Reward

LII: Abominations

LIII: In the Night Garden

LIV: A Cold Inversion

LV: Tainted

LVI: Brown Blanket

LVII: The Void

ENDWORD

Notes and Credits

Oh my God, how profound are these mysteries …

John Dee,

Monas Hieroglyphica
.

 
JOHN DEE

A note on the background.

 

Born in 1527, John Dee grew up in the most volcanic years of the reign of Henry VIII, at whose court his father was employed as a ‘gentleman server.’ John was eight when the King split with Rome, declaring himself head of the Church of England and systematically plundering the wealth of the monasteries.

Recognised by his early twenties as one of Europe’s leading mathematicians and an expert in the science of astrology, John Dee was introduced at court during the short reign of Henry’s son, Edward VI.

But Edward died at only sixteen, and Dee was lucky to survive the brief but bloody reign of the Catholic Mary Tudor.

Mary died in 1558 and was succeeded by the Protestant Elizabeth, who would always encourage John’s lifelong interest in what he considered science but others often saw as sorcery.

Caught between Catholic plots and the rise of a new puritanism, he would feel no more secure than would Queen Elizabeth herself.

1560 was… a difficult year.

Matters of the Hidden

A foreboding.

 

I
MUST HAVE
been the only man that morning to touch it. They’d gathered around me in the alley, but when I put a hand into the coffin they all drew back.

A drab day, not long after the year’s beginning. Sky like a soiled rag, sooted snow still clinging to the cobbles. I’d walked down, for maybe the last time, from my lodgings behind New Fish Street, through air already fugged with smoke from the morning fires. A stink of sour ale and vomit in the alley, and a hanging dread.

‘Dr Dee…’

The man pushing through the ring of onlookers wore a long black coat over a black doublet, expensive but unslashed. Mole-sleek hair was cut close to his skull.

‘You may not remember me, Doctor.’

His voice soft, making him younger than his appearance suggested.

‘Um…

’ ‘Arrived in Cambridge not long before you left.’

I was edging a cautious thumbnail over the yellowing face within the coffin. All the people you’re supposed to recognise these days. Why? They’re something then nothing, here then gone. Waste of study-time.

‘Quite a big college,’ I said.

‘I think you were a reader in Greek at the time?’

Which would have made it 1547 or ’48. I hadn’t been back to Cambridge since, having – to my mother’s fierce consternation – turned down a couple of proffered posts there. I looked up at him, shaking my head and begging mercy, for in truth I knew him not.

‘Walsingham,’ he said.

Heard of him. An MP now, about five years younger than me, so still in his twenties. Ambitious, they said, and courting Cecil for position. His messenger had been banging on my door before eight, when it was yet dark. I hadn’t liked this; it put me on edge. It always does, now.

‘Lucky to catch me, Master Walsingham. I was about to leave London for my mother’s house in Mortlake.’

‘Not permanently, I trust?’

I looked up, suspicious. A week earlier, the tight-arse who owned the house where I was lodging had finally raised the rent beyond my means – maybe under the impression, as many now seemed to be, that I was a man of wealth. It was as if this Walsingham knew the truth of my situation. How was that possible? There was also an assumed authority here which I doubted that he, as a mere MP, had any right to exercise.

Still, this matter intrigued me, so I was prepared to indulge him for a while.

‘Wax?’ he said.

Squatting down in the mud on the other side of the coffin, which was laid across a stone horse-trough. Putting out a forefinger to the face, but then drawing it back.

‘Let’s see,’ I said.

And then, impatient with all this superstition, placed both hands inside the coffin and lifted out the bundle, prompting a gasp from someone as I bent my head and sniffed.

‘Beeswax.’

‘Stolen from a church, then?’

‘I’d guess. Shaped over a flame. See the fingermark?’

What had lain in the box was naked upon a cloth of dark red, edged in gold. It was a foot in length, three inches in thickness. The eyes were jagged holes, the mouth a knife-slit smeared red. The smudged print was on one over-plump breast and another small glob of red made a dark berry in the cleft between the legs.

‘An altar candle?’ Walsingham said.

‘Could be. It was you who found it?’

‘My clerk. I live not far away, along the river. He thought at first it must be some nun’s still-born babe. When he—’

‘Don’t they usually just get dropped in the river wrapped in rags?’

‘—when he finally found the balls to take off the lid, he returned at once. Had me roused.’

I looked around: two constables, a man of the Watch, a couple of whores and a vagrant near the entrance to the alley. A dying pitch-torch smouldered by the door of a mean tavern on the corner, but the buildings either side were all tight-shuttered, no smoke from the chimneys. Warehouses, most likely.

‘Found exactly as . . .?’

‘No, no. The foul thing was in a most conspicuous position out on the quayside, where anyone might chance upon it. I had it moved here, then sent the Watch to knock on doors. A man walking the streets with a coffin in his arms can’t have gone entirely unseen.’

I nodded. Probably some drunkard out there still fearing for his sanity. I laid the waxen effigy back in the box and hefted the whole thing. It was quite light – pine maybe, ’neath the tarry black.

‘And then you summoned
me
,’ I said. ‘Can I, um, ask why?’

The question was left on the air; he tossed another at me.

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