Read The Book of Beasts Online
Authors: John Barrowman
âYou may join us now,' he called softly up to the loft space.
Scared eyes blinked against the light as the inhabitants of the house emerged from the loft. Two men, two women, and two children: a girl and a boy. Solon whispered that James, a miller, was the round man with flour on his apron. The gatekeeper Fraser was the frail one with stringy grey hair. Matt guessed that his daughter â Solon had said her name was Jo â was in her twenties, but he couldn't be sure. People aged faster in the Middle Ages, a result of a poor diet, poor living conditions and no understanding of germs or diseases. If a man lived into his fifties during this century, he was lucky.
Matt felt a wave of fear emanating from Solon at the sight of the second young woman. He guessed with a lurch in his stomach that this was Margaret, Solon's sister.
Malcolm said nothing more until everyone was seated round the table, the children huddled close to their father, the miller. Solon exchanged a long look with his sister. Margaret smiled in return, an expression that suggested absolute faith in her brother and his friend. Matt wished he was brimming with the same sense of confidence. He could feel Solon's entire being pulsing with hate.
âTake a seat, boys,' said Malcolm. âI asked Margaret to prepare this feast for us all, and it would be a shame not to eat it.'
The miller's son cried out and buried his head in his father's shoulder. His older sister did not turn away from the abomination now sitting at the head of the table.
âLet us begin,' said Malcolm.
Margaret began silently ladling mashed turnip into the bowls on the table. Malcolm looked disapprovingly at the wedge of missing flesh that Matt had taken from the roasting pig before carving the rest himself, his tongue flickering, lizard-like, between unfinished gums.
Matt sensed that Solon was plotting to attack at any moment. He switched his knife to his left hand in preparation, shoving his right into his pocket and grasping for his pencil.
âBoys,' said Malcolm, licking pig fat from his fingers, âbefore you do anything foolish, you may want to take a wee gander out the window. Perhaps what you see will persuade you to join us for this delicious meal.'
The sheer force of will surging from Malcolm felt to Matt like trying to stand upright against the wind on the ferry to Auchinmurn. He turned towards the window, lifted the latch on the shutters and pushed them open.
Outside, the hamlet was encircled with Malcolm's black knights, their breastplates blazing, their half-faces expressionless.
âHow is your father managing this?' whispered Solon beside Matt. âHow does he keep this legion of knights animated?'
Matt had asked Jeannie a similar question. Guardians couldn't animate. All of this was
impossible
.
The dark knights stood motionless at the tree line. Matt knew that if he and Solon attempted to animate, they would be attacked in a moment.
âOf course, they would stop you,' said Malcolm.
Matt jerked back from the window at the sound of his father's voice.
âBut I wouldn't set them all on you at once,' Malcolm continued. âEspecially not you, Mattie. My own flesh and blood.' He swallowed a piece of meat without chewing it. âBesides, I have a more important task for you in mind.'
With a sudden brutal movement, Malcolm stabbed the carving knife into the table and snatched the little boy from the miller's arms.
âWatt!' Guthrie leaped from his chair and tried to grab his son.
Little Watt squirmed madly to get back to his father. Then he calmed, stopped bucking and snuggled against Malcolm's shoulder. Guthrie ceased fighting too. He slumped back on his chair, smiling blandly at Malcolm.
Old Fraser stirred on the opposite side of the table. Margaret was at his side in a moment, one hand on the old man's shoulder and the other on his daughter Jo's, calming them. Matt sensed Margaret's desire to keep the situation under control, her willingness to comply with Malcolm's wishes. She too was a victim of his powerful mind control.
Matt didn't need his Guardian powers to work out his father's intentions. Malcolm was willing to inspirit these villagers and hurt them, to force Solon and Matt to obey.
âI'm glad that I'm making myself clear,' Malcolm said, joggling Watt against his shoulder and cooing into Watt's ear. Bursts of charcoal dust erupted from the incomplete side of his face as it touched the boy's smooth, rounded cheek.
The faceless knights had shifted closer, pressed against the building. Matt slammed the shutters. Solon dropped the wooden latch.
Malcolm nodded, satisfied. âGood.'
He returned Watt to his father's lap. Margaret carried on dishing out the turnips. A grim silence settled over the table.
âSit,' bellowed Malcolm suddenly, his words erupting in a cloud of chalky darkness.
Matt and Solon sat.
Matt had lost his appetite. He moved the food around on his plate, his mind grappling for a way out. How he and Solon might extricate themselves from Malcolm's power. How they had to free Jeannie and find Solon's master. He didn't dare dwell on these thoughts for long. His father would read them too easily.
Next to Matt, Solon was shovelling turnips and bread into his mouth. Malcolm watched them intently, glancing out of the open door at the fields outside every minute or two. The sun was up. Shadows moved through the tree tops.
Was his father waiting for someone?
Matt attempted to pry inside his father's mind. He couldn't read any emotion there at all. No matter how hard he pressed, he could not push through the steely firewall in Malcolm Calder's head. Matt's grandfather Renard used a similar strategy when he wanted to keep Em and Matt from reading his emotions, only Renard's mind projected an old caravan sitting on sand dunes.
Matt turned to Solon. âHow can you eat right now?' he hissed.
âIn this world, you eat when there's food in front of you,' Solon said with a shrug. âWho knows when we will see a full plate again? Besides, our Margaret knows how to roast a pig.'
Margaret scooped another helping of turnips into Solon's bowl. As she walked past, she flicked Solon's ear with her fingers. Matt saw Solon look into his bowl. A string of knotted thread lay on top of the turnips. In his next spoonful, Solon tucked the thread under his tongue.
Malcolm wolfed down most of the pork. Matt forced himself to eat his turnips. He did his best to not dwell on the knotted thread. If he was trying his hardest to get into his father's mind, then certainly Malcolm was doing the same in return.
No one looked up from their plates until they were empty. Malcolm took one last look outside and then stood.
âBoys, you will return with me to the monastery,' he said. âMargaret will remain here with the others under â my protection, shall we say? When you have completed the tasks I have in mind for you, she and the others will be free to go, to leave the island and join their families on the mainland. Understood?'
âUnderstood,' said Matt, willing Solon to remain silent lest he reveal the thread in his mouth.
They left the cottage. At the tree line bordering the hamlet, Malcolm stopped and lifted his hand in front of the good side of his face, blocking the sun. Then he spread his fingers open and stared at the sky. He repeated this odd gesture with his hands two more times.
âWhat's he doing?' Matt whispered to Solon.
Solon spat the little thread into his hand, concealing it in his palm. âMeasuring time,' he answered. âDoes your world not need to do that?'
âOf course,' said Matt, watching his father in curiosity. âBut we have clocks.'
âI have heard of clocks,' said Solon. âBut I have not seen one.'
Matt would have explained further, but he could see that Solon was fingering the knots on the thread with a look of concentration on his face.
âAre you reading that?' Matt said, watching more closely.
âMy sister has left a message for me in the knots.
Keep your secrets
.'
âWhat does it mean?'
âThe book,' he said softly. âShe means
The Book of Beasts
.'
Malcolm had turned back towards the hamlet, facing Matt and Solon. He closed his eyes and began to count down from ten.
âNine⦠eight⦠seven.'
A chill swept towards the hamlet from the forest. Matt's scalp tingled, his mind bombarded with fierce colours and a piercing light.
ââ¦six⦠fiveâ¦'
Solon yelped, sliding to the ground with his back against a tree trunk and his head in his hands.
âTwo⦠one and⦠bravo!'
Matt found that he was crouched on the ground, his hands over his head. His eyes watered with floaters of white light. He stared at the place they had come from, refusing to believe what he saw.
The knights were gone. James Guthrie's cottage no longer had windows or doors or even a chimney. Its roof had been flattened, and the ground on which it stood had somehow become a swamp. The building shimmered lightly as it slowly sank into the ground, sealed like a giant coffin.
Matt gawked at the sight before him. His father's actions had stunned him. The same question thundered in his head, clashing with his fears for those trapped inside the sinking cottage.
How could a Guardian create such a powerful animation?
âMargaret!' Solon shouted in horror. He scrambled towards the swamp, but stopped hopelessly at the gaping hole. âMargaret!'
âTouching,' Malcolm shrugged, âbut a waste of time. They will be safe if you do as I ask. We'll take the path through the forest to the monastery.'
Matt's feet were moving against his will towards the path. Solon followed wordlessly.
They reached the buildings in minutes. Without pausing, Malcolm walked past the sleeping monks and straight into the chapel. Matt realized that his father was heading for the rear of the altar.
Lifting a flaming torch from a nearby holder, Malcolm held open the door to the catacombs.
âIn you go,' he said, and pushed the boys down the narrow slippery stone steps in front of him. âLead the way, Solon.'
It took a few minutes to adjust to the smell of rotting vegetation and stagnant water. Matt used the nauseating odour to help him lock his thoughts away from his dad. He noticed that Solon was clenching his teeth, his jaw muscle flexing as he blocked Malcolm too.
The darkness was heavy with dampness and dread, both of which pressed down on Matt's shoulders as they slogged along tunnels flooded with water from Jeannie's wave.
They entered the burial chamber of the monastery's saints and martyrs. Several sleeping forms were lined up beside the damp walls; others lay next to sarcophagi or on top of tombs. All were asleep in deep inspirited comas, Matt was relieved to see, and breathing comfortably.
âWhere is my master?' said Solon, checking beneath the cowls of his nearby sleeping comrades.
âNot here,' said Malcolm, moving on. âI will take you to him, never fear. And then you will do something for me.'
The further they trudged, the deeper they seemed to be going. The tunnel ceiling was so low now that Malcolm could no longer stand up straight. Matt could feel his chest tightening at the sense of claustrophobia.
âWhere are you taking us?' Solon demanded as they walked on.
Matt's stomach clenched. He thought all the monks would know these tunnels. If Solon didn't know where Malcolm was taking them, then they were really lost.