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    Plague


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      ALSO BY C.C. HUMPHREYS

      The French Executioner

      Blood Ties

      Vlad: The Last Confession

      Absolute Honour

      The Hunt of the Unicorn

      Jack Absolute: A Novel

      A Place Called Armageddon

      The Blooding of Jack Absolute

      Shakespeare’s Rebel

      AS CHRIS HUMPHREYS

      The Fetch

      Vendetta

      Possession

      Copyright © 2014 C.C. Humphreys

      All rights reserved. The use of any part of this publication, reproduced, transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, or stored in a retrieval system without the prior written consent of the publisher—or in the case of photocopying or other reprographic copying, license from the Canadian Copyright Licensing agency—is an infringement of the copyright law.

      Doubleday Canada and colophon are registered trademarks.

      Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

      Humphreys, C. C. (Chris C.), author

      Plague / C.C. Humphreys.

      ISBN 978-0-385-67992-3 (bound) ISBN 978-0-385-67993-0 (epub)

      I. Title.

      PS8565.U5576P54 2014 C813′.6 C2013-906370-6

      C2013-906371-4

      Cover photograph © Malgorzata Maj/Arcangel Images

      Map on this page-this page © Darren Bennett

      Image on this page © Getty Images/NYPL Science Source;

      on this page © Getty Images/Culture Club

      Published in Canada by Doubleday Canada, a division of Random House of Canada Limited, a Penguin Random House company

      www.randomhouse.ca

      v3.1

      To Ingegerd Humphreys.

      Miss Oslo. Spy. Mother. Friend. Much missed.

      Contents

      Cover

      Other Books by This Author

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Dedication

      Map

      London 1665

      Dramatis Personae

      Part One

      1: The Highwayman

      2: The Thief-Taker

      3: The Butcher

      4: The Actress

      5: The Nobleman

      Part Two

      6: The Monstrous Cock

      7: The Scent

      8: The Light

      9: Knight Errant

      10: The King’s Evil

      11: Finders and Keepers

      12: Losers and Weepers

      13: London Race

      14: The Warren

      Part Three

      15: Arrangements

      16: Old Foes

      17: Resolution

      18: The Testing

      19: The Gamble

      20: The Blacker Devil

      21: The Closing

      Part Four

      22: Smitten

      23: The Murderer

      24: The Return

      25: The House

      26: Newgate

      27: Gilded Cage

      Part Five

      28: Levels of Hell

      29: Born Again

      30: Reunions and Farewells

      31: The Pale Horse Rides

      Epilogue

      Author’s Note

      Acknowledgements

      Further Reading

      About the Author

      London 1665

      Five years after his restoration to the throne, after a decade of glum Puritanism, Charles II leads his citizens by example, enjoying every excess. Many Londoners flock to the reopened places of entertainment: the cockpits, the brothels, the theatres—where for the first time women may perform onstage alongside the men.

      For some citizens, though, the wounds of the Civil Wars, which ended with the execution of Charles I in 1649 and the triumph of Oliver Cromwell and Parliament, have never healed. Especially bitter are radical Christians, those dissenters who enjoyed a brief tolerance under Cromwell and who are again persecuted. For them this liberated age has turned London into Babylon and many dream of an Apocalypse to purge the realm of sin.

      Some do more than dream.

      With its rambling streets, its great mansions, its fetid tenements, London is a city of contrasts. There is not enough clean water; there is too much garbage, there are too many rats. Refugees from Holland and France live ten to a room beside the English, who resent them.

      The city is a labyrinth. At its centre sleeps a monster. When the time is right, that monster will wake. And it will want to feed.

      The monster is the Great Plague.

      Dramatis Personae

      THE HIGHWAYMEN

      Captain William Coke

      Dickon, his adopted boy

      Swift Jack

      Maclean

      O’Toole

      THE THIEF-TAKER AND FAMILY

      Pitman

      Bettina, his wife

      Josiah, their son

      Grace, Faith, Imogen, their daughters

      RESIDENTS OF ST. GILES IN THE FIELDS

      Abel Strong, butcher

      Little Dot

      Mrs. Queek

      Clancy, parish friend of John Chalker

      Gentle George, pimp

      “Lizzie,” whore

      THE PLAYERS

      Sarah Chalker

      John Chalker, her husband

      Lucy Absolute

      Thomas Betterton

      THE COURT AND THE NOBLES

      King Charles II

      James, Duke of York

      Edward Hyde, Earl of Clarendon

      John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester

      Sir Charles Sedley

      Roland, Lord Garnthorpe

      Frances Stuart

      Barbara Castlemaine

      Winifred Wells

      THE FIFTH MONARCHY MEN

      Simeon Critchollow—Brother S.

      Hezekiah Chambers

      OTHERS

      Colonel Wingate, magistrate, Finchley

      Sir Griffith Rich, member of Parliament

      Lady Rich

      Aitcheson, attendant at the playhouse

      Isaac ben Judah, goldsmith

      Maggs, servant to Lord Garnthorpe

      Mrs. Philips

      The Coachman

      Mrs. Chambers

      The Doctor

      Eye Patch, gambler

      Tobias Sym, informer

      Mistress Proctor, the searcher

      Macready

      Tombes, the ironmonger

      James Morrow, headborough of the parish

      Turvey, royal cook

      Various Saints, jailers, guards, link boys, servants, searchers, boat men, playwrights.

      THE HIGHWAYMAN

      April 29, 1665

      Tally Ho Inn, Great North Road, near London

      Just before he rode away, the captain said, “Good night, then,” and touched one blackened toe, setting Swift Jack gently swinging. It was a touch for luck, for sympathy, for memory. Not two weeks earlier he and Jack had been drinking together at this same inn, and he’d been boasting, had Jack, about the special ineptitude of the parish constables in failing to catch his scent.

      “Which is astounding,” he’d declared, “seeing as how I’ve not bathed since the coronation.”

      Captain Coke had laughed but cautioned, “Be wary, man. ‘Tis a dead fox that steals too often from the same coop.”

      But Jack had scoffed—and now he swung from a gallows in Finchley, smelling even worse than he had in life.

      Heeling his mount to the trot, Coke thrust his nose deep into his scarf, seeking a hint of sandalwood. The fragrance, though, had long faded and the stench of death accompanied him for some distance. If this night’s work goes well, he thought, one of my first calls tomorrow will be on my parfumier.

      And why should it not go well? Everything pointed to success. Swift J
    ack had lived by his nickname, always preferring a sudden action on whoever happened across Finchley Common, content whether he stole a shilling or twenty crowns. Whereas Coke planned—selecting a mark, not stumbling upon one; varying the ground across six counties. A highwayman rotting at a crossroads was a blessing too, for like a scarecrow in a field, it warned other road knights to keep away. They did, so Coke did not; while seeing one villain swing made travellers a little less watchful for others. And since the coach that was his mark had a driver in front, a footman behind and the two men within, the less wary they were the better.

      Two men within and one woman. Tut, but she was lovely, the lady he’d studied earlier that evening while feigning a doze by the Tally Ho’s fire. She’d reminded him of Lavinia, his sister, dead these many years: the same graceful swan’s neck, same sharp sweep of nose, the same disdainful manner of looking down it at the antics of her two companions. He’d felt sorry for the woman, the boorish way the men had denied her request to press on while the light was yet strong, mocking her again when they’d at last called for their coach in the twilight and she’d pleaded that now they stay. The older man, her husband by how impertinently he’d pawed her, had demanded she show the other—his younger brother, perhaps, equally drunk—the necklace he’d recently purchased for her, had pulled it roughly from concealment when she’d demurred. Even in the dim light of the inn’s fire, the jewels had sparkled, and all the captain’s hunches about these travellers he’d followed from their marbled doorstep in St. James’s had been confirmed.

      He would take the necklace, of course. Its price would not only buy him perfume from Maurice of the Strand Arcade, it would also clear several of his debts and fend off some others. And yet perhaps he would find a way to convey to her, in their coming exchange, that he robbed her with the deepest regret. Their second exchange, he reminded himself. For their eyes had met as she’d followed her husband to the tavern door, while the captain had made a show of settling in, loudly ordering another tankard with a jest. She had glanced at him then, and he had smiled. She’d looked away, as modesty dictated, yet not before he’d seen a touch of interest quicken her almond eyes.

      At the thought of those eyes, he smoothed down his thick black moustache. She would not see it clearly, under silk as it would be. Still, he would know that he had looked his best.

      He flicked the reins and tapped Dapple’s left flank, directing the mare down the side path he’d discovered when he’d scouted the route earlier. It took him swiftly to the place he’d selected, the secluded vale where the coach would cross the Dollis Brook.

      As Dapple’s hooves splashed through water, Coke whistled the usual five notes. The same trill sounded in reply; all was well. The next moment the whistler spun onto the roadway like a whirligig. “The-the-they …? They …?” the boy called, his arms flailing.

      The captain smiled. The urchin he’d discovered the previous winter under a layer of snow, blocking his doorway, ribs poking through rags and his body one welt of sores, was rarely calm; but warmth, clothing and food had stilled some of the whirlwind in him. Dickon—a hard name to stutter out—was the best of partners, for he demanded no share of the profit; nothing more, indeed, than a place to curl up at the end of Coke’s mattress, the scraps from his table, the heat from his grate.

      “They come,” Coke reassured the boy, passing down the crust and cold chop he’d saved for his ward from his supper at the Tally Ho Inn. The boy started to cram them between teeth as ramshackle as an ancient cemetery’s stones, his eyes moving their opposite ways under a thatch of wheat-blond hair. “So to your place, Dickon.”

      The falling, the spit, the darting eyes all halted. “Cap’n,” the lad said, briskly pulling up his mask, continuing to eat under it, moving away to the appointed tree, the one before which, if all went well, the coach would halt.

      As the two of them settled into the gloom at the forest’s edge, minutes passed with nothing but birds in the trees and the flick of Dapple’s grey ears. Then sound arrived on the night-still air: the squeak of iron-shod wheels in road ruts, the snort of a horse. Closer the carriage came, closer, and then he heard something else. A cry? A woman’s, sure. Were those two bullies teasing her as they had in the tavern? Well, I will pay them a little for that, he thought, pulling up his mask till only his eyes showed under his hat’s wide brim. No lady as pretty as she should be made to cry. He’d not been able to stop his sister’s tears, when all was taken from them. But perhaps he could halt this lady’s for a time.

      With a cluck of his tongue, the slightest tap of heel, he moved Dapple to the highway’s edge. The mare stood as quiet as ever, a grey wraith in the near darkness. The coach ground nearer. There was a splash as wheels spun through the brook. A horse neighed and then the vehicle rounded the corner.

      The captain licked his lips. This was the moment. From the saddle holsters, he drew both his pistols and half cocked each. Then, as the coach arrived level, he pulled the hammers full back. “Stand and deliver!” he shouted. “I am Captain Cock! So you know not to fool with me.”

      But the coach did not stand. The driver did not whip it on, nor did the horses bolt; they just turned wide eyes to him as the front of the vehicle passed by.

      Now that, thought the captain, is a first.

      In his three years of robberies, many things had happened to him. He had been whipped, foully cursed, had shit thrown at him and, on three occasions, ball discharged. But he had never till this moment been completely ignored.

      He kept his pistols levelled as the vehicle slowly rolled on. But no shutter rose from the windows, and the rear was unoccupied. The footman who had clung to it when the carriage departed the inn was no longer there. Perhaps he was within, readying a blunderbuss.

      Coke could now see across the roadway to Dickon, his eyebrows high in puzzlement above his mask.

      “Stand, curse you!” Coke cried. “No one move. The first who does takes a bullet.” He thought of the pretty lady inside, did not like to fright her so. She wouldn’t take one, of course, none of them would—for Captain Cock did not load his guns with more than powder, something only he and Dickon knew. He might yet dance the hempen jig as a thief the way Swift Jack now did—but William Coke would never be hanged for a murderer. He had killed enough in the late, deplored wars and wanted no more phantoms stalking his dreams.

      But those in the carriage did not know his secret. And they were still ignoring him, the carriage continuing on. “Stand!” he shouted once again, spurring Dapple to the front of the coach. “I mean it, fellow!” he yelled, aiming his pistols at the driver. The man did not react, did not start at all. Even in the gloom, Coke could see the man’s eyes were open, though they did not move, nor did he lift his chin from his chest. Then, the horses, at no one’s bidding, halted, and in a moment Dickon was at their heads, taking their bits, crooning.

      It was the only sound in the vale. Shaking himself, Coke uncocked and holstered one pistol, slipped from the saddle, put one foot and hand onto the carriage. “Rest easy,” he growled, though the driver still showed no will to resist him. Indeed, as Coke swung himself up to the bench, the man did not acknowledge him in any way. He had seen men thus frozen with terror when he’d been a real captain. This was nothing like that, and for the first time that night, he felt the chill on his skin.

      And then he saw why the driver did not move, why the coach had advanced so slowly. For the reins were wound tight about the man’s chest, passing through a bar beside him. Coke tugged the knot—and the whole came apart, the reins slipping, the man sliding toward him. Coke put out a hand to steady him, met wetness, could not help the shove away. As the coachman fell off the bench, his head lolled back, and for just a moment Coke saw the wound, like a screaming extra mouth, under the chin.

      The body tumbled off, and struck a carriage stanchion before crumpling onto the ground. The horses jerked at the distinct snapping of bones.

      “Ca-Cap’n, what?” Dickon cried.

      “Keep their heads!�
    �� commanded Coke.

      The horses calmed to weight and whispers. And in the near silence that ensued Coke heard a bugle, a hunting call, followed by the yelp of a dog. The animal was still far enough away if it was coming for them, which the next moment he believed it was. He had been discovered, should flee straight. But he could not. Not yet.

     

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