Medi-Evil 3 Read online




  Medi-Evil 3

  Historical Horror and Fantasy

  by Paul Finch

  Published by Brentwood Press

  Kindle edition

  Copyright 2011 Paul Finch

  This ebook is licensed for personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you are reading this book and have not purchased it or it was not purchased for your use only then please return it to amazon.com. and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of the author.

  Front Cover image ©iStockphoto.com/duncan1890

  Graphics by Eleanor Finch

  Contents

  The Gaff

  To Walk On Thorny Paths

  A Plague On Both Your Houses

  The Destroyers

  Colossus

  Sources

  THE GAFF

  ‘Professor Feltencraft’s Penny-Gaff

  Wondrous Entertainment ... Thrills and Fun

  See ... The Indian Rubber Man

  See ... The Amazing Mandelsons

  See ... The Singing Violet

  See ... Exotic dancers, Dora and Fanny

  See ... Professor Feltencraft

  genius, comic singer and famous impresario’

  The notice hung under a gas-jet on a corner of Drury Lane. Ketch and Bobber regarded it blank-faced, before taking the narrow thoroughfare which led to the tiny theatre.

  A great crowd was already jostling to get inside, and a peeler on hand to maintain order. Ketch and Bobber watched him carefully as they took their places at the back, but he was too distracted to notice them let alone associate their faces with the very poor likenesses scrawled on the wanted posters.

  Inside the red-brick building, which had once been a small warehouse, a piano was playing wildly and raucous shouts and laughter could be heard. Friday night was a good night for entertainment, of course. The women and girls in the crowd wore their best, though in most cases this amounted to patched, ankle-length frocks, French boots and feathered hats. Many of the men and boys were still in their work-clothes, coated with dust or ash, and puffing hard on their pipes as they thrust their way inside. All were in a frenzy of excitement.

  Except for Ketch and Bobber.

  They waited quietly. And the reason was simple. Under Bobber’s long coat, a pistol and cutlass were concealed. Under Ketch’s there was a blunderbuss loaded with nails. They never hesitated to go on the job armed. Why should they? The two of them already faced several death-sentences each, if caught.

  Just inside the door to the theatre, there a notice on an easel read:

  Price one penny. Places at the front, tuppence

  Beyond it, seated in front of a tatty curtain of crimson baize, a slatternly-dressed woman with a butterfly-mask covering her face, collected money. She was admitting the audience, one by one, through a large rip in the material and dropping their coins into a wooden box by her stool.

  Ketch and Bobber gazed at the box as they shuffled closer. It was brimming with copper. The thought crossed their minds to do the job there and then, and probably get away with minimum fuss, but they knew that several boxfuls would already have been taken through to the back-rooms. At this late stage, it was pointless to throw away the greater prize for something so much smaller.

  The two bandits had been trawling penny-gaffs all over London, but none they’d found turned half as much business as this one. Six houses a night, it played to, and with this the last of the evening the takings would now be awesome. Neither Bobber nor Ketch knew much about the theatre’s owner, this so-called Professor Feltencraft, but they’d heard he entertained as many as three-hundred persons a show. No-one had ever known a penny-gaff as popular as that, but apparently this Feltencraft offered performers of energy if not quality.

  “It’s them two flash-dancers, I’ve come for,” a lad said, as the thieves followed him through the curtain. “Fanny and Dora. Dance like wild things, they do. Leave their drawers off, too! Strewth, mate ... you can see everything!”

  Neither man was interested. When this job was over, they’d be able to buy as much of that as they wanted. Maybe even the high priced whores on Haymarket.

  If it had been push-and-shove on the other side of the curtain, on this side it was a virtual brawl. They found themselves in the ‘pit’ area, jammed shoulder-to-shoulder with drunken ruffians and their women. To one side, narrow stairs led up to the gallery, but this was already dangerously crowded, its timber frame creaking and sagging under the weight of jostling people. The decor was of the poorest quality; the ceiling bare plaster and riddled with cracks, the walls draped with old material so torn and ingrained with filth it was impossible to make out the once cheerful images emblazoned on it. So loud was the uproar that the pianist at the front, struggled to be heard, though his determined efforts were impressive. The room stank of gin and was filled with pipe-smoke.

  Neither of the thieves were of a mind to worry about that.

  “An hour or so,” Bobber said. “I reckon we can handle that.”

  “Aye,” Ketch replied. “Soon as this lot’s cleared.”

  So they waited patiently, two motionless figures in the chaos.

  At length, the pianist’s efforts rose to a crescendo, and the stage curtain was drawn back. Rowdy applause accompanied this. The stage was ten feet square at the most, with several gas-bulbs along the front to illuminate it. Its drab rear wall was stained where eggs and fruit had been thrown in the past. In fact, someone flung something now – just for good measure. It didn’t seem to bother Professor Feltencraft, who came stumbling to the front in the garb of a gentleman gone to the dogs. He wore a crumpled topper and a ridiculously large flower in his dusty lapel. He was short and round, with a huge belly and a broad, sallow face, blotched from excessive drinking. He might have been under the influence at this moment.

  “Ladeeeeez and gentlemen,” he began. “Welcome to my palace of pulchritude, my mansion of miracles, my chateau of shenanigens ...”

  Roars of laughter followed, and coarse cries of ‘get on with it!’ Another egg flew. Professor Feltencraft wasted no more time, but quickly went into a comic song, accompanied by the pianist. It extolled the virtues of other men’s wives, and was essentially a stream of innuendos. The crowd hooted, whistled and shrieked hysterically. Bobber and Ketch watched in silence. Of the two, Bobber was the brains. He it was who identified jobs and planned them down to the final detail. That didn’t mean he wasn’t at least as vicious as his partner. Leg-irons and regular floggings on the prison-ships had eroded the few fragments of decency left in him after a fatherless childhood in the tar-black sprawls of Southwark and Rotherhithe. As he stared at Feltencraft, his hand tightened on the hilt of his cutlass. This drink-sodden buffoon made hundreds of quid a night for doing nothing. Hundreds of quid that by rights belonged to Bobber. He only hoped the bloody old sot would try and stop him.

  Eventually, the master of ceremonies gave way to Alab Abbab, the Indian Rubber Man. He waddled on in turban and loincloth but in a sitting posture, walking on his hands. Hisses and cries of derision accompanied the act throughout, though Abbab managed to contort himself into some astonishing positions. It seemed that every bone in his body must be hinged or jointed. One very curious thing about him was the greyish tinge of his skin. And his bland expression. Didn’t he feel anything from his twisting and warping?

  Following Abbab, the Amazing Mandelsons came on; acrobats and knockabouts in fleshings and greasepaint. They wore so much greasepaint that their faces could have been masks. They hurled each other around for several minutes before the audience began to hurl abuse. Only feats of prodigious strength brought renewed in
terest. The Mandelsons, three brothers, could easily form human pyramids, stand on each other’s shoulders or turn somersaults. None of them was particularly large or strongly-built however. In fact, musculature was oddly lacking.

  Professor Feltencraft followed with more facetiae, this time a pleasant little ditty about wayward women of the cloisters. Crude verse followed crude verse, but made no impression on the two robbers, aside from setting Ketch fidgeting. Bobber glanced up at him, knowing that patience was not his sidekick’s prime virtue. Ketch, physically the larger and more brutish of the two, had started out in the Grenadiers. As a career, it hadn’t proved successful. Badly wounded at Waterloo, he’d later been sent to India, where he’d come down with malaria. Even now, twenty years later, he still had regular bouts, which, in his own words, sent him “clear off his trolley!” It was at times like these when Ketch most enjoyed his work. Sweating, head bursting – none of that mattered. The main thing was it was easier to pull the trigger on someone when you suddenly thought they were one of Napoleon’s Old Guard.

  Feltencraft stepped back again, this time for the “wondrous warblings of that querulous queen”, the Singing Violet. A thin woman in a purple gown, a butterfly mask held to her face, came forward and singing. Her delivery was more graceful than the master of ceremonies’, if a trifle raucous, but the tone of the song was largely the same. She told a tale of abuse and chastisement at the hands of a cruel and “voracious” master.

  As the obscenities flowed, the audience leaped up and down, their shrill squeals set to raise the roof. The two thieves said nothing. In fact, they were growing tense. Sweat glistened on Ketch’s florid brow. Bobber nudged him. “Soon, me old mate, soon.”

  Ketch nodded tightly.

  The final performance of the evening was by far the most popular. ‘Flash-dancers’ Dora and Fanny came on-stage to thunderous applause. They were dressed as Parisian washer-women and commenced a furious can-can, which as they wore only garters and stockings beneath their voluminous skirts, was the crowning glory of the evening’s sauciness. It seemed odd that they were masked, again decked as butterflies in that curious masquerade style. Perhaps they were harridans, Bobber thought. It scarcely mattered. Who was looking at their faces? And what they may have liked in elegance, they made up for in vigour. The dance lasted ten minutes, with the artistes scarcely missing a step and never once tiring. So great was the clamour after they’d finished, that they came back on for an encore, and went through the whole routine again.

  Bobber and Ketch endured it in strained silence. It seemed that another hour had passed before the curtain finally fell and the noisy audience streamed back out to the gin-houses. The thieves held their ground as folk shouldered roughly past. Only when they were finally alone could they could truly see what a drab and litter-strewn place Feltencraft’s gaff was. Tough on him, really – he wasn’t going to be sprucing it up with tonight’s takings.

  They drew their neckerchiefs over their faces, pulled down the brims of their hats and walked to the stage. Clambering up via the piano stool, they lifted the curtain and slid underneath. It was dark back there, but lantern light flickered from a stone arch to one side. Bobber drew his weapons and moved towards it. Ketch covered his back, blunderbuss at the ready.

  A moment later, they were descending stone steps into a small, damp room with no furnishings. They halted and listened. There wasn’t a sound, but various doorways led off. It was from one of these that the lamplight shone, and beyond it, the thieves saw another chamber. Inside, a lantern sat on a table, showing a wall of old cupboards and in one corner a screen with faded Chinese etchings on it.

  Bobber ventured forward and kicked the screen away. It fell with a clatter. The Singing Violet was standing behind it, fully clothed and masked, but apparently frozen in shock. Bobber jammed the pistol under her chin.

  “Where’s your boss!” he hissed. She neither spoke, nor moved. “Tell me!”

  Still, she said nothing, and enraged, he drew back the cutlass and cut her with it; once, twice, thrice! At the same time, Ketch weighed in with the blunderbuss, smashing its butt against her head. She went down in a heap under the flurry of blows.

  When they stood back, they were panting.

  “How’s that for being chastised?” Ketch said.

  The next set of steps led upwards again, to a longer gallery. Pegs ran down its wall, with a variety of gaudy costumes hanging on them. At the far end, another door stood open. Candle-light flickered beyond and they could hear a voice; the voice of a man counting. They looked at each other and nodded. However, half way down they stopped. Previously unseen amid the hanging costumes, they noticed Alab Abbab, the Rubber Man. He was seated against the wall, legs crossed, hands joined. The eyes were closed in his odd grey face.

  They stared at him wonderingly. Then Ketch snickered and, raising a heavy boot, slammed Abbab’s head against the bricks with a crunch of cracking bones.

  The counting in the next room abruptly ceased.

  “Quick!” Bobber said, making a dash for the door.

  They crashed through it together, but everything going on in there was happening in a whirl of speed. A central table was heaped with coins, but Professor Feltencraft was in the act of sweeping them into a sack and rushing for an open panel behind him. At the same time two seated figures leaped up and blocked the intruders’ path; one was the masked woman from the theatre’s front door, the other a man in a bottle-green tail-coat, who they hadn’t noticed. He too was masked.

  Ketch barrelled into them, while Bobber jumped to one side, cocked his pistol and took a shot at the escaping professor. His aim was true. A second before he disappeared through the panelling, Feltencraft was thrown sideways, grabbing at his arm. His sack of money hurtled to the floor and exploded.

  Ketch laughed crazily and punched the woman on the side of the head, sending her staggering back and dislodging her mask. Only then did he see why she’d been wearing it. The laugh died in his throat.

  Bobber meanwhile was grappling with the man in the green coat. He hit the bloke with his pistol, and ran him through with the cutlass. It had no initial effect. Yanking it free, Bobber skewered the bloke a second time, but incredibly the fight went on. Only when the thief stepped back and slashed broadly, striking the head clean off, did resistance falter. The man didn’t die, however. Instead, he jerked wildly about and began to play an invisible piano.

  Bobber felt madness screaming inside his head, but no more so than Ketch, who was still paralysed by the woman’s face. For it had dried and rotted – only shreds of pasty flesh covered the yellowing bones. When she stumbled towards him, he had no hesitation in raising the blunderbuss and firing pointblank. It sounded like a cannon in the enclosed room, and the fusillade of metal flung her back against the wall with savage force.

  But when the smoke cleared, a new horror awaited him. He peered at the corpse, his eyes almost starting from their sockets. Blindly he grabbed at Bobber, who was still transfixed by the headless pianist. Only slowly did Bobber look round – and register the various cogs and wheels now visible through the woman’s shattered ribs. He looked back at the pianist – and noticed the springs hanging from the stump.

  “Clockwork,” he said in a daze. “He’s stuffed ‘em with clockwork!”

  Feltencraft, still leaning on the wall and clutching his wounded arm, roared with laughter. “You bloody fools ... I said I was a genius. You think I’d get living acts for the money I pay!”

  They gazed at him dumb-struck – before the pianist suddenly stopped his playing and turned sharply to face them; before the smashed woman began to twitch and turn and drag herself back to her feet.

  Bobber and Ketch didn’t wait to see more, but tore off down the gallery. Half way along, the Indian Rubber Man scuttled out, his head misshapen and hanging at a crazy angle. They bounded over him.

  At the foot of the next flight of steps, they staggered into the room where they’d killed the Singing Violet. Now she was back on h
er feet, hacked and tattered, mask askew. At the sight of her, Ketch cried out, but Bobber grabbed up the lantern and threw it. It hit her square on, shattered and ignited. In a second she was blazing from head to toe. She still tottered towards them, arms out-stretched. Ketch swung the table at her, driving her back, but Bobber ducked around and made for the door. As he got there, two of the cupboards flew open and out came Dora and Fanny, dancing wildly.

  It could have been comical had Dora not kicked Ketch in the legs as he tried to run past, and Fanny kick him in the head as he hit the floor. Bobber watched helplessly as his mate scrabbled and screamed and tried to get to his feet. But even when he did, they kicked him down again. They were kicking him repeatedly, with bone-breaking force.

  Bobber turned and fled up the final flight to the darkened stage. And that was where the Amazing Mandelsons were waiting for him.

  Like Ketch, Bobber, for all his violence, was no match for machinery. They had him for a good ten minutes, throwing him around – up and down in the air, from one side of the stage to the other, treating him like a theatre-prop, which by the time Feltencraft arrived and called a halt to proceedings, was what he’d become.

  The professor walked around the body. One by one, the rest of his troupe emerged from the darkness, limping, shuffling, bits crushed and dangling off them, gears audibly ticking in their broken shells. Fanny and Dora were least damaged, but still the last to arrive. They threw Ketch’s body alongside Bobber’s.

  “We’ll take ’em down to the workshop,” Feltencraft finally said. “We need a pair of broker’s men for next year’s pantomime. Should have ’em ready by then.” He surveyed his ravaged crew. “In fact ... I reckon we’ll all of us make a visit to the workshop, eh. There’s no-one ’ere couldn’t do with a bit of rendering.”

  One by one they hobbled away, dragging the two thieves by the feet. Feltencraft went last. As he did, he poked a spring back in through the bullet-hole in his arm.