“Well, you British pig dogs, Prince Jeff is now king,” said the herald.
We all looked at each other and shrugged.
“And Princess Cordelia of Britain is now Queen of France,” the herald added, rather huffy now.
“Oh,” said many, realizing at last at least a glancing relevance.
“Jeff?” said I. “The bloody frog prince is called Jeff?” I strode to the herald and snatched the scroll out of his hand. He tried to take it back and I clouted him with Jones.
“Calm, lad,” said Kent, taking the scroll from me and handing it back to the herald. “Merci,” said he to the messenger.
“He took my bloody princess and my monkey’s name!” said I, taking another swing with Jones, which missed its mark as Kent was dragging me away.
“You should be pleased,” said Kent. “Your lady is the Queen of France.”
“And don’t think she’s not going to rub my nose in that when I see her.”
“Come, lad, let’s go find your witches. We’ll want to be back by morning in time for Albany to accidentally hang you.”
“Oh, she’d like that, wouldn’t she?”
NINE
TOIL AND TROUBLE
So why is it that we are going to Great Birnam Wood to look for witches?” asked Kent as we made our way across the moor. There was only a slight breeze but it was bloody cold, what with the mist and the gloom and my despair over King Jeff. I pulled my woolen cape around me.
“Bloody Scotland,” said I. “Albany is possibly the darkest, dampest, coldest bloody crevice in all of Blighty. Sodding Scots.”
“Witches?” reminded Kent.
“Because the bloody ghost told me I’d find my answers here.”
“Ghost?”
“The girl ghost at the White Tower, keep up, Kent. Rhymes and riddles and such.” I told him of the “grave offense to daughters three” and the “madman rising to lead the blind.”
Kent nodded as if he understood. “And I’m along because…”
“Because it is dark and I am small.”
“You might have asked Curan or one of the others. I’m reticent about witches.”
“Nonsense. They’re just like physicians, only without the bleeding. Nothing to fear.”
“In the day, when Lear was still Christian, we did not do well by witches. I’ve had a cartload of curses cast on me.”
“Not very effective, though, were they? You’re child-frighteningly old and still strong as a bull.”
“I am banished, penniless, and live under the threat of death upon discovery of my name.”
“Oh, good point. Brave of you to come, then.”
“Aye, thanks, lad, but I’m not feeling it. What’s that light?”
There was a fire ahead in the wood, and figures moving around it.
“Stealthy, now, good Kent. Let us creep up silently and see what is to be seen before revealing ourselves. Now, creep, Kent, you crashing great ox, creep.”
And with but two steps my strategy revealed its flaw.
“You’re jingling like a coin purse possessed of fits,” said Kent. “You couldn’t creep up on the deaf nor dead. Silence your bloody bells, Pocket.”
I placed my coxcomb on the ground. “I can leave my hat, but I’ll not take off my shoes—we’ll surrender all stealth if I’m screaming from trodding tender-footed across lizards, thorns, hedgehogs, and the lot.”
“Here, then,” said Kent, pulling the remains of the pork shoulder from his satchel. “Dampen your bells with the fat.”
I raised an eyebrow quizzically—an unappreciated and overly subtle gesture in the dark—then shrugged and began working the suet into the bells at my toes and ankles.
“There!” I shook a leg to the satisfying sound of nothing at all. “Forward!”
Creep we did, until we were just outside the halo of firelight. Three bent-backed hags were walking a slow circle around a large cauldron, dropping in twisted bits of this and that as they chanted.
“Witches,” whispered Kent, paying tribute to the god of all things bloody fucking obvious.
“Aye,” said I, in lieu of clouting him. (Jones stayed behind to guard my hat.)
They double-bubbled the chorus and we were readying ourselves for another verse of the recipe when I felt something brush against my leg. It was all I could do not to cry out. I felt Kent’s hand on my shoulder.
“Steady, lad, it’s just a cat.”
Another brush, and a meow. Two of them now, licking my bells, and purring. (It sounds more pleasant than it was.) “It’s the bloody pork fat,” I whispered.
A third feline joined the gang. I stood on one foot, trying to hold the other above their heads, but while I am an accomplished acrobat, the art of levitation still eludes me; thus my ground-bound foot became my Achilles’ heel, as it were. One of the fiends sank its fangs into my ankle.
“Fuckstockings!” said I, somewhat emphatically. I hopped, I whirled, I made disparaging remarks toward all creatures of the feline aspect. Hissing and yowling ensued. When at last the cats retreated, I was sitting splayed-legged by the fire, Kent stood next to me with his sword drawn and ready, and the three hags stood in ranks across the cauldron from us.
“Back, witches!” said Kent. “You may curse me into a toad, but they’ll be the last words out of your mouths while your heads are attached.”
“Witches?” said the first witch, who was greenest of the three. “What witches? We are but humble washerwomen, making our way in the wood.”
“Rendering laundry service, humble and good,” said witch two, the tallest.
“All it be, is as it should,” said witch three, who had a wicked wart over her right eye.
“By Hecate’s[27] night-tarred nipples, stop rhyming!” said I. “If you’re not witches, what was that curse you were bubbling about?”
“Stew,” said Warty.
“Stew, stew most true,” said Tall.
“Stew most blue,” said Green.
“It’s not blue,” said Kent, looking in the cauldron. “More of a brown.”
“I know,” said Green, “but brown doesn’t rhyme, does it, love?”
“I’m looking for witches,” said I.
“Really?” said Tall.
“I was sent by a ghost.”
The hags looked at one another, then back at me. “Ghost told you to bring your laundry here, did it?” said Warty.
“You’re not washerwomen! You’re bloody witches! And that’s not stew, and the bloody ghost of the bloody White Tower said to seek you here for answers, so can we get about it, ye gnarled knots of erect vomitus?”
“Ah, we’re toads for sure now,” sighed Kent.
“Always a bloody ghost, innit?” said Tall.
“What did she look like?” asked Green.
“Who? The ghost? I didn’t say it was a she—”
“What did she look like, fool?” snarled Warty.
“I suppose I shall pass my days eating bugs and hiding under leaves until some crone drops me in a cauldron,” mused Kent, leaning on his sword now, watching moths dart into the fire.
“She was ghostly pale,” said I, “all in white—vaporous, with fair hair and—”
“She was fit,[28] though?” asked Tall. “Lovely, you might even say?”
“Bit more transparent than I care for in my wenches, but aye, she was fit.”
“Aye,” said Warty, looking to the others, who huddled with her.
When they came up, Green said, “State your business, then, fool. Why did the ghost send you here?”
“She said you could help me. I am fool to the court of King Lear of Britain. He has sent away his youngest daughter, Cordelia, of whom I am somewhat fond; he’s given my apprentice fool, Drool, to that blackguard bastard Edmund of Gloucester, and my friend Taster has been poisoned and is quite dead.”