It took Dick long seconds to recognize the storybook quotation.
“Who was last here?” shouted Sellwood. “This is inexcusable. With the Devil, one does not take such risks.”
“En cain’t git ouwt of thic Hole,” replied someone.
“Brother Milder, it has the wiles of an arch-fiend. That is why only I can be trusted to put it to the question. Who last brought the slops?”
There was some argument.
Maybee they’d be all right. Sellwood was so concerned with stopping an escape that he hadn’t thought anyone might break in.
One of the Brethren tentatively spoke up, and received a clout round the ear.
Dick wondered why anyone would want to be in Sellwood’s Church Militant.
“Stand guard,” Sellwood ordered. “Let me see what disaster is so narrowly averted.”
The door was pushed open. Sellwood set a lantern on a perch. The children pressed further back into shrinking shadow. Dick’s ankle bent the wrong way. He bit down on the pain.
He saw Sellwood’s shoes—with old-fashioned buckles and gaiters—walk past the trough, towards the Hole. He stopped, just by Dick’s face.
There was a pumping, coughing sound.
Sellwood filled a beaker.
He poured the water into the Hole.
Violet counted silently, again. After three, the water splashed on the French spy. It cried out, with despair and yearning.
“Drink deep, spawn of Satan!”
The creature howled, then gargled again. Dick realized it wasn’t making animal grunts but speaking. Unknown words that he suspected were not French.
The thing had been here for over a hundred years!
“Fose, Milder, in here, now. I will resume the inquisition.”
Brethren clumped in. Dick saw heavy boots.
The two bruisers walked around the room, keeping well away from the Hole. Dick eased out a little to get a better view. He risked a more comfortable, convenient position. Sellwood had no reason to suspect he was spied upon.
Brother Fose and Brother Milder worked the winch.
The chains tightened over the Hole, then wound onto the winch-drum.
The thing in the oubliette cursed. Dick was sure “f’tagn” was a swear-word. As it was hauled upwards, the creature struggled, hissing and croaking.
Violet held Dick’s hand, pulling, keeping him from showing himself.
A head showed over the mouth of the Hole, three times the size of a man’s and with no neck, just a pulpy frill of puffed-up gill-slits. Saucer-sized fish-eyes held the light, pupils contracting. Dick was sure the creature, eyes at floor-level, saw past the boots of its captors straight into his face. It had a fixed maw, with enough jagged teeth to please Ernest.
“Up,” ordered Sellwood. “Let’s see all of the demon.”
The Brethren winched again, and the thing hung like Captain Kidd on Execution Dock. It was man-like, but with a stub of fishtail protruding beneath two rows of dorsal spines. Its hands and feet were webbed, with nastily curved yellow nail-barbs. Where water had splashed, its skin was rainbow-scaled, beautiful even. Elsewhere, its hide was grey and taut, cracked, flaking or mossy, with rusty weals where the chains chafed.
Dick saw the thing was missing several finger-barbs. Its back and front were striped across with long-healed and new-made scars. It had been whipping boy in this house since the days when Boney was a warrior way-aye-aye.
He imagined Jacob Orris trying to get Napoleon’s secrets out of the “spy”. Had old Orris held up charts and asked the man-fish to tap a claw on hidden harbours where the invasion fleet was gathered?
Ernest was mumbling “sea-ghost” over and over, not frightened but awed. Violet hissed at him to hush.
Dick was sure they’d be caught, but Sellwood was fascinated by the creature. He poked his face close to his captive’s, smiling smugly. A cheek muscle twitched around his fixed sneer. The man-fish looked as if it would like to spit in Sellwood’s face but couldn’t afford the water.
“So, Diabolicus Maritime, is it today that you confess? I have been patient. We merely seek a statement we all know to be true, which will end this sham once and for all.”
The fish-eyes were glassy and flat, but moved to fix on Sellwood.
“You are a deception, my infernal guest, a lure, a living trick, a lie made flesh, a creature of the Prince of Liars. Own that Satan is your maker, imp! Confess your evil purpose!”
Sellwood touched fingertips to the creature’s scarred chest, scraping dry flesh. Scales fluttered away, falling like dead moths. Dick saw Sellwood’s fingers flex, the tips biting.
“The bones weren’t enough, were they? Those so-called ‘fossils’, the buried lies that lead to blasphemy and disbelief. No, the Devil had a second deceit in reserve, to pile upon the Great Untruth of ‘Pre-History’. No mere dead dragon, but a live specimen, one of those fabled ‘missing links’ in the fairy tale of ‘evolution’. By your very existence, you bear false witness, testify that the world is older than it has been proved over and over again to be, preach against creation, tear down mankind, to drag us from the realm of the angels into the festering salt-depths of Hell. The City of the Damned lies under the Earth, but you prove to my satisfaction that it extends also under the sea!”
The man-fish had no ears, but Dick was certain it could hear Sellwood. Moreover, it understood, followed his argument.
“So, own up,” snapped the Reverend. “One word, and the deception is at an end. You are not part of God’s Creation, but a sea-serpent, an monstrous forgery!”
The creature’s lipless mouth curved. It barked, through its mouth. Its gills rippled, showing scarlet inside.
Sellwood was furious.
Dick, strangely, was excited. The prisoner was laughing at its captor, the laughter of a patient, abiding being.
Why was it still alive? Could it be killed? Surely, Orris or Sellwood or some keeper in between had tried to execute the monster?
In those eyes was a promise to the parson. I will live when you are gone.
“Drop it,” snapped Sellwood.
Fose and Milder let go the winch, and—with a cry—the “French spy” was swallowed by its Hole.
Sellwood and his men left the room, taking the lantern.
Dick began breathing properly again. Violet let Ernest squirm a little, though she still held him under the trough.
Then came a truly terrifying sound, worse even than the laughter of the fish-demon.
Bolts being drawn. Three of them.
They were trapped!
VI
WSFF IMJTURQ-TK BH M’FYSR
Now was the time to keep calm.
Dick knew Violet would be all right, if only because she had to think about Ernest.
For obvious reasons, the children had not told anyone where they were going, but they would be missed at tea-time. Uncle Davey and Aunt Maeve could easily overlook a skipped meal—both of them were liable to get so interested in something that they wouldn’t notice the house catching fire—but Cook kept track. And Mr. and Mrs. Borrodale were sticklers for being in by five o’clock with hands washed and presentable.
It must be past five now.
Of course, any search party wouldn’t get around to the Priory for days, maybe weeks. They’d look on the beaches first, and in the woods.
Eventually, his uncle and aunt would find the folder marked Qrs Ndps ja qrs Dggjhbqs Dhhbrbfdqjm. Aunt Maeve, good at puzzles, had taught him how to cipher in the first place. She would eventually break the code and read Dick’s notes, and want to talk with Sellwood. By then, it would probably be too late.
They gave the Brethren time enough to get beyond earshot before creeping out from under the trough. They unbent with much creaking and muffled moaning. Violet lit her candle.