The Secret
By Janet Baldey
Harald drew back his arm and an arrow soared
into the sky. Tense, he stood watching,
then scowled as it fell short. With a snort of disgust, he tossed away his bow,
threw himself flat and lay kicking the ground, his heels sending spurts of dust
floating upwards.
‘I’m
bored.’
Alain’s
eyes flicked towards his friend. Unease fingered his heart. When Harald was
bored, mischief followed and afterwards it was always he who tasted the whip
while Harald escaped with a merry toss of his blond head.
His
friend sat up, a grin dimpling his face.
‘I
know! Let’s find the witch.’
The crescent
shaped birthmark under Alain’s breastbone started to itch and his stomach
cramped. The witch had an evil reputation, it was rumoured she stole new-born
infants to roast over her fire. He
looked upwards, although the sky was still blue, the sun had started its
downward slide and the shadows had a sharper edge. Soon it would be curfew when they barred the
castle gates and if they weren’t back to help Cook prepare the evening meal, it
was they who would be roasted.
He
looked at his friend and saw scorn lurking behind his smile. Although he was by
far the bigger boy, Harald was a year senior and never let him forget it; the slightest
sign of fear and he would be called a ‘babe in arms.’
So, he
nodded, feeling as though his head was controlled by strings.
In a
flash, Harald was up and darting towards the drawbridge. Luckily, the day was hot and the guard had
downed numerous draughts of ale. As fleet as deer, they slipped past his
slumped figure and ran out of the castle and over the moat towards the greensward
separating the village from the wilderness beyond.
At last,
their lungs on fire, they threw themselves down at the foot of a grassy hill
and squirmed on their bellies towards the top, Harald leading the way. Just
before his head crested the summit, he turned and placed a finger on his lips
before parting the long grass.
A
rotting pile of wood, masquerading as a cottage, was slowly decaying at the
bottom of the hill. They lay, hardly
daring to breathe and as they watched, its entrance darkened and a grotesque
figure emerged into the late afternoon sunshine. At first, a matted tangle of
hair obscured its face, but when it raised its head they gasped. Its features
looked fashioned in clay by a spiteful child; it was difficult to tell whether it
was male or female. Their unspoken question was answered when the creature
waddled forwards and with a grunt, hoisted its rags, squatted and released a
flood of steaming urine. As the stench
wafted towards them, Alain retched and the witch sprang up, her hairy nostrils
flaring. Jerking her head upwards she stared in their direction. Even from a distance they saw her eyes glow
like hot coals and she let out a screech rivalling that of a pig being
slaughtered. Stooping only to grab a handful of round, white objects the witch
hitched up her skirts and lumbered towards them.
‘Run’,
shouted Harald but Alain’s legs were already pumping. As they fled, the witch picked up speed and
pelted them with the missiles but the boys were fuelled by fear and soon her screams
faded into the distance.
Deaf to
the guard’s outraged bellows, they streaked into the castle grounds and ran until
their legs shook. Collapsing against a dank stone wall, they slid to the
ground, their breath rasping their throats.
Alain felt Harald’s fingers digging into his arm and heard his hoarse
whisper.
‘Did you
see what she threw at us?’
Harald’s
eyes bulged, his face was ashen and his freckles stood out like breadcrumbs
sprinkled upon snow.
‘They were
skulls, Alain. Little, tiny skulls’.
Tossing
and turning in his narrow cot, Alain couldn’t sleep. His birthmark was
throbbing and every time he drifted off, he awoke in a sweaty terror, dreaming
he was drowning in a pit of ivory bones while the witch capered above him.
‘Hush,
my love. It’s just a bad dream.’
His
mother’s hands, cool as river water, stroked his forehead. Alain could bear it
no longer, he was tired of being frightened.
He nestled his head against her breast.
‘Mother….’
As he told his tale, his
mother’s body stiffened and his words trailed away as he glanced at her. Her
head was bent and she sat quite still, her expression hidden beneath a
waterfall of ash blonde hair.
At last, she roused and
shook her head.
‘She’s just a lost soul. Touched
in the head. Forget about her.’
Rising, she left the room.
Of all the people he knew,
Alain hated the Cook the most. Gross and evil tempered, he treated those
working under him with spiteful cruelty. While his own belly overflowed his
breeches, he slapped away the hands of hungry kitchen boys sneaking scraps
destined for swill. In return for
turning spits all day, they were rewarded with a single mug of gruel but a
surfeit of kicks.
One market day, when Alain
out was with his parents, he spied his persecutor waddling towards them and his
heart sank. Knowing the man’s malicious
nature, he stepped to one side but as the Kitchenmaster drew abreast, the man
deliberately changed course and barged into him, his heavy bulk sending him
flying.
‘Out of the way, boy.’
His falsetto voice sliced
through the hubbub.
Alain lay, drinking puddle
water. Rage flooded his mind.
‘I wish you dead old man,’
he thought.
There was a crash, followed
by silence. Then, women began to scream and men shouted, deepening the tumult.
Startled,
Alain sat up, wiping mud from his eyes.
The Kitchenmaster
lay sprawled under a barrowload of spilled golden russets, his face as red and
swollen as a turkey’s wattle.
He
looked around for his parents; they were standing a little way off staring, not
at the fallen man, but at Alain; their
faces twin masks of despair.
Alain
heard his mother sobbing as he neared the cottage. Entering, he saw his father comforting her;
their heads pressed close together.
Hearing
the creak of the door, his parents looked up:
his mother’s face was streaked by tears.
‘Mother?’
Quickly,
his father rose, holding up a hand to block his advance.
‘Son, there
is something you should know.’ Alain frowned, his father’s voice sounded
strange; it was off-kilter, like a bell with a hairline crack.
‘Before
you were born, my wife and I longed for children but we had no live births. We
both grieved deeply and at last, I plucked up courage and went to the Witch for
a potion. I went expecting a hag but was spellbound by the evil creature and
saw, not her, but the phantasm of a beautiful girl.’
He
stared at the floor.
‘I was
given no potion but was told to go home and wait. Nine months later, a basket
containing a babe was left at our door. A note was pinned upon its shawl. The babe was
ours for a while. It said we would know when it was time to return the child.’
He gave
a deep shuddering sigh.
‘We will
always love you, my son, but now you must go back to your true home.’
The seconds lengthened, and
the innocence in Alain’s eyes faded: when
he spoke, his voice was wary.
‘What
are you saying Father?’
‘Son,
you are not your mother’s child. You bear the witch’s mark.’
He
lifted the boy’s shirt to reveal the half moon, glowing scarlet under his breastbone.
‘No!’ The word erupted from Alain’s mouth. He
shook his head wildly until his coarse black hair stood on end, his thick
eyebrows drew together in a scowl and his body started to swell.
His
father stepped backwards; the love on
his face changing to fear.
Then,
the only mother that Alain had ever known, spoke; her voice husky as if the
words were being dragged from her.
‘Alain,
do you recall what happened in the market place. When the kitchenmaster threw you
to the ground, did you wish him ill? Alain, we fear you have powers that can
harm. Powers that will grow just as your
body does. ‘Tis not safe to keep you
with us.’
Alain
stared at his mother, mixed emotions of guilt and horror plain upon his face. He
whirled and fled outside where he stood trembling in the darkness. He’d meant the Cook no real harm, ‘twas not
his fault. Hate welled as he realised how
his parents had lied to him. He wished
they were…. his fist blocked his mouth and he tasted blood. He squeezed his eyes shut, his lids glowing pink
as he felt his heart pounding, like a mailed fist on an oak door. He fought to
bring himself under control and when at last, his rage ebbed, he slumped
against the cottage wall, his body weak and drained. Slowly, he raised his head, moonlight washed
over his face and as it did, a great weight rolled away. Suddenly, he knew how to end his misery. He would
wish himself dead. He had the Power. But, he would be so lonely in the afterlife
without parents, for all their faults he loved them dearly.
He felt
no pang as their bodies thudded to the floor. After all, they would soon be
together, reunited in some magical kingdom beyond the stars. ‘I’m coming’, he thought as he willed himself
dead. Minutes passed and nothing
happened. Gritting his teeth, he concentrated
harder. ‘Die,’ he commanded. But no
matter how many images of death he conjured, his heart beat with a steady
rhythm. With rising panic, he rushed inside, grabbed a kitchen knife and
stabbed himself repeatedly. The pain was immense but when the knife was removed
his flesh healed over and not a drop of his blood was shed. Bawling and wailing, he blundered about the
cottage, beating his head against the walls, begging for death but still the breath
in his treacherous body refused to still.
When, at
last all hope had gone and he’d found his way to his only refuge, he learned
the true price of evil. His stomach
rebelling against the sour smell of her breath, he lay half smothered in the
foetid embrace of his birth mother and listened as she whispered their secret.
‘Witches
and their kinfolk live forever.’
Copyright Janet
Baldey