Conrad strode across the floor to Tiny, grabbed him by the collar and hauled him to his feet. “Shame on you,” he said. “Here he is, chained to this stone, while you are running free. You should be ashamed.”
Tiny fawned on Conrad, but he did not look ashamed.
Duncan, coming up behind Conrad, said to Scratch, “You seem to be all right. Did he try to harm you?”
“Not in the least,” said the demon. “He was only engaged in some doggish fun. I did not mind at all. He had no intent to hurt me, nor, I believe, to even frighten me. In his doggish mind, he only played a game with me.”
“That’s generous of you,” said Duncan.
“Why, thank you, sir. It is very decent of you to say so.”
“And by the way,” asked Duncan, “is it true, as you said, that you are a demon from the very pits of Hell? And if that is so, how come you here?”
“That is a long story and a sad one,” said Scratch. “Someday, when you have the time, I will relate to you the whole of it. I was an apprentice demon, you must understand, assigned to the antechambers of the Infernal Regions to learn my vocations. But, I fear, I did very badly at it. So to speak, I was all thumbs. I never did get anything quite right.
I suppose I never really got into the spirit of the job. I was always in the doghouse. Constantly I was reprimanded for my lack of honest zeal.”
“Maybe you were not cut out to be a demon.”
“That may well be. But being a demon, I had little choice. There were few other occupations that were open to me. I would have you believe that at all times I did my valiant best.”
“So what happened?”
“Why, I ran away. I couldn’t take it any longer. One day I just cut out. And do you know, sir, and this was the unkindest cut of all — I don’t believe they made any great effort to run me down and haul me back.”
“Except for the chain, you have good treatment here?”
“Except for the chain, I would say so. I know that I am somewhat better treated here than a human would be treated should he find himself in Hell.”
21
Cuthbert lay propped up in bed by two pillows placed atop one another against the headboard. He wore a nightcap of startling red and a nightgown with ruffles at the throat and wrists. He was a sunken man. His eyes were sunken deep beneath white, bushy eyebrows, the cap coming down so far upon his forehead that it seemed to rest upon the eyebrows. His face was sunken so that his cheekbones could be seen, the skin drawn tightly over them, his nose stabbing out like a beak, the mouth a furrow between the stabbing nose and outjutting chin. His chest was sunken, his shoulders rising above it in their bony knobbiness. Beneath the coverlet his stomach was so flat and sunken that the pelvic bones stood out, making twin humps beneath the bedclothes.
He cackled at Duncan, then spoke in a raspy voice, “So. Diane tells me you smote them hip and thigh. That’s the way to do it. That’s the one language that they understand.”
“My band and I,” said Duncan. “I did not do it all alone.”
“You’ll see the others of them later,” Diane told the wizard. “They are a motley group.”
She said to Duncan, “You do not mind if I call them a motley group?”
“I suppose you could call them that,” said Duncan, not too well pleased.
“You told me of them,” Cuthbert said to Diane. “A dog and horse and also a little burro. I’ll want to see them, too.”
“The dog, perhaps,” said Diane. “Certainly not the horse.”
“I want to see the entire tribe of them,” insisted Cuthbert. “I want to gaze upon this little band that smote them hip and thigh. By gad, it does me good to know there are such still in the land. Not running squealing from them, but standing up to them.”
“The horse and burro would have trouble getting here,” protested Diane. “All those stairs.”
“Then I’ll go and see them.”
“You know, sire, you must not exert yourself.”
He grumbled at her with mumbling words. He said to Duncan, “This is what happens when a man grows old. You can’t exert yourself. You can’t walk to the water closet. You must squat upon a pot to pee. You must move slowly and you must remain in bed. You must eat soft foods because your gut will not handle honest meat. You must be sparing with the wine. You must do not a single thing that you may enjoy, but many that you don’t.”
“In a short while,” said Duncan, “it would be my hope and prayer that you’ll again be doing all the things you most enjoy. But you must take what care you can…”
“You’re in league with her,” Cuthbert accused him. “Everyone is in league with her. She can twist a strong man about her little finger. Look at her, the hussy, all that golden hair and the way she bats her eyes.”
“You know, sire,” said Diane sharply, “that I never bat my eyes. And if your behavior does not improve considerably I shall cook you up a mess of greens and feed them to you for supper. And see you eat them, too.”
“You see,” Cuthbert said to Duncan. “A man hasn’t got a chance. Especially should he grow old. Take care you do not advance beyond the age of thirty. And now suppose you tell me about your little band and this great battle.”
“We would not have survived the battle,” Duncan said, “had it not been for Diane and her griffin and the Wild Huntsman…”
“Ah, the Huntsman — a stout fellow, that one. I well remember the time…” He speared Duncan with a sharp glance.
“Don’t tell me you’re the Huntsman. A close relative, perhaps, but surely not the Huntsman. You can’t fool me with your tales. I know the Huntsman. You can’t palm yourself off…”
“Sire,” said Diane, “I told you of this gentleman. He’s not the Huntsman nor did he claim to be. You’re imagining again. Duncan Standish is the scion of a great house in the north.”
“Yes, yes,” said Cuthbert, “now I do recall. The Standish, you say. The Standish, yes, I have heard of them. If you are of that house, what are you doing here? Why did you not tarry in the safety of the north, behind the castle walls?”
“I go with messages to Oxenford,” said Duncan.
“Oxenford? Oxenford. Yes, I know of Oxenford. A great company of distinguished scholars. I have friends in Oxenford.”
He let his head drop back on the pillow and closed his eyes. Duncan looked questioningly at Diane and she signaled patience.
After a time the wizard stirred on the pillows, opened his eyes and hauled himself into a more upright position. He looked at Duncan.
“You’re still here,” he said. “I thought you might have left. You sat throughout my nap. You must excuse me, sir.
Unaccountably, at times, I fall into these little naps.”
“You feel better now, sire?”
“Yes, much better now. Diane told me you had a question for me.”
“It’s about the Horde of Evil. My archbishop told me…”
“And what archbishop might that be?”
“His Grace of Standish Abbey.”
“A fuddy-duddy,” said the wizard. “A blathering fuddy-duddy. Do you not agree?”
“At times I have thought him so.”
“And what does he say of the Horde of Evil?”
“Very little, sire. He knows not what it is. He believes it feeds on human misery and that the devastations, which come at regular intervals, may be periods when it rejuvenates itself.”