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“Put the knife aside. I am in no danger.”

Jack looked toward Julian, but Crispin shook his head. “No, I am in no danger.”

With care, Jack lowered the knife to the sideboard and snatched the jug. “Master?”

“Need you even ask?”

Jack found Crispin’s bowl, refilled it, and handed it to him with a shaking hand. He took it with his good hand and downed the bowl.

“I should take care with the wine, Maître Guest,” said Jacob returning to his side. “A dose is good for the blood, but too much. .” He took the bowl from Crispin and handed it to Jack. He took the wounded arm and tucked the hand into his side, cradling it there with his elbow. Jacob rolled back the sleeve of Crispin’s cotehardie to his elbow and then did the same to his bloody chemise. Once the arm was revealed, Crispin got a look at the wound. Not deep, but it was still seeping blood.

Jacob clucked his tongue and murmured something in an unrecognizable language. Crispin tried to draw his arm away, fearing some strange Jewish incantation, but Jacob held it firm. “Worry not, Master Guest. I have been told I have a light touch.”

“It is not your touch I worry over,” he growled.

This made Jacob look up and meet his eyes. “I was saying a prayer, sir. In Hebrew.”

“Limit your prayers to English from now on.”

Without a change to his expression, the man lowered his face to his task. “Shallow but not ragged,” he said, turning the arm and examining, allowing the blood to trickle out. “My son is usually a fine surgeon when not wielding a knife in anger,” he muttered. “I will not need to sew it. But I will dress it with a poultice and wrap it tightly in linen.”

“I do not want your poultice. Just tie it off.”

The bushy brows rose. “But the poultice will help the healing, soothe the pain, and prevent scarring.”

“Did you hear me? I do not want your poultice.”

He shrugged and opened his hand to his son. Julian reluctantly dragged himself to the table of herbs and jars, retrieved a roll of linen strips, and handed some to his father.

Still cradling the arm, Jacob wrapped a length of linen over the wound, winding it tightly and expertly before tying it off with a firm knot over the cut. He began to roll the sleeves back down but Crispin yanked hard and freed his arm, doing it himself.

Jacob sighed and stepped back.

“I thank you,” said Crispin as caustically as he could. “Jack, let’s go.”

“Wait,” said Jacob. His face implored. He scrambled back to the table where Crispin had dropped his coin pouch and snatched it up. He held it out to Crispin with his white hands. “The parchments. I need them back. They must be returned. Please. Take the silver.”

With one hand on Jack and the other on the door, Crispin turned back. “We are a danger to each other, I fear. Go to the sheriffs with this.”

Crispin pulled open the door and scanned the empty corridor, wondering how he was to sneak out of the palace right outside the queen’s own chamber.

“There will be more murders,” said Jacob.

Crispin froze. Slowly, he turned back. “What did you say?”

“The murders,” Jacob whispered. “The boys. I have heard of the murders.” His tongue scraped his dry lips. “I know who is responsible.”

5

“Father,” warned Julian.

Jacob made a tight jerk of his head, closing his tired eyes.

“Explain yourself,” said Crispin.

“Please.” Jacob gestured toward the chair by the fire. “Sit.”

Cursing under his breath, he felt a twinge in his wounded arm, and finally stomped back to the fire. He sat hard on the chair.

“I know you find this distasteful, Maître Guest.” Jacob sank wearily onto his own chair. “Forgive me. But the help I need will not come from the sheriffs nor from the court. I sought you out in particular because of the rumors that you often deal with objects of religious significance. Is this true?”

Crispin felt the warmth of the fire at his cheek. It did little to warm the coldness creeping within him. “It is my curse,” he said, half-jesting.

The man did not take it as a jest. He edged forward. “Then you are no stranger to the hand of the Lord.”

He laughed unpleasantly. “Of this I know not. Relics, such as they are, are only relics to those who deem them so. They bear little significance to me.” He swallowed the half-truth with the toss of his head. “Are you saying these parchments are relics? That they have to do with murder? By all the saints, I am at my wits’ end, old man! Say your peace and have done!”

“I fear, Maître Guest, that the monster has been released.”

Jack sprang to his feet. “God blind me!” he shrieked. “Monster?”

“He. .” Crispin steadied himself and shook his head. “He does not mean that literally, Jack. He speaks of the monster of inhumanity-”

“I speak of it very literally, good maître. It is the missing parchments. They contain the words of Creation.” He shook his head sadly and fingered his beard. “And I let them slip through my fingers. I’m a fool. I cannot forgive myself.”

Crispin felt the tension in his body drain away. He saw in his mind a dark shape receding into the misty night. Heavy footfalls. Fear. “What. . what is this. . monster?”

“But we saw it, Master!” cried Jack. “We saw it!”

Jacob gasped. “What did you see?”

“This is utter nonsense,” muttered Crispin. He ran his fingers into his shaggy hair. “It was a man, surely. Tall and very broad. A. . a small. . head. .”

Jacob covered his mouth with his trembling fingers. “The Golem. He has been animated. We are dead.” He reached for his robe and ripped the seam.

“Father!” Julian was kneeling beside him, staying his hand from doing more damage to his robe. “No! It cannot be. This man is lying.”

Crispin raised his chin. “I am not lying. That is one sin of which I am not guilty.” He glanced back at Jack to confirm it but Jack appeared too frightened to speak. Damn this! “Harken to me, all of you. There is no monster. There is only Jewish superstition and odd circumstances.”

“The murders-” said Jacob.

“The fact that you know about these murders makes me very suspicious.”

Jacob shook his head. “When they first happened, I was the only physician nearby. They called me forth. I have since heard of two others. I saw the dead boys. Who but a monster would commit these horrible crimes?”

Who indeed? “What are you implying? That this. . this Golem. . has murdered these children?”

“I saw what was done to those boys.”

“How did you know that I am investigating?”

“One hears things. But that was after I had decided to seek you out.”

Crispin narrowed his eyes and looked across the room, peering into the shadows of the alcoves, trying to discern the strange beakers and jars from the shapes of alchemic apparatuses. “What is a. . Golem?”

Jacob rose and returned to his table, unrolling a scroll with shaking hands. “This, Maître Guest, is the Sefer Yetzirah: The Book of Creation.”

Curious, Crispin strode across the room and looked over the man’s shoulders. He gritted his teeth when he beheld the page of strange symbols interspersed with Stars of David. “These seguloth,” said Jacob, pointing to the symbols, “explain the book. Our Father Abraham was given the divine revelation of these pages by the Lord-blessed be His name-and the rabbis of old have discussed it and analyzed it for centuries. This,” he said, spreading his fingers over the tan parchment, “is the understanding of Creation itself. How the universe was created through the Sefirot, the Ten Sacred Numbers-”

“Enough!” The room felt close suddenly. This talk of Jewish magic made Crispin’s skin crawl. “This monster. This Golem. What is it? Did you make it?”