Chapter 19

 

NINETEEN

SHALL A MADMAN RISE

Gloucester was wandering around outside the castle, just beyond the drawbridge, coming dangerously close to tumbling into the moat. The storm was still raging and bloody rain streamed down the earl's face from his empty eye sockets.

Drool caught the old man by the back of his cloak and lifted him like he was a kitten. Gloucester struggled and waved about in horror, as if he'd been snatched up by some great bird of prey instead of an enormous nitwit.

"There, there," said Drool, trying to calm the old man the way one might try to settle a frightened horse. "I gots you."

"Bring him away from the edge and set him down, Drool," said I. "Lord Gloucester, this is Pocket, Lear's fool. We're going to take you to shelter and bandage your wounds. King Lear will be there, too. Just take Drool's hand."

"Get away," said the earl. "Your comforts are in vain. I am lost. My sons are scoundrels, my estate is forfeit. Let me fall in the moat and drown."

Drool set the old man down and pointed him toward the moat. "Go on, then, milord."

"Grab him, Drool, you wooden-headed ninny!"

"But he told me to let him drown, and he's an earl with a castle and the lot, and you're only a fool, Pocket, so I got to do what he says."

I strode forth, grabbed Gloucester and led him away from the edge. "He's not an earl anymore, lad. He has nothing but his cloak to protect him from the rain, like us."

"He's got nothing?" said Drool. "Can I teach him to juggle so he can be a fool?"

"Let's get him to shelter and see that he doesn't bleed to death first, then you can give him fool lessons."

"We're going to make a fool of ye," said Drool, clapping the old man on the back. "That'll be the dog's bollocks, won't it, milord?"

"Drown me," said Gloucester.

"Being a fool is ever so much better than being an earl," said Drool, far too cheery for a cold-dismal day of post-maiming. "You don't get a castle but you make people laugh and they give you apples and sometimes one of the wenches or the sheeps will have a laugh with you. It's the mutt's nuts,[42] it is."

I stopped and looked at my apprentice. "You've been having a laugh with sheep?"

Drool rolled his eyes toward the slate sky. "No, I - we have pie sometimes, too, when Bubble makes it. You'll like Bubble. She's smashing."

Gloucester seemed to lose all his will then, and let me lead him through the walled town, taking weak, halting steps. As we passed a long, half-timbered building I took to be barracks I heard someone call my name. I looked to see Curan, Lear's captain, standing under an awning. He waved us over and we stood with our backs hard to the wall to try to escape the rain.

"Is that the Earl of Gloucester?" asked Curan.

"Aye," said I. I told Curan what had transpired inside the castle and out on the heath since I'd last seen him.

"God's blood, two wars. Cornwall dead. Who is master of our force, now?"

"Mistress," said I. "Stay with Regan. The plan is as before."

"No, it's not. We don't even know who her enemy is, Albany or France."

"Aye, but your action should be the same."

"I'd give a month's wages to be behind the blade that slays that bastard Edmund."

At the mention of his son, Gloucester started wailing again. "Drown me! I will suffer no more! Give me your sword that I may run upon it and end my shame and misery!"

"Sorry," I said to Curan. "He's been a bit of a weepy little Nancy to be around since they ripped his eyes out."

"Well, you might bandage him up. Bring him in. Hunter's still with us. He's right handy with a cauterizing iron."

"Let me end this suffering," wailed Gloucester. "I can no longer endure the slings and arrows - "

"My lord Gloucester, would you please, by the fire-charred balls of St. George, shut the fuck up!"

"Bit harsh, innit?" said Curan.

"What, I said 'please.'"

"Still."

"Sorry, Gloucester, old chap. Most excellent hat."

"He's not wearing a hat," said Curan.

"Well, he's blind, isn't he? If you hadn't said anything he might have enjoyed his bloody hat, mightn't he?"

The earl started wailing again. "My sons are villains and I have no hat." He made to go on, but Drool clamped his great paw over the old man's mouth.

"Thanks, lad. Curan, do you have any food?"

"Aye, Pocket, we can spare as much bread and cheese as you can carry, and one of the men can scare up a flask of wine, too, I'll wager. His lordship has been most generous in providing us with fare," Curan said for the benefit of Gloucester. The old man began struggling against Drool's grip.

"Oh, Curan, you've set him off again. Hurry, if you please. We've got to find Lear and head to Dover."

"Dover it is, then? You'll join with France?"

"Aye, bloody King Jeff, great froggy, monkey-named, woman-stealing ponce that he is."

"You're fond of him, then?"

"Oh do piss off, captain. Just see to it that whatever force Regan might send after us doesn't catch us. Don't mutiny, just make your way to Dover east, then south. I'll take Lear south, then east."

"Let me come with you, Pocket. The king needs more protection than two fools and a blind man."

"The old knight Caius is with the king. You will serve the king best by serving his plan here." Not strictly true, but would he have done his duty if he thought his commander a fool? I think not.

"Aye, then, I'll get your food," said Curan.

When we arrived at the hovel, Tom O'Bedlam stood outside, naked in the rain, barking.

"That barking bloke is naked," said Drool, for once not singing praise to St. Obvious, as we were actually traveling with a blind fellow.

"Aye, but the question is, is he naked because he's barking, or is he barking because he's naked?" I asked.

"I'm hungry," said Drool, his mind overchallenged.

"Poor Tom is cold and cursed," said Tom between barking fits, and for the first time seeing him in daylight and mostly clean, I was taken aback. Without the coat of mud, Tom looked familiar. Very familiar. Tom O'Bedlam was, in fact, Edgar of Gloucester, the earl's legitimate son.

"Tom, why are you out here?"

"Poor Tom, that old knight Caius said he had to stand in the rain until he was clean and didn't stink anymore."

"And did he tell you to bark and talk about yourself in the third person?"

"No, I thought up that bit on my own."

"Come inside, Tom. Help Drool with this old fellow."

Tom looked at Gloucester for the first time and his eyes went wide and he sank to his knees. "By the cruelty of the gods," said he. "He's blind."

I put my hand on his shoulder and whispered, "Be steadfast, Edgar, your father needs your help." In that moment a light came into his eye like a spark of sanity returning and he nodded and stood up, taking the earl's arm. Shall a madman rise to lead the blind.

"Come, good sir," said Edgar. "Tom is mad, but he is not beyond aiding a stranger in distress."

"Just let me die!" said Gloucester, trying to push Edgar away. "Give me a rope so I may stretch my neck until my breath is gone."

"He does that a lot," I said.

I opened the door, expecting to see Lear and Kent inside, but the hovel was empty, and the fire had died down to embers. "Tom, where is the king?"

"He and his knight set out for Dover."

"Without me?"

"The king was mad to be back in the storm. 'Twas the old knight said to tell you they were headed for Dover."

"Here, here, bring the earl inside." I stood aside and let Edgar coax his father into the cabin. "Drool, throw some wood on the fire. We can stay only long enough to eat and dry out. We must be after the king."

Drool ducked through the door and spotted Jones sitting on a bench by the fire where I had left him. "Jones! My friend," said the dolt. He picked up the puppet stick and hugged it. Drool is somewhat unclear on the art of ventriloquism, and although I have explained to him that Jones speaks only through me, he has developed an attachment to the puppet.

"Hello, Drool, you great sawdust-brained buffoon. Put me down and stoke the fire," said Jones.

Drool tucked the puppet stick in his belt and began breaking up kindling with a hatchet by the hearth while I portioned out the bread and cheese that Curan had given us. Edgar did his best to bandage Gloucester's eyes and the old man settled down enough to eat some cheese and drink a little wine. Unfortunately, the wine and the blood loss, no doubt, took the earl from inconsolable wailing grief to a soul-smothering, sable-colored melancholy.

"My wife died thinking me a whoremonger, my father thought me damned for not following his faith, and my sons are both villains. I thought for a turn that Edmund might have redeemed his bastardy by being good and true, by fighting infidels in the Crusade, but he is more of a traitor than his legitimate brother."

"Edgar is no traitor," I said to the old man. Even as I said it Edgar held a finger to his lips and signaled for me to speak no further. I nodded to show I knew his will and would not give his identity away. He could be Tom as long as he wished, or for as long as he needed, for all I cared, as long as he put on some bloody trousers. "Edgar was always true to you, my lord. His treachery was all devised for your eyes by the bastard Edmund. It was two sons' worth of evil done by one. Edgar may not be the sharpest arrow in the quiver, but he is no traitor."

Edgar raised an eyebrow to me in question. "You'll make no case for your intelligence sitting there naked and shivering when there's a fire and blankets you can fashion into warm robes, good Tom," said I.

He rose from his father's side and went over to the fire.

"Then it is I who have betrayed Edgar," said Gloucester. "Oh, the gods have seen fit to rain misery down on me for my unsteady heart. I have sent a good son into exile with hounds at his heels and left only the worms as heirs to my only estate: this withered blind body. Oh, we are but soft and squishy bags of mortality rolling in a bin of sharp circumstance, leaking life until we collapse, flaccid, into our own despair." The old man began to wave his arms and beat at his brow, whipping himself into a frenzy, causing his bandages to unravel. Drool came over to the old man and wrapped his arms around him to hold him steady.

"It's all right, milord," said Drool. "You ain't leakin' hardly at all."

"Let me send this broken house to ruin and rot in death's eternal cold. Let me shuffle off this mortal coil - my sons betrayed, my king usurped, my estates seized - let me end this torture!"

He really was making a very good argument.

Then the earl grabbed Jones and tore him out of Drool's belt. "Give me your sword, good knight!"

Edgar made to stop his father and I threw out an arm to hold him back - a toss of my head stopped Drool from interceding.

The old man stood, put the stick end of Jones under his rib cage, then fell forward onto the dirt floor. The breath shot from his body and he wheezed in pain. My cup of wine had been warming by the fire and I threw it on Gloucester's chest.

"I am slain," croaked the earl, fighting for breath. "The lifeblood runs from me even now. Bury my body on the hill looking down upon Castle Gloucester. And beg forgiveness of my son Edgar. I have wronged him."

Edgar again tried to go to his father and I held him back. Drool was covering his mouth, trying not to laugh.

"I grow cold, cold, but at least I take my wrong-doings to my grave."

"You know, milord," I said. "The evil that men do lives after them, the good is oft interred with their bones, or so I've heard."

"Edgar, my boy, wherever you are, forgive me, forgive me!" The old man rolled on the floor, and seemed somewhat surprised when the sword on which he thought himself impaled fell away. "Lear, forgive me that I did not serve you better!"

"Look at that," said I. "You can see his black soul rising from his body."

"Where?" said Drool.

A frantic finger to my lips silenced the Natural. "Oh, great carrion birds are rending poor Gloucester's soul to tatters! Oh, Fate's revenge is upon him, he suffers!"

"I suffer!" said Gloucester.

"He is bound to the darkest depths of Hades! Never to rise again."

"Down the abyss I go. Forever a stranger to light and warmth."

"Oh, cold and lonely death has taken him," said I. "And a right shit he was in life, likely he'll be buggered by a billion barb-dicked devils now."

"Cold and lonely Death has me," said the earl.

"No, it hasn't," said I.

"What?"

"You're not dead."

"Soon, then. I've fallen on this cruel blade and my life runs wet and sticky between my fingers."

"You've fallen on a puppet," said I.

"No, I haven't. It's a sword. I took it from that soldier."

"You took my puppet stick from my apprentice. You've thrown yourself on a puppet."

"You knave, Pocket, you're not trustworthy and would jest at a man even as his life drains. Where is that naked madman who was helping me?"

"You threw yourself on a puppet," said Edgar.

"So I'm not dead?"

"Correct," said I.

"I threw myself on a puppet?"

"That is what I've been saying."

"You are a wicked little man, Pocket."

"So, milord, how do you feel, now that you've returned from the dead."

The old man stood up and tasted the wine on his fingers. "Better," said he.

"Good. Then let me present Edgar of Gloucester, the erstwhile naked nutter, who shall see you to Dover and your king."

"Hello, Father," said Edgar.

They embraced. There was crying and begging for forgiveness and filial snogging and overall the whole business was somewhat nauseating. A moment of quiet sobbing by the two men passed before the earl resumed his wailing.

"Oh, Edgar, I have wronged thee and no forgiveness from you can undo my wretchedness."

"Oh for fuck's sake," said I. "Come, Drool, let us go find Lear and on to Dover and the sanctuary of the bloody fucking French."

"But the storm still rages," said Edgar.

"I've been wandering in this storm for days. I'm as wet and cold as I know how to get, and no doubt a fever will descend any hour now and crush my delicate form with heavy heat, but by the rug-munching balls of Sappho, I'll not spend another hour listening to a blind old nutter wail on about his wrong-doings when there's a stack of wrongs yet to be done. Carpe diem, Edgar. Carpe diem."

"Fish of the day?" said the rightful heir to the earldom of Gloucester.

"Yes, that's it. I'm invoking the fish of the bloody day, you git. I liked you better when you were eating frogs and seeing demons and the lot. Drool, leave them half the food and wrap yourself as warm as you can. We're off to find the king. We'll see you lot in Dover."