Chapter One
Acquisition
The countess reread the letter as she sat in the trundling carriage. She was impeccable. Not a strand of her dark red hair was errant, not a speck of powder in the wrong place. Her deeply colored satin dress was folded and draped precisely where folds or drapes were required. Her nails were each filed to pinpoint sharpness, capable of picking a single wet hair off of a smooth marble surface. Or drawing blood...depending on the task at hand. Those menacing, red fingernails lightly scratched the back of the letter as she read.
Your Grace Mrs. Lelia Fleming,
I hope this letter finds you well. I am writing to inform you that I have found a trinket I believe you will fancy. I know I had promised such a gift long ago. Aware of your most exacting standards, I have discarded many that would satisfy you but certainly wouldn't bring you joy. I want to present to you a gift that will fill your heart delight. I believe I have found just such a toy. I will keep it for you here. You may, of course, collect it at your leasure. I am eternally grateful for the patience you have deigned to offer me as I conducted this search for you.
Your Most Humble Servant,
Officer Derrick Moonday
She smiled at the last line. Patience. It wasn't patience, she had simply forgotten him. She had somebody at each prison finding toys for her. Had she remembered that he owed her a tribute and failed to deliver it, she may well have had him put to death. She may well do that, still. He should hope his gift is as exquisite as he promised.
They never lasted, her toys. Soon they broke. Grown men became quivering, fearful children. Useless. Discarded. She had recently released her most recent toy and was looking for something new.
She felt the horses slow to a trot and stop. Looking out the window revealed looming brick walls, mossy and dirt crusted. She sat back until the door opened and a large, hairy hand lay open before her. She placed it delicately in the course palm and it lifted her out of the carriage with strength and care. It belonged to one of her two handmen. Both were massive figures, capable of bending a steel bar. They weren't entirely human, these two, but they were human enough for her purposes.
As they walked into and then through the prison, the two large outer figures rushed at each door, opening it just in time for the middle figure, the countess, to continue gliding without pause. They were halfway down an expansive hall when a man with one arm entered it, quickly hobbling and panting. He shouted "Your Grace! Your Grace! I'm so sorry I didn't greet you outside! You left no word you were coming today. I would have stood by the entrance all day, had I known."
With a flick of her wrist she dismissed his apologies as unneeded, and a little annoying as well. "Where is it?" she asked.
"Please, right this way."
The officer's hobble slowed them but the countess could glide at many rates of speed. He glanced fearfully at her handmen. Everybody did. It's what she loved most about them, the fear they elicited with their mere existence. "So, what is so special about this trinket that it took you two years to find?" She made no attempt to suppress the anger in her voice.
"It doesn't break," he said.
"They all break."
"No, my lady, not this one. Everybody has had a crack at him. He doesn't speak at all. Not a word. Not even 'please'."
She sighed, a labored, impatient sigh. It caused the officer to glance furtively at the handmen again. "Do you not think it possible that he is deaf? Or mute?"
He laughed nervously, his twisted back dipping forward a bit as he did. "Oh, dear, no. I didn't mean that no one has heard him speak. He hasn't spoken to us. He
has
spoken to one guard he thought was a prisoner. We planted him in the same cell. He was meant to befriend the prisoner and get our information that way. We disguised him perfectly, beat him about the face and neck, rolled him in some horse dung, put him in a dead prisoner's clothes. They got along famously. They talked about their families, food they missed eating, usual prisoner talk. When the guard asked him where he'd hidden the papers, he retreated. The guard said his eyes just went dead and he didn't speak another word. Not a 'good morning'. Not a 'bless you' when the guard sneezed. Nothing. Two more weeks he tried but he never got another word."
The countess felt her day brightening. "This
does
sound interesting. How important are these papers?"
"It depends. We don't want them. But we don't want anybody else to have them either. So, it's only important if somebody else knows where they are. We feel confident that we've collected everybody who knew of them. We questioned him to be thorough, is all." They were in the holding area, now. Cell after dark cell passed beside them. The officer removed his key ring as they approached the last one. A handman grabbed a torch from the wall. She could barely see a mass curled in the corner while the twisted, broken little man worked the lock. The handmen entered first, grabbed the prisoners arms and pulled him upward. His head hung forward and a handman pulled it up by the hair as the other held the torch next to his face. The prisoner's eyes fluttered. There was little other sign of life. He smelled like a cocktail of death and feces.
"He appears to be half dead."
"Yes, your ladyship. I had them stop just short of killing him. So I could keep him for you. He's a tough one. He'll handle anything you throw at him. This is one you can keep, my lady. I don't know that you could train him but he will last."
"We'll see," she said as she turned and glided back to the carriage. Her handmen insisted that one of them be allowed to ride in it with her and the prisoner. They were protective of her. She was good to them. Few had been before her. She let one of them ride in the carriage, cramping the space. It was pointless as the prisoner only regained consciousness for brief periods, his eyes searching the interior, trying to understand. "What shall I name him?"