floor stirred, Will leaned across the table and lowered his voice. 'You are our eyes and ears in the underworld, Kit. You know of things that lie far beneath the notice of men of good standing. Who would have the Skull? Where would it be now?'

The brightness faded from Marlowe's face. 'Walsingham did not send you.'

'No.'

'Even in this hour of need he cannot bring himself to deal with me!' A flicker of fear rose in his eyes. 'He does not trust me, Will. And in our world what is not trusted often meets a bloody end.'

'It will pass, Kit.'

Angrily, Marlowe put the toe of his boot under the stool and flicked it across the room where it crashed against the wall. The man who had stirred looked up with bloodshot eyes.

'Out!' Marlowe yelled at him. 'Fetch me the ordinary! I am hungry.' When the man had lurched away to find the vintner for the Bull's daily stew, Marlowe rounded on Will. 'As children we walked in summer fields and dreamed of the wonders that lay ahead. Yet we sold those dreams, and our lives, to defend England against something that can never be defeated, which waits, quiet and patient and still, until we let our guard slip, as it always will, and then we are torn apart in a gale of knives and teeth, unmourned even by our own. Mistrusted by our own! Look at what this business has made us, Will! See what we have become! We cannot trust those closest to us. We fear death from Enemy and friend alike. We are alone, waiting for that moment when it all ends. Where is the comfort in this world?'

'There is little for the likes of us, Kit. We live our blighted lives so others can sleep soundly in their beds. You know that.' Will watched the hopelessness play out across his friend's face and it troubled him. He had seen it many times before on others and in every case it ended the same way, an insidious despair that found its roots in the very nature of their Enemy, spreading like bindweed until every part of a person was choked by it. He had seen men kill themselves, others throw themselves into danger with no care for their lives, and revelling when they met their end. More simply setting in motion their own demise through their quiet actions. 'If this matter was not so grave I would not have troubled you, Kit. Time away from this business ... a lost week or more in one of your dens of iniquity will help you regain your equilibrium.'

'Yes, of course, Will,' Marlowe lied. 'I am tired, that is all. Forgive me.'

Though he feared the repercussions, Will pressed his friend for information. Marlowe was right: their business allowed little softness or compassion. The war was everything, and everyone was a victim.

Marlowe ran a hand through his hair as he steadied himself. 'A gang of rogues near the Tower over night? No. There are no gulls there for them to prey upon. They would be near the stews or ordinaries, the baiting rings and taverns and theatres.'

'They came upon the Enemy as they slipped away.'

Marlowe shook his head; it still did not make sense to him. 'The villains of London are an army, with generals and troops who march to order and follow detailed plans and strategy. They do not wait for their next meal, for they would starve.'

'You say they knew the Enemy would be passing by?'

'Perhaps. As we have spies everywhere, so do they. A guard at the Tower, sending word as the Enemy took their moment. A Silver Skull would be a valuable prize, even if they did not know its true worth. I pity the poor sod who wore it for they will have cut it free by now.' Marlowe made a slitting motion across his throat. 'Who was he?'

Will shook his head. 'This was not a random occurrence, then.'

Marlowe shook his head slowly too.

'Then who is the general? Who could place an agent in the Tower?'

'The gangs of London are countries within a country. They have their own spies, yes, and their own forces to keep them secure. They even have their own land where a criminal can find refuge, and no one-not even the queen's own men-can touch them. In Damnation Alley and the Bermudas and Devil's Gap. By the brick kilns in Islington, and Newington Butts and Alsatia. Cutpurses and cutthroats, pickpockets and tricksters, the coney- catchers and head-breakers. Who would dare such an act? Why, all of them, Will.'

Glancing through the window to where Nathaniel waited by the carriage, Will saw the inn yard now bright as the sun moved high in the sky. 'Time is short, Kit. You run with these rogues. Give me a name. If you were to point a finger at a likely culprit, who would it be?'

His shoulders hunched as if carrying a great weight, Marlowe thought for a moment and then said, 'There is one they call the King of Cutpurses. Laurence Pickering. Every week he holds a gathering at his house in Kent Street for all the heads of the London gangs, where they exchange information and drink and carouse with doxies. If Pickering is not behind this, he would know who is.'

'I have not heard of this man.'

'Few have. He has faces behind faces, and no one is quite sure which one is the real one, or if that is his true name. But I know one thing-he is the cousin of Bulle, the Tyburn hangman. Bulle himself admitted it when he was cup-shotten one night.'

'Bulle?'

Marlowe raised an eyebrow at Will's sudden interest. 'Why is that brute important?'

The image of Bulle hacking away at the neck of Mary, Queen of Scots, was still fresh in Will's mind, as was Walsingham's account of what happened after her death. 'Because there are no random occurrences in this world, Kit. And Kent Street is where I should find this Pickering?'

'No. That is the front he presents to the world so he can pass himself off as an upstanding man. If he has something of value, it will be in one of the fortresses his kind have built for themselves, secure from any lawful pursuit.' Marlowe turned over the possibilities in his mind and then announced, 'Alsatia, below the west end of Fleet Street, next to the Temple. There is no safer place in London for the debauched and the criminal.'

Will understood. 'It has the privilege of sanctuary. Only a writ of the lord chief justice or the lords of the Privy Council carries any force there.'

'And even then, not much. No warrant would ever be issued in Alsatia. I told you, Will-a country within a country. The citizens of Alsatia are, to a man and woman, criminal, and they will turn upon and attack any who come to seize one of their own. Have caution. If there is another way to achieve your ends, take it. You will not emerge from Alsatia with your life.'

Will held his arms wide. 'If we took no risks, Kit, how would we know we are alive?'

Marlowe laughed quietly. 'How secure I feel knowing the remarkable Will Swyfte is abroad to keep the land safe.' With a surprising display of emotion, he leaned across the table and grasped Will's hand. 'Take care, Will. You have been a good friend to me, and my life would be worse if you were not in it.' Tears stung Marlowe's eyes. His tumbling emotions were a clear sign of the tremendous stress he was under.

'You should know that taking care of myself is my greatest attribute. I will not be led gracefully towards the dark night, not while there is wine to be drunk and women to romance.'

Marlowe was one of the few men who could see through Will's words, but he was kind enough not to say anything.

Rising, Will nodded his goodbye, adding, 'Heed my words, Kit. Take time to find yourself.'

'If this business ever let me, I would.' He gave a lazy, sad smile, but when Will was at the door, he added, 'I have an idea for a play in which a man sells his soul to the Devil for knowledge, status, and power. What do you think of that, Will?' His eyes were haunted and said more than his words.

Will did not need to answer. As he left the room, Will wondered, as he did with increasing regularity, if he would see his friend alive again. But his mind was already turning to the trial that lay ahead-an assault on the most notorious and dangerous part of London: Alsatia, the Thieves' Quarter.

CHAPTER 9

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