Shakespeare for Squirrels Page 2
“He’s awake,” said the demon.
“Pocket!” I heard Drool say, at which point pretending to still be dead was a fool’s errand.
I looked over to see the great oaf sitting splayed-legged on the other side of the fire, a massacre of nuts and berries in his lap, the smeared evidence of their fate already streaming down his chin in red rivulets. “Cobweb saved us,” said the ninny. “She’s the git’s tits.”
“She?” said I. “So not the devil?”
“’Fraid not,” said the girl.
Of course, a girl. I looked over the figure crouched before me like some gamine gargoyle. Right tiny, and in need of a good scrubbing, but I supposed a girl she was. And not a child, neither, despite her size.
“I didn’t do so much of the rescuing as your large friend,” she said. “On the beach I jumped up and down on his back until he was breathing again. He carried you up here into the forest.” She leaned into me to whisper. “Methinks he may have taken a blow to the head during the wreck. He seems a bit slow.”
“Slow is his only speed, I’m afraid.”
“You took quite a shot to the noggin yourself.” She touched a spot above my forehead and I winced with the pain. “Covered in blood, you were. I cleaned you up.”
I touched the tender lump on my head and bolts of pain shot across the corners of my vision, a deep ache throbbed behind my eyes. Only then did I notice I was lying on a bed of ferns and leaves, naked but for my hat, which had been draped modestly over my man bits.
“Your kit is drying still,” said the girl. She shot a thumb over her shoulder to indicate my motley, propped on sticks before the fire, along with my jester’s scepter, the puppet Jones. “You’ll want to wash it proper in fresh water when you get a chance. Most of the blood came out in the sea, but not the salt.”
“What about Jeff? Where’s my monkey?”
“Weren’t no monkey, sirrah. Just the big bloke and you.” She held out a leather wineskin. “Here. Water. Slowly. Your friend drank it all in one draft and I had to fetch more at the stream.”
“Had a wee chunder,” said Drool.
I took the wineskin and thought I might swoon again as I drank the cool water and felt the fire in my throat abate.
“Enough for now,” said the girl, taking back the wineskin. “There’s food, too, if the big one’s left anything.”
“I saved you some, Pocket,” said Drool, holding out my codpiece, which was spilling berries as he moved.
The girl returned and handed me the codpiece. “Wondered what these things was for.”
“Thank you,” said I. My cod was nearly full of berries and nut meats. I thought I might weep for a moment at her kindness and pinched the bridge of my nose as if chasing away a headache.
“Your friend says you are fools,” she said, giving me shelter.
“I am a fool. Pocket of Dog Snogging upon Ouze, at your service.” I tow a train of titles behind my name—royal fool, black fool, emissary to the queen, king of Britain and France—but I thought it ill mannered to be grandiose while lying on a litter of leaves with only a hat to cover my tackle d’amore. “Drool is my apprentice.”
“We are fools and pirates,” said Drool.
“We are not pirates,” said I. “We were set adrift by pirates.”
“But you were on a pirate ship?” she asked.
“For two years,” said I. “There was a girl, a Venetian Jewess who fancied me. She wanted to be a pirate but became homesick. When she returned to Venice I was not welcomed to join her.”
“So you stayed with the pirates?”
“For a while.”
“And they set you adrift?”
“With no food and only enough water for three days, the scoundrels.”
“But why?”
“They gave no rhyme nor reason,” said I.
“It was because you’re a shit, wasn’t it?”
“No, why would you say that?”
“Because I only have known one fool, a fellow called Robin Goodfellow, and he, also, is a shit.”
“I’m not a shit,” said I. I am not, that she could prove.
“Did you insult them? Make sport of their efforts and appearances? Craft clever puns on their names? Play tricks on the na?ve and the simple? Compose rhymes disparaging their naughty bits? Sing bawdy songs about their mothers and sisters?”
“Absolutely not. There was no way to know if they even had sisters.”
“I think you were a shit, just like the Puck, so they set you adrift.”
“I was not a shit. And who are you to say? Why, I am deft at being rescued by wenches of great beauty and character, one for whom my heart still currently breaks, and I’ll not be abused by a waif, an urchin, a linty bit of stuff like you.”
“Feeling stronger then?” she asked, thin, sharp eyebrows bouncing over her disturbingly wide green eyes.
“Possibly,” said I.
A horn sounded in the distance, as if to call hounds to the hunt, and Cobweb leapt to her feet. “I have to go.”
“Wait,” said I.
The girl paused at the edge of the firelight. “What?”
“Where are we?”