Avenestra came in, chewing.
“No one else is waiting, LJncie. I hung out the ‘closed’ sign as you said.”
“Good!” He rose and stretched.
“Ooooh! What a beautiful bolt of cloth!”
“You like that, Avneh?”
“It’s just beautiful. Uncle! I love paisley!”
“Hmm. We may not be able to do anything about your craving for sweets, poor baby. But show me that you can come in here without chewing on something and we’ll see what we can have made for you from this.”
“Oh I’m sorry, Uncle. Mother Shipri make me strong!”
Strick patter her shoulder, turning a little sidewise to avoid being hugged (with hands one of which he saw was sticky from some pastry), and hurried downstairs to collect Fulcris. Leaving Avenestra “in charge” and Frax on guard, Strick and his other aide headed for the Street of Goldsmiths.
Nadeesh the leech had heard of the foreign spellwright who had come here to be of such value to Sanctuary, both physically and psychologi- cally. His sad-looking servant ushered the visitors in to his master. Nadeesh the leech was a cadaverously thin man with hair that began at about the midpoint atop his skull and dangled stringily in long ugly strands of corpse-gray. He looked to be seventy or more. He also, Strick and Fulcris discovered, wore only one earring. Attired in a paradoxically bright tunic that appeared to be draped over mere bone, he sat weakly in a chamber made dim by drawn drapes. Strick saw at once that he was in bad shape, and not just from the healed wound that showed his left earring had been torn from him. The fellow looked far too old for his age, which he said was “about fifty.”