There were seven other hard-core members, good fighters all. Twenty auxiliaries rounded out the gang, but only three of these were so loyal that Cade would have to kill them. Twelve. Twelve lives for Terrel’s. It wouldn’t even begin to balance the scales.
Cade, Raif, and Targ sat at the table in Marissa’s House. The guards were on the roof. Marissa was with Sarah. The sun had set. One hour and it would be over. Terrel’s death would be avenged-
“Are you sure the whole gang will be at the meet?” Cade asked.
“They always do it that way,” Raif answered. “All nine of the insiders at a buy.” The boy’s voice was happy, and who could blame him? Cer- tainly not Cade. This had been the best week of Raif’s short life. Money to have good quarters in Downwind (and to buy his first woman, though he hid that from Cade), all the food he could eat, sword practice with Targ in the hot sun. Gods, his own sword. Though he didn’t wear it. Cade and Targ had made it clear he would not be allowed to wear the sword until he knew how to use it. It was all like a dream to Raif, and even all this talk of murder and revenge made no dent in his new world.
Targ watched the youngster, keeping back a frown. Raif was a good boy, and damned smart. But he hero-worshiped Cade, like Toth did. Targ couldn’t understand it. Children never feared Cade, always reacted well to him. They missed the madness there, and the years of killing. But then again, whatever Targ thought of Cade, he knew one thing Cade didn’t know about himself: for all his self-aggrandizing introspection, Cade had never and would never kill a child.