11 – Uneasy Alliances

It was a signal. He palmed the small bit of rock and walked stealthily down the graveled path. He had gone less than ten paces when the smell of a very cheap, but very potent, perfume brought him to a cautious halt.

A woman stepped out of the bushes that lined the pathway. She was much too old for her chosen trade; only here in the Promise of Heaven could she hope to make a living with what remained of her physical charms. Men didn’t come here for porcelain beauty, but for a few quick grunts in the foliage. Still, she did the best with what she had. Goldenwash made her hair too blond, and rouge made her cheeks far too rosy. More rouge colored her breasts, and kohl darkened her lids in a manner that was almost seductive.

Her white dress floated about her as she moved forward. In the pale moonlight it was nearly impossible to discern just how threadbare and worn it really was. There was a certain sad beauty to it and to its wearer.

“Evening, Asphodel,” Dayme said softly. “That perfume. I smelled you before I saw you.”

She approached him, grinning, and suddenly she didn’t look quite so old. The smile brightened her face, lent it youth. “Sarome’s Night,” she informed him. “It’s in my price range, and it comes by the keg.” She ran her fingertips lightly over the jerkin that covered his chest. “If it offends your nostrils, my young friend, then buy me something more expensive.”

He caught her wrist, held it for a moment, then lifted her hand to his lips and kissed it. She giggled like a little girl, then pulled away. She touched her own lips to the place where he had kissed, then turned her hand over, opened her palm and exposed the black stone he had pressed upon her.

“You wanted to see me,” he reminded her gently.

Whore or not, Dayrne liked the old woman. He’d liked her since the first time he’d caught her placing flowers against the main gate at Land’s End. Lots of the townsfolk had left flowers and small gifts there since Cheyne smashed the PFLS. Especially, Dayme suspected, the prostitutes whose trade that group had nearly ruined by their terrorizing of the streets.

Asphodel, however, had brought more than just flowers to show her gratitude. “Walegrin didn’t take that bastard. Zip, to prison at all,” she’d revealed in her best conspiratorial whisper. “He let him go.” It was the first Dayme had heard ofWalegrin’s betrayal, but he’d only just returned to Sanctuary that same day with a hundred men and a missing Chenaya to occupy his time. He’d thanked her for the information, but had taken no other action.

A few nights later. Asphodel had sought him again outside the gate. “There’s a plot brewing in the palace,” she’d reported. “Nothing is set, yet, and the Prince isn’t involved. But some high people want Rashan dead real quick. They don’t like his talk about the Lady Chenaya being a goddess. Lots of folks are ready to believe it.”

“Why are you telling me this?” Dayme had asked suspiciously. “How does a Promise Park whore come by such palace gossip?”

That was the first time he’d seen her smile. She’d leaned back against the gate and struck a pose that might have tempted him had she been twenty years younger.

“The ladies who work the park owe much to your Lady,” Asphodel had answered. “While Zip and his bloody little boys ran this end of town our customers were afraid to venture out at night. But some of us have children and families to feed. Without the coins we earn in the park we couldn’t afford food. Zip starved us as surely as if he stole the bread from our mouths.”

She struck another pose. Dayme realized with a faint grin that she wasn’t trying to seduce him at all. Her postures were, instead, matters of long habit, totally unconscious. Long ago, this woman must have been something very special, perhaps madam of her own house. Sadly, times changed for everyone.

“There’ve been other things she’s done. too,” Asphodel had continued. “Little things. Many a time your Chenaya has cut through the Promise and scattered a few coins on the path. Oh, she always had a haughty air about her, but those coins sometimes made the difference between a good meal or none at all for someone’s baby. We’re a close-knit club, we women who work the Promise, and we don’t forget favors. Even if people don’t know they’re doing us favors.”

Dayme wished Chenaya could have heard those words, but she’d left town too soon. “Such information . . .” he’d started to ask.

Asphodel smiled again and rumpled her hair absentmindedly. “How does a common street whore come by such news?” She raised one finely penciled eyebrow. “Sir, it would surprise you the kind of men who seek us out. A fine, soft bed is, of course, a good thing.” Her smile turned mischievous, “But a tumble in the bushes, in the open air with the stars overhead and the leaves rustling, a body with no discernible face, and the wind in the crack of your ass. That’s more than mere sex, Sir. That’s an adventure. And men both highborn and low sometimes find their lives turning a bit stodgy. That’s when they seek us out.”

“And they talk?” Dayrne suggested, gleaning her subtleties.

Her smile faded only a little, replaced by an expression of wisdom and the barest hint of regret. “Ever meet a man who didn’t want the woman he topped to know how important he was?”

They’d continued to talk through the night. As the first clouds of morning caught fire in the east they’d parted, her with a full purse in her bodice. She’d tried to refuse it, but Dayrne had insisted. They’d made a pledge to help each other, and it came as no surprise to learn a few nights later that she’d distributed his coins among all the women of the Promise.

The leather purse, though, that she’d kept for herself. She wore it on a thong about her ample waist. As he watched, she opened it and deposited the small black stone that was her means of summoning him. That stone was the only clue Dayrne had as to where Asphodel spent her daylight hours, and he guessed she lived close to the White Foal, perhaps in Downwind.

“Has Lady Chenaya returned home, yet?” Asphodel asked with genu- ine concern.

Dayrne shook his head. “No word from her, either.”

The old whore bit her lip. The gesture touched Dayrne, drew him even closer to his new, unlikely friend.

He glanced up and down the walkway, making sure they were quite alone. Then, he pulled her gently into the bushes. To his surprise, she didn’t make the expected suggestive remark. That told him something was wrong.

“There’s trouble?” he whispered, his hand still upon her arm.

She stared at his hand, then away into the dark. “I’m not sure,” she said at last. “Maybe I shouldn’t bother you with it.”

He let go a sigh. If she didn’t want to bother him, then it didn’t concern Chenaya or Land’s End. Still, he owed her. She had done enough for him and those he cared for.

“Bother me,” he answered, another suggestive opening that she let pass. So it was big trouble.

Asphodel started to bite her nail, then pulled her finger away from her mouth and folded her hands together. “Some of the ladies have disappeared,” she murmured almost too faintly to be heard. Then, her voice grew stronger. “One a night for over a week. And tonight . . .” she hesitated and started to bite the nail again. Again, she caught herself. “A new girl vanished. Sweet child, but a real novice. Her name was Tiana.”

“Maybe she went home with a customer,” Dayme suggested.

Asphodel shook her head. “Not likely. We’re kind of a family here. We adopt newcomers like Tiana and try to keep an eye on them.” Unconsciously, she raised a finger to her lips, inserted it, and bit the nail quite through. She frowned, shook the finger and let go a sigh. “One moment, she was working by the bust of Sabellia. The next, she was gone. Nobody saw her leave. In fact, the park has been nearly deserted all night.” She pointed to the sky. “Full moon,” she explained. “The brightness keeps the customers away.”

Dayrne rubbed his chin. “Are you sure they’ve disappeared? Maybe they’ve found . . .” he paused, choosing his words carefully, “better work. Or, maybe they’re sick.” He tried to think of other reasons a prostitute might take a night off.

“I told you we’re close as family,” she repeated. “I went to their homes, myself. Two of the ladies had children. Those little ones were all alone. One was a babe, a half-starved suckling. I had to find places for them all.”

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