He stopped once or twice to ask directions, then took his band to a small inn situated in a side street just before the great market square. “Wait here,” he said, slipping awkwardly from his horse, “while arrange lodging. Say nothing to nobody.”
Gilbert marched inside the inn, The Trader’s Rest, trying to look as much like a nobleman as he could. He threw his cloak back over his shoulders and straightened his jacket, proud of its fine cut, even if its rose-pink velvet was a trifle stained by the months spent on the road.
“My man,” he said loudly as the proprietor stalked through the crowded tavern towards him. “A room for myself, the best you have, and something suitable for my retainers.”
The landlord looked him up and down. By his clothes a resident of Carlon, and a wealthy one at that. The man did not fail to note the fat purse that hung from Gilbert’s belt.
“My Lord,” he murmured, then gestured about the ground floor tavern. “As you can see, business is brisk. I can let you have a good room for your own person, and the stable loft can be cleared for your retainers, but,” he sighed, “I am afraid I
shall have to ask premium prices.” After an instant’s pause he named a sum.
Gilbert glowered. He wanted to haggle with the man – by Artor! he could have had a suite in a palace for that price! – but he felt exposed in such a public place and wanted nothing more than to conclude the business and slink away. He glanced nervously at the faces crowding against the bar – could there possibly be anyone here who knew him? – then nodded tersely.
“If I was not in a hurry, old man, I would sneer at such an exorbitant price. But I have important business to attend, and cannot afford to waste another minute of the day. Very well.”
“Half in advance,” the landlord said, and Gilbert threw some coins at him in a temper.
“I can only hope that the room is worth it.”
Once Gilbert had seen that the Brothers were comfortable in their loft – and, to be fair to the landlord, it was clean and the beds snug – he returned to his room for a wash and a quick meal, then hurried into the streets.
Even though it was late afternoon the crowds were not in the least diminished, and Gilbert had to shoulder his way through in order to reach the market square. Artor had told him he might find Faraday here, and Gilbert felt a knot of excitement in the pit of his belly.
The market square was dominated by the massive stone Market Hall, its roof tiled, Gilbert was astounded to see, in pure gold. The Hall’s ground floor was open to the streets, and underneath its archways flourished a myriad of stalls.
Gilbert slipped under one of the arches and stopped at the first stall.
“Excuse me,” he said.
The stall-keeper looked up. “Yes?” The man was looking everywhere but at her produce. She narrowed her eyes. Perhaps he was one of those noblemen who haunted the market for women they could lure home for the evening.
“Excuse me,” Gilbert said again, even though he had the woman’s attention. He didn’t like the way she looked at him. “I wonder if I might ask for some information.” “What?” she said curtly. “Um, I was wondering about the trees.” The woman finally straightened, wiping her hands on the rough cloth covering her hips. She stared at Gilbert.
“I was wondering,” he hastened on, “how far north they stretch. You see, I’ve only just come from the south.”
She took a considering breath. Well, the trees were new, and strange to those who had only just seen them. “They go no further north than this city. They stop just at the northern wall.” Gilbert’s face relaxed in a smile. Then she must be here! “They are unusual,” he said, “not what good folk from the plains are used to.”
“Unusual enough,” the woman said, and wondered what the man wanted. “But we have seen unusual events and even stranger people these past months.”
“But the trees,” Gilbert persisted, “don’t they frighten you?” The woman smiled briefly. “Frighten me? No, good sir, they seem quite appealing. Why, me and my husband think we might spend sixth-day afternoon on a picnic. Down a shaded pathway, perhaps.” Her face relaxed in a genuine smile. “The birds sing so, especially in the morning. It makes rising a joy, it does.”
Gilbert was appalled by her words, but encouraged by her sudden willingness to talk. “How is it that such great trees grew so quickly? I rode past Arcen, oh, some five or six months ago,” he lied, “and there were none here then.”
The expression on the woman’s face was positively beatific now. “Why, good sir, they only appeared some four days ago. With her.” “Her?”
“Her,” and the woman pointed.
Gilbert followed her finger, and for a moment he could see nothing.
Then he looked straight into the face of Faraday.
She was standing several stalls distant from him, and for one appalling moment Gilbert thought she had seen him, but in the next heartbeat she turned unconcernedly to a plump, ruddy-cheeked peasant woman by her side and laughed at some pleasantry they shared. On her other side stood a stout grey-haired man, a trader perhaps, but his clothes were rich and he wore a gold chain about his neck.
“You are a stranger,” the woman said, her tongue guarded again as she watched Gilbert’s face, “not to recognise Mayor Culpepper Fenwicke.”
“Of course I recognised hitn\” Gilbert snapped. “‘Twas the woman by his side who made me frown.”
Then you are a stranger to be suspicious of, the woman thought, her face closing over, if you frown at her. Without another word she bent back to her produce, and Gilbert pushed his way through the crowd.
His palms were positively itching now, and he could hear Artor’s voice roaring in his ears.
Faraday had enjoyed her stay in Arcen, but now she wanted to move on. She knew that the country above the Ranges would be cold and snowy, and she would not be able to move as fast through Skarabost as she had through Arcen, yet time was critical. She had to have planted Minstrelsea through to the Avarinheim by the time Axis was ready to confront Gorgrael.
Or else he would fail.
“Axis,” she whispered, and the Goodwife leaned over and hugged her briefly.
“You should tell him,” said the voice of the Mother.
“No,” Faraday’s eyes gleamed with tears. “No. He does not need to know.”
Culpepper, unsure what the two women whispered about but concerned by the expression on Faraday’s face, stepped forward. “Have I said something?” he asked anxiously. “Have I tired you?”
“No,” Faraday said. “No, not at all. We were frowning over some slight matter, Mayor Culpepper. Now, what fine guests have you invited to entertain the Goodwife and myself tonight?”
Chatting animatedly, Culpepper led the two women towards the archways into the square.
No-one noticed the man slipping through the crowds behind them.
Gilbert paused as the three moved away. “Damn!” he muttered, sweat now running down his back. “I almost had her!”
He wasn’t too sure what he was going to do once he reached Faraday, but he knew that her sweet, sweet neck would snap with only the slightest pressure. And neither that Goodwife nor the plump mayor looked as though they could rescue a drowning kitten, let alone Faraday. He could easily escape in the subsequent chaos; and then Artor and Achar would be saved, and he could reclaim the Tower of the Seneschal for his own.
He would enjoy redecorating the Brother-Leader’s apartment to his own taste.
Culpepper realised that the women would appreciate some time to themselves, so he tried to clear a path through the crowd as quickly as he could. But Faraday was jostled by people wanting to reach out and touch her . . .
“See, Harold, how her eyes gleam so magically!” “Lady? Would you touch my Martha, Lady? She has a fever.” “Now, Fillipa, if only you could manage such a noble bearing, you too could have any man you desired.”
Except the man you truly wanted, Faraday thought, but smiled at the mother and daughter anyway, and touched the feverish baby, and spoke gently to any who called her name. Her progress through the Market Hall slowed.
“Artor! I’m almost there!” Gilbert whispered, his eyes gleaming feverishly, and any who saw him stepped hurriedly
out of his way. Poor man, no doubt he wanted to touch the Lady.
Gilbert surely did, but he wanted a good deal more from Faraday than just a gentle smile and word.
Faraday had told Culpepper she was not tired, but now she felt her weariness crashing about her, and she hoped that she could reach the mayor’s house without too much fuss.