Thieves World 5 – The Face of Chaos by Asprin, Robert

Thieves’ World Book #05

The Face of Chaos

Edited by Robert Lynn Asprin

CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION Robert Lynn Asprin

HIGH MOON Janet Morris

NECROMANT C.J. Cherryh

THE ART OF ALLIANCE Robert Lynn Asprin

THE CORNERS OF MEMORY Lynn Abbey

VOTARY David Drake

MIRROR IMAGE Diana L. Paxson

INTRODUCTION

Robert Lynn Asprin

‘The Face of Chaos will laugh at us all before the cycle completes its turn!’

The words were barely audible above the din of the bazaar, but they caught the

ear of Illyra, stopping her in her tracks. Ignoring her husband’s puzzled

glance, she made her way into the crowds in search of the source of the voice.

Though only half S’danzo, the cards were still her trade and she owed it to her

clan to discover any intruders into their secrets.

A yellow-toothed smile flashed at her out of deep shadow, beside a stand.

Peering closely, she recognized Hakiem, Sanctuary’s oldest and most noted

storyteller, squatting in the shelter, away from the morning sun’s bright glare.

‘Good morning, old one,’ she said coolly, ‘and what does a storyteller know of

the cards?’

‘Too little to try to earn a living reading them,’ Hakiem replied, scratching

himself idly, ‘but much for one untrained in interpreting their messages.’

‘You spoke of the Face of Chaos. Don’t tell me you’ve finally paid for a

reading?’

‘Not at my age.’ The storyteller waved. ‘I’d prefer that the events of the

future come as surprises. But I have eyes enough to know that that card means

great change and upheaval. It requires no special sight to realize it must be

showing often in readings these days, with the newcomers in town. I have ears,

Illyra, as I have eyes. An old man listens and watches, enough not to be fooled

by one who walks younger than her makeup and dress would lead most to believe.’

Illyra frowned. ‘Such observations could cost me dearly, old one.’

‘Thou art wise, mistress. Wise enough to know the value of silence, as a hungry

tongue talks more freely.’

‘Very well, Hakiem,’ the fortune-teller laughed, slipping a coin into his

outstretched palm. ‘Dull your ears, eyes and tongue with breakfast at my expense

… and perhaps a cup of wine to toast the Face of Chaos.’

‘A moment, mistress,’ the storyteller called as she turned to go-‘A mistake!

This is silver.’

‘Your eyes are as keen as ever, you old devil. Take the extra as a reward for

courage. I’ve heard what you have to do to gather the stories you can tell!’

Hakiem slid the coin into the pouch belted within his tunic and heard the

satisfying clink as it joined the others secreted there. These days he extorted

breakfast money more out of habit than need. Purses were growing fat in

Sanctuary with the influx of wealth brought by the newcomers. Even extortion was

growing easier, as people became less tightfisted. Some, like Illyra, seemed

almost eager to give it away. Already, this morning, he had collected enough for

ten breakfasts without exerting the effort hitherto required to obtain enough

for one. After decades of decay. Sanctuary was coming to life again with the

influx of wealth brought by the Beysib troops. Their military strength was far

greater than the Sanctuary garrison could muster, and only the fact that the

foreigners had made no claim to the governance of the city itself kept it in the

hands of the Prince and his ministers. But the threat was always there, potent,

lending a new spice of danger to the customary activities of the people of the

city.

Scratching again, the storyteller frowned into the morning brightness, and not

all his wrinkles were from squinting. It was almost… no, it -was too good to

be true. Hakiem had too many years of anguish behind him not to look a gift

horse in the mouth. All gifts had a price, no matter how well-hidden or

inconsequential it might seem at the time. It only stood to reason that the

sudden prosperity brought by the newcomers would exact a price from the hell

hole known as Sanctuary. Exactly how high or terrible a price the storyteller

was currently unable to puzzle out. (There were still hawks in Sanctuary, though

not so easily brought to hand … and one hawkmaster in particular.) Sharper

eyes than Hakiem’s would be scrutinizing the effects and long-range implications

of the new arrivals. Still, it would do him well to keep his ears open and …

‘Hakiem! Here he is! I found him! Hakiem!’

The storyteller groaned inwardly as a brightly bedecked teenager leapt up and

down, flapping his arms to reveal Hakiem’s refuge to his comrades. Fame, too,

had its price … and this particular one was named Mikali, a young fop whose

main vocation seemed to be spending his father’s wealth on fine clothing. That,

and serving as Hakiem’s self-proclaimed herald. Though the money from the more

fashionable sides of Sanctuary was nice, the storyteller often longed for the

days of anonymity when he’d had to rely on his own wits and skills to peddle his

stories. Perhaps it was for this reason he clung to some of his old haunts in

the Bazaar and the Maze.

‘Here he is!’ the youth proclaimed to his rapidly assembling audience. ‘The only

man in Sanctuary who didn’t run and hide when the Beysib fleet arrived in our

harbours.’

Hakiem cleared his throat noisily. ‘Do I know you, young man?’

A rude snicker rippled through the crowd as the youth flushed with

embarrassment.

‘S … Surely you remember. It’s me, Mikali. Yesterday …’

‘if you know me,’ the elder interrupted, ‘you also know I don’t tell stories to

preserve my health, nor do I tolerate gawkers who block the view of paying

customers.’

‘Of course.’ Mikali beamed. In a flash he had produced a handkerchief of fine

silk. Cupping it in his hands, he began moving through the assemblage,

collecting coins. As might be expected, he was loathe to undertake this chore

silently.

‘A gift for Sanctuary’s greatest storyteller… Hear of the landing from the

lips of the one who welcomed them to our shore … Gifts … What’s that?

Coppers?! For Hakiem? Dig deeper into that purse or move along! That’s the

bravest man in town sitting there … Thank you … Gifts for the bravest man in

Sanctuary …’

In a nonce a double handful of coins had found their way into the handkerchief,

and Mikali triumphantly presented it to Hakiem with a flourish. The storyteller

weighed the parcel carelessly in his hand for a moment, then nodded and slipped

the entire thing into his tunic, secretly enjoying the look of dismay that

crossed the youth’s face as Mikali realized the fine handkerchief would not be

returned.

Though I took my post on the wharf near midday, it was after dark before the

fleet had anchored and the first of the Beysib ventured ashore. It was so dark,

I did not even see the small boat being lowered over the side of one of the

ships. Not until they lit torches and began pulling for the wharf was I aware of

their intent to make contact before first light,’ Hakiem began.

Indeed, on that night Hakiem had nearly dozed off before he realized a boat was

finally on its way from the fleet. Even a storyteller’s curiosity had its

limits.

‘It was a sight to frighten children with; that torchlit craft creeping towards

our town like some great spider from a nightmare, stalking its prey across an

ink-black mirror. Though I was hailed as brave, it embarrasses me not to admit

that I watched from the shadows. The wise know that darkness can shield the weak

as easily as it harries the strong.’

There were nods of acknowledgement throughout the crowd. This was Sanctuary, and

every listener, regardless of social status, had sought refuge in the shadows

more than once as the occasion arose, and did it more often than he would care

to admit.

‘Still, once they were ashore, I could see they were men not greatly different

from us, so I stepped forth from my place of concealment and went to meet them.’

This brave deed that Hakiem took on himself had been born of a mixture of

impatience, curiosity, and drink … mostly the latter. While the storyteller

had indeed been at his watchpost since midday, he had also been indulging all

the while, helping himself to the wines left untended in the wharfside saloons.

Thus it was that when the boat tied up at the wharf he was more sheets to the

wind than its mother vessel had been.

The party from the boat advanced down the pier to the shore; then, rather than

proceed into town, it had simply drawn up in a tight knot and waited. As

minutes stretched on and no additional boats were dispatched from the fleet, it

became apparent that this vanguard was expecting to be met by a delegation

from the town. If that were truly the case, it occurred to Hakiem that they

might well still be waiting at sunrise.

‘You’ll have to go to the palace!’ he had called without thinking.

At the sound of his voice, the party had turned their glassy-eyed stares on him.

‘Palace! Go Palace!’ he repeated, ignoring the prickling at the nape of his

neck.

‘Hakiem!’

A figure in the group had beckoned him forward.

Of all things he had anticipated or feared about the invaders, the last thing

Hakiem had expected was to be hailed by name.

Almost of their own volition, his legs propelled him shakily towards the group.

‘The first one I met was the one I least expected,’ Hakiem confided to his

audience. ‘None other than our own Hort, whom we all believed to be lost at sea,

along with his father. To say the least, I was astonished to find him not only

among the living, but accompanying these invaders.’

‘By now you all have not only seen the Beysib, but have all grown accustomed to

their strange appearance. Coming on them for the first time by torchlight on a

deserted pier as I did, though, was enough to panic a strong man … and I am

not a strong man. The hands holding the torches were webbed, as if they had come

out of the sea rather than across it. The handles of the warriors’ swords

jutting up from behind their shoulders I had seen from afar, but what I hadn’t

noted was their eyes. Those dark, unblinking eyes staring at me with the

torchlight reflecting in their depths nearly had me convinced that they would

pounce on me like a pack of animals if I showed my fear. Even now, by daylight

those eyes can …’

‘Hakiem!’

The storyteller was pleased to note that he was not the only one who started at

the sudden cry. He had not lost his touch for drawing an audience into a story.

They had forgotten the morning glare and were standing with him on a torchlit

pier.

Fast behind his pride, or perhaps overlapping it, was a wave of anger at having

been interrupted in mid-tale. It was not a kindly gaze he turned on the

interloper.

It was none other than Hort, flanked by two Beysib warriors. For a moment Hakiem

had to fight off a wave of unreality, as if the youth had stepped out of the

story to confront him in life.

‘Hakiem! You must come at once. The Beysa herself wishes to see you.’

‘She’ll have to wait,’ the storyteller declared haughtily, ignoring the murmurs

that had sprung up among his audience, ‘I’m in the middle of a story.’

‘But you don’t understand,’ Hort insisted, ‘she wants to offer you a position in

her court!’

‘No, you don’t understand,’ Hakiem flared back, swelling in his anger without

rising from his seat. ‘I already am employed … and will be employed until this

story is done. These good people have commissioned me to entertain them and I

intend to do just that until they are satisfied. You and your fish-eyed friends

there will just have to wait.’

With that, Hakiem returned his attention to his audience, ignoring Hort’s

discomfiture. The fact that he had not really wished to start this particular

session was unimportant, as was the fact that service with the leader of the

Beysib government-in-exile would undoubtedly be lucrative. Any storyteller, much

less Sanctuary’s best storyteller, did not shirk his professional duty in the

midst of a tale, however tempting the counter-offer might be.

Gone were the days when he would scuttle off as soon as a few coins were tossed

his way. The old storyteller’s pride had grown along with his wealth, and Hakiem

was no more exempt than any other citizen of Sanctuary from the effects of the

Face of Chaos.

HIGH MOON

Janet Morris

Just south of Caravan Square and the bridge over the White Foal River, the

Nisibisi witch had settled in. She had leased the isolated complex – one three

storied ‘manor house’ and its outbuildings -as much because its grounds extended

to the White Foal’s edge (rivers covered a multitude of disposal problems) as

for its proximity to her business interests in the Wideway warehouse district

and its convenience to her caravan master, who must visit the Square at all

hours.

The caravan disguised their operations. The drugs they’d smuggled in were no

more pertinent to her purposes than the dilapidated manor at the end of the

bridge’s south-running cart track or the goods her men bought and stored in

Wideway’s most pilferproof holds, though they lubricated her dealings with the

locals and eased her troubled nights. It was all subterfuge, a web of lies,

plausible lesser evils to which she could own if the Rankan army caught her, or

the palace marshal Tempus’s Stepsons (mercenary shock troops and ‘special

agents’) rousted her minions and flunkies or even brought her up on charges.

Lately, a pair of Stepsons had been her particular concern. And Jagat – her

first lieutenant in espionage – was no less worried. Even their Ilsig contact,

the unflappable Lastel who had lived a dozen years in Sanctuary, cesspool of the

Rankan empire into which all lesser sewers fed, and managed all that time to

keep his dual identity as east-side entrepreneur and Maze-dwelling barman uncom

promised, was distressed by the attentions the pair of Stepsons were payin her.

She had thought her allies overcautious at first, when it seemed she would be

here only long enough to see to the ‘death’ of the Rankan war god, Vashanka.

Discrediting the state-cult’s power icon was the purpose for which the Nisibisi

witch, Roxane, had come down from Wizardwall’s fastness, down from her shrouded

keep of black marble on its unscalable peak, down among the mortal and the

damned. They were all in this together: the mages of Nisibisi; Lacan Ajami

(warlord ofMygdon and the known world north of .Wizardwall) with whom they had

made pact; and the whole Mygdonian Alliance which he controlled.

Or so her lord and love had explained it when he decreed that Roxane must come.

She had not argued – one pays one’s way among sorcerers; she had not worked hard

for a decade nor faced danger in twice as long. And if one did not serve Mygdon

– only one – all would suffer. The Alliance was too strong to thwart. So she was

here, drawn here with others fit for better, as if some power more than magical

was whipping up a tropical storm to cleanse the land and using them to gild its

eye.

She should have been home by now; she would have been, but for the hundred ships

from Beysib which had come to port and skewed all plans. Word had come from

Mygdon, capital of Mygdonia, through the Nisibisi network, that she must stay.

And so it had become crucial that the Stepsons who sniffed round her skirts be

kept at bay – or ensnared, or bought, or enslaved. Or, if not, destroyed. But

carefully, so carefully. For Tempus, who had been her enemy three decades ago

when he fought the Defender’s Wars on Wizardwall’s steppes, was a dozen Storm

Gods’ avatar; no army he sanctified could know defeat; no war he fought could

not be won. Combat was life to him; he fought like the gods themselves, like an

entelechy from a higher sphere -and even had friends among those powers not

corporeal or vulnerable to sortilege of the quotidian sort a human might employ.

And now it was being decreed in Mygdonia’s tents that he must be removed from

the field – taken out of play in this southern theatre, manoeuvred north where

the warlocks could neutralize him. Such was the word her lover-lord had sent

her: move him north, or make him impotent where he stayed. The god he served

here had been easier to rout. But she doubted that would incapacitate him; there

were other Storm Gods, and Tempus, who under a score of names had fought in more

dimensions than she had ever visited, knew them all. Vashanka’s denouement might

scare the Rankans and give the Ilsigs hope, but more than rumours and

manipulation of theomachy by even the finest witch would be needed to make

Tempus fold his hands or bow his head. To make him run, then, was an

impossibility. To lure him north, she hoped, was not. For this was no place for

Roxane. Her nose was offended by the stench which blew east from Downwind and

north from Fisherman’s Row and west from the Maze and south from either the

slaughterhouses or the palace – she’d not decided which.

So she had called a meeting, itself an audacious move, with her kind where they

dwelled on Wizardwall’s high peaks. When it was done, she was much weakened – it

is no small feat to project one’s soul so far – and unsatisfied. But she had

submitted her strategy and gotten approval, after a fashion, though it pained

her to have to ask.

Having gotten it, she was about to set her plan in motion. To begin it, she had

called upon Lastel/One-Thumb and cried foul: ‘Tempus’s sister, Cime the free

agent, was part of our bargain, Ilsig. If you cannot produce her, then she

cannot aid me, and I am paying you far too much for a third-rate criminal’s

paltry talents.’

The huge wrestler adjusted his deceptively soft gut. His east-side house was

commodious; dogs barked in their pens and favourite curs lounged about their

feet, under the samovar, upon riotous silk prayer rugs, in the embrace of comely

krrf-drugged slaves – not her idea of entertainment, but Lastel’s, his sweating

forehead and heavy breathing proclaimed as he watched the bestial event a dozen

other guests found fetching.

The dusky Ilsigs saw nothing wrong in enslaving their own race. Nisibisi had

more pride. It was well that these were comfortable with slavery – they would

know it far more intimately, by and by.

But her words had jogged her host, and Lastel came up on one elbow, his cushions

suddenly askew. He, too, had been partaking ofkrrf- not smoking it, as was the

Ilsig custom, but mixing it with other drugs which made it sink into the blood

directly through the skin. The effects were greater, and less predictable.

As she had hoped, her words had the power of krrf behind them. Fear showed in

thejowled mountain’s eyes. He knew what she was; the fear was her due. Any of

these were helpless before her, should she decide a withered soul or two might

amuse her. Their essences could lighten her load as krrf lightened theirs.

The gross man spoke quickly, a whine of excuses: the woman had ‘disappeared …

taken by Askelon, the very lord of dreams. All at the Mageguild’s fete where the

god was vanquished saw it. You need not take my word – witnesses are legion.’

She fixed him with her pale stare. Ilsigs were called Wrigglies, and Lastel’s

craven self was a good example why. She felt disgust and stared longer.

The man before her dropped his eyes, mumbling that their agreement had not

hinged on the mage-killer Cime, that he was doing more than his share as it was,

for little enough profit, that the risks were too high.

And to prove to her he was still her creature, he warned her again of the

Stepsons: ‘That pair of Whoresons Tempus sicced on you should concern us, not

money – which neither of us will be alive to spend if -‘ One of the slaves cried

out, whether in pleasure or pain Roxane could not be certain; Lastel did not

even look up, but continued:’… Tempus finds out we’ve thirty stone of krrf in

-‘

She interrupted him, not letting him name the hiding place. ‘Then do this that I

ask of you, without question. We will be rid of the problem they cause,

thereafter, and have our own sources, who’ll tell us what Tempus does and does

not know.’

A slave serving mulled wine approached, and both took electrum goblets. For

Roxane, the liquor was an advantage: looking into its depths, she could see what

few cogent thoughts ran through the fat drug dealer’s mind.

He thought of her, and she saw her own beauty: wizard hair like ebony and wavy;

her sanguine skin like velvet: he dreamed her naked, with his dogs. She cast a

curse without word or effort, refiexively, giving him a social disease no

Sanctuary mage or barber-surgeon could cure, complete with running sores upon

lips and member, and a virus in control of it which buried itself in the

brainstem and came out when it chose. She hardly took note of it; it was a small

show of temper, like for like: let him exhibit the condition of his soul, she

had decreed.

To banish her leggy nakedness from the surface of her wine, she said straight

out; ‘You know the other bar owners. The Alekeep’s proprietor has a girl about

to graduate from school. Arrange to host her party, let it be known that you

will sell those children krrf – Tamzen is the child I mean. Then have your

flunky lead her down to Shambles Cross. Leave them there – up to half a dozen

youngsters, it may be – lost in the drug and the slum.’

‘That will tame two vicious Stepsons? You do know the men I mean? Janni? And

Stealth? They bugger each other, Stepsons. Girls are beside the point. And

Stealth – he’s a/wzzbuster- I’ve seen him with no woman old enough for breasts.

Surely -‘

‘Surely,’ she cut in smoothly, ‘you don’t want to know more than that – in case

it goes awry. Protection in these matters lies in ignorance.’ She would not tell

him more – not that Stealth, called Nikodemos, had come out of Azehur, where

he’d earned his war name and worked his way towards Syr in search of a Tros

horse via Mygdonia, hiring on as a caravan guard and general roustabout, or that

a dispute over a consignment lost to mountain bandits had made him bond-servant

for a year to a Nisibisi mage – her lover-lord. There was a string on Nikodemos,

ready to be pulled.

And when he felt it, it would be too late, and she would be at the end of it.

Tempus had allowed Niko to breed his sorrel mare to his own Tros stallion to

quell mutters among knowledgeable Stepsons that assigning Niko and Janni to

hazardous duty in the town was their commander’s way of punishing the slate

haired fighter who had declined Tempus’s offered pairbond in favour of Janni’s

and had subsequently quit their ranks.

Now the mare was pregnant and Tempus was curious as to what kind of foal the

union might produce, but rumours of foul play still abounded.

Critias, Tempus’s second in command, had paused in his dour report and now

stirred his posset of cooling wine and barley and goat’s cheese with a finger,

then wiped the finger on his bossed cuirass, burnished from years of use. They

were meeting in the mercenaries’ guild hostel, in its common room, dark as

congealing blood and safe as a grave, where Tempus had bade the veteran

mercenary lodge – an operations officer charged with secret actions could be no

part of the Stepsons’ barracks cohort. They met covertly, on occasion; most

times, coded messages brought by unwitting couriers were enough.

Crit, too, it seemed, thought Tempus wrong in sending Janni, a guileless

cavalryman, and Niko, the youngest of the Stepsons, to spy upon the witch:

clandestine schemes were Crit’s province, and Tempus had usurped, overstepped

the bounds of their agreement. Tempus had allowed that Crit might take over

management of the fielded team and Crit had grunted wryly, saying he’d run them

but not take the blame if they lost both men to the witch’s wiles.

Tempus had agreed with the pleasant-looking Syrese agent and they had gone on to

other business: Prince/Governor Kadakithis was insistent upon contacting Jubal,

the slaver whose estate the Stepsons sacked and made their home. ‘But when we

had the black bastard, you said to let him crawl away.’

‘Kadakithis expressed no interest.’ Tempus shrugged. ‘He has changed his mind,

perhaps in light of the appearance of these mysterious death squads your people

haven’t been able to identify or apprehend. If your teams can’t deliver Jubal or

turn up a hawkmask who is in contact with him, I’ll find another way.’

‘Ischade, the vampire woman who lives in Shambles Cross, is still our best hope.

We’ve sent slave-bait to her and lost it. Like a canny carp, she takes the bait

and leaves the hook.’ Crit’s lips were pursed as if his wine had turned to

vinegar; his patrician nose drew down with his frown. He ran a hand through his

short, feathery hair. ‘And our joint venture with the Rankan garrison is

impeding rather than aiding success. Army Intelligence is a contradiction in

terms, like the Mygdonian Alliance or the Sanctuary pacification programme. The

cutthroats I’ve got on our payroll are sure the god is dead and all the Rankans

soon to follow. The witch – or some witch – floats rumours of Mygdonian

liberators and Ilsig freedom and the gullible believe. That snotty thief you

befriended is either an enemy agent or a pawn ofNisibisi propaganda – telling

everyone that he’s been told by the Ilsig gods themselves that Vashanka was

routed … I’d like to silence him permanently.’ Crit’s eyes met Tempus’s then,

and held.

‘No,’ he replied, to all of it, then added: ‘Gods don’t die; men die. Boys die

in multitudes. The thief, Shadowspawn, is no threat to us, just misguided, semi

literate, and vain, like all boys. Bring me a conduit to Jubal, or the slaver

himself. Contact Niko and have him report – if the witch needs a lesson, I

myself will undertake to teach it. And keep your watch upon the fish-eyed folk

from the ships -I’m not sure yet that they’re as harmless as they seem.’

Having given Crit enough to do to keep his mind off the rumours of the god

Vashanka’s troubles – and hence, his own – he rose to leave. ‘Some results, by

week’s end, would be welcome.’ The officer toasted him cynically as Tempus

walked away.

Outside, his Tros horse whinnied joyfully. He stroked its mist-dappled neck and

felt the sweat there. The weather was close, an early heatwave as unwelcome as

the late frosts which had frozen the winter crops a week before their harvest

and killed the young sets just planted in anticipation of a bounteous fall.

He mounted up and headed south by the granaries towards the palace’s north wall

where a gate nowhere as peopled or public as the Gate of the Gods was set into

the wall by the cisterns. He would talk to Prince Kitty-Cat, then tour the Maze

on his way home to the barracks.

But the prince wasn’t receiving, and Tempus’s mood was ill -just as well; he had

been going to confront the young popinjay, as once or twice a month he was sure

he must do, without courtesy or appropriate deference. If Kadakithis was holed

up in conference with the blond-haired, fish-eyed folk from the ships and had

not called upon him to join them, then it was not surprising: since the gods had

battled in the sky above the Mageguild, all things had become confused, worse

had come to worst, and Tempus’s curse had fallen on him once again with its full

force.

Perhaps the god was dead – certainly, Vashanka’s voice in his ear was absent.

He’d gone out raping once or twice to see if the Lord of Pillage could be roused

to take part in His favourite sport. But the god had not rustled around in his

head since New Year’s day; the resultant fear of harm to those who loved him by

the curse that denied him love had made a solitary man withdraw even further

into himself; only the Froth Daughter Jihan, hardly human, though woman in

form, kept him company now.

And that, as much as anything, irked the Stepsons. Theirs was a closed

fraternity, open only to the paired lovers of the Sacred Band and distinguished

single mercenaries culled from a score of nations and diverted, by Tempus’s

service and Kitty-Cat’s gold, from the northern insurrection they’d drifted

through Sanctuary en route to join.

He, too, ached to war, to fight a declared enemy, to lead his cohort north. But

there was his word to a Rankan faction to do his best for a petty prince, and

there was this thrice-cursed fleet of merchant warriors come to harbour talking

‘peaceful trade’ while their vessels rode too low in the water to be filled with

grain or cloth or spices – if not barter, his instinct told him, the Burek

faction of Beysib would settle for conquest.

He was past caring; things in Sanctuary were too confused for one man, even one

near-immortal, god-ridden avatar of a man, to set aright. He would take Jihan

and go north, with or without the Stepsons – his accursed presence among them

and the love they bore him would kill them if he let it continue: if the god was

truly gone, then he must follow. Beyond Sanctuary’s borders, other Storm Gods

held sway, other names were hallowed. The primal Lord Storm (Enlil), whom Niko

venerated, had heard a petition from Tempus for a clearing of his path and his

heart: he wanted to know what status his life, his curse, and his god-bond had,

these days. He awaited only a sign.

Once, long ago, when he went abroad as a philosopher and sought a calmer life in

a calmer world, he had said that to gods all things are beautiful and good and

just, but men have supposed some things to be unjust, others just. If the god

had died, or been banished, though it didn’t seem that this could be so, then it

was meet that this occurred. But those who thought it so did not realize that

one could not escape the intelligible light: the notice of that which never

sets: the apprehension of the elder gods. So he had asked, and so he waited.

He had no doubt that the answer would be forthcoming, as he had no doubt that he

would not mistake it when it came.

On his way to the Maze he brooded over his curse, which kept him unloved by the

living and spurned by any he favoured if they be mortal. In heaven he had a

brace of lovers, ghosts like the original Stepson, Abarsis. But to heaven he

could not repair: his flesh regenerated itself immemorially; to make sure this

was still the case, last night he had gone to the river and slit both wrists. By

the time he’d counted to fifty the blood had ceased to flow and healing had

begun. That gift of healing – if gift it was – still remained his, and since it

was god-given, some power more than mortal ‘loved’ him still.

It was whim that made him stop by the weapons shop the mercenaries favoured.

Three horses tethered out front were known to him; one was Niko’s stallion, a

big black with points like rust and a jughead on thickening neck perpetually

sweatbanded with sheepskin to keep its jowls modest. The horse, as mean as it

was ugly, snorted a challenge to Tempus’s Tros – the black resented that the

Tros had climbed Niko’s mare.

He tethered it at the far end of the line and went inside, among the crossbows,

the flying wings, the steel and wooden quarrels and the swords.

Only a woman sat behind the counter, pulchritudinous and vain, her neck hung

with a wealth of baubles, her flesh perfumed. She knew him, and in seconds his

nose detected acrid, nervous sweat and the defensive musk a woman can exude.

‘Marc’s out with the boys in back, sighting-in the high-torque bows. Shall I get

him. Lord Marshal? Or may I help you? What’s here’s yours, my lord, on trial or

as our gift -‘ Her arm spread wide, bangles tinkling, indicating the racked

weapons.

‘I’ll take a look out back. Madam; don’t disturb yourself.’

She settled back, not calm, but bidden to remain and obedient.

In the ochre-walled yard ten men were gathered behind the log fence that marked

the range; a hundred yards away three oxhides had been fastened to the

encircling wall, targets painted red upon them; between the hides, three

cuirasses of four-ply hardened leather armoured with bronze plates were propped

and filled with straw.

The smith was down on his knees, a crossbow fixed in a vice with its owner

hovering close by. The smith hammered the sights twice more, put down his file,

grunted and said, ‘You try it, Straton; it should shoot true. I got a hand

breadth group with it this morning; it’s your eye I’ve got to match…’

The large-headed, raw-boned smith, sporting a beard which evened a rough

complexion, rose with exaggerated effort and turned to another customer, just

stepping up to the firing line. ‘No, Stealth, not like that, or, if you must,

I’ll change the tension -‘ Marc moved in, telling Niko to throw the bow up to

his shoulder and fire from there, then saw Tempus and left the group, hands

spreading on his apron.

Bolts spat and thunked from five shooters when the morning’s range officer

hollered ‘Clear’ and ‘Fire’, then ‘Hold’, so that all could go to the wall to

check their aim and the depths to which the shafts had sunk.

Shaking his head, the smith confided: ‘Straton’s got a problem I can’t solve.

I’ve had it truly sighted – perfect for me – three times, but when he shoots,

it’s as if he’s aiming two feet low.’

‘For the bow, the name is life, but the work is death. In combat it will shoot

true for him; here, he’s worried how they judge his prowess. He’s not thinking

enough of his weapon, too much of his friends.’

The smith’s keen eyes shifted; he rubbed his smile with a greasy hand. ‘Aye, and

that’s the truth. And for you. Lord Tempus? We’ve the new hard-steel, though why

they’re all so hot to pay twice the price when men’re soft as clay and even wood

will pierce the boldest belly, I can’t say.’

‘No steel, just a case of iron-tipped short-flights, when you can.’

‘I’ll select them myself. Come and watch them, now? We’ll see what their nerve’s

like, if you call score …’

‘A moment or two. Marc. Go back to your work, I’ll sniff around on my own.’

And so he approached Niko, on pretence of admiring the Stepson’s new bow, and

saw the shadowed eyes, blank as ever but veiled like the beginning beard that

masked his jaw: ‘How goes it, Niko? Has your maat returned to you?’

‘Not likely,’ the young fighter, cranking the spring and lever so a bolt

notched, said and triggered the quarrel which whispered straight and true to

centre his target. ‘Did Crit send you? I’m fine, commander. He worries too much.

We can handle her, no matter how it seems. It’s just time we need … she’s

suspicious, wants us to prove our faith. Shall I, by whatever means?’

‘Another week on this is all I can give you. Use discretion, your judgment’s

fine with me. What you think she’s worth, she’s worth. If Critias questions

that, your orders came from me and you may tell him so.’

‘I will, and with pleasure. I’m not his to wetnurse; he can’t keep that in his

head.’

‘And Janni?’

‘It’s hard on him, pretending to be … what we’re pretending to be. The men

talk to him about coming back out to the barracks, about forgetting what’s past

and resuming his duties. But we’ll weather it. He’s man enough.’

Niko’s hazel eyes flicked back and forth, judging the other men: who watched;

who pretended he did not, but listened hard. He loosed another bolt, a third,

and said quietly that he had to collect his flights. Tempus eased away, heard

the range officer call ‘Clear’ and watched Niko go retrieve his grouped

quarrels.

If this one could not breach the witch’s defences, then she was unbreachable.

Content, he left then, and found Jihan, his de facto right-side partner, waiting

astride his other Tros horse, her more than human strength and beauty

brightening Smith Street’s ramshackle facade as if real gold lay beside fool’s

gold in a dusty pan.

Though one of the matters estranging him from his Stepsons was his pairing with

this foreign ‘woman’, only Niko knew her to be the daughter of a power who

spawned all contentious gods and even the concept of divinity; he felt the cool

her flesh gave off, cutting the midday heat like wind from a snowcapped peak.

‘Life to you, Tempus.’ Her voice was thick as ale, and he realized he was

thirsty. Promise Park and the Alekeep, an east-side establishment considered

upper class by those who could tell classes of Ilsigs, were right around the

corner, a block up the Street of Gold from where they met. He proposed to take

her there for lunch. She was delighted – all things mortal were new to her; the

whole business of being in flesh and attending to it was yet novel. A novice at

life, Jihan was hungry for the whole of it.

For him, she served a special purpose: her loveplay was rough and her

constitution hardier than his Tros horses – he could not couple gently; with

her, he did not inflict permanent harm on his partner; she was bom of violence

inchoate and savoured what would kill or cripple mortals.

At the Alekeep, they were welcome. They talked in a back and private room of the

god’s absence and what could be made of it and the owner served them himself, an

avuncular sort still grateful that Tempus’s men had kept his daughters safe when

wizard weather roamed the streets. ‘My girl’s graduating school today. Lord

Marshal – my youngest. We’ve a fete set and you and your companion would be most

welcome guests.’

Jihan touched his arm as he began to decline, her stormy eyes flecked red and

glowing.

‘… ah, perhaps we will drop by, then, if business permits.’

But they didn’t, having found pressing matters of lust to attend to, and all

things that happened then might have been avoided if they hadn’t been out of

touch with the Stepsons, unreachable down by the creek that ran north of the

barracks when sorcery met machination and all things went awry.

On their way to work, Niko and Janni stopped at the Vulgar Unicorn to wait for

the moon to rise. The moon would be full this evening, a blessing since

anonymous death squads roamed the town -whether they were Rankan army regulars,

Jubal’s scattered hawk-masks, fish-eyed Beysib spoilers, or Nisibisi assassins,

none could say.

The one thing that could be said of them for certain was that they weren’t

Stepsons or Sacred Banders or nonaligned mercenaries from the guild hostel. But

there was no convincing the terrorized populace of that.

And Niko and Janni – under the guise of disaffected mercenaries who had quit the

Stepsons, been thrown out of the guild hostel for unspeakable acts, and were

currently degenerating Sanctuary-style in the filthy streets of the town thought

that they were close to identifying the death squads’ leader. Hopefully, this

evening or the next, they would be asked to join the murderers in their squalid

sport. ‘

Not that murder was uncommon in Sanctuary, or squalor. The Maze, now that Niko

knew it like his horses’ needs or Janni’s limits, was not the town’s true nadir,

only the multi-tiered slum’s upper echelon. Worse than the Maze was Shambles

Cross, filled with the weak and the meek; worse than the Shambles was Downwind,

where nothing moved in the light of day and at night hellish sounds rode the

stench on the prevailing east wind across the White Foal. A tri-level hell,

then, filled with murderers, sold souls and succubi, began here in the Maze.

If the death squads had confined themselves to Maze, Shambles, and Downwind, no

one would have known about them. Bodies in those streets were nothing new;

neither Stepsons nor Rankan soldiers bothered counting them; near the

slaughterhouses cheap crematoriums flourished; for those too poor even for that,

there was the White Foal, taking ambiguous dross to the sea without complaint.

But the squads ventured uptown, to the east side and the centre of Sanctuary

itself where the palace hierophants and the merchants lived and looked away from

downtown, scented pomanders to their noses.

The Unicorn crowd no longer turned quiet when Niko and Janni entered; their

scruffy faces and shabby gear and bleary eyes proclaimed them no threat to the

mendicants or the whores. Competition, they were now considered, and it had been

hard to float the legend, harder to live it. Or to live it down, since none of

the Stepsons but their task force leader, Crit (who himself had never moved

among the barracks ranks, proud and shining with oil and fine weapons and finer

ideals) knew that they had not quit but only worked shrouded in subterfuge on

Tempus’s orders to flush the Nisibisi witch.

But the emergence of the death squads had raised the pitch, the ante, given the

matter a new urgency. Some said it was because Shadowspawn, the thief, was

right: the god Vashanka had died and the Rankans would suffer their due. Their

due or not, traders, politicians, and moneylenders – the ‘oppressors’ – were

nightly dragged out into the streets, whole families slaughtered or burned alive

in their houses, or hacked to pieces in their festooned wagons.

The agents ordered draughts from One-Thumb’s new girl and she came back,

cowering but determined, saying that One-Thumb must see their money first. They

had started this venture with the barman’s help; he knew their provenance; they

knew his secret.

‘Let’s kill the swillmonger. Stealth,’ Janni growled. They had little cash – a

few soldats and some Machadi coppers – and couldn’t draw their pay until their

work was done.

‘Steady, Janni. I’ll talk to him. Girl, fetch two Rankan ales or you won’t be

able to close your legs for a week.’

He pushed back his bench and strode to the bar, aware that he was only half

joking, that Sanctuary was rubbing him raw. Was the god dead? Was Tempus in

thrall to the Froth Daughter who kept his company? Was Sanctuary the honeypot of

chaos? A hell from which no man emerged? He pushed a threesome of young puds

aside and whistled piercingly when he reached the bar. The big bartender looked

around elaborately, raised a scar-crossed eyebrow, and ignored him. Stealth

counted to ten and then methodically began emptying other patrons’ drinks on to

the counter. Men were few here; approximations cursed him and backed away; one

went for a beltknife but Stealth had a dirk in hand that gave him pause. Niko’s

gear was dirty, but better than any of these had. And he was ready to clean his

soiled blade in any one of them. They sensed it; his peripheral perception read

their moods, though he couldn’t read their minds. Where his maat – his balance

once had been was a cold, sick anger. In Sanctuary he had learned despair and

futility, and these had introduced him to fury. Options he once had considered

last resorts, off the battlefield, came easily to mind now. Son of the armies,

he was learning a different kind of war in Sanctuary, and learning to love the

havoc his own right arm could wreak. It was not a substitute for the equilibrium

he’d lost when his left-side leader died down by the docks, but if his partner

needed souls to buy a better place in heaven, Niko would gladly send him double

his comfort’s price.

The ploy brought One-Thumb down to stop him. ‘Stealth, I’ve had enough of you.’

One-Thumb’s mouth was swollen, his upper lip crusted with sores, but his

ponderous bulk loomed large; from the corner of his eye Niko could see the

Unicorn’s bouncer leave his post and Janni intercept him.

Niko reached out and grabbed One-Thumb by the throat, even as the man’s paw

reached under the bar, where a weapon might lie. He pulled him close: ‘What

you’ve had isn’t even a shadow of what you’re going to get, Turn-Turn, if you

don’t mind your tongue. Turn back into the well-mannered little troll we both

know and love, or you won’t have a bar to hide behind by morning.’ Then, sotto

voce: ‘What’s up?’

‘She wants you,’ the barkeep gasped, his face purpling, ‘to go to her place by

the White Foal at high moon. If it’s convenient, of course, my lord.’

Niko let him go before his eyes popped out of his head. ‘You’ll put this on our

tab?’

‘Just this one more time, beggar boy. Your Whoreson bugger-buddies won’t lift a

leg to help you; your threats are as empty as your purse.’

‘Care to bet on it?’

They carried on a bit more, for the crowd’s benefit, Janni and the bouncer

engaged in a staring match the while. ‘Call your cur off, then, and we’ll forget

about this – this once.’ Niko turned, neck aprickle, and headed back towards his

seat, hoping that it wouldn’t go any further. Not one of the four – bouncer, bar

owner. Stepsons – was entirely playing to the crowd.

When he’d reached his door-facing table, Lastel/One-Thumb called his bruiser off

and Janni backed towards Niko, white-faced and trembling with eagerness: ‘Let me

geld one of them. Stealth. It’ll do our reputations no end of good.’

‘Save it for the witch-bitch.’

Janni brightened, straddling his seat, both arms on the table, digging fiercely

with his dirk into the wood: ‘You’ve got a rendezvous?’

‘Tonight, high moon. Don’t drink too much.’

It wasn’t the drink that skewed them, but the krrf they snorted, little piles

poured into clenched fists where thumb muscles made a well. Still, the drug

would keep them alert: it was a long time until high moon, and they had to

patrol for marauders while seeming to be marauding themselves. It was almost

more than Niko could bear. He’d infiltrated a score of camps, lines and palaces

on reconnaissance sorties with his deceased partner, but those were cleaner,

quicker actions than this protracted infiltration of Sanctuary, bunghole of the

known world. If this evening made an end to it and he could wash and shave and

stable his horses better, he’d make a sacrifice to Enlil which the god would not

soon forget.

An hour later, mounted, they set off on their tour of the Maze, Niko thinking

that not since the affair with the archmage Askelon and Tempus’s sister Cime had

his gut rolled up into a ball with this feeling of unmitigated dread. The

Nisibisi witch might know him – she might have known him all along. He’d been

interrogated by Nisibisi before, and he would fall upon his sword rather than

endure it again now, when his dead teammate’s ghost still haunted his mental

refuge and meditation could not offer him shelter as it once had.

A boy came running up calling his name and his jug-head black tossed its rust

nose high and snorted, ears back, waiting for a command to kill or maim.

‘By Vashanka’s sulphurous balls, what now?’ Janni wondered.

They sat their mounts in the narrow street; the moon was just rising over the

shantytops; people slammed their shutters tight and bolted their doors. Niko

could catch wisps of fear and loathing from behind the houses’ facades; two

mounted men in these streets meant trouble, no matter whose they were.

The youth trotted up, breathing hard. ‘Niko! Niko! The master’s so upset. Thank

Us I’ve found you …’ The delicate eunuch’s lisp identified him: a servant of

the Alekeep’s owner, one of the few men Niko thought of as a friend here.

‘What’s wrong, then?’ He leaned down in his saddle.

The boy raised a hand and the black snaked his head around fast to bite it. Niko

clouted the horse between the ears as the boy scrambled back out of range. ‘Come

on, come here. He won’t try it again. Now, what’s your master’s message?’

Tamzen! Tamzen’s gone out without her bodyguard, with -‘ The boy named six of

the richest Sanctuary families’ fast-living youngsters. ‘They said they’d be

right back, but they didn’t come. It’s her party she’s missing. The master’s

beside himself. He said if you can’t help him, he’ll have to call the Hell

Hounds – the palace guard, or go out to the Stepsons’ barracks. But there’s no

time, no time!’ the frail eunuch wailed.

‘Calm down, pud. We’ll find her. Tell her father to send word to Tempus anyway,

it can’t hurt to alert the authorities. And say exactly this: that I’ll help if

I can, but he knows I’m not empowered to do more than any citizen. Say it back,

now.’

Once the eunuch had repeated the words and run off, Janni said: ‘How’re you

going to be in two places at once. Stealth? Why’d you tell him that? It’s a job

for the regulars, not for us. We can’t miss this meet, not after all the bedbugs

I’ve let chomp on me for this…’

‘Seh!’ The word meant offal in the Nisi tongue. ‘We’ll round her and her friends

up in short order. They’re just blowing off steam – it’s the heat and school’s

end. Come on, let’s start at Promise Park.’

When they got there, the moon showed round and preternatur-ally large above the

palace and the wind had died. Thoughts of the witch he must meet still troubled

Niko, and Janni’s grousing buzzed in his ears: ‘… we should check in with

Crit, let the girl meet her fate – ours will be worse if we’re snared by

enchantment and no backup alerted to where or how.’

‘We’ll send word or stop by the Shambles drop; stop worrying.’ But Janni was not

about to stop, and Niko’s attempts to calm himself, to find transcendent

perception in his rest-place and pick up the girl’s trail by the heat-track

she’d left and the things she’d said and done here were made more difficult by

Janni’s worries, which jarred him back to concerns he must put aside, and

Janni’s words, which startled him, over-loud and disruptive, every time he got

himself calmed enough to sense Tamzen’s energy trail among so many others like

red/yellow/pink yarn twined among chiaroscuro trees.

Tamzen, thirteen and beautiful, pure and full of fun, who loved him with all her

heart and had made him promise to ‘wait’ for her: he’d had her, a thing he’d

never meant to do, and had her with her father’s knowledge, confronted by the

concerned man one night when Niko, arm around the girl’s waist, had walked her

through the park. ‘Is this how you repay a friend’s kindness. Stealth?’ the

father’d asked. ‘Better me than any of this trash, my friend. I’ll do it

right. She’s ready, and it wouldn’t be long, in any case,’ he’d replied while

the girl looked between the soldier, twelve years older, and her father, with

uncomprehending eyes. He had to find her.

Janni, as if in receipt of the perceptive spirit Niko tried now to reclaim,

swore and mentioned that Niko’d had no business getting involved with her, a

child.

‘I’m not your type, and as for women, I drink from no other man’s tainted cup.’

So Niko broached an uneasy subject: Janni was no Sacred Bander; his camaraderie

had limits; Niko’s need for touch and love the other man knew but could not

fill; they had an attenuated pairbond, not complete as Sacred Banders knew it,

and Janni was uncomfortable with the innuendo and assumptions of the other

singles, and Niko’s unsated needs as well.

The silence come between them then gave Stealth his chance to find the girl’s

red time-shadow, a hot ghost-trail to follow south-west through the Maze…

As the moon climbed high its light shone brighter, giving Maze and then Shambles

shape and teasing light; colour was almost present among the streets, so bright

it shone, a reddish cast like blood upon its face, so that when common Sanctuary

horrors lay revealed at intersections, they seemed worse even than they were.

Janni saw two whores fight for a client; he saw blood run black in gutters from

thugs and just incautious folk. Their horses’ hoofbeats cleared their path,

though, and Maze was left behind, as willing to let them go as they to leave it,

although Janni muttered at every vile encounter their presence interrupted,

wishing they could intervene.

Once he thought they’d glimpsed a death squad, and urged Stealth to come alert,

but the strange young fighter shook his head and hushed him, slouched loose upon

his horse as if entranced, following some trail that neither Janni nor any

mortal man with God’s good fear of magic should have seen. Janni’s heart was

troubled by this boy who was too good at craft, who had a charmed sword and

dagger given him by the entelechy of dreams, yet left them in the barracks,

decrying magic’s price. But what was this, if not sorcery? Janni watched Niko

watch the night and take them deep into shadowed alleys with all the confidence

a mage would flaunt. The youth had offered to teach him ‘controls’ of mind, to

take him ‘up through the planes and get your guide and your twelfth-plane name’.

But Janni was no connoisseur of witchcraft; like boy-loving, he left it to the

Sacred Banders and the priests. He’d gotten into this with Niko for worldly

advantage; the youth ten years his junior was pure genius in a fight; he’d

seen him work at Jubal’s and marvelled even in the melee of the sack. Niko’s

reputation for prowess in the field was matched only by Straton’s, and the

stories told of Niko’s past. The boy had trained among Successors, the

Nisibisi’s bane, wild guerrillas, mountain commandos who let none through

Wizardwall’s defiles without gold or life in tithe, who’d sworn to reclaim

their mountains from the mages and the warlocks and held out, outlaws,

countering sorcery with swords. In a campaign such as the northern one coming,

Niko’s skills and languages and friends might prove invaluable. Janni, from

Machad, had no love for Rankans, but it was said Niko served despite a blood

hatred: Rankans had sacked his town nameless; his father had died fighting

Rankan expansion when the boy was five. Yet he’d come south on Abarsis’s

venture, and stayed when Tempus inherited the band.

When they crossed the Street of Shingles and headed into Shambles Cross, the

pragmatic Janni spoke a soldier’s safe-conduct prayer and touched his warding

charm. A confusion of turns within the ways high-grown with hovels which cut off

view and sky, they heard commotion, shouting men and running feet.

They spurred their horses and careened round corners, forgetful of their pose as

independent reavers, for they’d heard Stepsons calling manoeuvre codes. So it

was that they came sliding their horses down on haunches so hard sparks flew

from iron-shod hooves, cutting off the retreat of three running on foot from

Stepsons, and vaulted down to the cobbles to lend a hand.

Niko’s horse, itself, took it in its mind to help, and charged past them, reins

dragging, head held high, to back a fugitive against a mudbrick wall. ”Seh!

Run, Vis!’ they heard, and more in a tongue Janni thought might be Nisi, for the

exclamation was.

By then Niko had one by the collar and two quarrels shot by close to Janni’s

ear. He hollered out his identity and called to the shooters to cease their fire

before he was skewered like the second fugitive, pinned by two bolts against the

wall. The third quarry struggled now between the two on-duty Stepsons, one of

whom called out to Janni to hold the second. It was Straton’s voice, Janni

realized, and Straton’s quarrels pinning the indigent by cape and crotch against

the wall. Lucky for the delinquent it had been: Straton’s bolts had pierced no

vital spot, just clothing.

It was not till then that Janni realized that Niko was talking to the first

fugitive, the one his horse had pinned, in Nisi, and the other answering back,

fast and low, his eyes upon the vicious horse, quivering and covered with

phosphorescent froth, who stood watchful by his master, hoping still that Niko

would let him pound the quarry into gory mud.

Straton and his partner, dragging the first unfortunate between them, came up,

full of thanks and victory:’… finally got one, alive. Janni, how’s yours?’

The one he held at crossbow-point was quiet, submissive, a Sanctuarite, he

thought, until Straton lit a torch. Then they saw a slave’s face, dark and arch

like Nisibisi’s were, and Straton’s partner spoke for the first time: ‘That’s

Haught, the slave-bait.’ Critias moved forward, torch in hand. ‘Hello, pretty.

We’d thought you’d run or died. We’ve lots to ask you, puppy, and nothing we’d

rather do tonight …’ As Crit moved in and Janni stepped back, Janni was

conscious that Niko and his prisoner had fallen silent.

Then the slave, amazingly, straightened up and raised its head, reaching within

its jerkin. Janni levered his bow, but the hand came out with a crumpled paper

in it, and this he held forth, saying: ‘She

freed me. She said this says so. Please … I know nothing, but that she’s freed

me …’

Crit snatched the feathered parchment from him, held it squinting in the torch’s

light. ‘That’s right, that’s what it says here.’ He rubbed his jaw; then stepped

forward. The slave flinched, his handsome face turned away. Crit pulled out the

bolts that held him pinned, grunting; no blood followed; Straton’s quarrels

penetrated clothing only; the slave crouched down, unscathed but incapacitated

by his fear. ‘Come as a free man, then, and talk to us. We won’t hurt you, boy.

Talk and you can go.’

Niko, then, intruded, his prisoner beside him, his horse following close behind.

‘Let them go, Crit.’

‘ What? Niko, forget the game, tonight. They’ll not live to tell you helped us.

We’ve been needing this advantage too long -‘

‘Let them go, Crit.’ Beside him his prisoner cursed or hissed or intoned a

spell, but did not break to run. Niko stepped close to his task force leader,

whispering: ‘This one’s an ex-commando, a fighter from Wizardwall come upon hard

times. Do him a service, as I must, for services done.’

‘Nisibisi? More’s the reason, then, to take them and break them-‘

‘No. He’s on the other side from warlocks; he’ll do us more good free in the

streets. Won’t you. Vis?’

The foreign-looking ruffian agreed, his voice thick with an accent detectable

even in his three clipped syllables.

Niko nodded. ‘See, Crit? This is Vis. Vis, this is Crit. I’ll be the contact for

his reports. Go on, now. You, too, freedman, go. Run!’

And the two, taking Niko at his word, dashed away before Crit could object.

The third, in Straton’s grasp, writhed wildly. This was a failed hawkmask, very

likely, in Straton’s estimation the prize of the three and one no word from Niko

could make the mercenary loose.

Niko agreed that he’d not try to save any ofJubal’s minions, and that was

that… almost. They had to keep their meeting brief; any could be peeking out

from windowsill or shadowed door; but as they mounted up to ride away, Janni saw

a cowled figure rising from a pool of darkness occluding the intersection. It

stood, full up, momentarily, and moonrays struck its face. Janni shuddered; it

was a face with hellish eyes, too far to be so big or so frightening, yet their

met glance shocked him like icy water and made his limbs to shake.

‘Stealth! Did you see that?’

‘What?’ Niko snapped, defensive over interfering in Crit’s operation. ‘See

what?’

‘That – thing …’Nothing was there, where he had seen it. ‘Nothing… I’m

seeing things.’ Crit and Straton had reached their horses; they heard hoof beats

receding in the night.

‘Show me where, and tell me what.’

Janni swung up on his mount and led the way; when they got there they found a

crumpled body, a youth with bloated tongue outstuck and rolled up eyes as if a

fit had taken him, dead as Abarsis in the street. ‘Oh, no …” Niko, dismounted,

rolled the corpse. ‘It’s one of Tamzen’s friends.’ The silk-and-linened body

came clearer as Janni’s eyes accustomed themselves to moonlight after the glare

of the torch. They heaved the corpse up upon Janni’s horse who snorted to bear a

dead thing but forbore to refuse outright. ‘Let’s take it somewhere. Stealth. We

can’t carry it about all night.’ Only then did Janni remember they’d failed to

report to Crit their evening’s plan.

At his insistence, Niko agreed to ride by the Shambles Cross safe haven, caulked

and shuttered in iron, where Stepsons and street men and IIsig/Rankan garrison

personnel, engaged in chasing hawkmasks and other covert enterprises, made their

slum reports in situ.

They managed to leave the body there, but not to alert the task force leader;

Crit had taken the hawkmask wherever he thought the catch would serve them best;

nothing was in the room but the interrogation wheel and bags of lime to tie on

unlucky noses and truncheons of sailcloth filled with gravel and iron filings to

change the most steadfast heart. They left a note, carefully coded, and hurried

back on to the street. Niko’s brow was furrowed, and Janni, too, was in a hurry

to see if they might find Tamzen and her friends asa living group, not one by

one, cold corpses in the gutter.

The witch Roxane had house snakes, a pair brought down from Nisibis, green and

six feet long, each one. She brought them into her study and set their baskets

by the hearth. Then, bowl of water by her side, she spoke the words that turned

them into men. The facsimiles aped a pair of Stepsons; she got them clothes and

sent them off. Then she took the water bowl and stirred it with her finger until

a whirlpool sucked and writhed. This she spoke over, and out to sea beyond the

harbour a like disturbance began to rage. She took from her table six carven

ships with Beysib sails, small and filled with wax miniatures of men. These she

launched into the basin with its whirlpool and spun and spun her finger round

until the flagships of the fleet foundered, then were sunk and sucked to lie, at

last, upon the bottom of the bowl. Even after she withdrew her finger the water

raged awhile. The witch looked calmly into her maelstrom and nodded once,

content. The diversion would be timely; the moon, outside her window, was nearly

high, scant hours from its zenith.

Then it was time to take Jagat’s report and send the death squads – or dead

squads, for none of those who served in them had life of their own to lead into

town.

Tamzen’s heart was pounding, her mouth dry and her lungs burning. They had run a

long way. They were lost and all six knew it, Phryne was weeping and her sister

was shaking and crying she couldn’t run, her knees wouldn’t hold her; the three

boys left were talking loud and telling all how they’d get home if they just

stayed in a group – the girls had no need to fear. More krrf was shared, though

it made things worse, not better, so that a toothless crone who tapped her stick

and smacked her gums sent them flying through the streets.

No one talked about Mehta’s fate; they’d seen him with the dark-clad whore, seen

him mesmerized, seen him take her hand. They’d hid until the pair walked on,

then followed – the group had sworn to stay together, wicked adventure on their

minds; all were officially adults now; none could keep them from the forbidden

pleasures of men and women – to see if Mehta would really lay the whore,

thinking they’d regroup right after, and find out what fun he’d had.

They’d seen him fall, and gag, and die once he’d raised her skirts and had her,

his buttocks thrusting hard as he pinned her to the alley wall. They’d seen her

bend down over him and raise her head and the glowing twin hells there had sent

them pell-mell, fleeing what they knew was no human whore.

Now they’d calmed, but they were deep in the Shambles, near its end where

Caravan Square began. There was light there, from midnight merchants engaged in

double-dealing; it was not safe there, one of the boys said: slaves were made

this way: children taken, sold north and never seen again.

‘It’s safe here, then?’ Tamzen blurted, her teeth chattering but the krrf

making her bold and angry. She strode ahead, not waiting to see them follow;

they would; she knew this bunch better than their mothers. The thing to do, she

was sure, was to stride bravely on until they came upon the Square and found the

streets home, or came upon some Hell Hounds, palace soldiers, or Stepsons.

Niko’s friends would ride them home on horseback if they found some; Tamzen’s

acquaintance among the men of steel was her fondest prize.

Niko … If he were here, she’d have no fear, nor need to pretend to valour…

Her eyes filled with tears, thinking what he’d say when he heard. She was never

going to convince him she was grown if all her attempts to do so made her seem

the more a child. A child’s error, this, for sure … and one dead on her

account. Her father would beat her rump to blue and he’d keep her in her room

for a month. She began to fret – the krrf’s doing, though she was too far gone

in the drug’s sway to tell – and saw an alley from which torchlight shone. She

took it; the others followed, she heard them close behind. They had money

aplenty; they would hire an escort, perhaps with a wagon, to take them home. All

taverns had men looking for hire in them; if they chanced Caravan Square, and

fell afoul of slavers, she’d never see her poppa or Niko or her room filled with

stuffed toys and ruffles again.

The inn was called the Sow’s Ear, and it was foul. In its doorway, one of the

boys, panting, caught her arm and jerked her back. ‘Show money in that place,

and you’ll get all our throats slit quick.’

He was right. They huddled in the street and sniffed more krrf and shook and

argued. Phryne began to wail aloud and her sister stopped her mouth with a

clapped hand. Just as the two girls, terrified and defeated, crouched down in

the street and one of the boys, his bladder loosed by fear, sought a comer wall,

a woman appeared before them, her hood thrown back, her face hidden by a trick

of light. But the voice was a gentlewoman’s voice and the words were

compassionate. ‘Lost, children? There, there, it’s all right now, just come with

me. We’ll have mulled wine and pastries and I’ll have my man form an escort to

see you home. You’re the Alekeep owner’s daughter, if I’m right? Ah, good, then;

your father’s a friend of my husband … surely you remember me?’

She gave a name and Tamzen, her sense swimming in drugs and her heart filled

with relief and the sweet taste of salvation, lied and said she did. All six

went along with the woman, skirting the square until they came to a curious

house behind a high gate, well lit and gardened and full of chaotic splendour.

At its rear, the rush of the White Foal could be heard.

‘Now sit, sit, little ones. Who needs to wash off the street grime? Who needs a

pot?’ The rooms were shadowed, no longer well lit; the woman’s eyes were

comforting, calming like sedative draughts for sleepless nights. They sat

among the silks and the carven chairs and they drank what she offered and

began to giggle. Phryne went and washed, and her sister and Tamzen followed.

When they came back, the boys were nowhere in sight. Tamzen was just going to

ask about that when the woman offered fruit, and somehow she forgot the words on

her tongue-tip, and even that the boys had been there at all, so fine was the

krrf the woman smoked with them. She knew she’d remember in a bit, though,

whatever it was she’d forgot…

When Crit and Straton arrived with the hawkmask they’d captured at the Foalside

home of Ischade, the vampire woman, all its lights were on, it seemed, yet

little of that radiance cut the gloom.

‘By the god’s four mouths, Crit, I still don’t understand why you let those

others go. And for Niko. What – ?’

‘Don’t ask me, Straton, what his reasons are; I don’t know. Something about the

one being of that Successors band, revolutionaries who want Wizardwall back from

the Nisibisi mages -there’s more to Nisibis than the warlocks. If that Vis was

one, then he’s an outlaw as far as Nisibisi law goes, and maybe a fighter. So we

let him go, do him a favour, see if maybe he’ll come to us, do us a service in

his turn. But as for the other – you saw Ischade’s writ of freedom – we gave him

to her and she let him go. If we want to use her … if she’ll ever help us find

Jubal – and she does know where he is; this freeing of the slave was a message;

she’s telling us we’ve got to up the ante – we’ve got to honour her wishes as

far as this slave-bait goes.’

‘But this … coming here ourselves^. You know what she can do to a man …’

‘Maybe we’ll like it; maybe it’s time to die. I don’t know. I do know we can’t

leave it to the garrison – every time they find us a hawkmask he’s too damaged

to tell us anything. We’ll never recruit what’s left of them if the army keeps

killing them slowly and we take the blame. And also,’ Crit paused, dismounted

his horse, pulled the trussed and gagged hawkmask he had slung over his saddle

like a haunch of meat down after him, so that the prisoner fell heavily to the

ground, ‘we’ve been told by the garrison’s intelligence liaison that the army

thinks Stepsons fear this woman.’

‘Anybody with a dram of common sense would.’ Straton, rubbing his eyes,

dismounted also, notched crossbow held at the ready as soon as his feet touched

the ground.

‘They don’t mean that. You know what they mean; they can’t tell a Sacred Bander

from a straight mercenary. They think we’re all sodomizers and sneer at us for

that.’

‘Let ’em. I’d rather be alive and misunderstood than dead and respected.’

Straton blinked, trying to clear his blurred vision. It was remarkable that

Critias would undertake this action on his own; he wasn’t supposed to take part

in field actions, but command them. Tempus had been to see him, though, and

since then the task force leader had been more taciturn and even more impatient

than usual. Straton knew there was no use in arguing with Critias, but he was

one of the few who could claim the privilege of voicing his opinion to the

leader, even when they disagreed.

They’d interrogated the hawkmask briefly; it didn’t take long; Straton was a

specialist in exactly that. He was a pretty one, and substantively undamaged.

The vampire was discerning, loved beauty; she’d take to this one, the few

bruises on him might well make him more attractive to a creature such as she:

not only would she have him in her power but it would be in her power to save

him from a much worse death than that she’d give. By the look of the tall, lithe

hawkmask, by his clothes and his pinched face in which sensitive, liquid eyes

roamed furtively, a pleasant death would be welcome. His ilk were hunted by more

factions in Sanctuary than any but Nisibisi spies. Crit said, ‘Ready, Strat?’

‘I own I’m not, but I’ll pretend if you do. If you get through this and I don’t,

my horses are yours.’

‘And mine, yours.’ Crit bared his teeth. ‘But I don’t expect that to happen.

She’s reasonable, I’m wagering. She couldn’t have turned that slave loose that

way if she wasn’t in control other lust. And she’s smart – smarter than

Kadakithis’s so-called “intelligence staff, or Hell Hounds, we’ve seen that for

a fact.’

So, despite sane cautions, they unlatched the gate, their horses drop-tied

behind them, cut the hawkmask’s ankle bonds and walked him to the door. His eyes

went wide above his gag, pupils gigantic in the torchlight on her threshold,

then squeezed shut as Ischade herself came to greet them when, after knocking

thrice and waiting long, they were about to turn away, convinced she wasn’t home

after all.

She looked them up and down, her eyes half-lidded. Straton, for once, was

grateful for the shimmer in his vision, the blur he couldn’t blink away. The

hawkmask shivered and lurched backwards in their grasp as Crit spoke first:

‘Good evening, madam. We thought the time had come to meet, face to face. We’ve

brought you this gift, a token of our good will.’ He spoke blandly, matter-of

factly, letting her know they knew all about her and didn’t really care what she

did to the unwary or the unfortunate. Straton’s mouth dried and his tongue stuck

to the roof of it. None was colder than Crit, or more tenacious when work was

under way.

The woman, Ischade, dusky-skinned but not the ruddy tone of Nisibis, an olive

cast that made the whites other teeth and eyes very bright, bade them enter.

‘Bring him in, then, and we’ll see what can be seen.’

‘No, no. We’ll leave him – an article of faith. We’d like to know what you hear

of Jubal, or his band – whereabouts, that sort of thing. If you come to think of

any such information, you can find me at the mercenaries’ hostel.’

‘Or in your hidey-hole in Shambles Cross?’

‘Sometimes.’ Crit stood firm. Straton, his relief a flood, now that he knew they

weren’t going in there, gave the hawkmask a shove. ‘Go on, boy, go to your

mistress.’

‘A slave, then, is this one?’ she asked Strat and that glance chilled his soul

when it fixed on him. He’d seen butchers look at sheep like that. He half

expected her to reach out and tweak his biceps.

He said: ‘What you wish, he is.’

She said: ‘And you?’

Crit said: ‘Forbearance has its limits.’

She replied: ‘Yours, perhaps, not mine. Take him with you; I want him not. What

you Stepsons think of me, I shall not even ask. But cheap I shall never come.’

Crit loosed his hold on the youth, who wriggled then, but Straton held him,

thinking that Ischade was without doubt the most beautiful woman he’d ever seen,

and the hawkmask was luckier than most. If death was the gateway to heaven, she

was the sort of gatekeep he’d like to admit him, when his time came.

She remarked, though he had not spoken aloud, that such could easily be

arranged.

Crit, at that, looked between them, then shook his head. ‘Go wait with the

horses, Straton. I thought I heard them, just now.’

So Straton never did find out exactly what was – or was not – arranged between

his task force leader and the vampire woman, but when he reached the horses, he

had his hands full calming them, as if his own had scented Niko’s black, whom

his grey detested above all other studs. When they’d both been stabled in the

same barn, the din had been terrible, and stallboards shattered as regularly as

stalls were mucked, from those two trying to get at each other. Horses, like

men, love .and hate, and those two stallions wanted a piece of each other the

way Strat wanted a chance at the garrison commander or Vashanka at the

Wrigglies’ Ils.

Soon after, Crit came sauntering down the walk, unscathed, alone, and silent.

Straton wanted to ask, but did not, what had been arranged: his leader’s sour

expression warned him off. And an hour later, at the Shambles Cross safe haven,

when one of the street men came running in saying there was a disturbance and

Tempus could not be found, so Crit would have to come, it was too late.

What they could do about waterspouts and whirlpools in the harbour was unclear.

When Straton and Crit had ridden away, Niko eased his black out from hiding. The

spirit-track he’d followed had led them here; Tamzen and the others were inside.

The spoor met up with the pale blue traces of the house’s owner near the Sow’s

Ear and did not separate thereafter. Blue was no human’s colour, unless that

human was an enchanter, a witch, accursed or charmed. Both Niko and Janni

knew whose house this was, but what Crit and Straton were doing here,

neither wanted to guess or say.

‘We can’t rush the place. Stealth. You know what she is.’

‘I know.’

‘Why didn’t you let me hail them? Four would be better than two, for this

problem’s solving.’

‘Whatever they’re doing here, I don’t want to know about. And we’ve broken cover

as it is tonight.’ Niko crooked a leg over his horse’s neck, cavalry style.

Janni rolled a smoke and offered him one; he took it and lit it with a flint

from his belt pouch just as two men with a wagon came driving up from Downwind,

wheels and hooves thundering across the White Foal’s bridge.

‘Too much traffic,’ Janni muttered, as they pulled their horses back into

shadows and watched the men stop their team before the odd home’s door; the

wagon was screened and curtained; if someone was within, it was impossible to

tell.

The men went in and when they came out they had three smallish people with them

swathed in robes and hooded. These were put into the carriage and it then drove

away, turning on to the cart-track leading south from the bridge – there was

nothing down there but swamp, and wasteland, and at the end of it. Fisherman’s

Row and the sea … nothing, that is, but the witch Roxane’s fortified estate.

‘Do you think – Stealth, was that them?’

‘Quiet, curse you; I’m trying to tell.’ It might have been; his heart was far

from quiet, and the passengers he sensed were drugged and

nearly somnambulant.

But from the house, he could no longer sense the girlish trails which had been

there, among the blue/archmagical/anguished ones of its owner and those of men.

Boys’ auras still remained there, he thought, but quiet, weaker, perhaps dying,

maybe dead. It could be the fellow Crit had left there, and not the young scions

of east-side homes.

The moon, above Niko’s head, was near at zenith. Seeing him look up, Janni

anticipated what he was going to say: ‘Well Stealth, we’ve got to go down there

anyway; let’s follow the wagon. Mayhap we’ll catch it. Perchance we’ll find out

whom they’ve got there, if we do. And we’ve little time to lose – girls or no,

we’ve a witch to

attend to.’

‘Aye.’ Niko reined his horse around and set it at a lope after the wagon, not

fast enough to catch it too soon, but fast enough to keep it in earshot. When

Janni’s horse came up beside his, the other mercenary called: ‘Convenience of

this magnitude makes me nervous; you’d think the witch sent that wagon, even

snared those children, to be sure we’d have to come.’

Janni was right; Niko said nothing; they were committed; there was nothing to do

but follow; whatever was going to happen was well upon them, now.

A dozen riders materialized out of the wasteland near the swamp and surrounded

the two Stepsons; none had faces; all had glowing pure-white eyes. They fought

as best they could with mortal weapons, but ropes of spitting power came round

them and blue sparks bit them and their flesh sizzled through their linen

chitons and, unhorsed, they were dragged along behind the riders until they no

longer knew where they were or what was happening to them or even felt the pain.

The last thing Niko remembered, before he awoke bound to a tree in some

featureless grove, was the wagon ahead stopping, and his horse, on its own

trying to win the day. The big black had climbed the mount of the rider who

dragged Niko on a tether, and he’d seen the valiant beast’s thick jowls pierced

through by arrows glowing blue with magic, seen his horse falter, jaws gaping,

then fall as he was dragged away.

Now he struggled, helpless in his bonds, trying to clear his vision and will his

pain away.

Before him he saw figures, a bonfire limning silhouettes. Among them, as

consciousness came full upon him and he began to wish he’d never waked, was

Tamzen, struggling in grisly embraces and wailing out his name, and the other

girls, and Janni, spreadeagled, staked out on the ground, his mouth open,

screaming at the sky. ‘Ah,’ he heard, ‘Nikodemos. So kind of you to join us.’

Then a woman’s face swam before him, beautiful, though that just made it worse.

It was the Nisibisi witch and she was smiling, itself an awful sign. A score of

minions ringed her, creatures roused from graves, and two with ophidian eyes and

lipless mouths whose skins had a greenish cast.

She began to tell him softly the things she wished to know. For a time he only

shook his head and closed his ears and tried to flee his flesh. If he could

retire his mind to his rest-place, he could ignore it all; the pain, the screams

which split the night; he would know none of what occurred here, and die without

the shame of capitulation: she’d kill him anyway, when she was done. So he

counted determinedly backward, eyes squeezed shut, envisioning the runes which

would save him. But Tamzen’s screams, her sobs to him for help, and Janni’s

animal anguish kept interfering, and he could not reach the quiet place and

stay: he kept being dragged back by the sounds.

Still, when she asked him questions he only stared back at her in silence:

Tempus’s plans and state of mind were things he knew little of; he couldn’t have

stopped this if he’d wanted to; he didn’t know enough. But when at length,

knowing it, he closed his eyes again, she came up close and pried them open,

impaling his lids with wooden splinters so that he would see what made Janni

cry.

They had staked the Stepson over a wild creature’s burrow – a badger, he later

saw, when it had gnawed and clawed its way to freedom – and were smoking the

rodent out by setting fire to its tunnel. When Janni’s stomach began to show the

outline of the animal within, Niko, capitulating, told all he knew and made up

more besides.

By then the girls had long since been silenced.

All he heard was the witch’s voice; all he remembered was the horror of her eyes

and the message she bade him give to Tempus, and when he had repeated it, she

pulled the splinters from his lids … The darkness she allowed him became

complete, and he found a danker rest-place than meditation’s quiet cave.

In Roxane’s ‘manor house’ commotion raged; slaves went running and men cried

orders, and in the court the caravan was being readied to make away.

She herself sat petulant and wroth, among the brocades of her study and the

implements other craft: water and fire and earth and air, and minerals and

plants, and a globe sculpted from high peaks clay with precious stones inset.

A wave of hand would serve to load these in her wagon. The house spells’ undoing

would take much less than that – a finger’s wave, a word unsaid, and all would

be no more than it appeared: rickety and threadbare. But the evening’s errors

and all the work she’d done to amend them had drained her strength.

She sat, and Niko, in a corner, propped up but not awake, breathed raspingly:

another error – those damn snakes took everything too literally, as well as

being incapable of following simple orders to their completion.

The snakes she’d sent out, charmed to look like Stepsons, should have found the

children in the streets; as Niko and Janni, their disguises were complete. But a

vampire bitch, a cursed and accursed third-rater possessed of meagre spells, had

chanced upon the quarry and taken it home. Then she’d had to change all plans

and make the wagon and send the snakes to retrieve the bait – the girls alone,

the boys were expendable – and snakes were not up to fooling women grown and

knowledgeable of spells. Ischade had given up her female prizes, rather than

confront Nisibisi magic, pretending for her own sake that she believed the

‘Stepsons’ who came to claim Tamzen and her friends.

Had Roxane not been leaving town this evening, she’d have had to wipe the

vampire’s soul – or at least her memory – away.

So she took the snakes out once more from their baskets and held their heads up

to her face. Tongues darted out and reptilian eyes pled mercy, but Roxane had

forgotten mercy long ago. And strength was what she needed, which in part these

had helped to drain away. Holding them high she picked herself up and, speaking

words of power, took them both and cast them in the blazing hearth. The flames

roared up and snakes writhed in agony and roasted. When they were done she

fetched them out with silver tongs and ate their tails and heads.

Thus fortified, she turned to Niko, still hiding mind and soul in his precious

mental refuge, a version of it she’d altered when her magic saw it. This place

of peace and perfect relaxation, a cave behind the meadow of his mind, had a

ghost in it, a friend who loved him. In its guise she’d spoken long to him and

gained his spirit’s trust. He was hers, now, as her lover-lord had promised; all

things he learned she’d know as soon as he. None of it he’d remember, just go

about his business of war and death. Through him she’d herd Tempus whither she

willed and through him she’d know the Riddler’s every plan.

For Nikodemos, the Nisibisi bondservant, had never shed his brand or slipped his

chains: though her lover had freed his body, deep within his soul a string was

tied. Any time, her lord could pull it; and she, too, now, had it twined around

her pinky.

He remembered none of what occurred after his interrogation in the grove; he

recalled just what she pleased and nothing more. Oh, he’d think he’d dreamed

delirious nightmares, as he sweated now to feel her touch.

She woke him with a tap upon his eyes and told him what he was: her pawn, her

tool, even that he would not recall their little talk or coming here. And she

warned him of undeads, and shrivelled his soul when she showed him, in her

mirror-eyes, what Tamzen and her friends could be, should he even remember what

passed between them here.

Then she put her pleasure by and touched the bruised and battered face: one more

thing she took from him, to show his spirit who was slave and who was master.

She had him service her and took strength from his swollen mouth and then, with

a laugh, made him forget it all.

Then she sent her servant forth, unwitting, the extra satisfaction – gleaned

from knowing that his spirit knew, and deep within him cried and struggled

giving the whole endeavour spice.

Jagat’s men would see him to the road out near the Stepsons’ barracks; they took

his sagging weight in brawny arms.

And Roxane, for a time, was free to quit this scrofulous town and wend her way

northward: she might be back, but for the nonce the journey to her lord’s

embrace was all she craved. They’d leave a trail well marked in place and plane

for Tempus; she’d lie in high-peak splendour, with her lover-lord well pleased

by what she’d brought him: some Stepsons, and a Froth Daughter, and a man the

gods immortalized.

It took until nearly dawn to calm the fish-faces who’d lost their five best

ships; ‘lucky’ for everyone that the Burek faction’s nobility had been enjoying

Kadakithis’s hospitality, ensconced in the summer palace on the lighthouse spit

and not aboard when the ships snapped anchor and headed like creatures with

wills of their own towards the maelstrom that had opened at the harbour’s mouth.

Crit, through all, was taciturn; he was not supposed to surface; Tempus, when

found, would not be pleased. But Kadakithis needed counsel badly; the young

prince would give away his imperial curls . for ‘harmonious relations with our

fellows from across the sea’.

Nobody could prove that this was other than a natural disaster; an ‘act of gods’

was the unfortunate turn of phrase.

When at last Crit and Strat had done with the dicey process of standing around

looking inconsequential while in fact, by handsign and courier, they mitigated

Kadakithis’s bent to compromise (for which there was no need except in the

Beysib matriarch’s mind), they retired from the dockside.

Crit wanted to get drunk, as drunk as humanly possible: helping the Mageguild

defend its innocence, when like as not some mage or other had called the storm,

was more than distasteful; it was counterproductive. As far as Critias was

concerned, the newly elected First Hazard ought to step forward and take

responsibility for his guild’s malevolent mischief. When frogs fell from the

sky, Straton prognosticated, such would be the case.

They’d done some good there: they’d conscripted Wrigglies and deputized

fishermen and bullied the garrison duty officer into sending some of his men out

with the long boats and Beysib dinghies and slave-powered tenders which searched

shoals and coastline for survivors. But with the confusion of healers and

thrill-seeking civilians and boat owners and Beysibs on the docks, they’d had to

call in all the Stepsons and troops from road patrols and country posts in case

the Beysibs took their loss too much to heart and turned upon the townsfolk. .

On every corner, now, a mounted pair stood watch; beyond, the roads were

desolate, unguarded. Crit worried that if diversion was some culprit’s purpose,

it had worked all too well: an army headed south would be upon them with no

warning. If he’d not known that yesterday there’d been no sign of southward

troop movement, he confided to Straton, he’d be sure some such evil was afoot.

To make things worse, when they found an open bar it was the Alekeep, and its

owner was wringing his hands in a corner with five other upscale fathers. Their

sons and daughters had been out all night; word to Tempus at the Stepsons’

barracks had brought no answer; the skeleton crew at the garrison had more

urgent things to do than attend to demands for search parties when manpower was

suddenly at a premium; the fathers sat awaiting their own men’s return and thus

had kept the Alekeep’s graveyard shift from closing.

They got out of there as soon as politic, weary as their horses and squinting in

the lightening dark.

The only place where peace and quiet could be had now that the town was waking,

Crit said sourly, was the Shambles drop. They rode there and fastened the iron

shutters down against the dawn, thinking to get an hour or so of sleep, and

found Niko’s coded note.

‘Why wouldn’t the old barkeep have told us that he’d set them on his daughter’s

trail?’ Strat sighed, rubbing his eyes with his palms.

‘Niko’s legend says he’s defected to the slums, remember?’ Crit was shrugging

into his chiton, which he’d just tugged off and thrown upon the floor.

‘We’re not going back out.’

‘I am.’

‘To look for Niko’! Where?

‘Niko and Janni. And I don’t know where. But if that pair hasn’t turned up those

youngsters yet, it’s no simple adolescent prank or graduation romp. Let’s hope

it’s just that their meet with Roxane took precedence and it’s inopportune for

them to leave her.’ Crit stood.

Straton didn’t.

‘Coming?’ Crit asked.

‘Somebody should be where authority is expected to be found. You should be here

or at the hostel, not chasing after someone who might be chasing after you.’

So in the end, Straton won that battle and they went up to the hostel, stopping,

since the sun had risen, at Marc’s to pick up Straton’s case of flights along

the way.

The shop’s door was ajar, though the opening hour painted on it hadn’t come yet.

Inside, the smith was hunched over a mug of tea, a crossbow’s trigger mechanism

dismantled before him on a split of suede, scowling at the crossbow’s guts

spread upon his counter as if at a recalcitrant child.

He looked up when they entered, wished them a better morning than he’d had so

far this day, and went to get Straton’s case of nights.

Behind the counter an assortment of high-torque bows was hung.

When Marc returned with the wooden case, Straton pointed: ‘That’s Niko’s isn’t

it – or are my eyes that bad?’

‘I’m holding it for him, until he pays,’ explained the smith with the

unflinching gaze.

‘We’ll pay for it now and he can pick it up from me,’ Crit said.

‘I don’t know if he’d …’ Marc, half into someone else’s business, stepped back

out of it with a nod of head: ‘All right, then, if you want. I’ll tell him

you’ve got it. That’s four soldats, three … I’ve done a lot of work on it for

him. Shall I tell him to seek you at the guild hostel?’

‘Thereabouts.’

Taking it down from the wall, the smith wound and levered, then dry-fired the

crossbow, its mechanism to his ear. A smile came over his face at what he heard.

‘Good enough, then,’ he declared and wrapped it in its case of padded hide.

This way, Straton realized, Niko would come direct to Crit and report when Marc

told him what they’d done.

By the time dawn had cracked the world’s egg, Tempus as well as Jihan was sated,

even tired. For a man who chased sleep like other men chased power or women, it

was wondrous that this was so. For a being only recently become woman, it was a

triumph. They walked back towards the Stepsons’ barracks, following the

creekbed, all pink and gold in sunrise, content and even playful, his chuckle

and her occasional laugh startling sleepy squirrels and flushing birds from

their nests. .

He’d been morose, but she’d cured it, convincing him that life might take a

better turn, if he’d just let it. They’d spoken of her father, called

Stormbringer in lieu of name, and arcane matters of their joint preoccupation:

whether humanity had inherent value, whether gods could die or merely lie,

whether Vashanka was hiding out somewhere, petulant in godhead, only waiting for

generous sacrificers and heartfelt prayers to coax him back among his Rankan

people – or, twelfth plane powers forfend, really ‘dead’.

He’d spoken openly to her of his affliction, reminding her that those who loved

him died by violence and those he loved were bound to spurn him, and what that

could mean in the case of his Stepsons, and herself, if Vashanka’s power did not

return to mitigate his curse. He’d told her of his plea to Enlil, an ancient

deity of universal scope, and that he awaited godsign.

She’d been relieved at that, afraid, she admitted, that the lord of dreams might

tempt him from her side. For when Askelon the dream lord had come to take

Tempus’s sister off to his metaphysical kingdom of delights, he’d offered the

brother the boon of mortality. Now that she’d just found him, Jihan had added

throatily, she could not bear it if he chose to die.

And she’d spent that evening proving to Tempus that it might be well to stay

alive with her, who loved life the more for having only just begun it, and yet

could not succumb to mortal death or be placed in mortal danger by his curse,

his strength, or whatever he might do.

The high moon had laved them and her legs had embraced him and her red-glowing

eyes like her father’s had transfixed him while her cool flesh enflamed him.

Yes, with Jihan beside him, he’d swallow his pride and his pique and give even

Sanctuary’s Kadaki-this the benefit of the doubt – he’d stay though his heart

tugged him northward, although he’d thought, when he took her to their creekbed

bower, to chase her away.

When they’d slipped into his barracks quarters from the back, he was no longer

so certain. He heard from a lieutenant all about the waterspouts and whirlpools,

thinking while the man talked that this was his godsign, however obscure its

meaning, and then he regretted having made an accommodation with the Froth

Daughter: all his angst came back upon him, and he wished he’d hugged his

resolve firmly to his breast and driven Jihan hence.

But when the disturbance at the outer gates penetrated to the slaver’s old

apartments which he had made his own, rousting them out to seek its cause, he

was glad enough she’d remained.

The two of them had to shoulder their way through the gathered crowd of

Stepsons, astir with bitter mutters; no one made way for them; none had come to

their commander’s billet with news of what had been brought up to the gatehouse

in the dawn.

He heard a harsh whisper from a Stepson too angry to be careful, wondering if

Tempus had sent Janni’s team deliberately to destruction because Stealth had

rejected the Riddler’s offered pairbond.

One who knew better answered sagely that this was a Mygdonian message, a

Nisibisi warning of some antiquity, and he had heard it straight from Stealth’s

broken lips.

‘What did that?’ Jihan moaned, bending low over Janni’s remains. Tempus did not

answer her but said generally: ‘And Niko?’ and followed a man who headed off

towards the whitewashed barracks, hearing as he went a voice choked with grief

explaining to Jihan what happens when you tie a man spreadeagled over an

animal’s burrow and smoke the creature out.

The Stepson, guiding him to where Niko lay, said that the man who’d brought them

wished to speak to Tempus. ‘Let him wait for his reward,’ Tempus snapped, and

questioned the mercenary about the Samaritan who’d delivered the two Stepsons

home. But the Sacred Bander had gotten nothing from the stranger who’d rapped

upon the gates and braved the angry sentries who almost killed him when they saw

what burden he’d brought in. The stranger would say only that he must wait for

Tempus.

The Stepson’s commander stood around helplessly with three others, friends

ofNiko’s, until the barber-surgeon had finished with needle and gut, then chased

them all away, shuttering windows, barring doors. Cup in hand, then, he gave the

battered, beaten youth his painkilling draught in silence, only sitting and

letting Niko sip while he assessed the Stepson’s injuries and made black guesses

as to how the boy had come by green and purple blood-filled bruises, rope burns

at wrist and neck, and a face like doom.

Quite soon he heard from Nikodemos, concisely but through a slur that comes when

teeth have been loosed or broken in a dislocated jaw, what had transpired: they

had gone seeking the Alekeep owner’s daughter, deep into Shambles where drug

dens and cheap whores promise dreamless nights, found them at Ischade’s, seen

them hustled into a wagon and driven away towards Roxane’s. Following, for they

were due to see the witch at high moon in her lair in any case, they’d been

accosted, surprised by a death squad •armed with magic and visaged like the

dead, roped and dragged from their horses. The next lucid interval Niko recalled

was one of being propped against dense trees, tied to one while the Nisibisi

witch used children’s plights and spells and finally Janni’s tortured, drawn-out

death to extract from him what little he knew of Tempus’s intentions and Rankan

strategies of defence for the lower land. ‘Was I wrong to try not to tell them?’

Niko asked, eyes swollen half-shut but filled with hurt. ‘I thought they’d kill

us all, whatever. Then I thought I could hold out… Tamzen and the other girls

were past help… but Janni -‘ He shook his head. ‘Then they… thought I was

lying, when I couldn’t answer … questions they should have asked of you – Then

I did lie, to please them, but she … the witch knew…’

‘Never mind. Was One-Thumb a party to this?’

A twitch of lips meant ‘no’ or ‘I don’t know’.

Then Niko found the strength to add: ‘If I hadn’t tried to keep my silence I’ve

been interrogated before by Nisibisi … I hid in my rest-place … until Janni

– They killed him to get to me.’

Tempus saw bright tears threatening to spill and changed the subject: ‘Your

rest-place? So your maat returned to you?’

He whispered, ‘After a fashion … I don’t care about that now. Going to need

all my anger … no time for balance anymore.’

Tempus blew out a breath and set down Niko’s cup and looked between his legs at

the packed clay floor. ‘I’m going north, tomorrow. I’ll leave sortie assignments

and schedules with Critias – he’ll be in command here – and a rendezvous for

those who want to join in the settling up. Did you recognize any Ilsigs in her

company? A servant, a menial, anyone at all?’

‘No, they all look alike… Someone found us, got us to the gates. Some trainees

of ours, maybe – they knew my name. The witch said come ahead and die up

country. Each reprisal of ours, they’ll match fourfold.’

‘Are you telling me not to go?’

Niko struggled to sit up, cursed, fell back with blood oozing from between his

teeth. Tempus made no move to help him. They stared at each other until Niko

said, ‘It will seem that you’ve been driven from Sanctuary, that you’ve failed

here …’

‘Let it seem so; it may well be true.’

‘Wait, then, until I can accompany -‘

‘You know better. I will leave instructions for you.’ He got up and left

quickly, before his temper got the best of him where the boy could see.

The Samaritan who had brought their wounded and their dead was waiting outside

Tempus’s quarters. His name was Vis and though he looked Nisibisi he claimed he

had a message from Jubal. Because of his skin and his accent Tempus almost took

him prisoner, thinking to give him to Straton, for whom all manner of men bared

their souls, but he marshalled his anger and sent the young man away with a

pocket full of soldats and instructions to convey Jubal’s message to Critias.

Crit would be in charge of the Stepsons henceforth; what Jubal and Crit might

arrange was up to them. The reward was for bringing home the casualties, dead

and living, a favour cheap at the price.

Then Tempus went to find Jihan. When he did, he asked her to put him in touch

with Askelon, dream lord, if she could.

‘So that you can punish yourself with mortality? This is not your fault.’

‘A kind, if unsound, opinion. Mortality will break the curse. Can you help me?’

‘I will not, not now, when you are like this,’ she replied, concern knitting her

brows in the harsh morning light. ‘But I will accompany you north. Perhaps

another day, when you are calmer …’

He cursed her for acting like a woman and set about scheduling sorties and

sketching maps, so that each of his men would have worked out his debt to

Kadakithis and be in good standing with the mercenaries’ guild when and if they

joined him in Tyse, at the very foot ofWizardwall.

It took no longer to draft his resignation and Critias’s appointment in his

stead and send them off to Kadakithis than it took to clear his actions with the

Rankan representatives of the mercenaries’ guild: his task here (assessing

Kadakithis for a Rankan faction desirous of a change in emperors) was

accomplished; he could honestly say that neither town nor townspeople nor effete

prince was worth struggling to ennoble. For good measure he was willing to throw

into the stewpot of disgust boiling in him both Vashanka and the child he had

co-fathered with the god, by means of whom certain interests thought to hold him

here: he disliked children, as a class, and even Vashanka had turned his back on

this one.

Still, there were things he had to do. He went and found Crit in the guild

hostel’s common room and told him all that had transpired. If Crit had refused

the appointment outright, Tempus would have had to tarry, but Critias only

smiled cynically, saying that he’d be along with his best fighters as soon as

matters here allowed. He left One-Thumb’s case in Critias’s hands; they both

knew that Straton could determine the degree of the barkeep’s complicity quickly

enough.

Crit asked, as Tempus was leaving the dark and comforting common room for the

last time, whether any children’s bodies had been found – three girls and boys

still were missing; one young corpse had turned up cold in Shambles Cross.

‘No,’ Tempus said, and thought no more about it. ‘Life to you. Critias.’

‘And to you, Riddler. And everlasting glory.’

Outside, Jihan was waiting on one Tros horse, the other’s reins in her hand.

They went first southwest to see if perhaps the witch or her agents might be

found at home, but the manor house and its surrounds were deserted, the yard

criss-crossed with cart-tracks from heavily laden wagons’ wheels.

The caravan’s track was easy to follow.

Riding north without a backward glance on his Tros horse, Jihan swaying in her

saddle on his right, he had one last impulse: he ripped the problematical Storm

God’s amulet from around his throat, dropped it into a quaggy marsh. Where he

was going, Vashanka’s name was meaningless. Other names were hallowed, and other

attributes given to the weather gods.

When he was sure he had successfully cast it aside, and the god’s voice had not

come ringing with awful laughter in his ear (for all gods are tricksters, and

war gods worst of any), he relaxed in his saddle. The omens for this venture

were good: they’d completed their preparations in half the time he’d

anticipated, so that he could start it while the day was young.

Crit sat long at his customary table in the common room after Tempus had gone.

By rights it should have been Straton or some Sacred Band pair who succeeded

Tempus, someone … anyone but him. After a time he pulled out his pouch and

emptied its contents on to the plank table: three tiny metal figures, a fishhook

made from an eagle’s claw and abalone shell, a single die, an old field

decoration won in Azehur while the Slaughter Priest still led the original

Sacred Band.

He scooped them up and threw them as a man might throw in wager: the little gold

Storm God fell beneath the lead figurine of a fighter, propping the man upright;

the fishhook embraced the die, which came to rest with one dot facing up Strat’s

war name was Ace. The third figure, a silver rider mounted, sat square atop the

field star – Abarsis had slipped it over his head so long ago the ribbon had

crumbled away.

Content with the omens his private prognosticators gave, he collected them and

put them away. He’d wanted Tempus to ask him to join him, not hand him fifty

men’s lives to yea or nay. He took such work too much to heart; it lay heavy on

him, worse than the task force’s weight had been, and he’d only just begun. But

that was why Tempus picked him – he was conscientious to a fault.

He sighed and rose and quit the hostel, riding aimlessly through the foetid

streets. Damned town was a pit, a bubo, a sore that wouldn’t heal. He couldn’t

trust his task force to some subordinate, though how he was going to run them

while stomping around vainly trying to fill Tempus’s sandals, he couldn’t say.

His horse, picking his route, took him by the Vulgar Unicorn where Straton would

soon be ‘discussing sensitive matters’ with One-Thumb.

By rights he should go up to the palace, pay a call on Kadakithis, ‘make nice’

(as Straton said) to Vashanka’s priest-of-record Molin, visit the Mageguild …

He shook his head and spat over his horse’s shoulder. He hated politics.

And what Tempus had told him about Niko’s misfortune and Janni’s death still

rankled. He remembered the foreign fighter Niko had made him turn loose – Vis.

Vis, who’d come to Tempus, bearing hurt and slain, with a message from Jubal.

That, and what Straton had gotten from the hawkmask they’d given Ischade, plus

the vampire woman’s own hints, allowed him to triangulate Jubal’s position like

a sailor navigating by the stars. Vis was supposed to come to him, though. He’d

wait. If his hunch was right, he could put Jubal and his hawkmasks to work for

Kadakithis without either knowing – or at least having to admit – that was the

case.

If so, he’d be free to take the band north – what they wanted, expected, and

would now fret to do with Tempus gone. Only Tempus’s mystique had kept them this

long; Crit would have a mutiny, or empty barracks, if he couldn’t meet their

expectation of war to come. They weren’t babysitters, slum police, or palace

praetorians; they collected exploits, not soldats. He began to form a plan,

shape up a scenario, answer questions sure to be asked him later, rehearsing

replies in his mind.

Unguided, his horse led him slumward – a bam-rat, it was taking the quickest,

straightest way home. When he looked up and out, rather than down and in, he was

almost through the Shambles, near White Foal Bridge and the vampire’s house,

quiet now, unprepossessing in the light of day. Did she sleep in the day? He

didn’t think she was that kind of vampire; there had been no bloodless, no

punctures on the boy stiff against the drop’s back door when one of the street

men found it. But what did she do, then, to her victims? He thought of Straton,

the way he’d looked at the vampire, the exchange between the two he’d overheard

and partly understood. He’d have to keep those two quite separate, even if

Ischade was putatively willing to work with, rather than against, them. He

spurred his horse on by.

Across the bridge, he rode southwest, skirting the thick of Downwind. When he

sighted the Stepsons’ barracks, he still didn’t know if he could succeed in

leading Stepsons. He rehearsed it wryly in his mind: ‘Life to all. Most of you

don’t know me but by reputation, but I’m here to ask you to bet your lives on

me, not once, but as a matter of course over the next months …’

Still, someone had to do it. And he’d have no trouble with the Sacred Band

teams, who knew him in the old days, when he’d had a right-side partner, before

that vulnerability was made painfully clear, and he gave up loving the death

seekers – or anything else which could disappoint him.

It mattered not a whit, he decided, if he won or if he lost, if they let him

advise them or deserted post and duty to follow Tempus north, as he would have

done if the sly old soldier hadn’t bound him here with promise and

responsibility.

He’d brought Niko’s bow. The first thing he did – after leaving the stables,

where he saw to his horse and checked on Niko’s pregnant mare – was seek the

wounded fighter.

The young officer peered at him through swollen, blackened eyes, saw the bow and

nodded, unlaced its case and stroked the wood recurve when Critias laid it on

the bed. Haifa dozen men were there when he’d knocked and entered – three teams

who’d come with Niko and his partner down to Ranke on Sacred Band business. They

left, warning softly that Crit mustn’t tire him – they’d just got him back.

‘He’s left me the command,’ Crit said, though he’d thought to talk ofhawkmasks

and death squads and Nisibisi – a witch and one named Vis.

‘Gilgamesh sat by Enkidu seven days, until a maggot fell from his nose.’ It was

the oldest legend the fighters shared, one from Enlil’s time when the Lord Storm

and Enki (Lord Earth) ruled the world, and a fighter and his friend roamed far.

Crit shrugged and ran a spread hand through feathery hair. ‘Enkidu was dead;

you’re not. Tempus has just gone ahead to prepare our way.’

Niko rolled his head, propped against the whitewashed wall, until he could see

Crit clearly: ‘He followed godsign; I know that look.’

‘Or witchsign.’ Crit squinted, though the light was good, three windows wide and

afternoon sun raying the room. ‘Are you all right – beyond the obvious, I mean?’

‘I lost two partners, too close in time. I’ll mend.’

Let’s hope, Crit thought but didn’t say, watching Niko’s expressionless eyes. ‘I

saw to your mare.’

‘My thanks. And for the bow. Janni’s bier is set for morning. Will you help me

with it? Say the words?’

Crit rose; the operator in him still couldn’t bear to officiate in public, yet

if. he didn’t, he’d never hold these men. ‘With pleasure. Life to you. Stepson.’

‘And to you. Commander.’

And that was that. His first test, passed; Niko and Tempus had shared a special

bond. .

That night, he called them out behind the barracks, ordering a feast to be

served on the training field, a wooden amphitheatre of sorts. By then Straton

had come out to join him, and Strat wasn’t bashful with the mess staff or the

hired help.

Maybe it would work out; maybe together they could make half a Tempus, which was

the least this endeavour needed, though Crit would never pair again …

He put it to them when all were well disposed from wine and roasted pig and

lamb, standing and flatly telling them Tempus had left, putting them in his

charge. There fell a silence and in it he could hear his heart pound. He’d been

calmer ringed with Tyse hillmen, or alone, his partner slain, against a Rankan

squadron.

‘Now, we’ve got each other, and for good and fair, I say to you, the quicker we

quit this cesspool for the clean air of high peaks war, the happier I’ll be.’

He could hardly see their faces in the dark with the torches snapping right

before his face. But it didn’t matter; they had to see him, not he them. Crit

heard a raucous growl from fifty throats become assent, and then a cheer, and

laughter, and Strat, beside and off a bit, gave him a soldier’s sign: all’s

well.

He raised a hand, and they fell quiet; it was a power he’d never tried before:

‘But the only way to leave with honour is to work your tours out.’ They

grumbled. He continued: ‘The Riddler’s left busy-work sorties enough – hazardous

duty actions, by guild book rules; I’ll post a list – that we can work off our

debt to Kitty-Cat in a month or so.’

Someone nay’d that. Someone else called: ‘Let him finish, then we’ll have our

say.’

‘It means naught to me, who deserts to follow. But to us, to cadre honour, it’s

a slur. So I’ve thought about it, since I’m hot to leave myself, and here’s what

I propose. All stay, or go. You take your vote. I’ll wait. But Tempus wants no

man on his right at Wizardwall who hasn’t left in good standing with the guild.’

When they’d voted, with Straton overseeing the count, to abide by the rules

they’d lived to enforce, he said honestly that he was glad about the choice

they’d made. ‘Now I’m going to split you into units, and each unit has a choice:

find a person, a mercenary not among us now, a warm body trained enough to hold

a sword and fill your bed, and call him “brother” – long enough to induct him in

your stead. Then we’ll leave the town yet guarded by “Stepsons” and that name’s

enough, with what we’ve done here, to keep the peace. The guild has provisions

for man-steading; we’ll collect from each to fill a pot to hire them; they’ll

billet here, and we’ll ride north a unit at a time and meet up in Tyse, next

high moon, and surprise theRiddler.’

So he put it to them, and so they agreed.

NECROMANT

C. J. Cherryh

The wind came from the north tonight, out of chilly distances, sending an

unaccustomed rain-washed freshness through the streets of Downwind, along the

White Foal where traffic came and went across the only bridge. The Stepsons had

finally done the obvious and set up a guard post here; in these fractious times,

things were bad indeed. Previous holders of power in Sanctuary had been content

to watch and gather information. Now (when subtlety is lacking, one tries the

clenched fist) they meant to control every move between Downwind and the Maze.

Tonight another guard was dead, pinned to the post beside the guardhouse; the

second one – no one knew where. The word spread in all those quarters where folk

were interested to know, so that traffic on the bridge increased despite the

rumbles of oncoming thunder, and those who for a day or two had been caught on

one side of the White Foal or the other heard and went skittering, windblown,

across the White Foal bridge, some shuddering at the erstwhile guard whose eyes

still stared; some mocking the dead, how whimsical he looked, thus open-mouthed

as if about to speak.

For those who knew, the stationing of that corpse was a signature: the Downwind

knew and did not gossip, not even in the security of Mama Becho’s, which sat, a

scruffy, doors-open building, a tolerable walk from the. White Foal bridge. Only

the fact was reported there, that for the third time that week the bridge guard

had come to grief; there was general grim laughter.

The news found its way to the Maze on the other side and drew thoughtful stares

and considerably less mirth. Certain folk left the Vulgar Unicorn with news to

carry; certain ones called for another drink; and if there was gossip of what

this chain of murders might mean, it was done in the quietest places and with

worried looks. Those who had left did so with that skill of Maze-born skulkers,

pretending indirection. They shivered at the sight of beggars in the streets, at

urchins and old men, who were back again at posts deserted while the bridge

guard had (briefly) stood.

The news had not yet reached the strange ships rocking to the wind in

Sanctuary’s harbour, or the glittering luxury ofKadakithis, who amused himself

in his palace this night and who would not, without understanding more things

than he did, have known that the underpinnings of his safety trembled. The

report did, and soon, reach the Stepsons’ Sanctuary-side headquarters, after

which a certain man sat alone with uncertainties. Dolon was his name. Critias

had left him in charge, when the senior Stepsons had gone, quietly, band by

band, to the northern war. ‘You’ve got all you need,’ Critias had said. Now

Dolon, in charge of all there was, sat listening to the first patter of rain

against the wall and wondering whether he dared, tonight, the morale of his

command being what it was, send a band to the bridge to gather up the one

available body before the dawn.

Of even more concern to him was the missing one, what might have become of

Stilcho; whether he had gone into the river, or run away, or whether he might

have been carried off alive, to some worse and slower fate, spilling secrets

while he died. The house by the bridge was a burned-out shell; but burning the

beggars’ headquarters and creating a few Downwinder corpses had not solved the

matter, only scattered it.

He heard steps outside the building, splashing through the rain. Someone knocked

at the outside door; he heard that door groan open, heard the burr of quiet

voices as his own guards passed someone through. The matter reached his door

then, a second, louder rap.

‘Mor-am, sir.’ The door opened, and his guard let in the one he had sent for,

this wreckage of a man. Handsome once … at least they said that he had been.

The youth’s eyes remained untouched by the burn-scars, dark-lashed and dark

browed eyes. Haunted, yes; long habituated to terrors.

The commander indicated a chair and the one-time hawkmask limped to it and sat

down, staring at him from those dark eyes. The

nose was broken, scarred across the bridge; the fine mouth remained intact, but

twitched at times with an uncontrollable tic that might be fear – not enviable

was Mor-am’s state, nowadays, among latter-day Stepsons.

‘There’s a man,’ Dolon said at once, in a low, soft voice, ‘pinned to the White

Foal bridge tonight. How would this go on happening? Shall I guess?’

The tic grew more pronounced, spread to the left, scar-edged eye. The hands

jerked as well, until they found each other and clasped for stability.

‘Stepson?’ Mor-am asked needlessly, a hoarse thin voice: that too the fire had

ruined.

Dolon nodded and waited, demanding far more than that.

‘They would,’ Mor-am said, lifting his shoulder, seeming to give apologies for

those that had ruined him for life and made him what he was. ‘The bridge, you

know – they – h-have to come and go -‘

‘So now we and the hawkmasks have a thing in common.’

‘It’s the same t-thing. Hawkmasks and Stepsons. To t-them.’

Dolon thought on that a moment, without affront, but he assumed a scowl.

‘Certainly,’ he said, ‘it’s the same thing where you’re concerned. Isn’t it?’

‘I d-don’t t-take Jubal’s pay.’

‘You take your life,’ Dolon whispered, elbows on the desk, ‘from us. Every day

you live.’

‘Y-you’re not the same S-Stepsons.’

Now the scowl was real, and the moment’s sneer cleared itself from the man’s

ruined face.

‘I don’t like losing men,’ Dolon said. ‘And it comes to me -hawkmask, that we

might find a use for you.’ He let that lie a moment, enjoying the anxiety that

caused, letting the hawkmask sweat. ‘You know,’ he said further, ‘we’re talking

about your life. Now there’s this woman, hawkmask, there’s this woman – we know.

Maybe you do. You will. Jubal’s hired her, just to keep her out of play. Maybe

for more just now. But a hawkmask like yourself – maybe you could tell her just

what you just told me … Common cause. That’s what it is. You know who’s

looking for you? I’m sure you know. I’m sure you know what those enemies can do.

What we might do; who knows?’

The tic became steady, like a pulse. Sweat glistened on Mor-am’s brow.

‘So, well,’ Dolon said, ‘I want you to go to a certain place and take a message.

There’s those will watch you -just so you get there safe and sound. You can

trust that. And you talk to this woman and you tell her how Stepsons happen to

send her a hawkmask for a messenger, how you’re hunted – oh, tell her anything

you like. Or lie. It’s all the same. Just give the paper to her.’

‘What’s it s-say?’

‘Curiosity, hawkmask? It’s an offer of employ. Trust us, hawk-mask. Her name’s

Ischade. Tell her this: we want this beggar-king. More, we’ve got one man

missing on that bridge tonight. Alive, maybe. And we want him back. You’re

another matter … but I’d advise you come back to us. I’d advise you don’t look

her in the eye if you can avoid it. Friendly advice, hawkmask. And it’s all the

truth.’

Mor-am had gone very pale. So perhaps he had heard the rumours of the woman.

Sweat ran, in that portion of his face unglazed by scars. The tic had stopped,

for whatever reason.

The wind caught Haught’s cloak as he ran, rain spattered his face and he let it

go, splashing through the puddles as he approached the under-stair door within

the Maze.

He rapped a pattern, heard the stirring within and the bar thrust up. The door

swung inward, on light and warmth and a woman, on Moria, who whisked him inside

and snatched his dripping wrap. He put chilled arms about her,’hugged her tight,

still shivering, still out of breath.

‘They got a Stepson,’ he said. ‘By the bridge. Like before. Mradhon’s coming

another way.’

‘Who?’ Moria gripped his arms in violence. ‘Who did they get?’

‘Not him. Not your brother. I know that.’ His teeth wanted to chatter, not from

the chill. He remembered the scurrying in the alley, the footsteps behind him

for a way. He had lost them. He believed he had. He left Moria’s grasp and went

to the fireside, to stand by the tiny hearthside, the twisted, mislaid bricks.

He looked back at Moria standing by the door, feeling aches in all his scars.

‘They almost got us.’

‘They?’

‘Beggars.’

She wrapped her arms about herself, rolled a glance towards the door as someone

came racing up at speed, splashing through the rain. A knock followed, the right

one, and she whisked the door open a second time, for Mradhon Vis, who came in

drenched and spattered with mud on the left side.

Moria stared half a heartbeat and slammed shut the door, dropping the bar down.

Mradhon stamped a muddy puddle on the aged boards and stripped his cloak off,

showing a drowned, dark-bearded face, eyes still wild with the chase.

‘Slid,’ he said, taking his breath. ‘There’s a patrol out. There’s watchers You

get it?’

Haught reached inside his doublet, pulled out a small leather purse. He tossed

it at Mradhon Vis with a touch of confidence recovered. At least this they had

done right.

Then Moria’s eyes lightened. The hope came back to them as Mradhon shook the

bright spill of coins into her palm, three, four, five of them, good silver; a

handful of coppers.

But the darkness came back again when she looked up at them, one and the other.

‘Where did you get it, for what?’

‘Lifted it,’ Haught said.

‘Who from?’ Moria’s eyes blazed. ‘You by-Shalpa double fools, you lifted it from

where?’

Haught shrugged. ‘A greater fool.’

She hefted coin and purse, down-browed. ‘At this hour, a merchant abroad in the

Maze? No, not likely, not at all. What did I teach you? Where did you get this

haul? From what thief?’ They neither one answered, and she cast the prize on to

the table. Pour silver coins among the copper.

‘Light-fingers,’ Mradhon said. ‘Share and share alike.’

‘Oh, and share the trouble too?’ She held up the missing coin and dropped it

down her bodice, dark eyes flashing. ‘Share it when someone marks you out? I

don’t doubt I will.’ She walked away, took a cup of wine from the table, and

sipped at it. She drank too much lately, did Moria. Far too much.

‘Someone has to do it,’ Haught said.

‘Fool,’ Moria said again. ‘I’m telling you, there’s those about don’t take

kindly to amateurs cutting in on their territory. Still less to being robbed

themselves. Did you kill him?’

‘No,’ Mradhon said. ‘We did it just the way you said.’

‘What’s this about beggars? You get spotted?’

‘There was one near,’ Haught said. ‘Then – there were three of them. All at

once.’

‘Fine,’ said Moria in steely patience. “That’s fine. You’re not half good. My

brother and I -‘

But that was not a thing Moria spoke of often. She took another drink, sat down

at the table in the only chair.

‘We got the money,’ Haught protested, trying to cheer her.

‘And we’re counting,’ said Mradhon. ‘You go ahead and keep that silver, bitch.

I’m not going after it. But that’s all you get, ’til you’re worth something

again.’

‘Don’t you tell me who’s worth something. You’ll get our throats cut, rolling

the wrong man.’

‘Then you by-the-gods do something. You want to lose this place? You want us on

the street? Is that what you want?’

‘Who’s dead over by the bridge?’

‘Don’t know.’

‘But beggars sent you running. Didn’t they?’

Mradhon shrugged.

‘What more do we heed?’ she asked. ‘Stepsons. Now Becho’s vermin. Thieves.

Beggars, for Shipri’s sake, beggars sniffing round here.’

‘Jubal,’ Mradhon said. ‘Jubal’s what we need. Until you come through with

Jubal’s money -‘

‘He’s going to send for us again.’ Her lip set hard. ‘Sooner or later. We just

go on checking the drops. It’s slow, that’s all: it’s a new kind of business,

this setting up again. But he won’t touch us if you get the heat on us; if you

go off making your own deals. You stay out of trouble. Hear me? You’re not cut

out for thieves. It’s not in you. You want to go through life left-handed?’

‘Stay sober enough to do it yourself, why don’t you?’ Mradhon said.

The cup came down on the tabletop. Moria stood up; the wine spilled over the

scarred surface, dripping off the edge.

But Haught thrust himself into Mradhon’s way in his own temper. Something seized

up in him when he did; his gut knotted. Ex-slave that he was, his nerves did not

forget. Old reflexes. ‘Don’t talk to her that way.’

Mradhon stared at him, northron like himself, broad-shouldered, sullen. Friend,

sometimes. A moment ago, if not now. More, he suspected Mradhon Vis of pity, the

way Mradhon stared at him, and that was harder than the blow.

Mradhon Vis turned his shoulder and walked away across the room, leaving him

nothing.

He put his hand on Moria’s then, but she snatched it away, out of humour. So he

stood there.

‘Don’t be scattering that mud about,’ Moria said to Mradhon’s back. ‘You do it,

you clean it up.’

Mradhon sat down on the single bed, on the blankets, began pulling off his

boots, heedless of puddles forming, of their bed soaking and blanket muddied.

‘Get up from there,’ Haught said, pushing it further.

But Mradhon only fixed him with a stare. Come and do something, it said, and

Haught stood still.

‘You listen to me,’ Mradhon said. ‘It takes money keeping her in wine. And until

she comes across with some cash out of Jubal, what better have we got? Or maybe

-‘ a second boot joined the other on the floor. ‘Maybe we ought to go looking

for Jubal on our own. Or the Stepsons. They’re running short of men.’

‘Nof Moria yelled.

‘They pay. Jubal dealt with them,.for the gods’ sake.’

‘Well, he’s not dealing now. You don’t make deals on your own. No: ‘So when are

you going out again? When are you going to make that contact, eh? Or maybe

Jubal’s dead. Or not interested in you. Maybe he’s broke as we are, hey?’

‘I’ll find him.’

‘You know what I begin to think? Jubal’s done. The beggars seem to think so.

They don’t think it’s enough to take on hawk-masks. Now they take on Stepsons.

Nothing they can’t handle. They’re loose. You understand that? This Jubal – I’ll

believe he’s something if he can take them on. The day he nails a beggar to that

bridge, I’ll believe Jubal’s worth something. Meanwhile – mean while, there’s a

roof over our heads. A bar on the door. And we’ve got money. We’re out of

Becho’s territory. And keeping out takes money.’

‘We’re never out,’ Haught said, remembering the beggars, the ragged shapes

rising out of the shadows like spiders from their webs, small moving humps in

the lightning-flash that might have showed their faces to these beggar

witnesses.

The chill had seeped inward from Haught’s wet clothes. He felt cold, beyond

shivering. He sneezed, wiped his nose on his sleeve, went over to the fire to

sit disconsolate. Quietly he tried a small scrying, to see something. Once he

had had the means, but it had left him, with his luck; with his freedom. ‘I’ll

go out tomorrow,’ Moria said, walking over near the fire. ‘Don’t,’ said Haught.

There was a small premonition on him. It might be the scrying. It might be

nothing, but he felt a deep unease, the same panic that he had felt seeing the

beggars moving through the dark. ‘Don’t let him talk you into it. It’s not safe.

We’ve got enough for a little while. Let him find us, this Jubal.’

‘I’ll find him,’ she said. ‘I’ll get money.’ But she said that often. She went

and picked up the cup again, wiped the spilled wine with a rag. Sniffed loudly.

Haught turned his back to her, staring at the fire, the leaping shapes. The heat

burned, almost to the point of pain, but it took that, to reach the cold inside

his bones, in his marrow; easier to watch the future than to dwell on the past,

to remember Wizardwall, or Carronne, or slavery.

This Jubal the slaver who was their hope had sold him once. But he chose to

forget that too. He had nerved himself to walk the streets, at least by dark, to

look free men in the eye, to do a hundred things any free man took for granted.

Mradhon Vis gave him that; Moria did. If they looked to Jubal, so must he. But

in the fire he saw things, twisted shapes in the coals. A face started back at

him, and its eyes –

Mradhon came over and dumped the boots by him, spread his clothes on the stones,

himself wrapped in a blanket. ‘What do you learn?’ Mradhon asked. He shrugged.

‘I’m blind to the future. You know that.’ A hand came down on his shoulder,

pressed it, in the way of an apology.

‘You shouldn’t talk to her that way,’ Haught said again.

The hand pressed his shoulder a second time. He shivered, despite the heat.

‘Scared?’ Mradhon said. Haught took it for challenge, and the cold stayed in his

heart. Scared he was. He had not had a friend, but Mradhon Vis. Distrust gnawed

at him, not bitter, but only the habit of weighing his value – to anyone. He had

learned that he was for using and when he stopped being useful he could not see

what there was in him that anyone would want. Moria needed him; no woman ever

had, not really. This man did, sometimes; for a while; but a shout from him – a

harsh word – made him flinch, and reminded him what he was even when he had a

paper that said otherwise. Challenged, he might fight from fear. Nothing else.

And never Mradhon Vis.

‘I talk to her like that,’ Mradhon said, not whispering, ‘when it does her good.

Brooding over that brother others -‘

‘Shut up,’ Moria said from behind them.

‘Mor-am’s dead,’ Mradhon said. ‘Or good as dead. Forget your brother, hear? It’s

your good I’m thinking of.’

‘My good.’ Came a soft, hateful laugh. ‘So I can steal again, that’s the thing.

Because Jubal knows me, not you.’ A chair scraped. Haught looked round as two

slim-booted feet came beside them, as Moria squatted down and put a hand on

Mradhon’s arm. ‘You hate me. Hate me, don’t you? Hate women. Who did that, Vis?

You born that way?’

‘Don’t,’ Haught said, to both of them. He gripped Mradhon’s arm, which had gone

to iron. ‘Moria, let him be.’

‘No,’ Mradhon said. And for some reason Moria drew back her hand and had a

sobered look. .

‘Go to bed,’ said Haught. ‘Now.’ He-sensed the violence beside him, sensed it

worse than other times. He could calm this violence, draw it to himself, if

there was nothing else to do. He was not afraid of that, viewed it with

fatalistic patience. But Moria was so small, and Mradhon’s hate so much.

She lingered, looking at them both. ‘You come,’ she said, in a quiet, fearful

voice, ‘too.’

Mradhon said nothing, but stared into the fire. Go, Haught shaped with his lips,

nodded towards the bed, and so Moria went, paused by the table, and finished off

the wine all at a draught. –

‘Sot,’ Mradhon said under his breath.

‘She just gets started at it sometimes,’ Haught said. ‘Alone – the storm…’

The rain spatted against the door. The wind knocked something over that went

skittering along the alley outside. The door rattled. Twice. And ceased.

Mradhon Vis looked that way, long and keenly. Sweat ran on his brow.

‘It’s just the wind,’ Haught said.

Thunder cracked, distantly, outside, and the shingles of the small riverhouse

fluttered like living things. The gate creaked, not the wind, and disturbed a

warding-spell that quivered like a strand of spider web, while the spider within

that lair stirred in a silken bed, opened eyes, stretched languorous limbs.

The visitor took time getting to the door: she read his hesitancy, his fear, in

the sound of uneven steps her hearing registered. No natural hearing could have

pierced the rain sound. She slipped on a robe, an inkiness in the dark. She

wished for light, and there was, in the fireplace, atop the logs that were

nothing but focus and never were consumed; atop candles that smelled musty and

strange and perfumed with something sweet and dreadful.

Her pulse quickened as the visitor tried the latch. She relaxed the ward that

sealed the door, and it swung inward, a gust that guttered the candles, amid

that gust a cloaked, hunched man who smelled of fear. She tightened the ward

again and the door closed, against the wind, with a thump that made the visitor

turn, startled, in his

tracks.

He did not try it. He looked back again, cast the hood back from a face fire had

touched. His eyes were dilated, wild.

‘Why do you come?’ she asked, intrigued, despite a life that had long since

lacked variety. In the casual matter of the door she had dropped pretences that

she wore like robes; he knew, must know, that he was in deadly jeopardy. ‘Who

sent you?’ He seemed the sort not to plan, but to do what others planned.

‘I’m one of the h-hawkm-masks. M-mor-am.’ The face jerked, twisting the mouth;

the whole head nodded with the effort of speech. ‘M-message.’ He fumbled out a

paper and offered it to her in a shaking hand.

‘So.’ He was not so unhandsome, viewed from the right side. She walked around

him, to that view, but he followed her with his eyes, and that was error, to

meet her stare for stare. She smiled at him, being in that mood. Mor-am. The

name nudged memory, and wakened interest. Mor-am. The underground pricked up its

ears in interest at that name – could this man be running Jubal’s errands again?

Likely as summer frost. She tilted her head and considered him, this wreckage.’

Whose message?’ she asked.

‘T-take it.’ The paper fluttered in his hand.

She took it, felt of it. ‘What does it say?’ she asked, never taking her eyes

from his.

‘The Stepsons – t-there’s another d-dead. They s-sent me.’

‘Did they?’

‘C-common problem. M-Moruth. The beggars. They’re k-killing us both.’

‘Stepsons,’ she said. ‘Do you know my name, Mor-am? It’s Ischade.’ She kept

walking, saw the panic grow. ‘Have you heard that name before?’

A violent shake of the head, a clamping of the jaw.

‘But you are more notorious than I-in certain quarters. Jubal misses you. And

you carry Stepson messages – what do they say to tell me?’

‘Anyt-thing you a-asked m-me.’

‘Mor-am.’ She stopped before him, held him with her eyes. Her hand that had

rested on his shoulder touched the side of his jaw, Stilled the tic, the jerking

of muscles, his rapid breathing. Slowly the contorted body straightened to stand

tall; the drawn muscles of his face relaxed. She began to move again, and he

followed her, turning as she wove spells of compulsion, until she stood before

the great bronze mirror in its shroud of carelessly thrown silks. At times in

this mirror she cast spells. Now she cast another, and showed him himself,

smiled at him the while. ‘So you will tell me,’ she said, ‘anything.’

‘What did you do?’ he asked. Even the voice was changed. Tears leapt to eyes, to

voice. ‘What did you do?’

‘I took the pain. A small spell. Not difficult for me.’ She moved again, so that

he must turn to follow her, with dreamlike slowness. ‘Tell me – what you know.

Tell me who you are. Everything. Jubal will want to know.’

‘They caught me, the Stepsons caught me, they made me -‘

She felt the lie and sent the pain back, watched the body twist back to its

former shape.

‘I – t-turned – traitor,’ the traitor said, wept, sobbed. ‘I s-s-sold them, sold

other hawkmasks – to the Stepsons. My sister and I -we had to live, after Jubal

lost it all. I mean, how were we going to live? – We didn’t know. We had to. I

had to. My sister – didn’t know.’ She had let go the pain and the words kept

coming, with the tears. His eyes strayed from her to the mirror. ‘0 gods -‘

‘Go on,’ she said, ever so softly, for this was truth, she knew. ‘What do the

Stepsons want? What do you want? What are you prepared to pay?’

‘Ge( Moruth. That’s what they want. The beggar-lord. And this man – this man of

theirs, they think the beggars have got, get him back – safe.’

‘These are not trifles.’

‘They’ll pay – I’m sure – they’ll pay.’

She unfolded the note, perused it carefully, holding it before the light. It

said much of that. It offered gold. It promised – immunities – at which she

smiled, not humorously. ‘Why, it mentions you,’ she said. ‘It says I might lend

you back to Jubal. Do you think he would

be amused?’

‘No,’ he said. There was fear, multiplying fear: she could smell it. It prickled

at her nerves.

‘But when you carry messages for rogues,’ she said, ‘you should expect such

small jokes.’ She folded the note carefully, folded it several times until it

was quite small, until she opened her hand, being whimsical, and the paper note

was gone.

He watched this, this magician’s trick, this cheap comedy of bazaars. It amused

her to confound him, to suddenly brighten all the fires ’til the candles gleamed

like suns, ’til he flinched and looked as if he would go fleeing for the door.

It would not have yielded. And he did not. He stood still, with his little shred

of dignity, his body clenched, the tic working at his face as she let the spell

fade.

So this was a man. At least the remnant of one. The remnant of what had almost

been one. He was still young. She began to pace round him, back of him, to the

scarred left side. He turned the other way to look at her. The tic grew more and

more pronounced.

‘And what if I could not do what they wish? I have turned their betters down

before. You come carrying their messages. Is there nothing – more personal you

would want?’

‘The p-pain.’

‘Oh. That. Yes, I can ease it for a time. If you come back to me. If you keep

your bargains.’ She stepped closer still, took the marred face between her

hands. ‘Jubal, on the other hand, would like you the way the beggars left you.

He would flay you inch by inch. Your sister -‘ She brushed her lips across his

own, gazed close into his eyes. ‘She has been under a certain shadow for your

sake. For what you did.’

‘Where is she? Ils blast you, whereT

‘A place I know. Look at me, go on looking, that’s right. That’s very good. No

pain, none at all. Do you understand – Mor-am, what you have to do?’

‘The Stepsons -‘

‘I know. There’s someone watching the house.’ She kissed him long and

lingeringly, her arms twined behind his neck, smiled into his eyes. ‘My friend,

a hawkmask’s a candle in the wind these days; a hawkmask other hawkmasks hunt

– hasn’t a chance in the world. The contagion’s even gotten to your sister.

Her life, you understand. It’s very fragile. The Stepsons might take her.

Hawkmasks use her only to talk to Stepsons. Right now they’re not talking at

all. Not to these. Not to stupid men who’ve thrown away every alliance better

men had made. Moruth, too – Moruth the beggar knows your name. And hers. He

remembers the fire, and you, and her, and it’s a guess where he casts the blame

– as if he needed an excuse at any time. What will you pay for my help? What

coin do you have, Mor-am?’

‘What do you want?’

‘Whatever. Whenever. That does change. As you can. Never forget that, hear? They

name me vampire. Not quite the case – but very close. And they will tell you so.

Does that put you off, Mor-am? Or is there worse?’

He grew brave then and kissed her on the lips.

‘0 be very careful,’ she said. ‘ Very careful. There will be times – when I tell

you go, you do not question me. Not for your life, Mor-am, not for your soul,

such as it is.’ Another kiss, lighter than all the rest. ‘We shall go do the

Stepsons a favour, you and I. We shall go walking – oh, here and there tonight.

I need amusement.’

‘They’ll kill me on the street.’

She smiled, letting him go. ‘Not with me, my friend. Not while you’re with me.’

She turned away, gathering up her cloak, looked back again. ‘It’s widely said

I’m mad. A beast, they call me. Lacking self-control. This is not so. Do you

believe me?’

And she laughed when he said nothing. ‘That man of theirs -go outside. Tell

Dolon’s spy to keep to his own affairs tonight. Tell him – tell him maybe.’ She

dimmed the lights, unwarded the door, a howl of wind and rain. Mor-am’s face

contorted in fright. He ran out to do as he was told, limping still, but not so

much as before. She took back the spell: he would be limping in truth when he

reached the watcher, would be the old Mor-am, in pain, to convince the Stepsons.

And that also amused her.

She shut the door, walked through the small strange house, which at one time

seemed to have one room and disclosed others behind clutter – oddments, books,

hangings, cloaks, discarded garments, bits of silk or brocade which had taken

her fancy and lost it again, for she never wore ornament, only kept it for the

pleasure of having it; and the cloaks, the men’s cloaks – that was another sort

of amusement. Her bare feet trod costly silk strewn on time-smoothed boards, and

thick carpet of minuscule silk threads, hand knotted, dyed in rarest opalescent

dyes – collected for a fee, provenance forgotten. Had someone plundered the

hoard, she might not have cared or missed the theft – or might have cared

greatly, depending on her mood. Material comfort meant little to her. Only

satiation – when the need was on her. And lately – lately that need had

quickened in a different way. One had affronted her. She had, in the beginning,

dismissed the matter, clinging to her indolence, but it gnawed at her. She had

thought upon this thing, as one will think on an affront long after the moment,

turning it from one side to the other to discover the motive of it, and she had

discovered not malice, not anger, but insouciance, even humour on the part of

the perpetrator, this witch, this northron demigoddess, be she what she was. The

affront lay there a good long while, gnawing at the laissez-faire on which her

peace was founded – for, without that habit of laziness, she hungered more

often; and that hunger led to tragedies.

Such a thing had happened because she was lazy, because there were costs of

power she had never wished to pay. This witch slaughtered children, plucking

them from her hands; and dropped the matter at her door. This witch went her

way, indifferent, having fouled her nest, her eyes set on further ambitions, in

professional disregard. This was worth, after thought, a certain anger; and

anger eroded itself a place and grew. She ought, Ischade thought, to thank the

Nisi witch for this discovery, that there were other appetites, and one great

one which could assuage that moon-driven hunger that had held her, so, so long.

She understood – oh, very much of what passed in the streets, having been on the

bridge, having been everywhere in Sanctuary, black-robed, wrapped in more than

robes when she chose to be. The world tottered. The sea-folk intruded, assuming

power; Wizardwall and Stepsons fought, with ambitions all their own; Jubal

planned

– whatever Jubal planned; young hotheads dealt in swords on either side; death

squads invaded uptown; while across the White Foal the beggar-king Moruth made

his own bid. All the while the prince sat in his palace and intrigued with

thieves, invaders, all, a wiser fool than some; priests connived, gods perished

in this and other planes

– and Ranke, the heart of empire, was in no less disarray, with every lord

conniving and every priest conspiring. She heard the rain upon the roof, heard

the thunder rattling the walls of the world and heard her own catspaw returning

up the path. She shod herself, flung her cloak about her, opened the door on

Mor-am’s rain-washed presence.

‘Take a dry cloak,’ she said, catching up a fine one, dark as hers. ‘Man, you’ll

catch your death.’

He was not amused; but she unwound the pain from him, cast one cloak aside, and

adjusted the finer one about his newly straightened shoulders, tenderly as a

mother her son, looking him closely in the eyes.

‘Gone?’ she asked.

‘They’ll try to trick you.’

‘Of course they will.’ She closed the front door, opened the back, never

glancing at either. ‘Come along,’ she said, flinging up her hood, the wide wings

of her cape flying in the wind that swirled the random, garish draperies of the

house like multicoloured fire. The gust struggled with the candles and the

fireplace and failed to extinguish them, while mad shadows ran the walls, ’til

she winked the lights out, having no more need of them.

Something rattled. Mradhon Vis opened an eye, in dark lit by the dying fire in

its crooked hearth. Beside him Haught and Moria lay inert, lost in sleep, curled

together in the threadbare quilt. But this sound came, and with it a chill, as

if someone had opened a door on winter in the room, while his heart beat in that

blind terror only dreams can give, or those things that have the unreality of

dreams. He had no idea whether that rattle had been the door – the wind, he

thought, the wind blowing something; but why this night-terror, this sickly

sweat, this conviction it boded something?

Then he saw the man standing in the room. Not – standing – but existing there,

as if he were part of the shadows, and light from somewhere (not the fire)

falling on golden curling hair, and on a bewildered expression. He was young,

this man, his shirt open, a charm hung on a cord about his neck, his skin

glistening with wine-heat and summer warmth as it had been one night; while

sweat like ice poured down Mradhon’s sides beneath the thin blanket.

Sjekso. But the man was dead, in an alley not so far from here. In some unmarked

grave he was food for worms.

Mradhon watched the while this apparition wavered like a reflection in wind

blown water, all in dark, and while its mouth moved, saying something that had

no sound – as, suddenly, treacherously swift, it came drifting towards the bed,

closer, closer, and the air grew numb with cold, Mradhon yelled in revulsion,

waved his arm at it, felt it pass through icy air, and his bedmates woke,

stirred in the nest –

‘Mradhon!’ Haught caught his arm, held him.

‘The door,’ Moria said, thrusting up from beside them, ‘0 gods, the door -‘

Mradhon rolled, saw the lifting of the bar with no hands upon it, saw it totter

– it fell and crashed, and he was scrambling for the side of the bed, the

bedpost where his sword hung even while he felt the blast of rain-soaked air,

while Haught and Moria likewise ‘ scrambled for weapons. He whirled about, his

shoulders to the wall, and there was no one there at all, but the lightning

flashes casting a lurid glow on the flooded cobbles outside, and the door

banging with the wind.

Terror loosened his bones, set him shivering; instinct sent his hand groping

after a cloak, his feet moving towards the door, his sword in hand the while he

whipped the cloak about himself, towellike. He leapt out suddenly into the rain

swimming alley, barefoot, trusting the corners of his eyes, and swung at once-to

that side that had anomaly in it, a tall shape, a cloaked figure standing in the

rain.

And then he was easy prey for anything, for that cloaked form, its height, its

manner, waked memories. He heard a presence near, Haught or Moria at his back,

or both, but he could not have moved, not from the beginning. That figure well

belonged with ghosts, with witchery, with nightmares that waked him cold with

sweat. Lightning flashed and showed him a pale face within the hood.

‘For Ils’ sake get in!’ Moria’s voice. A hand tugging at his naked shoulder.

But it was a potential trap, that room, lacking any other door; while

somewhere, somehow in his most secret nightmares he knew, had known, that

Ischade had always known how to find him when she wished.

‘What do you want?’ he asked.

‘Come to the bridge,’ the witch said. ‘Meet .me there.’

He had gazed once into those eyes. He could not forget. He stood there with the

rain pelting him, with his feet numb in icewater, his shoulders numb under the

force of it off the eaves. ‘Why?’ he asked. ‘Witch, why?’

The figure was blank again, lacking illumination. ‘You have employ again,

Mradhon Vis. Bring the others. Haught – he knows me, oh, quite, quite well.

‘Twas I freed him, after all; and he will be grateful, will he not? For Moria

indeed, this must be Moria -1 have a gift: something she has misplaced. Meet me

beneath the bridge.’

‘Gods blast you!’

‘Don’t trade curses with me, Mradhon Vis. You would not proft in the exchange.’

And with that the witch turned her back and walked away, merged with the night.

Mradhon stood there, chilled and numb, the sword sinking in his hand. He felt

distantly the touch against him, a hand taking his arm – ‘For Ils’ sweet sake,’

Moria said, ‘get inside. Come on.’

He yielded, came inside, chilled through, and Moria flung shut the door, barred

it, went to the fire and threw a stick on it, so that the yellow light leapt up

and cast fleeting shadows about the walls. They led him to the fire, set him

down, tucked the blanket about him, and finally he could shiver, when he had

gotten back the strength.

‘Get my clothes,’ he said.

‘We don’t have to go,’ Moria said, crouching there by him. She turned her head

towards Haught, who came bringing the clothes he had asked for.’ We don’t have

to go.’

But Haught knew. Mradhon took the offered clothes, cast off the sodden blanket,

and began to dress, while Haught started pulling on his own.

‘Ils save us,’ Moria said, clutching her wrap to her. Her eyes looked bruised,

her hair streaming wet about her face. ‘What’s the matter with you? Are you both

out of your minds?’

Mradhon fastened his belt and gathered up his boots, having no answer that made

sense. In some part of him panic existed, and hate, but it was a further and

cooler hate, and held a certain peace. He did not ask Haught his own reasons, or

whether Haught even knew what he was doing or why; he did not want to know. He

went in the way he would draw his hand from fire: it hurt too much not to.

And with scalding curses at them both, Moria began getting dressed, calling on

them to wait, swearing impotence on them both in Downwind patois, in terms even

the garrison had lacked.

‘Stay here,’ he said, ‘little fool; you want to save your neck? Stay out of

this.’

He said it because somewhere deep inside he understood a difference between this

woman and the other, which he had never fully seen, that Moria with her thin

sharp knife was on his side and Haught’s because they were fools themselves, and

three fools seemed better odds.

‘Rot you,’ Moria said, and when he took his muddy cloak and headed for the door,

when Haught overtook him in the alley, Mradhon heard her panting after, still

cursing.

He gave her no help, no sign that he heard. The rain had abated, sunk to a

steady drizzle, a dripping off the eaves, a river down the cobbled alley, which

sluiced filth along towards the sewers and so towards the bay where the foreign

ships rode, insanity to heap upon the other insanities that life was here, where

the likes of Ischade prowled.

If he could have loved, he thought, if he could have loved anything, Moria,

Haught, known a friend outside himself, he might have made that a charm against

what drew him now. But that had gone from him. There was only Ischade’s cold

face, cold purposes, cold needs: he could not even regret that Moria and Haught

were with him: he felt safe now only because she had summoned them together, and

not called him alone, not alone into that house. And he was ashamed.

Moria came up on his left hand, Haught on his right, and so they took that

street under the eaves of the Unicorn and passed on by its light, by its

shuttered, furtive safety that did not ask what prowled the streets outside.

‘Where?’ Dolon asked, at his desk, the sodden watcher standing dripping on the

floor before him. ‘Where has he gotten to?’

‘I don’t know,’ the would-be Stepson said: Erato, his partner, was still out. He

stood with his hands behind him, head bowed. ‘He -Just said he had a message to

take, to carry for her. He said her answer was maybe. I take it she wasn’t sure

she could do anything.’

‘You take it. You take it. And where did they go, then? Where’s your left-hand

man? Where’s Stilcho? Where’s our informer?’

‘I -‘ The Stepson stared off somewhere vague, his face contracted as if at

something that just escaped his wits.

‘Why didn’t you do something?’

‘I don’t know,’ the Stepson said in the faintest, most puzzled of voices. ‘I

don’t know.’

Dolon stared at the man and felt the flesh crawling on his nape. ‘We’re being

used,’ he said. ‘Something’s out of joint. Wake up, man. Hear me? Get yourself a

dozen men and get out there on the streets. Now. I want a watch on that bridge

not a guard, a watch. I want that woman found. I want Mor-am watched. Finesse,

hear me? It’s not a random thing we’re dealing with. / want Stilcho back. I

don’t care what it takes’

The Stepson left in all due haste. Dolon leaned head on hands, staring at the

map that showed the Maze, the streets leading to the bridge. It was not the only

thing on his desk. Death squads. A murder uptown. Factions were armed. The

beggars were on the streets. And somehow every contact had dried up, frozen

solid.

He saw things slipping. He called in others, gave them orders, sent them to

apply force where it might loosen tongues.

‘Make examples,’ he said.

The streets gave way to one naked rim along the White Foal shore, an openness

that faced the rare lights of Downwind, across the White Foal’s rain-swollen

flood. The black water had risen far up on the pilings of the bridge and gnawed

away at the rock-faced banks, trying at this winding to break its confinement

and take the buildings down, this ordinarily sluggish stream. Tonight it was

another, noisier river, a shape-changer, full of violence; and Mradhon Vis moved

carefully along its edge, in this soundless darkness of deafening sound, in the

lead because of the three of them, he was most reckless and perhaps the most

afraid.

So they came up in the place he had aimed for, in the underpinnings of the

bridge on the Mazeward side; in this deepest dark. But a star glimmered here

like swampfire, and above it was a pale, hooded face.

He felt one of his two companions set a warning hand on his arm. He kept walking

all the same, watching his footing on this treacherous ground. He could look

away from that face, or look back again, and a strange peace came on him, facing

this creature who was the centre of all his fears. No more running. No more

evasion. There was a certain security in loss. He stopped, took an easy stance,

there above the flood.

‘What’s the job?’ he asked, as if there had never been an interlude. The light

brightened fitfully, in the witch’s outheld hand.

‘Mor-am,’ she said. A shadow moved from among the pilings to stand by her. Light

fell on a ruined, still-familiar face.

‘0 gods,’ Mradhon heard beside him, Moria lunged and he caught her arm. Hers was

hard and tense; she twisted like a cat, but he held on.

‘Moria,’ her twin said, no longer twin, ‘for Ils’ sake listen -‘

She stopped fighting then. Perhaps it was the face, which was vastly, horribly

changed. Perhaps it was Haught, who moved in the way of her knifehand, making

himself the barrier, too careless of his life. Haught was a madman. And he could

win what no one else could. Moria stood still, still heaving for breath, while

Mor-am stood still at Ischade’s side.

‘See what love is worth,’ Ischade said, smiling without love at all. ‘And

loyalty, of course.’ She walked a pace nearer, on the slanted stones. ‘Mor-am’s

loyalty, now – it’s to himself, his own interests; he knows.’

‘Don’t,’ Mor-am said, with more earnestness than ever Mradhon had heard from the

hardnosed, streetwise seller of his friends; for a moment the face seemed

twisted, the body diminished, then straightened again – a trick of the light,

perhaps, but in the same moment Moria’s arm went limp and listless in his hand.

‘You’d live well,’ Ischade said in her quiet voice, an intimate tone which yet

rose above the river-sound. ‘I reward – loyalty.’

‘With whatT Mradhon asked.

She favoured Mradhon with a long, slow stare, ophidian and, at this moment,

amused.

‘Gold. Fine wines. Your life and comfort. Follow me – across the bridge. I need

four brave souls.’

‘What for? To do what for you?’

‘Why, to save a life,’ she said, ‘maybe. The bumed house. I’m sure you know it.

Meet me there.’

The light went, the shadow rippled, and in the half-dark between the pilings and

the flagstone bank, one shadow deserted them. The second started then to follow.

‘TTie patrols -‘ he said to the dark, but she was gone then. Mor-am stopped,

abandoned, his voice swallowed by the river-sound. He turned hastily, facing

them.

‘Moria -1 had a reason.’

‘Where have you been?’ The knife was still in Moria’s hand. Mradhon remembered

and took her by the sleeve.

‘Don’t,’ Mradhon said, not for love of Mor-am, the gods knew; rather, a deep

unease, in which he wished to disturb nothing, do nothing.

‘What’s this about?’ Moria asked. ‘Answer me, Mor-am.’

‘Stepsons – They – they hired her. They sent – Moria, for Ils’ sake, they had

me locked up, they used me to bargain with – with her.’

‘What are you worth?’ Moria asked.

‘She works for Jubal.’

That hung there on the air, dying of unbelief.

‘She does,’ Mor-am said.

‘And you work for her.’

‘I have to.’ Mor-am turned, amorphous in his cloak, began to vanish among the

pilings.

‘Mor-am -‘ Moria started forward, brought up short in Mrad-hon’sgrip.

‘Let him go,’ Mradhon said, and in his mind was a faint far dream of doing

something rash, breaking with sanity and heading for somewhere safe. To the

Stepsons, might be. But that was, lately, no way to a long life.

Haught was on his way – why, he had no idea, whether it was despair or

ensorcelment. ‘Wait,’ he called to Haught, losing control of things, but he had

lost that when he had come out here, blind-sotted as Moria at her worst. He let

her draw him up the stone facing, among the pilings, chasing after Haught at the

first, but then joining him in the open, where anyone might spy them.

There was the empty guard station, the pole standing vacant.

‘They got him down,’ Haught said.

‘Someone did,’ Mradhon muttered, looking about. He felt naked, exposed to view.

The rain spattered away at the board surface of the bridge, a shadowed span

leading through the dark to Downwind, to Ischade. A distant, solitary figure

flitted like illusion at its other end, lost itself into Downwind, among its

shuttered buildings. Here they stood, neither one place nor the other, neither

in the Maze of Sanctuary nor in the Downwind, belonging now to no one.

And there was no hiding now.

Haught started across the bridge. Mradhon followed, with Moria beside him, and

all he could think of now was how long it took to get across, to get out of this

nakedness. Someone was coming their way, a shambling, raggedy figure. He

clutched his cloak about him, gripped his sword as this beggar passed; he dared

not look when the apparition had gone by, but Moria swung on his arm, feigning

drunkenness like some doxy.

”Sjust a beggar,’ she said in full voice, hanging on him, terrifying him with

the noise. Haught spun half-about, turned again, and kept walking like some

honest man with disreputable followers – but no honest man crossed the bridge.

‘Beggar,’ Moria whined, leaning on Mradhon’s arm. He jerked at her and cursed,

knowing this mentality, this bloody-minded humour that he had had beside him in

the field, soldiers who got this affliction. Heroes all. Dead ones. Soon.

‘Straighten up,’ he said, knowing her, knowing her brother, knowing that this

was a game both played. He twisted at her arm. ‘You see your brother? You see

what games won him?’

She grew quiet then. Subdued. She walked beside him at Haught’s back, past the

tall end-pilings that themselves bore nail-holes from the time that hawkmasks,

not Stepsons, were the prey.

To the right, a huddle of blackened timbers, of tumbled brick, was the burned

shell of a house. Haught went that way, entering the shadow of Downwind, and

they came after, out of choices now.

Erato slipped back into shadow, his pulse beating double-time, for a shadow had

passed that disturbed him. He felt a presence at his shoulder, where it

belonged, but he trusted nothing now. He scanned the figure at near range, his

heart still thumping away until he had (pretending calm) resolved his left-hand

man still beside him, and not some further threat, some shape-changer, night

walker. He had no taste for this witch-stalking. ‘They’re across,’ the partner

said.

‘They’re across. We’re not the only ones moving. Get back along the bank. Get

the squad in place. Get a message back to base.’ Erato moved back along the

alley, headed towards the river house.

It smelled of double-cross, the whole business. His partner jogged off, holding

his cloak tight to him, muffling his armour. They kept well away from the

grounds, wary of traps. This was the place to watch. Here. He was sure of that.

He settled in then, watching the storm clouds lose themselves on the seaward

horizon in the dark, down that split that divided Downwind from Sanctuary, poor

from rich, that division no bridge could span. He had been smug once, had Erato,

well-paid, well-armed as he was, convinced of his own skill, of the reputation

that would keep challenges off his neck. And somewhere in Downwind that bluff

was called, and they dared not go in, dared not pass the streets except by day

had effectively lost nighttime access to their own base beyond the Downwind, the

slaver’s old estate, and relied more and more on the city command. And their

enemies knew it.

It would be a long, cold wait. It eroded morale, that view of the bridge, the

river, the Downwind. The realization came to him that he was sitting now in the

same kind of position the bridge guard had been in, alone out here. Sounds came

and went in the streets, rustled in the thin line of brush that rimmed the

river-shore. Wild fears dawned on him, to wonder whether the others were there,

whether those sounds masked murder, creepings through cover, throats cut, or

worse, his comrades snatched away as Stilcho had gone. He wanted to call out, to

ask the others were they safe; but that was craziness. He heard the rustling

again near himself.

Some vermin creeping about; they grew rats large here on riverside. So he told

himself. Something feeding on the garbage that swept down the sewers, the

gutters, some choice tidbit brought down from the dwellings of the rich, to

tempt the rats and snakes. And the fear grew and grew, so that he eased his

sword from its sheath and crouched there with his back pressed to the stones and

his eyes constantly scanning the dark that he had view of.

There was nothing anywhere but the splash of rain, the steady drip off eaves of

buildings that still had eaves. Beside them, the shell, the timbers, the loose

piles of brick.

One moved with a dull chink. Mradhon whirled about, saw a figure close against

the wall, at the corner.

‘Come,’ Ischade said.

‘Where’s my brother?’ Moria asked.

But the witch was gone around the corner.

Mradhon cursed beneath his breath, adding things as he went, as Haught did, as

Moria stayed with them. There was no way of retreat, now, against the flow of

things. The beggar on the bridge – someone was watching. The body was gone.

There were likely Stepsons on the loose. He came round the corner, down the

alley where once he had waited in ambush, where the three of them had, before

the Stepsons had chosen to make a bonfire of the place, to use the clenched

fist.

He knew this place. Knew it because he had lived here. They had. He knew the law

here, how it worked apart from Kadakithis’s law, from Molin Torchholder’s, from

any governance of Ranke. Law this side flowed from a place called Becho’s. It

flourished on the trade of vice, on things that went dear Across the Bridge,

that most men never thought to sell, or never planned to. He remembered the

smell of it, the reek that clung to clothes; the smell of Mama Becho’s brew.

Haught stopped, for the witch had, waiting in their way, a tall shadow-shape;

and a second had joined her.

‘Now you earn your pay,’ Ischade said, when they had come close. The dark

surrounded them, buildings leaned close overhead where listeners could have

heard, perhaps did hear, but Ischade seemed not to care. ‘I have a matter to

discuss. A man who certain folk want back, in whatever case. Mor-am knows. The

second Stepson. Stilcho is his name.’

‘Moruth,’ Mradhon said.

‘Oh, yes, Moruth has him. I do think this is the case. But Moruth will be

reasonable, with me.’

‘Wait,’ Mradhon said, for she had moved to drift away again. This time she did

wait, looked at him, faceless in the dark; and this time the question died

stillborn. Why?

‘Is there something?’ she asked.

‘What are we supposed to do – that you can’t?’

‘Why, to have mercy,’ Ischade said. ‘This man wants rescuing. That’s your

business.’

And she was off again, a shadow along the way.

‘Becho’s,’ Mor-am said, all hoarse, keeping a safe distance from them. ‘Follow

me.’

But they knew the streets, every route that led to that place, that centre of

this shell.

‘No luck,’ the man said, in the commander’s doorway. ‘Everything’s gone

underground. This time of night -‘

There was disturbance beyond; the outer doorway opened, creating a draught that

blew papers out of order. Dolon slammed his hand on to them to stop the fall.

‘Get someone,’ he said. ‘I don’t care -‘

One of his aides appeared behind the man, signalling with a nod of his head.

‘What?’ Dolon said.

‘Erato sends word,’ the aide said, ‘the woman’s gone to the Downwind. Taken the

informer with her.’

Dolon stood up. ‘Who says? Get him in here.’

‘By your leave,’ the other said, trying graceful exit.

‘You stay.’ Dolon walked round the desk and met the man that came in. Erato’s

partner. ‘Where’s Erato now?’

‘Set up to watch the shore. Figuring she’ll come home – sooner or later,

whatever she comes up with.’

Dolon drew a breath, the first easy one in hours. Something worked. Someone was

where he ought to be, taking advantage of the situation. ‘All right,’ he said.

‘You get back there right now -Tassi.’

‘Sir,’ the other said.

‘Get ten more men. I want them down there on that rivershore. I want every

access under watch, from both directions. I want no surprises out of this. You

get down there. You get those streets blocked. When the witch shows up, I want

an account from her. I want names, places, bodies – I don’t care how you get

them. If she cooperates, fine. If not – stop her. Dead. Understood?’

There was hesitance.

‘Sir,’ Erato’s partner said.

‘Understood?’

‘Yes, sir.’

‘They say fire works on her sort. You get what you can.’

‘She’s-‘

Heat rose to his face. Breath grew short.’- gone undependable. If she ever was.

You cure it. Hear? You get what you can, then you settle her. I want Stilcho

quiet, you understand: back here safe, number one; but if he’s become

expendable, expend him. You know the rule. Now move!’

There was flight from the doorway, a clatter in the outer room, one injudicious

unhappy oath. Dolon stood gathering his breath. Critias’s list of reliables was

itself the problem; unstable informants; men on double payrolls. A witch, for

the gods’ sake, an ex-slaver, a judge on the take.

There was, he began to reckon, a need to purify that list. His discretion,

Critias had said. Critias had delayed too long in passing power, that was what

it was. Uncertainty set in. The opportunists wanted convincing again.

Then the rest would fall in line.

It was near Becho’s. Mradhon Vis knew that much, and it set off nerves, this

approach. Tygoth would be in his alley, patrolling up and down, banging at the

wall with his stick to let all Downwind know that Mama’s property was secure.

The surviving crowd of drunks would have collapsed in the streets. Gods knew who

might have inherited that room in the alley now. He did not want to know. He

wanted out of this place, with all his soul he wanted out of it, and he was

where he had never looked to be again, following Mor-am through the labyrinth of

alleys, with Haught at his back – and Moria between them. He glanced back from

time to time, when there was too much silence; but they still followed.

And now Mor-am stopped. Waited, signalled silence, outside a street that had

gotten overbuilt with lean-tos.

Beggar-kingdom, this. Mradhon grabbed a handful ofMor-am’s cloak, pulled,

meaning retreat.

No, Mor-am insisted. He pointed just ahead, where suddenly a figure darker than

the night was treading amid the ragged, lumpish shelters. Ischade paused and

beckoned to them.

Mor-am followed, and Mradhon did, taking it on himself whatever the others did,

wishing now they would keep their feckless help out of this. He gripped his

sword, meaning to kill a few if it came to that, but Ischade kept her pace slow,

down that street of furtive eyes, of watchers within collections of board,

canvas, anything that might fend away rain and wind. The stench rose up about

them, of human waste, of something dead and rotting. He heard steps at his back

and dared not turn his head, praying to Ilsigi gods that he knew who it was. His

eyes were all for Mor-am, for the wand-slender darkness of Ischade, who walked

before them through this aisle of misery.

And none offered to touch, none offered violence. A building made this lane a

cul de sac, a dilapidated, boarded-up building, but light showed from the cracks

about the door.

Sound got out. Mor-am wavered at that whimpering, that human, wretched sound. At

voices. At laughter. He stopped altogether, and Mradhon shoved him, put him into

motion, not because he wanted to go, but because it was not a good moment to

stop, not here, not now, without any path of retreat. There was a moment in

battles, the downhill moment past which there was no way to stop, and they had

reached it now. Things seemed to slow, just as they began to move in earnest,

when the door flew open outward with no one touching it at all, when light flung

out into the dark and there were dark figures leaping to their feet inside that

building, but none darker than Ischade’s, who occupied that doorway.

And silence then, after momentary outcry. Dire silence, as if everyone inside

had stopped, just stopped. Mor-am stood stock still. But Mradhon stepped up the

single step to stand behind Ischade.

‘Give him to me,’ Ischade said very quietly, as if everything was sleeping and

voices ought to be hushed. ‘Mradhon Vis -‘ She had never looked around, and knew

him, somehow, by means that set his teeth on edge. So did calling his name here.

‘This man they have. Get him up. Whatever you can do for him. Mor-am knows the

way.’

He looked past her, to the wretch on the floor, to what this ragged, awful crowd

had left of a man. He had seen corpses, of various kinds. This one looked worse

than most and might still be alive, which daunted him more than death. But it

was a question of downhill. He walked in, among the beggar-horde, among ragged

men and women. Gods! there was a child, feral, with a rat’s sharp, frozen grin.

He bent above this seeming corpse and picked it up. not even thinking of broken

bones, only struggling with limp weight; the head lolled. It only had one eye.

Blood was everywhere.

Haught met him, passing Ischade, got the other arm of this perhaps-living thing,

and they took it to the door. Moria was there. Mor-am stood against the wall.

‘Mor-am,’ Ischade said, never turning her head. ‘Remember.’ And more quietly:

‘Get him away now. I have further dealings with these here.’

The nightmare lasted. The silence held, that chill quiet lying over all the

alley with its sea of tents. Not the look of her eyes that had wrought this

quiet, no, Mradhon reckoned, but some subtler spell. Or fear. Perhaps they knew

her. Perhaps here in Downwind she was better understood than across the river,

for what she was, and what her visitations meant.

‘Come on,’ Mradhon said. He heaved the limp arm further across his shoulder.

‘Gods blast you,’ he said to Moria, ‘get going -‘ for Mor-am began to run,

limping, down the lane between the tents and shelters, off into the dark.

It would hold, he thought, only so long as Ischade was in the way, only so long

as Ischade dealt with Moruth, who was somewhere in that room. What estate would

distinguish a beggar king, he wondered in a mad distraction, panting through the

tents, managing with Haught to drag the bleeding half-corpse past obstacles,

boxes, litter and heaped-up offal of the beggar-king’s court. He wished he had

known the face, had gotten the image clear, but he had focused clearly on none

of them, not one, the way he had not focused on the man he was carrying. He had

nightmares enough to last him; he bore this one with him, past the end of the

street, around the corner. He twisted his neck to look to his side.

‘Moria. Little fool,’ he panted, ‘get up ahead, get in front of us, don’t

straggle.’

‘Where’s my brother?’ she asked, her voice verging on panic. She had her knife;

he saw the dull gleam. ‘Where has he gotten to?’

‘Back to the street,’ Haught guessed, between breaths, and they laboured along,

dragging the dead weight, back the way they had come. No sign of Mor-am.

Nothing.

‘Bridge,’ Mradhon gasped, working with Haught to run with their burden as best

they could. ‘Stepsons want this bastard, they get themselves out there and hold

that Ils-forsaken bridge.’

It was a long way through the streets, a long, long course, the noise of their

footsteps, of their ragged breathing like the movement of an army. Moria ran

ahead of them, checked comers.

Then one moment she failed to bob into sight again. Haught began to pull

forward, doubling his pace. Mradhon resisted.

Then Moria reappeared, dodging round the comer, flat shadow, her hand up as if

the knife was in it, and another shadow came shambling round wide of her,

standing in the way – Mor-am was back.

‘B-b-boat,’ he said. His breath came raw and hoarse. ‘Sh-she says – this p

place. 0 g-g-gods, c-come on.’

‘The river’s up,’ Mradhon hissed, the limp weight sagging against his shoulder,

the feel of chase behind. ‘The river’s up to the bridge bottom, hear? No boat

can handle that current.’

‘Sh-she says. C-come.’

Mor-am lurched off, dragging one foot. Moria stood where she was, plastered to

the wall. Wrong, a small faint voice was saying inside Mradhon Vis, a prickling

of his nerves where Moria’s twin was concerned. And another voice said she. The

river. Ischade.

‘Come on,’ he said, deciding, and Haught shouldered up his side as they headed

after Mor-am.

Moria cursed as they passed and came too, jogging along with them in the dark,

under the dripping eaves. She took the lead again, serving as their eyes in this

winding gut of a street.

Now there were sounds, many of them.

‘Behind us,’ Haught gasped; and where they were Mradhon could not have sworn,

but it sounded like behind. He threw all he had into running, pulled a stitch in

his side as Haught stumbled and recovered, and now Moria was gone again, in the

turning of the streets.

They staggered the last alley and on to the downslope to the river, splashing

through the outpourings of Downwind’s streets, past a low wall and down again.

‘This way,’ Moria said, materializing again out of the brushy dark, in the sound

of the river, which lay like a black gulf downslope. Mradhon went, steadied his

footing for Haught’s sake. There was the reek of blood from their unconscious

burden, and now the taste of it was in Mradhon’s mouth, coppery; his lungs

ached; he was blind except that Moria was at his nght telling him come on, come

on, down to the river, to the flooded dark, the curling waters that could snatch

any misstep and make it fatal. He flung his head up, sweat running in his eyes,

sucked air, staggered on the uneven stony shore and nearly went to his knees on

the rain-slick rock.

There was a boat. He saw Mor-am struggling with it, and Moria running to it, a

black shell amid the brush, not distinguishable as a boat if he had not known

what it was. There was a muddy slide: boats were launched here, from Downwind,

in sane weather, when the river was tamer. But this one hit the water and

rode calm, stayed close as if there were no currents tearing at it, as if it

and the river obeyed two madly different laws.

‘G-get him in,’ Mor-am said, and coming to the edge, Mradhon took the limp

weight all to his side, going into water to the knee to reach the boat,

staggering as he flung the body down. The boat hardly rocked. He gripped the

side of it, stood there, uselessly, to steady it. Haught crouched on the muddy

shore, head down, breathing in great gulps.

‘Sh-she said w-wait,’ Mor-am said.

Mradhon stood, still leaning on the side, his feet going numb and the sweat

pouring down his face into his eyes. Go out in this against orders – no. He saw

Moria collapsed, head and arms between her knees, in the clearing of the sky

that afforded them some starlight; saw Mor-am’s hooded shape standing further

up, holding to the rope. When he glanced across the river, he could see

Sanctuary’s lights, few at this hour, could see the bridge, sane and

reasonable crossing.

And from the man they had carried all this way, there was no sound, no movement

– dead, Mradhon thought. They had just carried a corpse away from Moruth; and

everyone was robbed.

Stones rattled, high among the brush. Heads lifted, all round; and she was

there, coming down, gliding down the rocks like a fall of living dark, making

only occasional sound. ‘So,’ she said, reaching them. She put out a hand and

brushed Mor-am. ‘You’ve redeemed yourself.’

He said nothing, but limped down to the water’s edge, and Haught and Moria were

on their feet.

‘Get in,’ said Ischade. ‘It will take us all.’

Mradhon climbed aboard, stepping over the corpse, which moved, which moaned, and

his nerves prickled at that unexpected life. Greater mercy, he thought, with

this stirring between his feet, to use the sword: he had seen deaths such as

this Stepson faced when the wounds went bad, the gaping socket of the missing

eye thus close to the brain – it would be bad, he thought, while the boat rocked

with the others getting in. He reached over the side, dipped up water with his

hand, passed it over the Stepson’s lips, felt movement in response.

Ischade’s robe brushed him as she took her place. She knelt there all too close

for any comfort; she bent her head, bowed over, her hands on the wounded face.

There was suddenly outcry, a struggling of limbs beneath them … ‘For the gods’

sake!’ Mradhon exclaimed, his gorge rising; he thrust at Ischade, shoved her

back, froze at the lifting of her face, the direction of that basilisk stare at

him.

‘Pain is life,’ she said.

And the boat began to move, slowly, like a dream, the while the wind swirled

about them and the river roared beneath. His companions – they were hazy shapes

in the night about Ischade. The wounded man stirred and moaned, threatening

instability in the boat should his thrashing become severe. Mradhon reached down

and held him, gently. The witch touched him too, and the struggles took harder

and harder restraint. The moans were pitiful.

‘He will live,’ she said. ‘Stilcho. I am calling you. Come back.’

The Stepson cried out, once, sharply, back arching, but the river took the

sound.

It was a boat, running on the flood. Erato saw it, his first thought that some

riverfisher’s skiff had come untied in the White Foal’s violence.

But the boat came skimming, running slowly like a cloud before the wind across

the current, in a straight line no boat could achieve in any river. Erato

stirred in his concealment, hair rising at his nape. He scrambled higher amongst

the brush, disturbed one of his men.

‘Pass the word,’ he said. ‘Something’s coming.’

‘Where?’

‘River.’

That got a stare, a silence in the dark.

‘Get the rest,’ Erato hissed, shoving at the man. ‘They’re going to come ashore.

Hear me? Tell them pass it on. The back of the house: that’s where they’ll

come.’

The man went. Erato slipped along the bank at the same level, towards the

brambles, which served as effective barrier. The house they watched – they did

not venture liberties with it, did not try the low iron gate, the hedges. Try

reason, he thought. He was in command. It was on him to try reason with the

witch; and it had to be the witch out there: there was nothing in all sanity

that ought to be doing what that boat did. He moved quietly, gathered up men

here and there while the boat came on.

The bow grated on to rock and kept grating, pushing itself ashore, and the

Stepson moaned anew, leaning against the gunwales of the boat.

‘Bring him,’ Ischade said, and Mradhon looked up as the witch stepped ashore, on

the landing which rose in steps up to the brambles. He flung an arm about the

Stepson, accepted Haught’s help as he stood up, as now the Stepson fought to get

his own feet under him, more than dead weight. The boat rocked as Mor-am went

past and stepped out, close to Ischade. They went next, stepping over the bow to

solid if water-washed stone footing, and Moria came up by Haught’s side, while

Ischade stood gazing into the dark beside them.

Men were there, armed and armoured. A half a dozen visible. Stepsons.

The foremost came out a few steps. ‘You surprise us,’ that one said. ‘You did

it.’

‘Yes,’ Ischade said. ‘Now go away. Be wise.’

‘Our man -‘

‘Not yours,’ she said.

‘There’s more of them,’ Mradhon muttered to her; there was the light of torches

up on the height of the bank, just the merest wink of red through the brush.

‘Give him over, woman.’ He was holding the Stepson still, and the man was

standing much on his own between himself and Haught, standing, having no

strength, perhaps, to speak for himself. Or no will to do so – as there seemed a

curious lack of initiative on the part of the Stepsons who faced them in the

dark.

‘Go away,’ Ischade said, and walked past, walked up to the iron gate that closed

the bramble hedge at the back of her house. She turned there and looked back at

them, lifted her hand.

Come. Mradhon felt it, a shiver in his nerves. The man they were carrying took a

step on his own, faltering, and they went on carrying him, up the steps, to the

gate Ischade held open for them, into a garden overgrown with weeds and brush.

The back door of the house swung open abruptly, gaping dark; and they went

towards this, up the backdoor steps – heard hasty footfalls behind them, Moria’s

swift pace, Mor-am’s dragging foot. The iron gate creaked shut.

‘Get him in,’ Ischade hissed at their backs; and there was not, at the moment,

any choice.

Light flickered, the beginnings of fire in the fireplace, candles beginning to

light all at once. Mradhon looked about in panic, at too many windows, a house

too open to defend. The Stepson dragged at him. He sought a place and with

Haught’s help bestowed the man on the orange silk-strewn bed, the gruesomeness

of it all niggling at his mind – that and the windows. He looked about, saw

Moria close to the shelf-cluttered wall, by the window – saw the gleam of fire

through the shutter-slats.

‘Come out!’ a thin voice cried, ‘or burn inside.’

‘The hedges,’ Haught said, and Ischade’s face was set and cold. She lifted her

hand, waved it as at inconsequence. The lights all brightened, all about the

room, white as day.

‘The hedges,’ said Mor-am. ‘They’ll burn.’

‘They’re close.’ Moria had sneaked a look, got back to the safe solidity of the

wall. ‘They’re moving up.’

Ischade ignored them all. She brought a bowl, dipped a rag, laid a wet cloth on

the Stepson’s ravaged face, so, so tenderly. Straightened his hair. ‘Stilcho,’

she addressed the man. ‘Lie easy now. They’ll not come inside.’

‘They won’t need to,’ Mradhon said between his teeth. ‘Woman, they don’t care if

he fries along with us. If you’ve got a trick, use it. Now.’

‘This is your warning,’ the voice came from outside the walls. ‘Come out or

burn!’

Ischade straightened.

Beyond the window slats a fire arced, flared. Kept flaring, sun-bright. There

were screams, a rush of wind. Mradhon whirled, saw the blaze of light at every

window and Ischade standing black and still in the midst of them, her eyes –

He averted his, gazed at Haught’s pale face. And the screams went on outside.

Fire roared like a furnace about the house, went from white to red to white

again outside, and the screams died.

There was silence then. The fire-glow vanished. Even the light of the candles,

the fire in the fireplace sank lower. He turned towards Ischade, saw her let go

a breath. Her face – he had never seen it angry; and saw it now.

But she walked to a table, quietly poured wine, a rich, rich red. She turned up

other cups, two, four, the sixth. She filled only the one. ‘Make yourselves at

home,’ she said. ‘Food, if you wish it. Drink. It will be safe for you. I say

that it is.’

None of them moved. Not one. Ischade drained her cup and drew a quiet breath.

‘There is night left,’ she said. ‘An hour or more to dawn. Sit down. Sit down

where you choose.’

And she set the cup aside. She took off her cloak, draped it over a chair, bent

and pulled off one boot and the other, then rose to stand barefoot on the litter

that carpeted this place; she drew off her rings and cast them on the table,

looked up again, for still no one had moved.

‘Please yourselves,’ she said, and her eyes masked in insouciance something very

dark.

Mradhon edged back.

‘I would not,’ she said, ‘try the door. Not now.’

She walked out to the middle of the silk-strewn floor. ‘Stilcho,’ she said; and

a man who had been near dead moved, tried to sit.

‘Don’t,’ Moria said, a strangled, small voice – not love of Stepsons, it was

sure; Mradhon felt the same, a knot of sickness in his throat.

Ischade held out her hands. The Stepson rose, swayed, walked to her. She took

his hands, drew him to sit, with her, on the floor; he knelt, carefully.

‘No,’ Haught said, quietly, a small, lost voice. ‘No. Don’t.’

But Ischade had no glance for him. She began to speak, whispering, as if she

shared secrets with the man. His lips began to move, mouthing words she spoke.

Mradhon seized Haught’s arm, for Haught stood closest, drew him back, and Haught

got back against the wall. Moria came close. Mor-am sought their corner, the

furthest that there was.

‘What’s she doing?’ Mradhon asked, tried to ask, but the room drank up sound and

nothing at all came out.

She dreamed, deeply dreamed. The man who touched her -Stilcho. He had been deep

within that territory of dreams, as deep as it was possible to go and still come

back. He wanted it now: his mind wanted to go fleeting away down those dark

corridors and bright – Sjekso, she chanted, over and over: that was the easiest

to call of all her many ghosts. Sjekso. She had his attention now. Sjekso. This

is Stilcho. Follow him. Come up to me.

The young rowdy was there, just verging the light. He attempted his old

nonchalance, but he was shivering in the cold of a remembered alleyway, in the

violence of her wrath.

She named other names and called them; she sent them deep, deep into the depths,

remembering them – all her men, most ruffians, a few gentle, a few obsessed with

hate. One had been a robber, dumped his victims in the harbour after carving up

their faces. One had been a Hell Hound: Rynner was his name; he used to play

games with prostitutes – his commander never knew. They were hate, raw hate:

there were some souls that responded best to them. There was a boy, come with

tears on his face; one of Moruth’s beggars; one ofKadakithis’s court, silver

tongued, with honey hair and the blackest, vilest heart. Up and up they came,

swirled near, a veritable cloud.

She spoke, through Stilcho’s lips, words in a language Stilcho would not have

known, that few living did. “Til dawn, ’til dawn, ’til dawn -‘

The dream stretched wide, passed beyond her control in a moment of panic. She

tried to call them back, but that would have been dangerous.

‘Til dawn, she had said.

* * *

There were so many pressing at the gates, so very many – Sanctuary, the whisper

went. Sanctuary’s open – and some went in simple longing for home, for wives,

husbands, children; some in anger, many, many in anger – the town inspired that,

in those it trapped.

A wealthy widow turned in bed from the slave she kept and stared into a dead

husband’s reproachful eyes: a yell rang out through marble halls, high on the

hill.

A judge waked, feeling something cold, and stared round at all the ghosts who

had cause to remember him. He did not scream; he joined them, for his heart

failed him on the spot.

In the Maze there was the sound of children’s voices, running frenzied through

the streets – 0 Mama, Papa! Here I am! One such wandered alone, among the

merchants’ fine houses, and rapped on a door. I’m home – o Mama, let me in!

A thief stirred in his sleep, rubbed his eyes and rubbed them twice. ‘Cudget,’

he said, knowing that he was dreaming, and yet he felt the cold drifting from

the old man. ‘Cudget?’ The old man swore at him just as he used to do, and Hanse

Shadowspawn sat up in bed, petrified as his old mentor gazed on him, sitting on

his foot.

Outside, the streets rustled with the gathering of the dead. One hammered at a

door with thin rattling result; Where’s my money? it wailed. One-Thumb, where’s

my money?

The booths at the Vulgar Unicorn grew crowded, buzzed with whispers, and the few

diehard patrons went fleeing out the door.

Brother, a ghost said to the fat man in an uptown bed, and to the woman beside

him – is he worth it, Thea?

Screams rose, long ones, echoing above the streets, a thin clamouring that the

wind took and carried through the air.

A Beysib woman felt the stirring of the snake that shared her bed, opened dark

strange eyes and stared in wonder at the pale night-gowned figure that stood

within the room: Usurper, it said. Get out of my bed. Get out of my house. You

have no right.

No one had ever told her that. She blinked, confused, hearing the screams, as if

the town were being sacked.

Across the river Moruth hurried along, hastening in the night for a newer, more

secure place, in the madness of the hour, in streets insane with screams.

He stopped, seeing the way closed off. They were hawkmasks. four of them, who

began to come towards him; he turned, and there were Stepsons, armed with

swords.

In the guardroom a Hell Hound wakened, bleary-eyed from drink, looked up with

the interest of one who hears the step of a friend returning, a singular

pattern, so familiar and loved among a thousand others; and then with a sinking

of the heart remembered it impossible. But Zaibar looked all the same, and stood

up, overturning the chair with a crash.

Raskuli was standing there, unmarred, his head firmly on his shoulders. I can’t

stay long, he said.

And higher in the palace, Kadakithis screamed and yelled for guards, waking to

find strangers in his room, a horde of ghosts. some with ropes about their

necks; and soldiers all dusty in tattered armour; and his grandfather, who did

not belong in Sanctuary, wearing a shadow-crown.

Shame, his grandfather said.

Walegrin sat up in bed, in the barracks below the wall – heard the clash of

bracelets, ominous and clear. He reached for his knife, beneath the pillow. But

as the sound ceased, faint as it was, he heard screams from beyond the walls,

and leapt up, knife in hand, to fling the window wide.

Jubal the ex-slaver waked, hearing the murmur of a sea – and not a sea, but a

horde of slaves about his bed, lacking limbs, with scars, some clutching their

entrails to them. He spat at them, and felt the cold at the same time.

It’s your fault, Kurd said, and from that ghost the others fled, deserting the

place, leaving only the pale old man, the visitor with hollow eyes. We should

sit and talk, Kurd said.

S/r? asked a wan, lost ghost, accosting a drunk who staggered by the Unicorn,

stopping up his ears. Sir? What street is this? I got to get home, me wife ‘II

kill me, sure.

On the street of gods a priestess screamed, waking to find a tiny ghost lying at

her breast, all wet and dripping with riverweed, an infant of dark and accusing

eyes.

A clatter of hooves rang through the Stepson barracks courtyard, a rattle of

armour, a breath of cold wind.

And in the headquarters in the town, Dolon gave orders, dispatched men here and

there – stopped cold as, alone, he realized other men had come, with their

blackened skin and flesh hanging from their limbs.

We’ve lost, Erato said.

Fool! A different presence burst among them, whose armour shone, whose look was

bronze and gold; he came striding in from out of the wall itself and the others

fled. The air smelled suddenly of dust and heat. Ofool, what have you done?

And Dolon backed away, knowing legend when he saw it.

The presence faded and left cold in its stead.

Ischade stirred, feeling the pain of long-rigid limbs. A heavy weight poured

against her, Stilcho in collapse. And one last thing she did, without thinking

of it, holding the Stepson in her arms: ‘Come back,’ she said, knowing it was

dawn.

No, the almost-ghost said, weeping, but she compelled it. The body grew warm

again. Moaned with pain.

‘Help me,’ she said, looking up at the others who sat huddled in the corner.

It was Haught who came. Even Mor-am was too afraid; but Haught – who touched

her, with his hands and in a different way, like the flickering of a fire. He

took Stilcho up; Mor-am helped, and Vis, and Moria last of all.

Ischade drew herself to her feet, walked over to the window and unshuttered it

by hand, considerate of her guests. There were some things they might bear with

in the dark of night; but by day – that seemed unkind, and she felt washed clean

this morning. A bird was perched on the untouched hedge. It was a carrion crow;

it hopped down out of sight, in a fluttering of unseen wings.

Mradhon Vis strode along the street in the silence of the morning free, inhaling

air that had, even with its stench, a more wholesome quality than that within

the riverhouse.

Haught, Moria, Mor-am – they were afraid. The Stepson slept, unharmed, in

Ischade’s silken bed, while the witch herself – gods knew where she was.

‘Come on,’ he had pleaded, with Haught – with Moria, even. Mor-am he had not

asked. Even the Stepson: him he would have gotten out of there if he could. But

maybe it would be a corpse he was carrying before he had gotten to the street.

‘No,’ Moria had said, seeming shamed. Haught had said nothing, but a hell was in

his eyes, so he had it bad. ‘Don’t – touch her,’ Mradhon had said then, shaking

him by the shoulders. But Haught turned away, head bowed, passed his hand over

one of the dead candles. A bit of smoke curled up on its own. Died. So Mradhon

knew what hold Ischade had on Haught. And he went away, went out the door with

no one to stop him.

She would find him if she wished. He was sure of that. There was a long list of

those who might be interested to find him – but he walked the street past the

bridge by daylight in the town. Traffic had begun, if late. There were walkers

on the street, folk with unhappy, hunted looks.

‘Vis,’ someone said. He heard rapid steps. His heart turned in him as he looked

back and saw a man of the garrison. ‘Vis, is it?’

He thought of his sword, but daytime, on the streets – even in Sanctuary – was

no time or place for that kind of craziness. He struck an easy stance, impatient

attention, nodded to the man.

‘Got a message,’ the soldier said. ‘Captain wants to see you. Mind?’

THE ART OF ALLIANCE

Robert Lynn Asprin

A large blackbird perched on the awning of the small jeweller’s shop, its head

cocked to fix the approaching trio with an unblinking eye, as if it knew of the

drama about to unfold.

‘There it is. Bantu, just like I told you. I’m sure it wasn’t there last week.’

The leader of the group nodded curtly, never taking his eyes from the small

symbol scratched on one of the awning posts. It was a simple design: a

horizontal line curved downward at the left, with a small circle at its lower

right end. No rune or letter of any known alphabet matched it, yet it spoke

volumes to those in the know.

‘Not last week,’ Bantu said, his jaw muscles tightening, ‘and not next week.

Come on.’

The three were so intent on their mission within that they failed to note the

loiterer across the street, who regarded them with much the same careful

scrutiny that they had given the symbol. As they vanished into the shop, the

watcher closed his eyes to evaluate the details of what he’d seen.

Three youths … well monied from the cut and newness of their clothes …

swords and daggers only … no armour … none of the habitual wariness of

warriors about them …

Satisfied that the facts were clear in his mind, the watcher opened his eyes,

turned, and made his way quickly down the street, suddenly aware of the

pressures of time in the performance of his duties.

There was a middle-aged couple in the shop, but the youths ignored them as

completely as they did the displays. Instead they moved to confront the

shopkeeper.

‘Can … may I show you gentlemen something?’ that notable inquired hesitantly.

‘We’d like to know more about the sign scratched on the post outside,’ Bantu

proclaimed bluntly.

‘Sign?’ the shopkeeper frowned. ‘There’s no sign on my posts. Perhaps the

children …’

‘Spare us your feigned innocence, old fool,’ the youth snapped, swaggering

forward. ‘Next you’ll be telling us you don’t even recognize Jubal’s mark.’

The shopkeeper paled at the mention of the ex-crimelord’s name, and shot a quick

glance at his other customers. The couple had drawn away from the disturbance

and were attempting to appear unaware that anything was amiss.

‘Tell us what that mark means,’ Bantu said. ‘Are you one of his killers or just

a spy? Are these goods you’re selling stolen or merely smuggled? How much blood

was paid for your stock?’

The other customers exchanged a few mumbled words and began edging towards the

door.

‘Please,’ the storekeeper begged, ‘I…’

‘That black bastard’s power has been smashed once,’ the youth raged. ‘Do you

think honest citizens will just stand by while he spreads his web again? That

sign …’

The shop door flew open with a crash, cutting off the customers’ escape. Half a

dozen figures crowded into the limited space, swords drawn and ready.

Before Bantu had finished turning, the newcomers had shoved his comrades roughly

against the walls of the shop, pinning them there with bared blades against

their throats. The youth started to reach for his own weapon, then thought

better of it and let his hand fall away from his sword hilt.

These men had the cold, easy confidence of those who make their living by the

sword. There was near-military precision to their movements, though no soldier

ever worked with such silent efficiency. As confident as he was at terrorizing

storekeepers, Bantu knew he was now outclassed; there was no doubt in his mind

what the outcome would be if he or his comrades offered any resistance.

A short, swarthy man came forward with a step that was more a glide. He leaned

casually in front of the storekeeper, yet never took his eyes from Bantu. ‘Are

these boys bothering you, citizen?’

‘No, these … men were just asking about the sign on my post outside. They …

seemed to think it was Jubal’s mark.’

‘Jubal?’ the swarthy man repeated, raising his eyebrows in mock surprise.

‘Haven’t you heard, lad? The Black Devil of Sanctuary’s dead now, or so

everybody says. Lucky for you, too.’

A knife glinted suddenly in the man’s hand as he advanced on Bantu, a glint that

was echoed in his narrowed eyes.

‘… because if he were alive, and if this shop were under his protection, and

if he or his men caught you coming between him and a paying customer, then he’d

have to make an example of you and your friends!’

The man was close now, and Bantu’s throat tightened as the knife moved up and

down in the air between them, gracefully serving as a pointer during the speech.

‘Maybe your ears should be cut off to save you from hearing troublesome rumours

… or your tongue cut out to keep you from repeating them … Better still the

nose … yes, chop off the nose to keep it out of other people’s business ,..’

Bantu felt faint now. This couldn’t be happening. Not in broad daylight on the

east side of town. These things might happen in the Maze, but not here! Not to

him!

‘Please, sir,’ the shopkeeper interrupted. ‘If anything happens in my shop …’

‘Of course,’ the swarthy man continued, as if he hadn’t heard, ‘all this is pure

conjecture. Jubal is dead, so nothing need be done … or said. Correct?’

He turned away abruptly, summoning his men back to the door with a jerk of his

head.

‘Yes, Jubal is dead,’ he repeated, ‘along with his hawkmasks. As such, no one

need concern themselves with silly symbols scratched on shopfronts. I trust we

did not interrupt your business, citizens, for I’m sure you are all here to

purchase some of this man’s excellent stock … and you will each buy something

before you leave.’

Jubal, the not-so-dead ex-crimelord of Sanctuary, paced the confines of the

small room like a caged animal. The process that had healed his terrible wounds

after the raid on his estate had aged him physically. Mentally, however, he was

still agile, and that agility rebelled at these new restrictions on his

movement. Still, it was a small price to pay for rebuilding his lost power.

‘So the alliance is finalized?’ he asked. ‘We will warn and guard the Stepsons

whenever possible in return for their abandoning the hunt for the remaining

hawkmasks?’

‘As you ordered,’ his aide acknowledged. Jubal caught the tone of voice and

hesitated in his pacing. ‘You still don’t approve of this treaty, do you

Saliman?’

‘Tempus and his Whoresons raided our holdings, wounded you nearly unto death,

scattered our power, and have since been occupying their time killing our old

comrades. Why should I object to allying with them … any more than I’d

object to bedding a mad dog that’s bitten me not once, but several times.’

‘But you yourself counselled not seeking vengeance on him!’

‘Avoiding confrontation is one thing. Pledging to help an enemy is yet another.

Forming an alliance was your idea, Jubal, not mine.’

Jubal smiled slowly, and for a moment Saliman saw a flash of the old crimelord,

the one who had once all but ruled Sanctuary.

‘The alliance is at best temporary, old friend,’ the ex-gladiator murmured.

‘Eventually there will be a reckoning. In the meantime, where better to study an

enemy than from within his own camp?’

‘Tempus is smarter than that,’ his aide argued. ‘Do you really • think he’ll be

trusting enough to relax his guard?’

‘Of course not,’ said Jubal. ‘But Tempus has moved north to fight at Wizardwall.

I have less respect for those he’s left behind. However, their efforts to locate

old hawkmasks are an annoyance we can ill afford at this time.’

‘The rebuilding goes well. Resistance is minimal, and …’

‘I’m not talking about the rebuilding, and you know it!’ Jubal interrupted

viciously. ‘It’s those Beysib that have me worried.’

‘But everyone else in town is unconcerned.’

‘They’re fools! Not a one of them can see beyond their own immediate

gains. Merchants don’t understand power. Power understands power. I know

those fish folk better than most, because I know myself. They didn’t come

to Sanctuary to help the town. Oh, they’ll make a big show of the benefits

of their arrival to the citizens, but eventually there’ll come a

parting of the ways. A situation will arise when they’ll have to

choose between what’s good for their new neighbours and what’s good for

the Beysib, and there’s no doubt in my mind as to how they’ll choose. If we

let them get strong enough. Sanctuary will be lost when their chance

goes against the city.’

‘They are not exactly weak now,’ Saliman observed, thoughtfully chewing his lip.

‘That’s right,’ Jubal growled, ‘and that’s why they concern me. What we must do

… what the town must do, is to gain strength through our association with the

fish-folk, while at the same time blocking their growth, actually sapping their

strength whenever possible. Fortunately, this is a role Sanctuary is well suited

to.’

‘There are those who would confuse your zeal for self-interest rather than a

defence of the town,’ Saliman said carefully. ‘The Beysib do constitute a threat

to your effort to rebuild your power base.’

‘Of course,’ the hawkmaster smiled. ‘Like the invaders, I work for my own

benefit… Everyone does, though most don’t admit it. The difference is that my

success is linked to the continuance of Sanctuary as we have known it. Theirs

isn’t.’

‘Of course, your success will not happen by itself,’ his aide reminded him.

‘Yes, yes. I know. Affairs of business. Forgive my ramblings, Saliman, but you

know I find details tedious now that I’ve attained old age.’

‘You found them tedious well before your aging,’ came the dry response.

‘… which is why you are so valuable to me. Enough of your nagging. Now, what

pressing matter do you have that simply must be dealt with?’

‘Do you recall the shop that was displaying our protection symbol without having

paid for the services?’

‘The artifact shop? Yes, I remember. Synab never struck me as the sort who had

that kind of courage.’

For all his grumbling and protests about detail, Jubal had an infallible memory

for money and people.

‘Well?’ the slaver continued, ‘What of it? Has the investigation been completed,

or does his shop still stand?’

‘Both,’ Saliman smiled. ‘Synab claims to be innocent of offence. He says that he

didpa.y us for protection.’

‘And you believed him? It’s not like you to be so easily bluffed.’

‘I believed him, but only because we located the one who has been dealing in our

name.’

‘A poacher?’ Jubal scowled. ‘As if we didn’t have enough problems. All we need

is to have every cheap crook in Sanctuary borrowing our reputation for his own

extortions. I want the offender caught and brought to me as soon as possible.’

‘He’s waiting outside,’ the aide smiled. ‘I thought you would want to see him.’

‘Excellent, Saliman. Your efficiency improves daily. Give me a moment to get

into this wretched mask and bring him in.’

To maintain appearances, Jubal always wore one of the outlawed blue hawkmasks,

as well as a hooded cloak when interviewing underlings and outsiders. It would

not do to have the word spread that his youth had fled him, nor did it hurt to

capitalize on the terror inspired by a featureless leader. In an effort to

maximize the latter effect, the ex-crimelord doused all candles but one and laid

his sword on the table in front of himself before signalling that the captive’s

blindfold should be removed.

Their prisoner was an unwashed urchin barely into his teens. His type were as

numerous as rats in Sanctuary, harassing store owners and annoying shoppers with

their arrogant stares and daring sorties. There was no defiance in this one,

though. Cowed and humble, he stood blinking, trying to clear his eyes while

standing with the trembling stillness of a tethered goat trying to escape the

notice of a predator.

‘Do you know who I am, boy?’

‘J … Jubal, sir.’

‘Louder! The name came readily enough to you when you represented yourself to

Synab as my agent.’

‘I … everyone said you were dead, sir. I thought the symbols were a new

extortion racket and didn’t see any harm in trying to cash in on it myself.’

‘Even if I were dead, it’s a dangerous name to be using. Weren’t you afraid of

the guardsmen? Or the Stepsons? They’re hunting hawkmasks, you know.’

‘The Stepsons,’ the boy sneered. ‘They aren’t so much. One of them had me cold

with my hand in his purse yesterday. I knocked him down and got away before he

could untangle himself enough to draw his sword.’

‘Anyone can be surprised, boy. Remember that. Those men are hardened veterans

who’ve earned their reputation as well as their

pay.’

‘They don’t scare me,’ the boy argued, more defiantly.

‘Do I?’

‘Y … Yes, sir,’ came the reply, as the youth remembered his predicament.

‘… but not enough to keep you from posing as one of my agents,’ Jubal finished

for him. ‘How much did you get from Synab, anyway?’

‘I don’t know, sir.’

The ex-crimelord raised his eyebrows in mock surprise.

‘Really!’ the urchin insisted. ‘Instead of a flat fee, I demanded a portion of

his weekly sales. I told him that we … that you would be watching his shop and

would know if he tried to cheat on the figure.’ ,

‘Interesting,’ Jubal murmured. ‘How did you arrive at that system?’

‘Well, once I knew that he was scared enough to pay, I suddenly realized that I

didn’t know how much to ask for. If I asked for too little, he’d get suspicious,

but if I named a figure too high, he’d either ruin his shop, trying to pay it,

or simply refuse … and then I’d have to try to make good my threats.’

‘So what portion did you ask for?’

‘One in five. But, you see, linking his payment to his sales, the fee would grow

with his business, or adjust itself if times grew lean.’

The hawkmaster pondered this for a time.

‘What is your name, boy?’

‘Cidin, sir.’

‘Well, Cidin, if you were in my place, if you caught someone using your name

without permission, what would you do to him?’

‘I … I’d kill him, sir,’ the boy admitted. ‘You know, as an example, so other

people wouldn’t do the same thing.’

‘Quite right,’ Jubal nodded, rising to his feet. ‘I’m glad you understand what

would have to be done.’

Cidin braced himself as the ex-crimelord reached for the sword on the table,

then blinked in astonishment as the weapon was returned to its scabbard, instead

of being wielded with deadly intent.

‘… fortunately for both of us, that isn’t the case here. You have my

permission to use my name and work as my agent. Of course, two thirds of what

you collect will be paid to me for the use of that name. Agreed?’

‘Yes, sir.’

‘You might also think of recruiting some of your friends to help you … if

they’re as quick of wit as they are of foot.’

‘I’ll try, sir.’

‘Now wait here for a moment while I fetch my aide. I want you to tell him what

you told me about portions instead of flat fees. It’s an idea worth

investigating.’

He started for the door, then paused, studying the boy with a thoughtful eye.

‘You don’t look like a hawkmask… but then again, maybe that’s what our

rebuilding needs. I think the days of swaggering swordsmen are numbered in

Sanctuary.’

‘Have you reached a decision yet on Mor-am and Moria?’

Jubal shook his head. ‘There’s no rush,’ he said. ‘Mor-am is ours anytime we

want him. I don’t want to eliminate him until I’ve made my mind up on Moria.

Those two were close once, and I’m still unconvinced she has totally quelched

her feelings for her brother.’

‘It’s said she has developed a taste for wine. If we wait too long, she may not

be worth the recruiting.’

‘All the more reason to wait. Either she is strong enough to stand alone,

without brother or wine, or she isn’t. We’ve no room for employees who need

tending.’

‘They were good people,’ Saliman said softly.

‘Yes, they were. But we can ill afford generosity at this time. What about the

other? Is there any danger our spies in Walegrin’s force will be discovered?’

‘None that we know of. Of course, they have an advantage over the rest of us.’

‘What’s that supposed to mean?’

‘Only that they’re exempt from the order to assist the Stepsons, whenever

trouble arises. I’ve told you before, it’s a dead giveaway to come to the aid of

those mercenaries every time they get into a scrape. No one else in town likes

them, except the whores, and it breeds suspicion when one of ours takes their

side in a quarrel.’

‘Have they honoured their pledge not to hunt the old hawk-masks?’

‘Yes,’ Saliman admitted grudgingly. ‘In a way, they still go through the

motions, but they have been notably ineffective since the alliance.’

‘Then we’ll honour our side of the bargain. If our forces are drawing unwanted

attention, instruct them to be more subtle with their assistance. There are ways

of helping without openly taking sides in a brawl.’

‘We tried that, and the Stepsons proved inept in battle. You were the one who

said we must do whatever necessary to keep them alive.’

‘Then keep doing it!’ Jubal was suddenly tired of the argument. ‘Saliman, I fear

your dislike of this alliance has slanted your reports. Those “inept” Stepsons

drove our entire force out of our mansion. I find it hard to believe that they

are suddenly unable to survive a simple street skirmish.’

The small snake raised its head to study its captors, then went back to

exploring the confines of its jar with the singleminded intent characteristic of

reptiles.

‘So this is one of the dread beynit,’ Jubal mused, resting his chin on his hands

to study the specimen. ‘The secret weapon of the Beysib.’

‘Not all that secret,’ his aide retorted. ‘I’ve told you of the bodies that have

appeared marked with snakebite. The fish-folk are not always discreet in their

use of their secret weapons.’

‘Let’s not fall victim to our own tricks, Saliman. We were never above

scattering a few extra corpses around to confuse the issue. I don’t think it’s

safe to assume that every snakebit body is the work of the Beysib. You’re sure

this snake won’t be missed?’

‘It cost the life of one of their women, but that’s unimportant. Hers isn’t the

only life they’ve lost lately. They seem remarkably stubborn about not adapting

to Sanctuary’s nightlife. Wherever they come from, they’re used to being able to

travel the streets alone.’

‘Their carelessness may give us the advantage we need,’ Jubal said, tapping the

side of the jar to make the snake raise its head again. ‘If we can unlock the

secret of this venom, we’ll be that much ahead if we ever have to confront the

fish-folk.’

He straightened and pushed the jar across the table to his aide.

‘Pass this to someone well-versed in toxins and include enough money for test

slaves. I want an antidote for this poison within the month. Too bad Tempus

revenged himself on Kurd. We could use the vivisectionist’s services.’

‘Tempus has a knack for making our life difficult,’ Saliman agreed, dryly.

‘That reminds me. How are things going with the Stepsons? You haven’t said

anything lately, so I assume the situation has stabilized.’

‘No, it hasn’t. However, you told me in no uncertain terms that you didn’t want

to hear any more complaining about the Alliance.’

‘No more complaints, but that didn’t mean I would reject all reports.’

‘Yes, it did. All I get is complaints about the Whoresons and their inability to

save themselves from the simplest of conflicts.’

‘All right, Saliman,’ Jubal sighed. ‘Perhaps I have discounted the reports too

much. Now, can you give me an impartial briefing as to what has been happening?’

The aide paused to collect his thoughts before reporting. ‘The Stepsons, as we

knew them when they first arrived in town, were hardened warriors, able to not

only survive but triumph in most situations involving armed conflict. They were

feared but respected by the people of Sanctuary. This has changed radically

since our alliance with them. They have grown more quarrelsome, and their

ability to defend themselves seems to have diminished nearly to the point of

nonexistence. A major portion of our agents’ time and energies is being diverted

into keeping the Stepsons out of trouble, or saving them when our preventive

measures fail.’

The ex-crimelord digested this. ‘We both know that field soldiers left in town

too long become troublesome as their fighting trim and discipline deteriorate.

Is this what’s happened to the Stepsons?’

Saliman shook his head. ‘Such deterioration would not be so rapid or complete.

These warriors could not be more ineffectual if they were trying to lose.’

‘You may have the answer there. We know the Stepsons to be fearless, willing to

follow Tempus’s orders even unto death. They could be testing us, deliberately

exposing themselves to danger to measure our intent or ability to honour our

alliances. Either that, or there may be more to Tempus’s leadership than meets

the eye. It has been established that he derives support from at least one god.

Perhaps he has found a way to transmit that power to his troops … a way that

has grown tenuous operating at such a distance.’

‘Either way, we’re still investing too much of our time maintaining a bad

alliance.’

‘But until we know for sure, we can’t tell if it’s more to our advantage to keep

or dissolve the agreement. Find me the answers and I’ll reconsider. Until then,

we’ll maintain our current position.’

‘As you will.’

Jubal smiled as Hakiem was led blindfolded into the room. It was not necessary

to wear the hawkmask for this interview, and he was glad, for he wanted an

unobstructed view of his guest. Had he not been forewarned, he never would have

recognized the old storyteller. He waited until the blindfold had been removed

before making his examination, walking slowly around the tale-spinner, while

Hakiem stood blinking in the light. New clothes, hair and beard trimmed, the

gauntness gone from his rib cage, and … Yes! The fragrant odour of perfume!

Hakiem had bathed!

‘I have a job,’ the storyteller broke the silence, almost embarrassed by his

newfound wealth.

‘I know,’ Jubal said. ‘In the new court, as advisor to the Beysa.’

‘If you already knew that, why’d you drag me here all blindfolded,’ Hakiem

snapped, returning momentarily to his old gutter temper.

‘Because I also know you’re thinking of quitting.’ There were several heartbeats

of silence; then the storyteller heaved a sigh. ‘So instead of my asking why I’m

here, I guess the question is “Why am I quitting?” Is that it?’

‘You’ve put it a bit more bluntly than I would have, but you’ve captured the

essence of the matter.’

Jubal sank into a chair and waved Hakiem to take the seat across from him. ‘…

and help yourself to the wine. We’ve known each other too long for you to stand

on ceremony.’

‘Ceremony!’ the old tale-spinner snorted, accepting both chair and wine.

‘Perhaps that’s what bothers me. Like you, I come from the streets and gutters.

All the pomp and bother of court life bores me and, if nothing else, my time in

Sanctuary has taught me to be impatient with boredom.’

‘Money pays for much patience, Hakiem,’ Jubal observed. ‘That I’ve learned from

this town. Besides, I’ve had call to discover your beginnings are not as humble

as you would have others believe. Come now, the real reason for your

discontent.’

‘And what business is it of yours? Since when did you concern yourself with my

thoughts or livelihood?’

‘Information is my business,’ the ex-gladiator shot back. ‘Especially when it

concerns the power structure of this town. You know that. You’ve sold me rumours

often enough. And besides …’ Jubal’s voice dropped suddenly, losing its edge

of anger and authority. ‘… Not long ago I considered changing careers. Two

men, an old friend and a penniless storyteller, ignored my temper and convinced

me to examine my own motives. I haven’t paid all my debts in life, but I don’t

forget them either. Will you let me try to return the favour you paid me? Of

being both gadfly and confessor at a time you feel most alone?’

Hakiem stared into his wine for several moments. ‘I love this town,’ he said

finally, ‘as you do, though we love it differently and for different reasons.

When the foreigners ask me my opinions of the townfolk, to appraise their

trustworthiness or weakness, I feel I’m somehow betraying my friends. The gold

is nice, but it leaves a slime on me that all the perfumed baths in the world

cannot remove.’

‘They ask no more than I did when you served as my eyes and ears,’ Jubal

suggested.

‘It’s not the same,’ Hakiem insisted. ‘You are a part of this town. like the

Bazaar of the Maze. Now I deal with strangers, and I’ll not spy against my home

for mere gold.’

The ex-crimelord weighed this carefully, then poured them each another round of

wine.

‘Listen to me, Hakiem,’ he said at last. ‘And think well on what I say. Your old

life is gone. You know you could no more return to being an innocent storyteller

than I could go back to being a slave. Life moves forward, not backward. Just as

I’ve had to adapt to my sudden advance in age, you must learn to live with your

new station in life. No. Hear me out.

‘What you tell the invaders, they would learn whether you supplied it or not. As

a fellow gatherer of information, I swear to you this is true. There is always

more than one way to learn any fact. If, however, you were not there, if they

chose someone else to advise them, there would be a difference. Another would be

too swelled with his own importance, too in love with the sound of his own words

to hear and see what was actually going on around him. That, storyteller, is a

weakness you have never had.

‘What goes on in that court, and the logic that the newcomers use to arrive at

their decisions, can be of utmost importance to the future of our town. It

worries me, but not so much as it would if anyone but yourself were monitoring

their activities. Trading information we know for that which we do not is a fair

enough bargain, especially when what we gain is so valuable.’

‘All this talk comes very smoothly, slaver,’ the talesmith scowled. ‘Perhaps

I’ve underestimated you again. You didn’t bring me here to ask my reasons for

quitting. It seems my thoughts were already known to you. What you really wanted

was to recruit me as your spy.’

‘I suspected your reasons,’ Jubal admitted. ‘But spy is an ugly word. Still, the

life of a spy is dangerous and would command a high wage … say, fifty in gold

each week? With bonuses for particularly valuable reports?’

‘To betray the other powers of Sanctuary while feeding your strength.’ Hakiem

laughed. ‘And what if the Beysib ask about you? They’ll grow suspicious if there

is a blind spot in my reporting.’

‘Answer them as truthfully as you would when questioned about anyone else.’ The

ex-gladiator shrugged. ‘I’m hiring you to gather information, not to protect me

at your own expense. Admit everything, including that you have ways of

contacting me, should the need arise. Tell the truth as often as you can. It

will increase the odds of them believing you when you do find it necessary to

lie.’

‘I’ll consider it,’ the storyteller said. ‘But I’ll tell you the only reason I’d

even think about such a pact is that you and your ghosts are one of the last

effective forces in Sanctuary, now that the Stepsons have left.’

Something nickered across Jubal’s face, then was gone.

‘The Stepsons?’ he asked. ‘When last I heard, they still ruled the streets. What

makes you think they’re gone?’

‘Don’t toy with me, Hawkmaster,’ Hakiem scolded, reaching for more wine, only to

find the bottle empty. ‘You, who know even what’s going on in my own head, must

know that those clowns in armour who parade the streets these days are no more

Stepsons than I’m a Hell Hound. Oh, they have the height and the hair of those

they replaced, but they’re poor substitutes for the mercenaries who long ago

followed Tempus off to the Northern Wars.’

‘Of course.’Jubal smiled vaguely.

A small purse found its way from his tunic to his hand, and he pushed it across

the table to the storyteller.

‘Here,’ he instructed, ‘use this to buy yourself a charm, a good one, against

poison. Violence in the courts is quieter, but no less rough than that you know

from the Maze, and tasters are not always reliable.’

‘What I really need is a guard against their snakes,’ Hakiem grimaced, making

the purse vanish with a wave of his hand. ‘I’ll never get used to having so many

reptiles about.’

‘Check with me next week,’ Jubal answered absently. ‘I have people working on an

antidote for that particular poison. That is, of course, assuming you decide to

retain your position. A street storyteller has no need of such protection.’

‘You have one of the beynit?’ the talesmith asked, impressed in spite of

himself.

‘They aren’t that hard to come by,’ the ex-crimelord responded casually, ‘which

reminds me. If you need a tidbit to keep your patroness happy with your

services, tell her that not all the snakebite victims appearing lately are her

people’s work. There are those who would discredit her court by duplicating

their methods.’

Hakiem raised his eyebrow in silent question, but Jubal shook his head.

‘None of mine,’ he declared, ‘though the idea bears further study in the future.

If you’ll excuse me now, I have other matters to attend to … and tell your

escort I said to see that you reach your next destination safely.’

The sound of Jubal’s laughter brought Saliman hurrying into the room.

‘What is it?’ he asked, half-puzzled, half-concerned by the first outburst of

gaiety he’d witnessed from Jubal for many months. ‘Did the old storyteller have

an amusing tale? Tell me, I could use a good laugh these days.’

‘It’s very simple,’ the Hawkmaster explained, regaining partial control of

himself. ‘We’ve been betrayed. Double-crossed.’

‘And you’re laughing about it?’

‘It’s not the intent, but the method that amuses me. Though I have no love of

being tricked, even I must admit this latest effort displays a certain style.’

With a few brief sentences, he sketched out what he had learned from Hakiem.

‘Substitutes?’ Saliman frowned.

‘Think about it,’ Jubal argued. ‘You know at least some of the Stepsons on

sight. Have you seen any familiar faces in those uniforms lately? Perhaps the

one who made the alliance with us? It explains so much, like why the so-called

Stepsons suddenly don’t know which end of a sword to grasp. And to think I

expected to take advantage of a naive second-in-command.’

‘So what are we going to do now?’

‘That I decided as soon as I learned of the deception.’

All signs of laughter faded from Jubal’s eyes, to be replaced by a dangerous

glitter.

‘I make alliances with men, not uniforms. Now it just so happens that the men,

the Stepsons, whom our alliance is with are now somewhere to the north, putting

their lives and reputations on the line for the dear old Empire. In their

efforts to be in two places at once, though, they’ve left themselves vulnerable.

They’ve turned their name over to a batch of total incompetents, hoping their

reputation will suffice to bluff their replacements’ way through any crisis.

‘While we have an alliance with the Stepsons, we have no obligation at all to

the fools they left behind in their stead. What’s more, we know from our own

difficulties in rebuilding exactly how fragile a reputation can be.’

The eyes were narrow slits now.

‘Therefore, here are my orders to all under my command. All support for those in

town who currently call themselves Stepsons is to be withdrawn immediately. In

fact, any opportunity to harass, embarrass, or destroy those individuals is to

take priority over any assignment save those directly involving the Beysib. In

the shortest possible time, I want to see the name of the Stepsons held in

somewhat less regard by the citizens of Sanctuary than that shown to the

Downwinders.’

‘But what will happen when word of this reaches the real Stepsons?’ Saliman

asked.

‘They will be faced with a choice. They can either stay where they are and have

their name slandered in the worst hell-hole in the Rankan Empire, or they can

return at all speed, risking the label of deserter from the forces at

Wizardwall. With any luck, both will happen. They’ll desert their post and find

they are unable to reestablish their reputation here.’

He locked gazes with his aide, then winked slowly. ‘And that, Saliman old

friend, is why I’m laughing.’

THE CORNERS OF MEMORY

Lynn Abbey

1

A door that had been obscured by shadows opened to admit a hunched-over figure

in dark, voluminous robes. The laboured wheezing of the intruder filled the

little room as, with quick, bird-like movements, the winding sheet was opened

and the naked corpse revealed. Light entered the austere room from a single

barred window high on one wall, illuminating the face of a young woman who lay

on a narrow, wooden table, masking her waxen pallor so that it seemed she rested

in the gentle sleep of youth, rather than the deeper sleep of eternity.

Ulcerous fingers uncurled from the depths of the shapeless robe sleeves, fingers

more morbid and repellent than the corpse they probed. From within the cowl came

a sound like a laugh – or a sob – and the grotesque hands brushed the young

woman’s hair away from her neck. His dark robes concealed her as the crippled

creature sighed, sniffed, and bent to her throat. He stepped back, examining a

slim phial of blood in the faint light.

Still silent, except for his strained breathing, the robed figure lurched back

into the shadows, where he conjured an intense blue light and, drop by drop,

emptied the blood into it. He inhaled the vapours, extinguished the light with a

gesture, and returned his attention to the corpse. His fingers re-examined every

part of her without finding any mark other than the small bruise on her neck

from which he had removed the blood.

Sighing, he drew the edges of the shroud together again and carefully rearranged

the folds of coarse linen. He smoothed her ash-brown hair over the bruise on her

neck and, reluctantly, folded the cloth over her face. There was no doubt, this

time, that a sob escaped from the shadowed depths of his cowl. There had been

many women when he had been young and handsome. They had pursued him and he had

squandered his love on them. Now he could remember no face more clearly than the

one he had just covered with the linen.

The mage, Enas Yorl, shuffled back into the shadows, lit an ordinary candle, and

sat at a rough-plank desk, his face cradled in his unspeakable hands. She had

been a woman from the Street of Red Lanterns; from the Aphrodisia House, where

blue-starred Lythande was a frequent guest. Yet they’d brought her to Enas for

the postmortem. And now he understood why.

Dipping the stylus in the inkwell, he began his report in a script that had been

antique in his own youth. ‘ Your suspicions are confirmed. She was poisoned by

the concentrated venom of the beynit serpent.’

Lythande had most likely suspected as much, but the Order of the Blue Star

neither knew nor taught everything. It fell to such as himself, more shunned

than feared, to research the arcane minutiae of the eon; to recognize the poison

for what it was or was not. Enas Yorl continued:

The mark on her neck concealed two punctures – like those of the

beynit serpent, though, my colleague, I am not at all certain

that a serpent slithered up her arm to strike her. Our new

ruler, the Beysa Shupansea, has the venom within her – as she

has shown at the executions. It is said that the Blood of

Bey, the envenomed blood, flows only in the veins of the true

rulers of the Beysib, but you and I, who know magic and

gods, know that this is most likely untrue. Perhaps not

even Shupansea knows how far the gift is spread, but surely

she knows she is not the only one …

A weeping ulcer on Yorl’s hand burst with a foul odour, and a vile ichor seeped

on to the parchment. The ancient, cursed magician groaned as he swept the fluid

away. A ragged hole remained on the parchment; grey-green bone poked through the

ruined flesh of his hand. The movement, and the pain, had loosened his cowl. It

fell back to reveal thick, chestnut-coloured hair, which glittered crimson and

gold in the candlelight – his own hair – if the truth were known or anyone still

lived who remembered him from before the curse.

He did not often feel the pain of his assorted bodies; the curse that disguised

him in ever-shifting forms did not truly affect him. He still felt as he’d felt

the instant before the curse had claimed him. Except – except rarely when in

mocking answer to a yearning he could not quite repress, he was himself again:

Enas Yorl, a man twice, three times the age of any other man. A shambling,

rotted-out wreck who could not die; whose bones would never be scoured clean in

the earth. He hid the radiant, unliving, and therefore uncursed, hair.

The ulcer was congealing with a faintly blue, scaly iridescence. Yorl prayed, as

much as he ever prayed and to gods no mortal would dare worship, that sometime

it would end for him as it had ended for the woman on his table. He no longer

wished that the curse be removed.

The blueness was beginning to spread, bringing with it dis-orientation and

nausea. He would not be able to complete his message to Lythande. With a

trembling hand, he clutched the stylus and scrawled a final warning:

Go. or send someone you trust, to the Beysib wharf where their

ships still lie at anchor. Whisper ‘Harka Bey’ to the

waters; then leave quickly, without looking back –

The transformation sped through him, blurring his vision, softening his bones.

He folded the paper with a gross, awkward gesture and left it on the shroud.

Paralysis had claimed his feet by the time he’d fumbled the door open and he

retreated back to his private quarters, crawling on his hands and knees.

There was much more he could have told Lythande about the powerful, legendary

beynit venom and the equally powerful and legendary Harka Bey. A few months ago

even he had thought that the assassin’s guild was only another Ilsigi myth; but

then the fish-eyed folk had come from beyond the horizon and it now seemed some

of the other myths might be true as well. Someone had gone to considerable

trouble, using distilled venom and a knife point to make the wound, to make it

seem as if the Harka Bey had slain the courtesan. He did not personally believe

the Harka Bey would trouble themselves over a Red Lanterns woman – and he did

not truly care why she had been killed or who had killed her. His thoughts

surrounded the knowledge that the methods of the Harka Bey, at least, were real

and might be turned towards ending his own misery.

2

Of late life had been kinder to the woman known in the town simply as Cythen.

Her high leather boots were not only new but had been made to fit her. Her warm,

fur-lined cloak was new as well: made by an old Downwinds woman who had

discovered that, since the arrival of the Beysib and their gold, there were more

things to do with a stray cat than eat it. Yes, since the Beysib had come, life

was better than it had been –

Cythen hesitated, repressed a wave of remembrance and, reminding herself that it

was dangerous folly to remember the past, continued on her way. Perhaps life was

better for the Downwinds woman; perhaps her own life was now better than it had

been a year before, but it was not unconditionally better.

The young woman moved easily through the inky, twilight shadows of the Maze,

avoiding the unfathomed pools of detritus that oozed up between the ancient

cobblestones. Tiny pairs of eyes focused on her at the sound other approach and

scampered noisily away. The larger, more feral creatures of the hell-hole

watched in utter silence from the deeper shadows of doorways and blind alleys.

She strode past them all, looking neither right nor left, but missing no flicker

of motion.

She paused by an alley apparently no different from any of the dozens she had

already passed by and, after assuring herself that no intelligent eyes marked

her, entered it. There was no light now; she guided herself with her fingertips

brushing the grimy walls, counting the doorways: one, two, three, four. The

door was locked, as promised, but she quickly found the handholds that had

been chipped into the outer walls. Her cloak fell back as she climbed and,

had there been light enough to reveal anything, it would have shown a man’s

trousers under a woman’s tunic and a mid length sword slung low on her left

hip. She swung herself over the cornice and dropped into the littered courtyard

of a long-abandoned shrine.

A single patch of moonlight, brilliant and unwelcome here in the Maze, shone

amid the rubble of what had been an altar. Holding her cloak as if it were the

source of all bravery and courage itself, Cythen knelt among the stones and

whispered: ‘My life for Harka Bey!’ Then, as no one had forbidden it, she drew

her sword and laid it across her thighs.

Lythande had said – or rather implied, for magicians and their ilk seldom

actually said anything – that the Harka Bey would test her before they would

listen to her questions. For Bekin’s sake and her own need for vengeance, Cythen

vowed that they would not find her wanting. The slowly shifting moonlight fed

her terror, but she sat still and silent.

The darkness, which had been a comfort while she had been a part of it, now

lurked at the edge of her vision, as her memories of better times always lurked

at the edge of her thoughts. For a heartbeat she was the young girl she had once

been and the darkness lunged at her. A yelp of pure terror nearly escaped her

lips before she pushed both memory and old feats aside.

Bekin had been her elder sister. She had been betrothed when disaster had

struck. She had witnessed her lover’s bloody death and then had been made the

victim of the bandits’ lust in the aftermath of their victory. None of the

brigands had noticed Cythen: slight, wiry Cythen, dressed in a youth’s clothes.

The younger sister had escaped from the carnage into the darkness. Waiting until

the efforts of drinking, killing, and raping had overcome each outlaw and she

could bundle her senseless sister away to the relative safety of the brush.

Under Cythen’s protection, Bekin’s bruises had healed, but her mind was lost.

She lived in her own world, believing that the bulge in her belly was the

legitimate child of her betrothed, oblivious to their squalor and misery. The

birthing, coming on an early spring night, much like this, with only the

moonlight for a midwife, had been a long and terrifying process for both of

them. Though Cythen had seen midwives start a baby’s life with a spanking, she

held this one still, watching Bekin’s exhausted sleep, until there was no chance

it would live. Remembering only the half-naked outlaws in the firelight, she

laid the little corpse on the rocks for scavengers to find.

Again Bekin recovered her strength, but not her wits. She never learned the

cruel lessons that hardened Cythen and never lost the delusion that each strange

man was actually her betrothed returning to her. At first Cythen fought with

Bekin’s desires and agonized with guilt whenever she failed. But she could find

no work to get them food, while the men often left Bekin a trinket or two that

could be pawned or sold in the next village – and Bekin was willing to go with

any man. So, after a time, Bekin earned their shelter while Cythen, who had

always preferred swordplay to needlework. learned the art of the garrote and

dressed herself in dead men’s clothes. .

When the pair reached Sanctuary, it was only natural that Cythen found a place

with Jubal’s hawkmasked mercenaries. Bekin slept safely in the slaver’s bed

whenever he desired her and Cythen knew a measure of peace. When the hell-sent

Whoresons had raided Jubal’s Downwinds estate, the younger sister again came to

the aid of the elder. This time, she took her to the Street of Red Lanterns, to

the Aphrodisia House itself, where Myrtis promised that only a select,

discriminating clientele would encounter the ever-innocent Bekin. But now,

despite Myrtis’ promise, Bekin was four days dead of a serpent’s venom.

The pool of moonlight shifted as the night aged and Cythen waited. She was

bathed in silvery light and blind to the shadows beyond it: undoubtedly the

Harka Bey had chosen the rendezvous carefully. She held only her sword hilt and

endured the cramps the cold stone left in her legs. Rising above the pain, she

sought the mindlessness she had first discovered the day her world had ended and

the future closed. It was not the fantastic mindlessness that had claimed Bekin,

but rather an alert emptiness, waiting to be filled.

Even so, she missed the first hint of movement in the shadows. The Harka Bey

were within the ruins before she heard the faint rustle of shoes on the

crumbling masonry.

“Greetings,’ she whispered as one figure separated from the rest and whipped out

a short, batonlike sword from a sheath she wore slung like a bow across her

back. Cythen was glad of the sword beneath her palms and of the sturdy boots

that let her spring to her feet while the advancing woman drew a second sword

like the first. She remembered all Lythande had been able to tell her about the

Harka Bey: they were women, mercenaries, assassins, magicians, and utterly

ruthless.

Cythen backed away, masking her apprehension as the woman spun the pair of

blades around her with a blinding, deadly speed. By now, five months after the

landing, almost everyone had heard of the dazzling swordwork of the Beysib

aristocracy, but few had seen even practice bouts with wooden swords and none

had seen such lethal artistry as advanced towards Cythen.

She assumed the static en garde of a Rankan officer – who until the Beysib had

been the best swordsmen in the land – and fought the mesmerizing power of the

spinning steel. The almost invisible sphere the Beysib woman constructed with

the whirling blades was both offence and defence. Cythen saw herself sliced down

like wheat before a peasant’s scythe – and cut down in the next few heartbeats.

She was going to die. . .

There was serenity in that realization. The nausea dropped away, and the terror.

She still couldn’t see the individual blades as they twirled, but they seemed

somehow slower. And no one, unless the Harka Bey were demons as well, could

twirl the steel forever. And wasn’t her own blade demon-forged, shedding green

sparks when it met and shattered inferior metal? The voice of her father, a

voice she thought she had forgotten, came to her: ‘Don’t watch what I do,’ he’d

snarled good-naturedly after batting aside her practice sword. ‘Watch what I’m

not doing and attack into that weakness!’

Cythen hunched down behind her sword and no longer retreated. However fast they

moved, those blades could not protect the Harka Bey everywhere, all the time.

Though still believing she would die in the attempt, Cythen balanced her weight

and brought her sword blade in line with her opponent’s neck: a neck which would

be, for some invisible fraction of time, unprotected. She lunged forward,

determined that she would not die unprotesting like the wheat.

Green sparks showered as Cythen absorbed the force of two blades slamming hard

against her own. The Beysib steel did not shatter – but that was less important

than the fact that all three blades were entrapped by each other and the tip of

Cythen’s blade was a finger’s width from the Harka Bey’s black-scarved neck.

Cythen had the advantage with both hands firmly on her sword hilt, while the

Harka Bey still had her two swords, and half the strength to hold each of them

with. Then Cythen heard the unmistakable sound of naked steel in the shadows

around her.

‘Filthy, fish-eyed bitches!’ Cythen exclaimed. The local patois, usually

unequalled for expressing contempt or derision, had not yet taken the measure of

the invaders, but there was no mistaking the murderous disgust in Cythen’s face

as she beat her sword free and stepped momentarily back out of range.

‘Cowards!’ she added.

‘Had we wished to slay you, child, we could have done so without revealing

ourselves. So, you see, it was simply a test; which you passed,’ her opponent

said in slightly breathless, accented tones. She sheathed her swords and, unseen

still in the darkness, her companions did the same.

‘You’re lying, bitch.’

The Harka Bey ignored Cythen’s remark, but began unwinding the black scarf from

her face, revealing a woman only a little older than Cythen herself. The clear

racial stamp of the Beysib unsettled Cythen as much, or more than, the twirling

swords. It wasn’t just that their eyes were a bit too round and bulging for

mainland taste but -flick – and those eyes went impenetrable and glassy. To

Cythen it was like being watched by the dead, and with the corpse of her sister

still foremost in her mind, the comparison was not at all comforting.

‘Do we truly seem so strange to you?’ the Beysib woman asked, reminding Cythen

that she, too, was staring.

‘I had expected someone… older: a crone, from what the mages said.’

The Harka Bey hunched her shoulders; the glassy membrane over her eyes flicked

open, then closed without interrupting her stare. ‘No old people came on the

ships with us. They would not have survived the journey. I have been Harka Bey

since my eyes first opened on the sun and Her blood mingled with mine. You

needn’t fear that I am not Harka Bey. I am called Prism. Now, what do you wish

from the Harka Bey?’

‘A woman from the Street of Red Lanterns has been murdered. She slept secure in

the most guarded House in Sanctuary and yet someone was able to kill her leaving

the mark of serpent fangs on her neck.’ Cythen spoke the words Lythande had

taught her, though they were far from the ones she would have freely chosen.

Though the Sanctuary woman believed it impossible. Prism’s eyes grew wider,

rounder and the glassy membrane fluttered wildly. Finally her eyelids closed

and, as if on cue, the loose, dark clothing she wore began to writhe from her

waist to her breasts, from her breasts to her shoulders, until the bloodred head

of the woman’s familiar peeked above her collar and regarded Cythen with round,

unblinking eyes. The serpent opened its mouth, revealing an equally crimson maw

and glistening ivory fangs. Its tongue wove before Cythen’s face, drawing a

faint murmur of disgust from her.

‘You needn’t fear her,’ Prism assured Cythen with a cold smile, ‘unless you’re

my enemy.’

Cythen silently shook her head.

‘But you do think that I, or my sisters, killed this woman who was, in some way,

dear to you?’

‘No – yes. She was mad; she was my sister. She was protected there and there was

no reason for anyone to want her dead. She lived in the past, in a world that

doesn’t exist any more.’

The cold smile nickered across Prism’s face again. ‘Ah, then, you see it could

not have been Harka Bey. We would never kill without reason.’

“There were no marks besides the snakes fangs’ puncture anywhere on her. Myrtis

even called Lythande to examine the body -and he arranged for Enas Yorl to study

the poison. And Enas Yorl sent us to you.’

Prism turned to the shadows and spoke rapidly in her own language. Cythen

recognized only the names of the two magicians; the native Beysib language was

very different from the mix of dialects common in Sanctuary. A second woman

joined them in the moonlight. She unwound her scarf to reveal a face that

shimmered orchid as it stared at Cythen. Cythen let her hand rest once again on

her sword hilt while the two women conversed rapidly in their incomprehensible

tongue.

‘What else did your magician, Enas Yorl, tell you about us -besides how to

contact us along the wharves?’

‘Nothing,’ Cythen replied, hesitating a bit before continuing. ‘Enas Yorl’s

cursed. We left Bekin’s corpse in his vestibule and returned later to find a

note tucked in her shroud. Lythande said it was incomplete; that the shifting

curse had claimed him again. Beyond saying that you, the Harka Bey, would know

the truth, the note was indecipherable.’

There was another brief exchange of foreign words before Prism spoke again to

Cythen. ‘The shape-changer is known to us – as we are known to him. It is a

serious charge you and he bring before us. This woman, your sister, was not our

victim. You, of course, do not know us well enough to know that we speak the

truth in this; you will have to trust us that this is so.’

Cythen opened her mouth to protest, but the woman waved her back to silence.

‘I have not doubted the truth of your words,’ Prism warned. ‘Do not be so

foolish as to doubt mine. We will study this matter closely. The dead woman will

be avenged. You will be remembered. Go now, with Bey, the Mother of us all.’

‘If it wasn’t you, then who was it?’ Cythen demanded, though the women were

already melting back into the shadows. ‘It couldn’t have been one of us. None of

us has the venom, or knows of the Harka Bey …’

They continued to vanish, as silently and mysteriously as they had arrived.

Prism lingered the longest; then she, too, vanished and Cythen was left to

wonder if the alien women had been there at all.

Still full of the delayed effects of her terror, Cythen clambered loudly over

the wall. The Maze was still black as ink, but now it was silent, caught in the

brief moment between the activities of night and those of the day. Her soft

footfalls echoed and she pulled the dark cloak high around her face, until the

Maze was behind her and she was in the Street of Red Lanterns, where a few

patrons still lingered in the doorways, shielding their faces from her eyes. The

great lamps were out above the door of the Aphrodisia House. Myrtis and her

courtesans would not rise until the sun beat on the rooftops at noon. But her

staff, the ones who were invisible at night, were working in the kitchens and

took Cythen’s hastily scribbled, disappointed message, promising that it would

be delivered as soon as Madame had breakfasted. Then, weary and yawning, Cythen

slipped back into the garrison barracks where Walegrin, in deference to her sex,

had allotted her a private, bolted chamber.

She slept well into the day watch, entering the mess hall when it was deserted.

The gelid remains of breakfast remained on the sideboard, ignored by the endemic

vermin. It would taste worse than it looked, though Cythen was long past the

luxury of tasting the food she ate: one ate what was available or one starved.

She filled her bowl and sat alone by the hearth.

Bekin’s death was still unexplained and unavenged and that weighed more heavily

upon her than the greasy porridge. For more years than she cared to remember,

her only pride had been that she had somehow managed to care for Bekin. Now that

was gone and she stood emotionally naked to her guilts and unbidden memories. If

the Harka Bey had not appeared, she might still have blamed them but, despite

their barbaric coldness, or perhaps because of it, she believed what they had

said. The warmth of tears rose within her as her brooding was broken by the

sound of a chair scraping along the floor in the watchroom above her. Rather

than succumb to the waiting tears, she went to confront Walegrin.

The straw-blond man didn’t notice as she opened the door. He was absorbed in his

square of parchment and the cramped rows of figures he had made upon it. With

one hand on the door, Cythen hesitated. She didn’t like Walegrin; no one really

did, except maybe Thrusher – and he was almost as strange. The garrison’s

officer repelled compassion and friendship alike and hid his emotions so

thoroughly that none could find them. Still, Walegrin managed to provide

leadership and direction when it was needed – and he reminded Cythen of no one

else in her troubled past.

‘You missed curfew,’ he greeted her after she closed the door, not looking up

from his figures. His hands were filthy with cheap ink, the only kind available

in Sanctuary. But the numbers themselves, Cythen saw as she moved closer, were

clear and orderly. He could read and write as well as swing a sword; in fact, he

had education and experience equal to her own, and at times her feelings for him

threatened to take wild leaps beyond friendship or respect. Then she would

remind herself that it was only loneliness that she was feeling and the

remembering of things best left forgotten.

‘I left word for you,’ she stated without apology.

He kicked a stool towards her. ‘Did you find what you were looking for?’

She shook her head and sat on the stool. ‘No, but I found them all right.

Beysib, and from the palace, by the look of them.’ She shook her head again,

this time recalling the strange faces of the two women she had seen. ‘They

sneaked up on me; I couldn’t see how many there were. One came after me with a

pair of those long-hiked swords of theirs. She spun them so fast I couldn’t see

them any more. Fighting with them’s like walking into the mouth of a dragon.’

‘But you fought and survived?’ A faint trace of a smile creased Walegrin’s face.

He set his quill aside.

‘She said they were testing me – but that’s because she couldn’t kill me like

she’d planned. Her swords couldn’t stop mine, and mine didn’t break hers; that

Beysib steel is good. I guess we were both surprised. And then she figured she

better talk to me, and listen … But she never blinked while I talked to her so

this Harka Bey, whatever it is, really must be from the palace and around the

Beysa, right? The closer they are to the Imperial blood the more fish-eyed they

are, right? And while I was talking to her a snake, one of those damned red

mouthed vipers, crawled up out of her clothes and wound up around her neck,

lookin’ at me as if its opinion was the one that really mattered. And the other

one – the one who came forward after the test – her face was shiny and purple!’

‘Then she should be fairly easy to identify if she’s the one who killed your

sister.’

Cythen froze on the stool, searching the past few days, the past few months for

any slip of the tongue when she might have let him know what Bekin was to her;

that she pursued the killer of a Red Lanterns courtesan out of anything more

than outrage or simple compassion.

‘Molin told me,’ Walegrin explained. ‘He was looking for a pattern.’

‘Molin Torchholder? Why in the name of a hundred stinking little gods should

Vashanka’s torch know anything about me or my sister?’ The anxiety and guilt

transformed themselves into anger; Cythen’s rich voice filled the room.

‘When Myrtis asks Lythande and Lythande asks Enas Yorl and they ask for a

specific person to escort the corpse from pillar to post then, yes – somehow

Molin Torchholder hears about it and gets his answers.’

‘And you’re his errand boy? His messenger?’ She had touched a sore point between

them in her anger, and by the darkening of his face she knew to regret it. Back

in the first days of chaos after the Beysib fleet heaved over the horizon, Molin

Torchholder had been everywhere. The archetypical bureaucrat had kept his

beleaguered temple open for business; his Prince well-advised, the Beysib amused

and, ultimately, Walegrin and his band employed in the service of the city. In

return, Walegrin had begun to hand back a portion of the garrison’s wages for

Molin’s speculations. It was not such a bad partnership. Walegrin’s duties kept

him apprised of the merchant’s activity anyway, and Molin seldom lost money. But

for Cythen, whose family, when she’d had a family, had been rich in land, not

gold, the rabid pursuit of more gold than you needed was degrading. And, though

she would never admit it directly, she did not want Walegrin degraded.

‘He told me,’ Walegrin replied after an uncomfortable silence, his voice

carefully even, ‘because you are still part of this garrison and if something is

going to make you act rashly he would want me to know about it. Bekin’s death

isn’t the only one that’s got us edgy. Each night since she died at least two

Beysib have been found dead, mutilated, and the lord-high muckety-mucks are

thinking about showing some muscle around here. We’re all under close watch.’

‘If he was so damned all-fired concerned about how rashly I might act, then why

in his departed god’s name didn’t he keep Bekin from getting killed in the first

place?’

‘You hid her too well. He didn’t know who she was until she was dead, Cythen.

You bought Myrtis’s silence; she was the only one beside you who knew – and

maybe Jubal, I guess. But, did you know she was working the Beysib traffic on

the Street?’ Walegrin paused and let Cythen absorb the information she obviously

had not had before. ‘Most of the women won’t, you know. I guess it’s not just

their eyes that’re different. But she was killed by a Beysib serpent – a jealous

wife maybe? And, now that Beysibs are getting killed by an ordinary rip-and

slash artist in numbers and places that can’t all be written off to

carelessness, you are a suspect, you Know.’

The anger had burned itself out, leaving Cythen with gaping holes in her

defences; the grief slipped out. ‘Walegrin, she was mad. Every man looked the

same to her – so of course she’d work the Beysib, or Jubal. She didn’t live

here. She couldn’t have known anything, or done anything to make someone kill

her. Damn, if Molin cares who services the Beysib stallions he could have

protected her anyway.’ A few tears escaped and, shamed by them, Cythen hid her

face behind her hands.

‘You should tell him that yourself. You’re not going to be any use to me until

you do.’ Walegrin rolled the parchment, then stood up to fasten his sword-belt

over his hips. ‘You won’t be needing anything – let’s go.’

Too surprised to object, Cythen followed him into the palace forecourt. A

handful of gaudy Beysib youths, brash young men and lithe, bold women, pushed

loudly past them, the exposed, painted breasts of the women flashing from

beneath their capelets in the sunlight. Walegrin affected not to notice; no man

in Sanctuary would notice the flaunted flesh – not if he valued his life. The

Beysib had made that very clear in the first, and – thus far – only, wave of

executions. Cythen stared, though not as well as the Beysib could stare, at

their faces and finally looked away, unable to find any individuality in the

barbaric features. Prism could have walked beside her and she would not have

known it.

One of the Beysib lords strode by, magenta pantaloons billowing around him, a

glittering fez perched atop his shaved head, and a well-scrubbed Sanctuary

urchin struggling with a great silk parasol behind him. Both Walegrin and Cythen

halted and saluted as he passed. That was the way now, if you accepted their

gold.

She was grateful for the shadows of the lower palace and the familiar sound of

servants shouting in Rankene at each other as they approached the much-reduced

quarters of Kadakithis and his retainers. In truth, though, she no longer wanted

to see the priest, if indeed she had ever wanted to see him. Her anger had

escaped and now she only wanted to return to her tiny room. But Walegrin pounded

on the heavy door and forced it open before the Torch’s pet mute could lift the

latch.

Molin set down his goblet and stared at Cythen in the old-fashioned way that

said: What has the cat dragged in this time? Cythen tugged at her tunic, well

aware that the clothes of a garrison soldier, no matter how clean or cared for,

were unseemly attire for a woman – especially one who had been an earling’s

daughter. And if he knew about Bekin, then he might have known the rest as well.

She would have run from the chamber, had that been an option, but since it

wasn’t, she squared her shoulders and matched his appraising look with one of

her own.

The priest was Rankan and he’d managed to retain all the implied power and

majesty that that word had ever carried, despite the low ceilings and the

laundry-women battling outside his window. Bands of gold decorated the hems of

his robes, adorned his boots, and circled his fingers. His midnight hair was

combed to surround his face like a lion’s mane – yet it was not so dark or shiny

as his eyes. If the Torch’s god had been vanquished, as some claimed; if the

Prince was simply a puppet in the hands of the Beysa; if his prospects for

wealth and honour had been reduced, then none of it showed in his appearance or

demeanour. Cythen looked away first.

‘Cythen has some questions I can’t answer for her,’ Walegrin said boldly as he

laid the parchment on the priest’s table. ‘She wonders why you didn’t protect

Bekin when you first suspected there might be danger in dealing with the Beysib,

as she did.’

The Torch calmly unrolled the parchment. ‘Ah, three caravans yesterday; seventy

five soldats. We’ve almost enough. They agree the first boat should be bought

with Rankan gold, you know. The longer we can keep the capital ignorant of our

situation here, the better it will be for all of us. If they knew how much gold

was floating in our harbour, they’d bring half the army down here to take it

from us – and neither we nor they want that.’ He looked up from the parchment.

‘Have you found me a man to take the gold north yet? I’ll have other messages

for him to carry as well. The war’s not going well; I think we can lure Tempus

back to his Prince. We’re going to need that man’s unique and nasty talents

before this is over.’ He rerolled the parchment and handed it over to the

mute.

Walegrin scowled. He had no desire to have Tempus back in the town. Molin sipped

at his wine and seemed to notice Cythen for the first time again. ‘Now then, for

your companion’s questions. I was not aware of the unfortunate woman’s

relationship to Cythen until after she was dead. And I certainly did not know

there was danger in bedding a Beysib until it was too late.’

‘But you were watching her. You must have suspected something,’ Cythen snarled,

grinding her heel into the lush wool-and-silk carpet and banging her fist on the

priest’s fine parquet table.

‘She was, I believe, a half-mad – or totally mad, you’d know better than I

harlot at the Aphrodisia. I can not imagine the dangers or delights of such a

life. She entertained a variety of Beysib men, one of the few who would, and as

the welfare of the Beysib is important to me, I kept tabs on them, and therefore

her. It is a pity she was murdered – that is what happened, isn’t it? But, mad

as she was – sleeping with the Beysib – isn’t it better that she’s departed? Her

spirit is free now to be reborn on a higher, happier level.’

Theology came easily and sincerely to the priest. And Cythen, who knew her own

sins well enough, was tempted to believe the resonant phrases.

‘You knew something,’ she said pleadingly, clutching her resolve. ‘Just like the

Harka Bey suspected something when I told them.’

Torchholder swallowed his pious words and looked to Walegrin for confirmation.

The blond, ice-eyed man simply nodded his head slightly and said: ‘It had been

suggested by Yorl. Cythen seemed the most appropriate one for the task; she

volunteered anyway.’

‘Harka Bey,’ the priest repeated, mulling over the words. ‘Vengeance of Bey, I

believe, in their language. I’ve heard rumours, legends, whatever about them,

but everybody’s denied that there’s anything to the legends. Poison-blooded

female assassins? And real enough that Cythen met with them? Very interesting,

but not at all what I’d expected.’

‘I believe, your Grace, that Yorl only suggested contacting the Harka Bey. It

seems unlikely that they would have killed the girl: Indeed they deny it,’

Walegrin corrected, clenching Cythen’s upper arm in a bruising grip to keep

her quiet.

‘What did you expect?’ Cythen demanded of Molin, wrenching free of Walegrin and

raising her voice. ‘Why is it so important that she slept with the Beysib men?

Which one of them do you suspect of murder?’

‘Not so loudly, child,’ the priest pleaded, remember, we survive on sufferance;

we can have no suspicions.’ He gestured to the mute, who went to the window and

began playing a loud folktune on his pipes. ‘We have no rights.’ Taking Cythen’s

arm, he ushered her into a cramped, windowless alcove, hidden behind one of his

tapestries.

Molin began to speak in a hoarse whisper. ‘And keep quiet about this,’ he warned

her. ‘The Aphrodisia is the favourite gaming place of our new lords and masters,

especially the younger, hot-headed ones. There’s an element among them that does

not appreciate the current policy of restraint. Remember, these people are

exiles; they’ve just lost a war at home; they’ve got something to prove to

themselves. Sure, the older men say “Bide your time,” “We’ll go home next

year, or the year after that, or the one after that.” They weren’t the

ones on the battlefields getting their asses kicked.

‘The Beysa Shupansea listens to the old men, but now, with the murders of their

own people, she is becoming nervous herself. The clamour for a stronger hand is

rising …’

Molin was interrupted by the sound of someone banging on the outer door. ‘The

palace is a sponge,’ he complained, and he was in a position to know the truth.

‘Wait here and stay quiet, for god’s sake.’

Walegrin and Cythen pressed back into the shadows and listened to a loud,

unintelligible conversation between Molin and one of the Beysib lords. They did

not need to understand the words; the shouts told them enough. The Beysib was

angry and upset. Molin was having small success at calming him down. Then the

Beysib stormed out of the room, slamming the door behind him, and Molin rushed

back into the alcove.

‘They want results.’ He rubbed his hands together nervously, releasing the scent

of the oils he used on his skin. ‘Turghurt’s out there calling for vengeance and

his people are listening. After all, no Beysib would kill another Beysib in such

a crude manner!’ Molin’s voice spewed sarcasm. ‘I’ve got no great love for the

natives of this town but one thing they are not, to a man, woman or child of

them – stupid enough to taunt the Beysib like this!’

Walegrin frowned. ‘So they believe it’s a Sanctuary man, or woman, behind it.

But at least one of the bodies was found on the rooftops, right here, in the

palace compound. This place is guarded, Molin. We guard it; they guard it. We’d

have seen him, at least.’

‘Exactly what I’ve told them. Exactly why I’m sure it isn’t one of us. But no;

they’ve been frightened. They’re convinced the town is smouldering against them

– they don’t intend to be pushed any further and they’re not about to listen to

me.

‘I figure it works this way: there are malcontents in this court just like

anywhere else. I knew the bulk of the hotheads congregated at the Aphrodisia. I

didn’t think there was danger to it; I just meant to keep those young men

watched. Their leader is the eldest son of Terrai Burek, the Beysa’s prime

minister. And a child more unlike the father you can’t imagine. It’s no secret

the boy hates his father and would do anything to spite the old man – though I

expect bullying the townspeople would come naturally to him anyway. Yet, the

father protects his son and the common laws of Sanctuary can’t reach him.’

‘You’re talking about Turghurt, aren’t you?’ Walegrin asked, obviously

recognizing the name, though Cythen didn’t recall having heard it before.

‘Still, Cythen’s sister was killed by venom – and the Harka Bey are all women.’

‘True enough, but if the Harka Bey is real then it’s likely a number of other

things are – like the rings with reservoirs for venom and razor-sharp blades to

simulate the fangs. They’ve told me the venom can’t be isolated, but I don’t

believe them now -‘

‘Who is this Terket Buger?’ Cythen inquired, her thoughts warming to the idea of

a name and face she could blame and take vengeance upon. ‘Would I recognize

him?’

‘Turghurt Burek,’ Walegrin corrected. ‘Yeah, you’ve probably seen him. He’s a

big man, a troublemaker. Taller than most of the Beysib men here by a head or

more. He’s a coward, I’m sure, because we can never find him alone. He’s always

got a handful of cronies around. We can’t lay a hand on him anyway – though this

time we’re talking about killing.’ He looked hopefully to the priest.

‘Not this time, either.’

They were once again interrupted by a hammering on the outside door and the

sounds of masculine voices shouting in the Beysib language. Molin left the

alcove to deal with the intrusion and fared worse this time than before. He was

roundly berated by two men who, it appeared, had made up their minds about

something. The priest returned to the alcove, visibly shaken.

‘It fits together now,’ he said slowly. ‘The boy has boxed us all. Another

Beysib woman has been found dead – and mutilated, I might add – down by the

wharf. Young Burek has played his hand masterfully. That was him, and his

father, to tell me that the populace must be controlled or wholesale slaughter

of the townsfolk will be on my conscience. The men of Bey will not see their

women defiled.’

‘Turghurt Burek was here?’ Cythen asked, her hands moving instinctively to her

hip, where she usually wore her sword. She cursed herself for not having dared

to lift the tapestry a fraction to see his face.

‘The same, and he’s convinced his father now as well. Walegrin, I don’t know how

you’ll do it, but you’ve got to keep the peace until I can get the old man to

see reason – or catch the murderers bloody-handed.’ The priest paused, as if an

idea had just occurred to him. He looked hard at Cythen and she fairly cringed

from the plotting she saw in his face. ‘Catch them bloody-handed! You – Cythen;

how much do you want your revenge? What will you sacrifice to get it? Turghurt

is full of himself, and he’ll likely go back to the Aphrodisia to celebrate this

victory. He hasn’t been back since your sister died, but I doubt he’ll wait much

longer. If not tonight, then tomorrow night. He’ll go back because he has to

gloat – and because his kind get no satisfaction from these high-handed Beysib

women.

‘Now, somehow your sister learned something she shouldn’t have and died for it.

Could you lure him into the same mistake and survive to let me know of it? I’ll

need proof absolute if I’m going to confront his father. Not a corpse, you

understand; that will only fan the flames. What I’ll need is Turghurt and the

proof. Can you get it for me?’

Cythen found herself nodding, promising the Rankan priest that she would get her

vengeance as she got him his proof; as she spoke another hidden part of herself

froze into numb paralysis. The meeting had become a dream from which she could

not seem to awaken: a continuation of all the nightmares that made her past so

unpleasant to remember. Bekin was dead – but not gone.

She stood mute while the priest and Walegrin made their plans. Her silence was

taken for attentiveness, though she heard nothing above the screaming other own

thoughts. The priest patted her on the shoulder as she left his rooms, following

Walegrin into the forecourt again. Knots of Beysibs had gathered there, talking

among themselves with their backs to the Sanctuary pair as they walked back to

the garrison. One of the men did turn to stare at her. He wasn’t tall so he

wasn’t Turghurt, but all the same. the feel of the cold fish-eyes regarding her

finally loosened her tongue.

‘Sabellia preserve me! I know nothing of Bekin’s trade. I’m still a virgin!’ It

was as much of a prayer as she had muttered since her father went down with an

arrow in his throat.

Walegrin stopped short, appraising her in surprise. ‘You told me you’d worked on

the Street of Red Lanterns?’

‘I told you that I’d tried to work on the Street of Red Lanterns and that I

couldn’t. Don’t look at me like that; it’s not that unreasonable. Don’t I have

my own quarters now, and no one who’d dare to bother me there? A woman who lives

with the garrison is safe from all other men, and a woman who is part of that

garrison is safe from her cohorts as well.’

‘Then you’ve got more courage than I thought,’ he replied, shaking his head, ‘or

you’re an utter fool. You’d better let Myrtis know when you get there; she’ll

know how to turn it to our advantage.’

Cythen grimaced and tried not to think of that evening, or the next evening. She

left her sword in Walegrin’s care and made her way to the Street. It was nearing

dusk by the time she got there and some of the poorer, more worn women, who did

not dwell in any of the major establishments, were already on the prowl, though

the Aphrodisia was not yet open for business. One of them jeered at her as she

climbed the steps to the carved doors: ‘They won’t take your type there,

soldier-girl.’

She stood there uncomfortably, ignoring the comments from the street below and

remembering why she always came in the morning. The doorman recognized her,

however, and at length the doors swung open to her. The downstairs was beginning

to come to life with music and women dressed in brilliant, flower-coloured

dresses. Cythen watched them as the doorman guided her to the little room where

Myrtis was getting ready for the evening herself.

‘I had not expected to see you again,’ Myrtis said softly, rising from her

dressing table and discreetly closing the account book, which crowded out the

cosmetic bottles. ‘Your note said your meeting did not go well. You had not

mentioned returning here.’

‘The meeting didn’t go well.’ Cythen eyed Myrtis’s smooth, clenched white hands

as she spoke. There was a barely perceptible nervousness in the madam’s voice

and a barely perceptible rippling to the edge of the table rug beneath the

account books. Both could have any number of benign explanations, but Cythen had

brought Bekin here expecting, and paying for, her sister’s safety. Myrtis had

not provided the services she had been paid for and Cythen’s vengeance could be

expected in several different ways.

‘I’ve seen the priest, Molin Torchholder, and he’s made a plan; a way to snare

the one he suspects. I thought he would have sent you a message by now,’

Cythen said quickly.

Myrtis shrugged, but without unclenching her fists. ‘Since Bekin there have been

other deaths: gruesome murders, many of them Beysib women. All the reliable

couriers have been kept busy. There isn’t time for the death of a Sanctuary

girl. Perhaps you can tell me who Molin Torchholder suspects of using beynit

venom when the Harka Bey denies all knowledge of it?’

‘He suspects a man, a Beysib man. He suspects that the death of my sister is not

so different from the Beysib deaths.’

‘Has he given you a name?’

‘Yes, Turghurt Burek.’

‘The son of the prime minister?’

‘Yes, but the Torch suspects him anyway. He comes here, doesn’t he?’

‘That man has spies everywhere!’ Myrtis grimaced as she relaxed and raised her

fist towards the smouldering hearth. Cythen heard a small click; then watched as

the flames leapt high and crimson. ‘Once primed, it must be shot,’ Myrtis

explained, while Cythen shuddered. ‘We called him Voyce here; and he was always

a gentleman – for all that he’s fish-folk. Bekin was special to him; such

childlike innocence is not at all common among their women. He grieved over her

death and hasn’t been back since she died.

‘But he was also the second person to suggest the Harka Bey to us.’ Myrtis

paused, and just when Cythen despaired of being believed at all, the starkly

beautiful woman continued: ‘I like him very much; he reminds me of a love I once

had. I was blinded. I have hiot been blinded for … for a long time. The signs

were there; my suspicions should have been roused. Does Molin Torchholder have

some notion of how we’re to bring the son of the Beysib prime minister to

justice before there is war in the town and we turn to Ranke for help?’

‘Molin believes that since Bekin was the only Sanctuary woman who has been

slain, she must have learned something dangerous to him. Molin thinks that

Turghurt will make the same mistake again, now that he’s convinced his father to

see everything his way. But I will be less easy to kill than she was, and snare

him instead.’

‘You play a dangerous game between the priest and this Beysib, Cythen. Molin is

no less ruthless than the fish-folk. And, here Burek is Voyce; none of my women

knows the true names of the men here, and if you value your life you’ll remember

that. The Aphrodisia is a place apart; a man need not be himself here – and they

expect me to protect them. ‘

‘Now Voyce is clever, strong and cruel, yet it would be a simple matter to be

rid of him, if that would serve our purposes. The Harka Bey are not the only

women who understand killing. But he must be exposed, not slain, and that will

be all the more dangerous.’

‘I’ve come for my vengeance,’ Cythen warned.

‘He will not expose himself to a garrison soldier, my dear, neither figuratively

nor literally.’ Myrtis gave Cythen a slightly condescending smile. ‘His tastes

do not run towards strong-willed women, such as he was raised with and his

father serves. You do not have the yielding nature that madness gave your

sister.’

‘I’ll become whatever I must be to trap him.’

As she spoke, Cythen yanked loose the cord that bound her hair, shaking her head

until the brown strands rose like an untidy aura around her face.

‘Good intentions will not deceive him, either.’ Myrtis had become kind-voiced

again. ‘Your need for vengeance will not make you a courtesan. There are others

here who can bell our cat.’

‘No,’ Cythen protested. ‘He’ll come here again and make his mistake again, and

he might kill another of your courtesans. Isn’t it to your advantage to let me

risk my life rather than sacrificing one of those who belong to you?’

‘Of course it would be to my advantage, child, if I owned anyone. But just

because I keep account books on love a.nd pleasure, do not think I am completely

without conscience. If Voyce is all he is suspected of being, I would be as

guilty of your death, or anyone’s death, as he would be.’

Cythen shook her head and took a step closer to Myrtis, resting her fists on the

table. ‘Don’t lecture me about death or guilt. For five years since those

bandits swept down and attacked us, I travelled with Bekin, protecting her,

bringing her men, and killing them if I had to. It would have been better if she

had died that first night. I’m not sorry she’s dead, only sorry that she was

murdered by a man she trusted, as she trusted all men. I don’t blame you, or me,

but I can’t get her out of my memory until I’ve avenged her. Do you understand

that? Do you understand that I must close the circle completely, myself, if I’m

to have peace, if I’m to be free of her?’

Myrtis met Cythen’s rabid stare and, whether she understood the dark emotions

and memories that drove the younger woman or not, she finally nodded. ‘Still, if

you are to have a chance at all, you must abide by what I tell you to do,

Cythen. If he does not find you attractive, he will search elsewhere. I will

give you her chambers and her clothes; that will give you an advantage. I will

send Ambutta to bathe you, to help you dress and to arrange your hair.

‘When he returns again, if he returns again, he will be yours. You may stay as

long as you please, but he is not to be harmed in this house! Now then, you must

also seem to belong here, and it will rouse suspicion if you take no others

while you wait. I will set aside your portion -‘

‘I’m a virgin,’ Cythen interrupted in a far from steady voice. When her mind was

focused on the fish-eyed murderer other sister, she could manage to ignore the

implications of the plan she had agreed to; but faced with the pragmatic logic

of the madam, she began to realize that vengeance and determination might not be

enough.

Myrtis nodded, ‘I had suspected as much. You would not want your sister’s

slayer, then, to be the first -‘

‘It won’t matter. Just tell everyone that I’m being saved for just the right

man. That’s often the way of it anyway, isn’t it? A special prize for a special

customer?’

Myrtis hardened. ‘In those places where courtesan and slave are the same that

may be so. But my women are here because they wish to be here; I do not own

them. Many leave for other lives after they’ve grown tired of a life of love and

earned a healthy portion of gold. But pleasure is not your talent, Cythen; you

wouldn’t understand. Men have nothing you desire and you have nothing to give

them in return.’

‘I have a talent for deceit, Myrtis, or neither Bekin nor I would have survived

at all. Honour your promise. Give him to me for one night.’

With a gesture of worried resignation, Myrtis consented to the arrangement. She

summoned Ambutta, who some said was her daughter, and had Cythen led into the

private sections of the house where, for a night and a day she was fussed over

and transformed. Before sundown of the next day she was ensconced in the plush

seraglio where Bekin had lived, and died. Her garrison clothes and knife had

been hidden in the dark panelled walls and she herself was now draped in lengths

of diaphanous rose-coloured silk – a gift to Bekin from the man who had slain

her.

Staring into the mirror as the sun set, Cythen saw a woman she had never known

before: the self she might have become if tragedy had not intervened. She was

beautiful, as Bekin had been, and she preferred the feel of silk to the chafing

of the linen and wools she normally wore. Ambutta had skilfully wound beads

through Cythen’s hair, binding it into a fanciful shape that left Cythen afraid

to turn quickly, lest the whole affair come tumbling down into her face.

‘There was a message for you earlier,’ Ambutta, a disturbingly wise woman no

older than thirteen, said as she daubed a line of kohl under Cythen’s eyes.

‘What?’ Cythen jerked away in anger, her stance becoming that of a fighter,

despite the silk.

‘You were bathing,’ the child-woman explained, twirling the brush in the inky

powder, ‘and men do not come upstairs by day.’

‘All right, then, give it to me now.’ She held out her hand.

‘It was spoken only, from your friend Walegrin. He says two more fish-folk have

been found murdered: Actually it’s three -another was found at low tide – but

the message came before that. One of them was a cousin to the Beysa herself. The

garrison is ordered to produce the culprit, or any culprit, by dawn or the

executions will begin. They will kill as many each noon as fish-folk who have

already died. Tomorrow they’ll kill thirteen – by venom.’

Though the room was warm and draughtless, Cythen felt a chill. ‘Was that all?’

‘No, Walegrin said Turghurt is horny.’

The chill became a finger of ice along her spine. She did not resist as Ambutta

moved closer to finish applying the kohl. She saw her face in the mirror and

recognized herself as the frightened girl beside the wise Ambutta.

The hours wore on after Ambutta left her. Two knobs had burnt off the hour

candle and none had come to her door. The music and laughter that were the

normal sounds of an evening at the Aphrodisia House grated on her ears as she

listened for the telltale accent that would betray the presence of the fish

folk, whatever common Ilsigi or Rankan name Myrtis gave them.

Couples walked noisily past her closed door; women already settled for the

night. The smells of love-incense grew strong enough to make her head ache. She

stood on a pile of pillows to open the room’s only window and to look out on the

jumble of the Bazaar stalls and the dark roofs of the Maze beyond them. Absorbed

by the panorama of the town, she did not hear the latch lift nor the door open,

but she felt someone staring at her.

‘They told me that they had given you her room.’

She knew, before she turned, that he had finally come. He spoke the local

dialect well, but without any attempt to conceal his heavy accent. Her heart was

fluttering against her ribs as she turned to face him.

He had left his cloak downstairs and stood before her in fish-folk finery,

filling the doorway with his bulk. It was no wonder Bekin had adored him – she’d

had a child’s delight in colour and shine. His pantaloons were a deep turquoise,

embroidered with silver. His tunic was a lighter shade, slashed open to the

navel with sleeves that shone and rippled like the rose silk she wore. His fez

was encrusted with glittery stones; he removed it with a smile; his shaved scalp

glistened in the candlelight. Despite herself, Cythen flattened against the wall

and regarded him with a mixture of fear and awe. His eyes shone as he watched

her without blinking, and after a moment she looked away.

‘There is no need to be frightened. Little Flower.’

His arms circled the rose silk and drew her tightly against him. Strong blunt

fingers pressed around her neck, digging in behind her ears so she could not

resist as he forced her lips apart. She willed herself to numbness when he found

the knots that bound the silk around her and undid them. Screams of outrage

echoed in her mind, but she clung silently, unprotestingly, to his powerful

arms.

‘You are still frightened?’ he asked after a while, running a finger over the

curve other hip as she lay limp on the pillows beside him. He was strong, as

Walegrin had said he would be, but she did not quite have the nerve to find out

if he was a coward as well.

She shook her head when he asked if she was afraid, but could not stop her hands

from coming to rest on top of his, stopping his incessant motion. He bent over

her, caressing her breast with his lips, tongue and teeth. With a strangled

whimper, she stiffened away from him.

‘You will see. There’s nothing to be frightened of. Just relax.’

He was staring at her: cold fish-eyes peering into her body and soul. All the

warnings that Myrtis, Walegrin, and even Ambutta had given her chorused out of

her memory and she wished she was Bekin: either dead or willing to love any man.

Her confidence went out like a guttered candle. She felt him loosening the heavy

belt that bound his pantaloons and knew she could not stifle the next screams

that would rise from her throat.

There would be no second chance. She would fall, and probably die here in this

room with her sister’s ghost hovering in her thoughts. But she was a master of

deceit, as she had claimed, which was much more than simple lying or pretending.

‘Yes, I’m frightened,’ she whispered in a coy, little girl’s voice she had just

discovered, using the truth to buy a few more moments. She shivered and clutched

the discarded silk against her as he let her slide away from him. ‘Do you know

what happened to the girl who lived in this room? While she slept, someone let a

serpent into here and it bit her. She died horribly. Sometimes I think I hear it

on the pillows, but they won’t let me have another room.’

There are no snakes in this room. Little Flower.’

In the shadows, she could not be certain of his expression, and his accent made

it difficult to read the sound of his voice. Recklessly, she continued.

‘That’s what they tell me. The only snakes in Sanctuary which are poisonous are

the Beysa’s holy snakes – and those never go far from her in the palace. But she

was killed by snake venom. Someone had to have put it in here. But she was only

a mad girl from the Street of Red Lanterns, so no one will search for her

killer.’

‘I’m sure your Prince will do all that he can. It would be a crime among us, as

well, if someone had stolen the Beysa’s serpent.’

‘I’m afraid. Suppose they didn’t need to steal the serpent, suppose they only

needed the venom. Suppose the Harka Bey are angry because men like you come here

to women like me.’

He took her in his arms again, brushing the sweat-dampened hair back from her

face. ‘The Harka Bey is a tale for children.’

She caught his hand in hers and felt the design of the ring on his hand: a

serpent, with fangs that rasped on the ridges of her fingertips. He pulled his

hand quickly away.

‘I’m afraid, Turghurt, of what will become of me -‘

He struck like a snake, grabbing at her throat and wrenching her head around

into the candlelight. Her right arm was hopelessly twisted in the silk and her

left bent backwards into agony.

‘So Myrtis thinks it’s me, does she?’

‘No,’ Cythen gasped, aware now that she had used his real name, as she had been

warned not to do. ‘She knows it could not have been you who killed Bekin. Only

women handle the serpents…’ but they were both staring at the serpent ring

shining in the candle-light.

‘What are you?’ he demanded, shaking her jaw until something ripped loose in her

neck and she could not have answered him if she had wanted to. ‘Who sent you?

What do you know?’ He bent her wrist back until it was in the candle flame. ‘Who

told you about our plans?’

Tears flowed through the kohl, washing the black powder into her eyes – but that

was the least of her pain. She screamed, finally, though wrenching her jaw free

of him was almost enough to make her faint. He caught her again, but it was too

late. Even as he beat her head against the wall, someone was banging on the

door. She fell back on the candle, extinguishing it with her body, and they

struggled against each other in the darkness.

She broke free more than once, digging her filed nails into whatever vulnerable

skin she could grab. But she did not have the strength to break his bones with

her hands and could not find, in the darkness, the panel that concealed her

knife. Someone was using an axe on the door now, and she thought perhaps it

would not all have been in vain if they caught him for her death.

He caught her by the shoulder and brought his fist crashing into her weakened

jaw. The force and the pain stunned her. She hung limp in his grip, defenceless

against his second punch. He heaved her body into a corner, where it hit with a

dead-weight thud; then he began moving frantically through the darkness as the

axe continued to bite against the door.

Cythen had not lost consciousness, though she wished she had. Her mouth and jaw

were on fire, although, ironically, one or another of his punches had undone the

dislocation, along with loosening a few of her teeth. She could have screamed

freely now, as she heard his glittery clothing dropping to the floor, but the

anguish of her failure was too great.

A piece of wood had splintered away from the door. Light from the lanterns in

the hallway glinted off the serpent ring which he held before his eyes. She

realized that he must think her dead or unconscious, and she thought she might

survive if she continued to be silent, but he came at her as a second, larger

piece of wood came loose. The glistening serpent’s head rose above his fist.

She lunged away from him and felt something strike her shoulder. In the swirl of

pain and panic she did not know if the fangs had pierced her; she knew only that

she was still alive, still wrapped around his legs and trying to bite him with

her already battered and bloody teeth. He kicked free other with little

difficulty and made a leap for the window as a hand reached around into the

darkness and worked the latch.

Though the door was open almost at once, Turghurt had heaved himself clear of

the window before they reached him. And though Cythen protested her health and

survival, they made more of a fuss over her and the ruined silk than they did

over the escaping Beysib.

‘He won’t get far. Not without any clothes,’ Myrtis assured her, holding up the

discarded turquoise pantaloons.

‘He’ll be bleedin’ naked!’ one of the other women tittered.

Cythen had already learned that the pain was bearable so long as she didn’t try

to talk, so she ignored the chaos of conversation and searched for the panel

that concealed her proper clothes and knife. The Beysib wasn’t naked, she was

sure of that. Somehow he’d managed to exchange his bright silks for dark clothes

such as the Harka Bey had worn. He hadn’t been able to change his boots, though,

and the light leather should be easy to spot – if he wasn’t already safe at the

palace by now. She shoved Ambutta aside and pulled on her own boots.

‘You aren’t going after him, are you? The garrison has men at both ends of the

Street. They’ll have him by now. I’ve already sent for a physician to see you.’

Myrtis reached gently towards Cythen’s battered face, and Cythen warned her away

with an animal growl.

With her hair still loose and glittering, she shoved her way to the door. Maybe

Walegrin really was out there; it would be the first good thing that had

happened. Maybe they had already caught Turghurt. She’d rather have Thrusher

tend her v/ounds than some cathouse doctor. She kicked at the doorman when he

tried to stop her and burst out into the Street.

Although the walls of the Palace were closer, they were more dangerous. She

guessed Turghurt would have gone south past the Bazaar and into the Maze before

heading back to the palace. It had not occurred to her that he might still be on

the Street until a hand loomed out of the shadows and closed over her mouth. Her

throat tore with an almost soundless shriek and she lashed back with her heels

and fists before hearing a familiar voice.

‘Damn you, bitch! We’ve got him cornered in a loft not a hundred steps from

here.’

She pried Walegrin’s fingers from her face and stood before him, tears streaming

down her cheeks and her whole body trembling.

‘What happened to you?’

‘I… got… hit,’ she said slowly, moving her mouth as little as possible.

‘Did you get the proof?’

She shrugged. Was the ring and his attempt to kill her proof he had killed Bekin

or the Beysib men and women?

‘C’mon, Cythen. He broke out of there like a bull. He didn’t punch you out

’cause you’re ugly -‘

She shook her head and tried to explain what had happened, but her mouth was too

sore for so many words and he could make no sense of her gestures.

‘Well, all right, anyway. Maybe we can pry something out of him now. We think

he’s found a regular hideout behind some of the older Houses.’ Walegrin led the

way off the street to a dark jumble of buildings where two of his men waited.

‘It’s as quiet as a tomb up there,’ the soldier informed his captain; then,

noticing Cythen, added: ‘What happened to you?’

‘She got hit. Don’t ask questions. Now, you’re sure he’s still up there?’

‘There’s only two ways out and he ain’t used either of them.’

‘Okay.’ Walegrin turned back to Cythen. ‘You get him at ally She shook her head

to say no and he looked away. ‘Okay. Thrush, you come with me. Jore, you bellow

if you see something. And Cythen,’ he tossed her a scabbard. ‘Here’s your sword;

redeem yourself.’

They dashed across an open space and flattened themselves against the rough

stucco walls of the building. It had been abandoned for some time. Chunks of

stonework broke loose as they made their way to the gaping doorway. The central

column of stairs to the upper room was only wide enough for one person and

missing a good third of its boards as well. Walegrin drew his Enlibrite sword

and started up them, motioning for the others to remain behind.

He moved smoothly and silently until, while he was raising his leg over two

missing steps, the lower board gave way. The blond man lurched forward, using

his sword for balance, not defence, and another sword swished through the air

above him and bit deep into his arm. Metal began to sing loudly against metal;

green sparks danced in the air. By their faint light it was clear that Walegrin,

with a cut in his shoulder and his legs entangled in the ruins of the stairs,

was taking a beating.

Thrusher shouted outside for help, though with Walegrin wedged in the stairway,

there was no easy way to reach Burek, nor to protect their captain – but there

was one way. While Thrusher watched in surprise, Cythen drew her own sword and

prepared to get up to the second floor by running up and over Walegrin. With a

handful of his hair and one foot planted hard on his thigh, she propelled

herself over him, hoping that the sheer audacity of her move would keep Burek

guessing for the moment it would take for her to regain her balance. She raised

her sword just as his blade arced towards her – and Walegrin reached out to

parry it aside.

The Beysib circled away from the stairwell, and Cythen edged along the walls.

This room was not the dusty wreckage the lower parts of the building had been.

Someone had been using it recently. Knives littered an otherwise clean table and

a crude map of the town hung on the wall. There was another curved Beysib sword

on the wall as well, but Turghurt hadn’t taken it. The room was too small for

the swirling double-sword style the Harka Bey had used. His stance was not that

much different from her own, though his reach was substantially longer.

Walegrin, still struggling to free himself from the stairs, broke through

another board and fell from sight, shaking the entire structure as he landed.

From the commotion, Cythen knew they were trying to improvise a human ladder,

but at that moment Turghurt was easily parrying her best cuts and she doubted

they’d reach her in time.

She wouldn’t have the strength to ward off many of his thunderous attacks. She

could stall and hope they’d get something together in time, or she could charge

him and hope for the same sort of clear shot as she’d gotten at the Harka Bey

though that would kill him and might make everything worse.

He guessed her intention to attack and back-pedalled across the room, laughing

to himself. He was silhouetted by a hole in the walls where a window might once

have been and he seemed very large, but perhaps his laughing had made him drop

his guard just a fraction. She sprang at him.

His eyes went wide with disbelief. He was falling towards her before she touched

him, the disbelief becoming a fixed, deathlike stare. His momentum pushed her

backwards and off balance, knocking her sword aside. But he was no longer

attacking, only falling. They both went crashing to the floor and through it, as

the old wood gave way beneath them. Cythen heard a scream – her own – then

nothing.

3

The sun was bright in the courtyard of the palace. Cythen, the swelling still

apparent in her face, and Walegrin, his arm in a sling, stood with the Hell

Hounds in the places of honour. There were, as yet, no Beysibs in sight. Enas

Yorl let the curtain fall from his hand and sat back in the shadowed privacy of

his study. It seemed the whole population of the town had crammed around the

high platform whereupon the Beysa would pronounce judgement.

‘Would you have stopped him for the courtesan’s sake alone?’ he asked the

darkness beside him.

‘The girl-soldier has conquered her fears and her past. We have made her a part

of our sisterhood. We, too, must adapt. Her vengeance is ours,’ the voice of a

Beysib woman replied.

‘Ah, but that wasn’t the question. If all you knew was that the Blood of Bey, as

you call it, had been used to slay an innocent courtesan, and that it had been

done to make the suspicion fall on you; if there had been no other crimes, would

you have stopped him?’

‘No. We have always been blamed for crimes we do not commit. It is part of the

balance we have with the Empire. One insignificant life would have made no

difference.’

Trumpets blared out a fanfare. Yorl lifted the curtain again. Sunlight fell on a

four-fingered, ebony hand. The Beysa had arrived at the platform, her breasts so

heavily painted they scarcely seemed naked. Her long golden hair swirled

plumelike in the light breeze. The moment had arrived and the crowd grew quiet.

Terrai Burek, the prime minister, ascended the platform and behind him, in

chains, came his son, Turghurt.

The young man stumbled and the guards rushed forward to get him back on his

feet. Even at this distance, it was plain that something had happened to the

young man and that he had no clear idea why his aunt, the Beysa Shupansea, was

standing in the sun, telling everyone that he was going to die for the deaths of

his own people and for the death of a Sanctuary courtesan. Yorl let the curtain

drop again.

‘Then why did you use just enough venom on your dart to destroy his mind but not

enough to kill him?’

The Beysib woman laughed melodically. ‘He overstepped himself. He thought to

arouse Shupansea’s rage by slaying Sharilar, her cousin, while they walked along

the wharf. But he killed not only Sharilar, but Prism – and that we could not

forgive.’

‘But you could have killed him outright. Wouldn’t that have been the true

vengeance of Bey?’

‘Bey is a goddess of many moods; she is life as well as death. This is a lesson

for everyone: for town and Beysib. They will respect each other a little more

now. Shupansea, herself, needed to pronounce this judgement. She must rise to

rule here or Turghurt will be only the first.’

There was a collective gasp from the crowd and Yorl drew back the curtain for

the third time. The Beysa was holding a small, bloody knife, while her serpent

wound around her arm. Turghurt was already dead. The crowd broke into cheering,

just as Yorl felt the sharp prick of fangs on his own neck.

Poison burned and gripped him in hands of red-hot iron. The sunlit courtyard

grew dim, then black. The homed gateway to the seventh level of paradise shone

before him. The ancient magician’s spirit stumbled forward and fell, with the

gate just beyond his reach.

Failure – and with the land of death almost within his grasp. He wept and

brushed the tears away with a shaggy paw. The room was dark and filled with the

odour from the pyre on which they’d immolated the criminal, depriving his spirit

of eternal life within the goddess Bey. And Yorl was left with only the memory

of death to sustain him.

VOTARY

David Drake

‘Hai!’ called the Beysib executioner as his left blade struck. The tip of his

victim’s index finger spun thirty feet across the Bazaar and pattered against

Samlor’s boot. ‘Hai!’ and the right sword lopped the ends off the fourth and

middle fingers together, so that the victim’s right hand ended in a straight

line, the four fingers all the length of the least, the only one to which a

fingernail remained for the moment. ‘Hai!’

The auction block in the centre of the Bazaar had been used for punishment

before, but this particular technique was new to Samlor hil Samt. It was new as

well to many of the longer-term residents of Sanctuary, judging from the

expressions on their faces as they watched. The victim had been spread-eagled,

belly against a vertical wooden barrier. That gave the audience a view of the

executioner’s artistry, which an ordinary horizontal chopping block would have

hidden. And the Beysib – Lord Tudhaliya, if Samlor had understood the crier was

an artist, no doubt about that.

Tudhaliya held his swords each at its balance and twirled them as he himself

pirouetted. The blades glittered like lightning in the rain. The Beysib bowed to

the onlookers before he spun in another flurry of cuts. The gesture was a

sardonic one, an acknowledgement of the audience’s privilege of watching him

work. Tudhaliya was not nodding to the locals as peers or even as humans. For

his performance, the executioner had stripped to a clout that kept his genitals

out of the way when he moved. His arrival had been in a palanquin, however, and

the richly brocaded Beysib who stood by as a respectful backdrop to the activity

were clearly subordinates. And at the moment, his lordship was slicing off the

fingers of a screaming victim like so many bits of carrot.

Well, the governance of Sanctuary had never been Samlor’s concern. Blood and

balls! How the Cirdonian caravan-master wished that he had no other concern with

this cursed city either.

The first link of the information he needed had come from an urchin for a copper

piece, sold as blithely as the boy would have sold a stale bread twist from the

tray balanced on his head. The name of a fortune-teller, a S’danzo whose

protector was a blacksmith? Oh yes, Illyra was still in Sanctuary… and Dubro

the smith, too, if the foreign master’s business was with him.

Samlor’s intended business was in no way with the blacksmith, but the

information was none the less good to know. Before entering the booth, the

Cirdonian set his thumbs on his waist belt and tugged the broad leather a

fraction, to the side. That was less obtrusive than adjusting the belt-sheathed

fighting knife directly.

‘Welcome, master,’ said the woman who had been reading the cards to herself on a

stool. Samlor looped the sash across the doorway hangings. There were the usual

paraphernalia and a table that could be slid between the S’danzo and the lower,

cushioned seat for clients. The young woman’s eyes were very sharp, however. The

Cirdonian knew that her quick appraisal of him as he slid aside the curtain of

pierced shells gave often as much information as a reading would require, when

retailed back to the sitter over cards or his palms or through ‘images’

quivering in a dish of water.

‘You came about the luck of your return -‘ and Samlor would have said that his

face was impassive, but it was not, not to her. ‘No, not a journey but a woman.

Come, sit. The cards, I think?’ Her left hand fanned the deck, the brilliant,

complex signs that some said reflected the universe in a subtlety equal to that

of the icy stars overhead.

‘Lady,’ said Samlor. He turned up his left palm and the silver in it. It was

uncoined bullion, stamped each time it was assayed in a Beysib market. ‘You gave

a man I met true readings. I need a truth that you won’t find in my face.’

The S’danzo looked at the caravan-master again, her smile still professional,

but something new behind her eyes. Samlor’s boot heels were high enough to grip

stirrups, low enough for walking, and worn more by flints than by pavements. He

was stocky and no longer young; but his waist still made a straight line with

his rib cage, with none of the bulge that time brings to easy living. Samlor’s

tunic was of dull red cloth, nearly the shade of his face. His skin never seemed

to tan in the sun and wind that beat it daily. His only touch of ornament was a

silver medallion, its face hidden until the man moved to show the bullion in his

calloused palm. Then toad-faced Heqt flashed upward, goddess ofCirdon and the

Spring rains – and the S’danzo gasped, ‘Samlor hil Samt!’

‘No!’ the man said sharply in answer to the way Illyra’s eyes flicked towards

the doorway, towards the ringing of hot iron heard through it. ‘Only

information, lady. I wish’you no harm.’ And he did not touch the hilt of his

belt knife, because if she remembered Samlor, she remembered the tale of his

first visit to Sanctuary. No need to threaten what his reputation had already

promised, wish it or not. ‘I want to find a little girl, my niece. Nothing

more.’

‘Sit, then,’ the S’danzo said in a guarded voice. This time the visitor obeyed.

He held the silver out to her between thumb and forefinger, but she opened his

palm and held it for her gaze a moment before taking her payment. ‘There’s blood

on them,’ she said abruptly.

‘There’s an execution in the square,’ Samlor said, glancing at his cuff. But it

was unmarked, and even his boot had been too dusty for overt sign where the

severed fingertip had touched it. ‘Oh,’ he said in embarrassment. ‘Oh.’ He

raised his eyes to the S’danzo’s. ‘Life can be hard, lady… and there are

matters of honour. Not my honour since I went into trade -‘ his lip quirked in a

wormwood grimace – ‘but of the family, of the House ofKodrix, yes. I’ve found

little enough that brings me pleasure. But not that, not slaughter. Life is

hard, that’s all.’

Illyra released his palm. The silver clung to her fingers in what was almost a

sleight of hand, professional in that, though the reading was no longer simply

professional or simple at all. ‘Tell me about the child,’ the S’danzo said.

‘Yes,’ the stocky man agreed slowly. Little enough of pleasure, and none at all

in some memories. ‘My sister Samlane was …’ he said, and he paused, ‘not a

slut, I suppose, because she didn’t bed just anybody, and the decision was

always hers. And not a whore, except as a lark, as little coin as there was to

be had in our House … She had a disdain for trade that did credit to the noble

House of Kodrix. Our parents were proud of her, I think, as they never were of

me after I found an honest way to buy their food – and replenish their wine

cellar.’ The grimace again, calling attention to a joke that bit the teller like

a shark.

The woman was quiet, as cool as the shells that whispered in the door curtain.

‘But she was very – experimental. So we shouldn’t have been surprised,’ Samlor

continued, ‘that she’d whelped a bastard before her marriage, while she still

lived in Cirdon. Samlane’s personal effects were sent back after she, she died ‘

Six inches of steel, her brother’s boot knife, were buried in her womb, and

vision as clear in Samlor’s mind as the edge of the knife with which he had

replaced that one. ‘I think Regli wanted to pretend she’d never been born. Alum

won’t hide stretch marks, but she’d passed for a virgin with Regli. I guess

Rankan nobles are even stupider than I’d thought. The tramp! Gods! The worthless

tramp!’

‘Go on,’ Illyra said with unexpected gentleness, as if she heard the pain and

tortured love beneath the curses.

‘The story was there in a diary, enough of it,’ Samlor continued. He was

deliberately opening his hands, which had clenched in fury at nothing material.

‘The child was a girl, fostered with a maid of Samlane’s, Reia. I probably saw

her myself -‘ he swallowed ‘-playing in the halls with the other servants’

brats. You could get lost in the house, a whole wing could crumble over you and

you’d never be found.’ The hands clenched again. ‘My parents tell me they never

knew about the child, about Samlane, in that big house. Pray god I never learn

otherwise, or I’ll have their hearts out though they are my parents.’

The S’danzo touched his hands, relaxing them again. He continued, ‘She’s four

years old by now. She has a birthmark on the front of her scalp, so the hair is

streaked white on the black curls. They called her Star, my sister did and the

maid. And I came back to Sanctuary -‘ Samlor raised his eyes and his voice,

neither angry but as hard and certain as a sword’s edge’- to this hell-hole, to

find my niece. Reia had married here, a guardsman, and she’d stayed after the

after what happened when my sister died. And she’d kept Star like one of her

own, she told me, until a month ago, and the child disappeared, no one to say

where.

‘That’s how late I was, lady,’ the Cirdonian went on in a wondering voice. ‘Just

a month. But I will find Star. And I’ll find any one or any thing that’s harmed

the child before then.’

‘You’ve brought something of the girl’s for me to touch, then?’ said Illyra.

Professional calm had reasserted itself in her voice as she approached her task.

This was the crystalline core on which all the mummery, all the ‘dark strangers’

and ‘far journeys’ were based.

‘Yes,’ said Samlor, calm again himself. With his right hand, his knife hand, he

held out a medallion like the one around his own neck. ‘It’s a custom with us in

Cirdon, the birth-token consecrating the newborn to Heqt’s bounty. This was

Star’s. It was found in the mews of the barracks where she lived. Another child

picked it up, a friend, so she brought it to Reia instead of keeping it

herself.’

Illyra’s hand cupped the grinning face of Heqt, but her eyes glanced over the

ends of the thong that had suspended the medallion. The surface of the leather

was dark with years of sweat and body oils, but its core at the ends was a clear

yellow. ‘Yes,’ Samlor said, ‘it had been cut off her, not stretched and broken.

Help me find Star, lady.’

The S’danzo nodded. Her eyes had slipped .off into a waking trance already.

Illyra’s gaze stayed empty for seconds that seemed minutes. Her • fingers were

brown and capable and heavy with rings. They worked the surface of the medallion

they held, reporting the sensations not to the woman’s mind but to her soul.

Then, like a castaway flailing herself up from the sea, the S’danzo spluttered

again to conscious alertness. Her thin lips formed a brief rictus, not a smile,

at the memory of things she had just seen. Samlor had let his own breath out in

a rush that reminded him that he had not breathed since Illyra entered her

trance.

‘I wish,’ said the woman softly, ‘that I had better news for you, or at least

more. No -‘ for Samlor’s face had stiffened to the preternatural calmness of a

grave stele’- not dead. And I can’t tell you who, master -‘ the honorific

professional as habit reasserted itself’- or even where. But I think I have seen

why.’

With one hand Illyra returned the medal as carefully as if it were the child

herself. With the fingers of the other hand, she touched her own kerchief-bound

hair. ‘The mark that you call the “star” is the “porta” to some of the Beysib. A

sea-beast with tentacles … a god, to some of them.’

Samlor turned his eyes towards the curtain that hid the execution, as within him

his heart turned to murder. ‘That one?’ Nodding, his voice as neutral as if all

the fury at Lord Tudhaliya were not foaming over his mind as he spoke.

‘No, not the rulers,’ Illyra said positively. ‘Not the Burek clan at all, the

horsemen. But the fisher-folk and boatwrights who brought the Burek here, the

Setmur – and not all of them.’ The woman smiled at the trace of a memory so grim

that its fullness wiped her face with loathing an instant later. ‘There was,’

she explained, looking away from the caravan-master, ‘a cult of Dyareela in

Sanctuary in the – recent past. The Porta cult is like that. Only a few, and

those hidden because it’s sacrilege and treason to worship other than the

Imperial gods.’

‘The Beysib have closed the temples here?’ Samlor asked. Her last statement had

jarred him into the interjection.

‘Only to human beings,’ Illyra said. ‘And the Setmur are human, even to the

Burek.’ She smiled again and this time held the expression. ‘We S’danzo are

accustomed to being animals, master. Even in cities Ranke conquered as long ago

as she did Cirdon.’

‘Go on,’ said Samlor evenly. ‘Do these Beysib think to sacrifice Star to their ‘

he shrugged ‘- octopus, their squid?’

The S’danzo woman laughed. ‘Master – Samlor,’ she demanded, ‘is Heqt a giant

toad that you might find near the right pond?’ The man touched his medallion,

and his eyes narrowed at the blasphemy. Illyra went on, ‘Porta is a god, or an

idea – if there’s a difference. A fisher-folk idea. Some of them have always had

images, little carvings on stone or shells, hidden deep in their ships where the

nobles never venture for the stink … And now they have something else to bring

them closer to their god. They have -‘ and she looked from the child’s medal,

which had told her much, to the Cirdonian’s eyes, which in this had told her

even more ‘- the girl you call your niece.’

Samlor hil Samt stood with the controlled power of a derrick shifting a cargo of

swords. The booth was suddenly very cold. ‘Lady,’ he said as he paused in the

doorway. ‘I thank you for your service. But one thing. I know that the Rankans

say their storm-god bedded his sister. But we don’t talk about that in Cirdon.

We don’t even think about it!’

Except when we ‘re drunk, the stocky man’s mind whispered as his hand flung down

the sash. His legs thrust him through the pattering curtain and again into the

square. Except when we’re very drunk, but not incapable … may Samlane burn in

the Hell she earned so richly!

Amazingly, the execution was still going on. Lord Tudhaliya’s breechclout was

black with sweat. His body gleamed as it moved through its intricate dance. His

swords shone as they spun, and the air was jewelled with garnet drops of blood.

The victim’s forearm was gone. Tudhaliya’s blades were sharp, but they were too

light to shear with a single blow the thick bone of a human upper arm. Right

sword, left sword – placing cuts only, notching … Tudhaliya pivoted, his back

to his victim, and the blades lashed out behind him, perfectly directed. The

stump of the victim’s elbow bounded away from the block. She moaned, a bestial

sound… but she had never been human to Tudhaliya, had she? The Beysib

entourage gave well-bred applause to the pass. Their left fingertips pattered on

their right palms.

Samlor strode out of the Bazaar. He was thinking about a child. And he was

thinking that murder might not always be without pleasure, even for him.

In the years since Samlor’s first visit to Sanctuary, the tavern’s sign had been

refurbished. The unicorn’s horn had been gilded, and his engorged penis was

picked out with red paint, lest any passerby miss the joke. The common room

stank as before, though it was too early to add the smoky reek of lamp flames.

There were a few soldiers present, throwing knucklebones and wrangling over who

owed for the next round. There were also two women who would have looked

slatternly even by worse light than what now streamed through the grimy windows;

and, by the wall, a man who watched them, and watched the soldiers, and – very

sharply – watched” Samlor as he entered the tavern.

No one was paying any attention to the fellow in the corner with the sword, the

lute, and a sneer of disgust at the empty tankard before him. ‘Ho, friend,’

Samlor called to the slope-shouldered bartender. ‘Wine for me, and whatever my

friend with the lute is drinking.’ The instrument had inlays of ivory and

mother-of-pearl, but Samlor had noticed the empty sockets, which must recently

have been garnished with gems.

The women were already in motion, lurching from their stools – remoras thrashing

towards the shark they hoped would find their next meal. It was to the pimp

against the wall that Samlor turned with a bright smile, however. ‘And for you,

sir -‘ he said. His thumb spun a coin through the air. Its arc would have

dropped it in the pimp’s lap if the fellow had not snatched it in with fingers

like eagle’s talons. The coin was silver, minted in Ranke, a day’s wage for a

man and as much as these blowsy whores together could expect for a night. ‘If

you keep them away from me. Otherwise, I take back the coin, even if you’ve

swallowed it.’ Samlor wore a smile again, but it was not the same smile. The

women were backing off even before the pimp snarled at them.

The minstrel had risen to take the cup Samlor handed him from the bar. It was

wine, though poverty had drunk ale on the previous round. ‘I thank you, good

sir,’ the man said as he took the cup. ‘And how may Cappen Varra serve you?’

Samlor passed his left hand over the sound box of the lute. The coin he dropped

sang on the strings as it passed. ‘A copper for a song from home,’ he said. He

knew, and from the sound the minstrel knew also, that the coin had not been

copper or even silver. ‘And another like it if you’ll sing to me out on the

bench, where the air has less – sawdust in it.’

Cappen Varra followed with a careful expression. He gave the lute a gentle toss

in his hand, just enough to make the gold whisper again in the sound chamber.

‘So, what sort of a song did you have in mind, good sir?’ he asked as he seated

himself facing Samlor. The minstrel had set his wine cup down. His left leg was

cocked under him on the bench; and his right hand, on the lute’s belly, was not

far from the serviceable hilt of his dagger.

‘A little girl’s missing,’ said Samlor. ‘I need a name, or the name of someone

who might know a name.’

‘And how little a girl?’ asked Varra, even more guarded. He set down the lute,

ostensibly to take the cup in his left hand. ‘Sixteen, would she be?’

‘Four,’ said Samlor.

Cappen Varra spat out the wine as he stood. ‘It shouldn’t offend me, good sir,’

said the minstrel as he up-ended the lute, ‘there’s folk enough in this city who

traffic in such goods. But I do not, and I’ll leave your “copper” here in the

gutter with your suggestion!’

‘Friend,’ said Samlor. His hand shot out and caught the falling coin in the air

before the sun winked on the metal. ‘Not you, but the name of a name. For the

child’s sake. Please.’

Cappen Varra took a deep breath and seated himself again. ‘Your pardon,’ he said

simply. ‘One lives in Sanctuary, and one assumes that everyone takes one for a

thief and worse … because everyone else is a thief and worse, I sometimes

fear. So. You want the name of someone who might buy and sell young children?

Not a short list in this city, sir.’

‘That’s not quite what I want,’ the Cirdonian explained. ‘There is – reason to

think that she was taken by the Beysib.’

The minstrel blinked. ‘Then I really can’t help you, much as I’d like to, good

sir. My songs give me no entree to those folk.’

Samlor nodded. ‘Yes,’ he agreed. ‘But it might be that you knew who in the local

community – fenced goods for Beysib thieves. Somebody must, they can’t deal

among themselves, a closed group like theirs.’

‘Oh,’ said Cappen Varra. ‘Oh,’ and his right hand drummed a nervous riff on the

belly of his instrument. When he looked up again, his face was troubled. ‘This

could be very dangerous,’ he said. ‘For you, and for anyone who sent you to this

man, if he took it amiss.’

‘I was serious about the payment,’ Samlor said. He thumbed a second crown of

Rankan gold from his left hand into the right to join the piece already there.

‘No, not that,’ said the minstrel, ‘not for this. But… I’ll give you

directions. Go after dark. And if I thought you might mention my name, I

wouldn’t tell you a thing. Even for a child.’

Samlor smiled wanly. ‘It’s possible,’ the caravan-master said, ‘that there are

two honourable men in Sanctuary this day. Though I wouldn’t expect anyone to

believe it, even the two of us.’

Cappen Varra began fingering an intricate sequence of chords from his lute.

‘There’s a temple of Ils in the Mercer’s Quarter,’ he began in a rhythmic

delivery. It would have suited the love lyrics his face was miming. ‘Just a

neighbourhood chapel. Go through it and turn right in the alley behind …’

It had been three hours to sundown when Samlor left the Vulgar Unicorn, but it

took him most of the remaining daylight to shop for what he would require during

the interview. Nothing illicit, but the city was unfamiliar; and the major

purchase was uncommon enough to take some searching. He found what he needed at

last at an apothecary’s.

The streets of Sanctuary had a different smell after dark, a serpent-cage miasma

that was more of the psychic atmosphere than the physical. Under the

circumstances, Samlor did not feel it would be politic to carry his dagger free

in his hand as he might otherwise have done. He kept a careful watch, however,

for the casual footpads who might waylay him for his purse, or even for the wine

bottle whose neck projected from his scrip.

The chapel of Ils had once had a gate. It had been stolen for the weight of its

wrought iron. There was nothing pertaining to the cult in the sanctuary except a

niche in which the deity was painted. There might at one time have been a statue

in the niche instead; but if so, it had gone the way of the gate. Samlor slipped

through unobtrusively, though he was by no means sure that the drunk asleep in

the corner was only what he seemed.

The alley behind the chapel was black as a politician’s soul, but by now the

Cirdonian was close enough to operate by feel. A set of rickety stairs against

the left wall. A second staircase. The things that squelched and crunched

underfoot did not matter. There were other, stealthy sounds; but the guards

Samlor expected would not attack without orders, and they would fend away less

organized criminals as the Watch could not dream of doing.

A ladder was pinned against the wall. It had ten rungs, straight up into a trap

door in the overhanging story. Samlor climbed two rungs up and rapped on the

door. He was well aware of how extended his body was if he had misjudged the

guard’s instructions.

‘Yes?’ grunted a voice from above.

‘Tarragon,’ Samlor whispered. If the password had been changed, the next sound

would be steel grating through his ribs.

The door flopped open. A pair of men reached down and heaved Samlor inside with

scant ceremony. Both of them were masked, as was the third man in the room. The

third was the obvious leader, seated behind the oil lamp and the account books

on a desk. The men who held Samlor were bravos; more perhaps than their muscles

alone, but certainly there for their muscles in part. The leader was a black.

The mask obscuring his face was battered from age and neglect, but the eyes that

glittered behind it were as bright as those of the hawk it counterfeited.

The black watched during the silent, expert search. Samlor held himself relaxed

in the double grip as the guards’ free hands twitched away his knife, his purse,

his scrip; snatched off his boots, the sheath in the left one empty already but

noted; ran along his arms. his torso, his groin. The only weapon Samlor carried

this night was the openly sheathed dagger. To leave it behind as well would in

this city have been more suspicious than the weapon.

When the guards were finished, they stepped back a pace to either side. Samlor’s

gear lay in a pile at his feet, save for the dagger, slipped now through the

belt of one of the burly men who watched him.

Unconcerned, the Cirdonian knelt and pulled on his left boot. The man behind the

desk waited for the stranger to speak. Then. as Samlor reached for his other

boot, the masked leader snarled, ‘Well? You’re from Balustrus, aren’t you?

What’s his answer?’

‘No, I’m not from Balustrus,’ Samlor said. He straightened up. holding the wine

bottle. He pulled the cork with his teeth and spat it on to the floor before he

went on. ‘I came to buy information from you,’ Samlor said, and he slurped a

mouthful from the bottle.

The mask did not move. An index finger lifted minusculely for the chopping

motion that would have ended the interview. Samlor spat the fluid in his mouth

across the desk, splattering the topmost ledger and the lap of the seated man.

The hawk-masked leader lunged upward, then froze as his motion made the lamp

flame gutter. There was a dagger aimed at Samlor’s ribs from one side and a

long-bladed razor an inch from his throat on the other; but the Cirdonian knew,

and the guards knew … and the man across the desk most certainly knew that,

dying or not, Samlor could not be prevented from hurling the bottle into the

lamp past which he had spat so nearly.

‘That’s right,’ said Samlor with the bottle poised. ‘Naphtha. And all I want to

do is talk to you nicely, sir, so send your men away.’

While the leader hesitated, Samlor hawked and spat. It would take days to clear

the petroleum foulness from his mouth, and the fumes rising into his sinuses

were already giving him a headache.

‘All right,’ said the leader at last. ‘You can wait below, boys.’ He settled

himself carefully back on his stool, well aware of the stain on his tunic and

the way the ink ran where the clear fluid splashed his ledgers.

‘The knife,’ said Samlor when the guard who had disarmed him started to follow

his fellow through the trap. An exchange of eyes behind masks; a nod from the

leader; and the weapon dropped on the floor before the guard slipped into the

alley. When the door closed above the men, Samlor set the potential firebomb in

a corner where it was not likely to be bumped.

‘Sorry,’ said the caravan-master with a nod towards the leader and the blotted

page. ‘I needed to talk to you, and there wasn’t much choice. My niece was

stolen last month, not by you, but by Beysibs. Some screwball cult of them

fishermen.’

‘Who told you where I was?’ asked the black man in a voice whose mildness would

not have deceived a child.

‘A fellow in Ranke, one eye, limps,’ Samlor lied with a shrug. ‘He’d worked for

you but ran when the roof fell in.’

The leader’s fists clenched. ‘The password – he didn’t tell you that!’

‘I just mumbled my name. Your boys heard what they expected.’ Samlor

deliberately turned his back on the outlaw to end the line of discussion. ‘You

won’t have contacts with their religious loonies, not directly. But you’ll know

their thieves, and a thief wili’ve heard something, know something. Sell me a

Beysib thief, leader. Sell me a thief from the Setmur clan.’

The other man laughed. ‘Sell? What are you offering to pay?’

Samlor turned, shrugging. ‘The price of a four year old girl? That’d run to

about four coronations in Ranke, but you know the local market better. Or the

profit on the thief you give me. Figure what he’ll bring you in a lifetime …

Name a figure, leader. I don’t expect you to realize what this giri means to n”,

but – name a figure.’

‘I won’t give you a thief,’ said the masked man. He paused deliberately and

raised a restraining finger, though the Cirdonian had not moved. ‘And I won’t

charge you a copper. I’ll give you a name: Hort.’

Samlor frowned. ‘A Beysib?’

The mask trembled negation. ‘Local boy. A fisherman’s son. He and his father got

picked up by Beysib patrols at sea before the invasion. He speaks their language

pretty well – better than any of them I know speaks ours. And I think he’ll help

you if he can.’ The mask hid the speaker’s face, but the smile was in his voice

as well as he added, ‘You needn’t tell him who sent you. He’s not one of mine,

you see.’

Samlor bowed. ‘I couldn’t tell him,’ he said. ‘I don’t know who you are.’ He

reached for the latch of the trap door. ‘I thank you. sir.’

‘Wait a minute,’ called the man behind the desk. Samlor straightened and met the

hooded eyes. ‘Why are you so sure I won’t call down to have you spitted the

moment you’re through this door?’

The Cirdonian shrugged again. ‘Business reasons,’ he said. ‘I’m a businessman

too. I understand risks. You’ll be out of this place-‘ he waved at the dingy

room – ‘before I’m clear of the alley. No need to kill me to save a bolt-hole

that you’ve written off already. And there’s not one chance in a thousand

that I could get past what you have waiting below, but -‘ calloused palm up,

another shrug- ‘in the dark … You have people looking for you, sir, that’s

obvious. But none of them so far would be willing to burn this city down block

by block to flush you, if he had to.’

Samlor reached again for the latch, paused again. ‘Sir,’ he said earnestly, ‘you

may think I’ve lied to you tonight… and perhaps I have. But I’m not lying to

you now. On the honour of my House.’ He clenched his fist over the medallion of

Heqt on his breast.

The mask nodded. As Samlor dropped through the trap into darkness, the harsh

voice called from above, ‘Let him go! Let him go, this time!’

There was nothing ugly about the harbour water with the noon sun on it. The

froth was pearly, the fish-guts iridescent; and the water itself, whatever its

admixture of sewage, was faceted into diamond and topaz across its surface.

Samlor sipped his ale in the dockside cantina as he had done at noon on the past

three days. As before, he was waiting for Hort to return with information or the

certain lack of it. The Cirdonian wondered what Star saw when she looked around

her; and whether she found beauty in it.

There was commotion on one of the quays, easily visible through the cantina’s

open front. A trio of Beysib had been stepping a new mast into a trawler. As

they worked, a squad of cavalry – Beysib also, but richly caparisoned in metals

and brocades – had clattered along the quay. The squad halted alongside the

boat. The men on the trawler had seemed as surprised as other onlookers when the

troopers dismounted and leaped aboard, waggling their long swords in visual

emphasis of the orders they shouted.

Nine of the horsemen were involved either in trussing the startled fishermen or

acting as horseholders for the rest. The tenth man watched coldly as the others

worked. He wore a helmet, gilded or gold, with a feather-tipped triple crest.

When he turned as if in disdain for the proceedings, Samlor saw and recognized

his profile. The man was Lord Tudhaliya, the swordsman who had been

demonstrating his skill on an Ilsig animal the other day.

The fishermen continued to babble until ropes with slip knots were dropped over

their throats. Then they needed all their breath

to scramble after the cavalrymen. \ The troopers remounted with a burst of

chirruping cross-chat which sounded undisciplined to the caravan-master, but

which detracted nothing from the efficiency of the process. Three of the men

tied off the nooses to their saddle pommels. Tudhaliya gave a sharp order and

the squad rode at a canter back the way it had come. Citizens with business on

the quay dodged hooves as best they might. The fishermen blubbered in terror as

they tried to run with the horses. They knew that a misstep meant death, unless

the rider to whom they were tethered reined up in time. Nothing Samlor had seen

of Lord Tudhaliya suggested his lordship would permit such mercy.

There were half a dozen regulars in the bar, fishermen and fish-merchants. When

Samlor looked away from the spectacle, he found the local men staring at him. He

gave a scowl of surprise when he noticed them; but even as the locals retreated

into their mugs in confusion, Samlor understood why they had looked at him the

way they had. The Cirdonian had nothing to do with the arrests on the docks just

now; but he had nothing to do with this tavern, either. He had sat here during

three noons and drunk ale … and on the third day, the Beysibs made an arrest

on the dock below. To the vulnerable, no coincidence is chance. These fishermen

were unusually vulnerable to all the powers of the physical world as well as

those of the political one. No wonder the Beysib counterparts of these men had

turned to a god their overlords would not recognize; a personification, perhaps,

of mystery and of the typhoons that could sweep the ocean clear of small boats

and simple sailors.

Hort slipped into the cantina. He was dressed a little on the gaudy side. Still,

he wore his clothes with the self-assurance of a young man instead of a boy’s

nervous gibing at the world. He raised a finger. The bartender chalked the slate

above him and began drawing a mug of ale for the newcomer.

‘I’m not sure you want to be seen with me,’ Hort muttered to Samlor as he took

his ale. ‘The fellows they just carried off -‘ he nodded, as he slurped the

brew, towards the trawler bobbing high on its lines with the mast still swinging

above it from the sheer legs. ‘Kummanni, Anbarbi, Arnuwanda. I talked to them

just last night. About what you needed to know.’

‘That’s why they were arrested?’ the caravan-master asked. He tried to keep his

voice as calm as if he were asking which tailor had sewn the younger man’s

jerkin.

‘I would to god I knew,’ Hort said with feeling. ‘It could be anything.

Tudhaliya is – Minister of Security, I suppose. But he likes to stay close to

things. To keep his hand in.’

‘And his swords,’ Samlor agreed softly. His eyes traced the path the horsemen

had taken as they rode off, towards the palace and the dungeons beneath it.

‘Would enough money to let you travel be a help?’

Hort shrugged, shuddered. ‘I don’t know.’ He drained his mug and slid it to the

bartender for a refill.

‘I’m not afraid to be seen with you,’ Samlor said. ‘But I’m not sure you want to

tell me about the – cult – with so many other people around.’ He smiled about

the cantina. The men there had just furnished him with a tactful way to prod the

frightened youth into his story.

Hort drank and shuddered again. He said, ‘Oh, I was raised with everyone here.

Omat’s my godfather. They won’t tell tales to the Beysib.’

It wasn’t the time for Samlor to comment. He assumed it was obvious anyway.

Anyone will talk if the questions are put with sufficient forcefulness. But Hort

must have known that too. The local man was not a coward, and he was not the

worse for never having asked questions the way Lord Tudhaliya would. The way

Samlor hil Samt had done, when need arose, might Heqt wash him . with mercy when

she gathered him in …

‘There’s a boat went out last month at the new moon,’ Hort said beneath a

moustache of beer foam. ‘A trawler, but not fishing. Do you know what Death’s

Harbour is?’

‘No.’ Samlor had poled a skiff as a boy, when he hunted ducks in the marshes

south ofCirdon. He knew little of the sea, however, and nothing at all of the

seas around Sanctury.

‘Two currents meet,’ Hort explained. ‘Any flotsam in the sea gets swept into the

eye of it. Wrecks, sometimes. And sometimes men on rafts, until the sun dries

their skin to parchment shrouding their bones.’ He laughed. ‘Sorry,’ he said. ‘I

forget what sort of story I meant to tell you.’ The smile faded. ‘Nobody fishes

in Death’s Harbour. The bottom is deeper than anyone here ever set a line.

Scooped out by the currents, I suppose. The fish won’t shoal there, so it’s no

use to us. But a Beysib trawler went there last month, and it’s coming back now

slower than there’s any reason for. Except that it’s going to arrive tonight,

and the moon is new again tonight.’

‘Star’s aboard her, then?’ Samlor asked and sipped more ale. The brew was

bitter, but less bitter than the gall that flooded his mouth at the thought of

Star in Beysib hands.

‘I think so,’ Hort agreed. ‘Anbarbi didn’t approve. Of any of it, I think,

though none of them said what was really going on. We’d seen the boat at sea, my

father, all of us from Sanctuary that go to sea ourselves. That’s what we talked

about, though they didn’t much want to talk. But from what Anbarbi let drop, I

think there was a child on the trawler. At least when it put out.’

‘And it’ll dock here this evening?’ the Cirdonian said. He had set down his mug

and was flexing his hands, open and shut, as if to work the stiffness out of

them.

‘Oh -‘ said Hort. He was embarrassed not to be telling his story more in the

fashion of an intelligence summary than of an entertainment with the discursions

which added body to the tale and coin to the teller’s purse. ‘No, not here.

There’s a cove west a league of Downwind. Smugglers used it until the Beysib

came. There are ruins there, older than anybody’s sure. A temple, some other

buildings. Nobody much uses them now, though the Smugglers’11 be back when

things settle down, I suppose. But the boat from Death’s Harbour will put in

there at midnight. I think, sir. I tell stories for a living, and I’ve learned

to sew them together from this word and that word I hear. But it doesn’t usually

matter if my pattern is the same one that the gods wove to begin with.’

‘Well,’ Samlor said after consideration, ‘I don’t think my first look at this

place had better be after dark. There’ll be a watchman or the like, I suppose

… but we’ll deal with that when we find it. I -‘ he paused and looked straight

at the younger man instead of continuing to eye the harbour. ‘We agreed that

your pay would be the full story when I had it to tell … and you’ll have that.

But it may be I won’t be talking much after tonight, so take this,’ his clenched

hand brushed Hort’s flexed to empty into the other’s palm, ‘and take my

friendship. You’ve – acted as a man in this thing, and you have neither blood

nor honour to drive you to it.’

‘One thing more,’ said the youth. ‘The Beysib – the Setmur clan, I mean – are

real sailors, and they know their fishing, too … But there are things they

don’t know about the harbourages here, around Sanctuary. I don’t think they know

that there’s a tunnel through the east headland of the cove they’ve chosen for

whatever they’re going to do.’ Hort managed a tight smile. Sweat beaded on his

forehead. The risk he was taking by getting involved with the stranger was very

real, though most of the specific dangers were more nebulous to him than they

were to Samlor. ‘One end of the tunnel opens under the corniche of the headland.

You can row right into it at high tide. And when you lift the slab at the other

end, you’re in the temple itself.’

Hort’s coda had drawn from his listener all the awed pleasure that a story well

told could bring. The local man stood up, strengthened by the respect of a

strong man. ‘May your gods lead you well, sir,’ Hort said, squeezing the

Cirdonian’s hand in leave-taking. ‘I look forward to hearing your story.’

The youth strode out of the cantina with a flourish and a nod to the other

patrons. Samlor shook his head. In a world that seemed filled with sharks and

stonefish, Hort’s bright courage was as admirable as it was rare.

To say that Samlor felt like an idiot was to understate matters. It was the only

choice he could come up with at short notice, however, and which did not involve

others. At this juncture, the Cirdonian was not willing to involve others.

He had rented a mule cart. It had provided a less noticeable method of scouting

the cove than a horse would have done. The cart had also transported the punt he

had bought to the nearest launching place to the headland that he could find.

The roadstead on which Sanctuary was built was edged mostly by swamps, but the

less-sheltered shore to the west had been carved away by storms. The limestone

corniche rose ten to fifty feet above the sea, either sheer or with an outward

batter. A lookout on the upper rim could often not see a vessel inshore but

beneath him. That was to Samlor’s advantage; but the punt, the only craft the

Cirdonian felt competent to navigate, was utterly unsuited to the ocean.

Needs must when the devil drives. Samlor’s great shoulders braced the pole

against the cliff face, not the shelving bottom. Foam echoed back from the rocks

and balanced the surge that had tried to sweep him inward with it. In that

moment of stasis, Samlor shot the punt forward another twenty feet. Then the

surf was on him again, his muscles flexing on the ten-foot pole as they

transferred the sea’s power to the rock, again and again.

Samlor had launched the punt at sunset. By now, he had no feeling for time nor

for the distance he had yet to struggle across to his once-glimpsed goal. He had

a pair of short oars lashed to the forward thwart, but they would have been

totally useless for keeping him off this hungry shore. Samlor was a strong man,

and determined; but the sea was stronger, and the fire in Samlor’s shoulders was

beginning to make him fear that the sea was more determined as well.

Instead of spewing back at him, the next wave continued to be drawn into the

rock. It became a long tongue, glowing with microorganisms. Samlor had reached

the tunnel mouth while he had barely enough consciousness to be aware of the

fact.

Even that was not the end of the struggle. The softer parts ofth& rock had been

worn away into edges that could have gobbled the skiff like a duckling caught by

a turtle. Samlor let the next surge carry him in to the depth of his pole. The

phosphorescence limned a line of bronze hand-holds set into the stone. The

powerful Cirdonian dropped his pole into the boat to snatch a grip with both

hands. He held it for three racking breaths before he could find the strength to

drag the punt fully aground, further up the tunnel.

The tunnel was unlighted. Even the plankton cast up by the spray illuminated

little more than the surfaces to which it clung. Samlor spent his first several

minutes ashore striking a spark from flint and steel into the tinder he carried

in a wax-plugged tube. At first his fingers seemed as little under his control

as the fibres of the wooden pole they had clutched so fiercely. Conscious

direction returned to them the fine motor control they would need later in the

night.

By the time a spark brightened with yellow flame instead of cooling into

oblivion, Samlor’s mind was at work again as well. His shoulders still ached

while the blood leached fatigue poisons out of his muscles. He had been more

tired than this before, however. The very respite from wave-battering increased

the Cirdonian’s strength.

With the tinder aflame, Samlor lighted the candle of his dark lantern. Then,

carrying a ten-gallon cask under one arm and the lantern in the other hand, he

began to walk up the gently rising tunnel. The lantern’s shutter was open, and

its horn lens threw an oval of light before him.

The tunnel was not spacious, but a man of Samlor’s modest height could walk

safely in it by hunching only a little in his strides. He could not imagine who

had cut the passage through the rock, or why. Scraps – a buckle, a broken knife;

a boot even – suggested that the smugglers used it. Samlor could imagine few

circumstances, however, in which it would pay smugglers to off-load beneath the

surf-hammered corniche rather than in the shelter of the cove. For them, the

tunnel might be useful storage; but the smugglers had not built it, and in all

likelihood they had as little knowledge of its intended purpose as Samlor did,

or Hort.

Samlor set down the cask at what he estimated was the halfway point along the

tunnel. The cask had been an awkward burden in the narrow confines, and its

weight of a talent or more was as much as a porter would be expected to carry

for even a moderate distance. Because it used muscles in a way that the punt had

not, however, the hundred yards Samlor had carried the cask were almost

relaxing.

The only thing certain about the escape he hoped to make in a few hours was that

he would have very little time. Now the Cir-donian set the cask on end and drew

his fighting knife. The blade was double-edged and a foot long. It was stout

enough at the cross-hilt to take the shock of a sword and was sharpened to edges

that would hold as they cut bronze, rather than something that its owner could

shave with. Samlor had razors for shaving. The knife was a

different sort of tool.

He set the point at the centre of one of the end-staves, using his left hand to

keep the weapon upright. The butt cap was bronze, flat on top, and a perfect

surface for Samlor to hammer with the heel of his right hand. The blade hummed.

The beechwood cracked and sagged away from the point. Working the knife loose,

Samlor then punched across the grain of the other four end staves as well. The

line of perforations did not quite open the cask, but they would permit him to

smash his heel through the weakened boards quickly

when the need arose.

He was more aware than before of the lantern’s hot shell as he paced the rest of

the tunnel’s length. He could hear someone above him when he reached the end of

the tunnel. The susurrus could have been anything, wind-driven twigs as easily

as the slippers of a guard on the floor above. There was a sharper sound to

punctuate that whispering, however; a spear grounded as the man paused, or the

tip of a bow. The stone conducted sounds very well, but it conducted them so

well that Samlor could not get a precise fix on where the guard was in relation

to the trap door. For that matter, the caravan-master had no idea of how well

the upward-pivoting door was concealed. It might very well flop open in the

centre of the room above.

The good news was that the sounds did not include speech. Either the guard was

alone, or the party was more stolid than the random pacing seemed to suggest.

Samlor needed more information than he could get in the tunnel. There would be

no better time to learn more. He shuttered his lantern and slid the worn bronze

bolt from its socket in the door jamb. There were stone pegs set into the end

wall as a sort of one-railed ladder. Samlor set his right foot on the midmost,

where his leg was flexed just enough to give him its greatest thrust. His right

hand held the dagger while his left readied itself on the trap door. Then the

Cirdonian exploded upward like a spring toy.

As it chanced, the door was quite well hidden in an alcove, though the hangings

that would once have completed the camouflage were long gone. There was no time

to consider might-have-beens, no time for anything but the pantalooned Beysib

who turned, membranes flicking in shock across his eyes. He was trying to raise

his bow, but there was no time to fend Samlor away with the staff, much less to

nock one of the bone-tipped arrows. Samlor punched the smaller man in the pit of

the stomach, a rising blow, and the point of the long dagger grated on the

Beysib’s spine in exiting between his fourth and third ribs.

The Beysib collapsed backwards, his motion helping Samlor free the knife for

another victim if one presented himself. None did. The nictitating membrane

quivered over the Beysib’s eyes. In better light, it would have shown colours

like those on the skin of a dying albacore. The blow had paralysed the man’s

lungs, so that the only sound the guard made as he died was the scraping of his

nails on the stone floor.

Samlor slid the body back through the trap door, from whence its death had

sprung. He hoped the victim was not a friend of Hort; he sympathized with simple

folk looking for solace apart from the establishment of such as Lord Tudhaliya.

But they had made their bed when they stole a child from the House of Kodrix.

The temple had been a single, circular room. It was roofless now, and its girdle

of fluted columns had fallen; but the curtain wall within those columns still

stood to shoulder height or above. That wall had been constructed around only

three-quarters of the circumference, however. A 90° arc looked out unimpeded on

the waters of the cove, which lapped almost to the building’s foundations.

And out at the mouth of the cove, its hull black upon the phosphorescence

through which sweeps drove it languidly, was a trawler. The vessel’s sail was

furled because of the breeze that began to push against the rising ride when the

land cooled faster than the sea.

There were sounds outside the temple. Mice, perhaps, or dogs; or even tramps

looking for at least the semblance of shelter.

More likely not. Nothing Hort had said suggested that the ceremony planned for

tonight would be limited to the boatload who had carried Star to Death’s

Harbour. Not all the Setmur would be involved, but at least a few others would

slip in from the greater community. The tunnel was as good a hiding place as

could be found; and if the guard had been placed in the temple, it was at least

probable that Star would be brought to it by her captors.

Samlor slipped back the way he had come. He set the tip of the Beysib bow

between the edge of the trap door and its jamb. That wedged the door open a

crack, through which Samlor could hear better and see; and be seen, but the

lights would be dim against discovery, and the alcove was some protection as

well. Then Samlor waited, with a reptile’s patience, and the chill certainty of

a reptile as well.

The firstcomers were blurs bringing no illumination at all. Shawls, pantaloons

like those the guard had worn, sweeping nervously through Samlor’s field of

vision. They chattered in undertones. Occasionally someone raised a voice to

call what might have been a name: ‘Shaushga!’ The corpse stiffening at Samlor’s

feet made no reply.

Then a hull grated on the strand. There were more voices, and more of the voices

were male. Water slopped between shore and hull as at least a dozen persons

dropped over the trawler’s gunwale. Then the temple floor rasped beneath the

horn-hard soles of barefooted fishermen. A tiny oil lamp gleamed like the sun to

light-starved eyes.

In the centre of the open room, a Beysib in red robes set down the burden he

carried. It was Star, had to be Star. She was dressed also in red. Her hair had

been plaited into short tendrils so that the blaze above her forehead seemed to

have eight white arms.

‘I don’t want to,’ the child cried distinctly. ‘I want to go to bed.’ She

refused to support herself with her legs, curling to the pavement when the

Beysib set her down.

The man in red and a woman as nondescript as the others in a brown and black

shawl bent to the child. They spoke urgently and simultaneously in Beysib and a

melange of local dialects. The latter were almost equally unintelligible to

Samlor for the accent and poor acoustics. The man in red held Star by the

shoulders, but he was coaxing rather than trying to force her to rise.

The trawler had been crabbed further into the cove so that Samlor could no

longer see it from his vantage point. The Cir-donian held his body in a state of

readiness, but at not quite the bowstring tautness of the instant before

slaughter. There would be slaughter, nothing could be more certain than that;

but for the moment, Samlor continued to wait. There were ten, perhaps twenty,

Beysib within the temple wall at the moment. Some of them were between Star and

the hidden door. That would not keep Samlor from striking if the need arose, but

there was at least a chance that some of those now milling in the room would

spread out if the ceremony began.

Star had gotten to her feet. She was pouting in the brief glimpse Samlor had of

her face as she turned. He could not imagine how anyone had taken Star for the

maid’s daughter. Even the set other lips was a mirror of Samlane’s.

The Beysib chattering ceased. Their feet brushed quickly to positions flanking

the temple opening. It was much as Samlor had hoped. Star stretched her hands

out, palms forward, towards the cove. The man in red was still with her, but the

woman had joined the others just outside the building. Star began chanting in a

bored voice. The syllables were not in any language with which Samlor was

familiar. From the regularity of the sounds, it was possible that they were from

no language at all, merely forming a pattern to concentrate nonverbal portions

of the brain.

Samlor tensed. He had already chosen the spot through which his dagger would

enter the kidneys of the man in red. Then, suddenly, Lord Tudhaliya’s troopers

swept into the gathering with cries of bloody triumph.

The security forces might have intended to take a few prisoners, but as Samlor

bolted from his hiding place, he saw a woman cut in half. The trooper who killed

her had a sword almost four feet long in the blade. His horizontal, two-handed

cut took her in the small of the back and bisected her navel on the way out.

The troopers had approached dismounted, of course. Even so, they had shown

abnormal skill for cavalrymen in creeping up among the ruins. There was no way

of telling how many of them there were, but it was certainly more than the squad

that had made the arrests that morning. Lights began to flare, dark lanterns

like Samlor’s own still hissing in the tunnel below.

The red-garbed Beysib bawled in horror and tried to enfold Star in his cloak, as

if that would serve as any protection from what was about to happen. Samlor

smashed the Beysib down with the dagger’s hilt to his forehead, not from mercy,

but because the point might have caught and held the weapon for moments the

Cirdonian did not have to lose. Samlor grabbed the screaming child by the

shoulder and spun for the tunnel mouth.

A Beysib cavalryman leaped from the crumbling wall. He was aiming a kick at

Samlor’s head.

The angle was different, but too many camels had launched feet at the caravan

master for Samlor to be caught unprepared. The boot slashed by his ear as he

pivoted. The Beysib’s sword was cocked for a blow that the fellow had to hold

until he landed, or he risked lopping off his own feet. The long weapon did

nothing to keep the Beysib’s momentum from impaling him on the Cirdonian dagger.

Samlor slipped the hilt as it punched home. He tossed Star to the trap door and

rammed her through as he jumped in himself.

When Samlor tried to bang the stone door to, a Beysib sword shot through the gap

and kept the edges from meeting. Instead of tugging against the springy steel,

Samlor let the Beysib’s own pull open’the trap again. Samlor lunged upward

through the opening. Before the sword could be transformed once more from a pry

bar into a weapon, the Cirdonian had buried his boot knife in the trooper’s

throat.

The sword dropped into the tunnel as Samlor shot the bolt which closed the door.

The last thing the caravan-master had seen before stone met stone was the face

of Lord Tudhaliya turned to a fright mask by fury and speckles of blood. The

Beysib noble was lunging to take the place of his dying trooper. His

outstretched sword sang against the marble even as the bolt snicked home.

‘Come on. Star, I’m your uncle!’ Samlor shouted as he grabbed the nearest

handful of the child. He did not particularly care whether she obeyed or even

understood, for there was no time now to wait on a four-year-old’s legs. He let

the Beysib sword lie, because he needed his right hand for the lantern. Its

unshuttered light seemed shockingly bright in the closeness. Samlor ran bent

over, the girl under his arm as the cask had been when he came from the punt.

Even as Samlor’s heels hit the floor on his second stride, hands and sword

blades wrenched the bronze latch into fragments. A file of Beysib troopers with

lamps and swords plunged into the tunnel behind Lord Tudhaliya.

Samlor’s plan had been based on the assumption that his sudden assault would

startle the gathering of fisher-folk and give him the thirty seconds or so that

he needed to block his escape route. This security troop was as well-trained as

any force the Cirdonian had encountered, and they were already primed to rip

open hiding places. Presumably Tudhaliya thought he was after fugitives from the

ceremony, but that mattered as little to him as it did to Samlor.

The Cirdonian smashed open the cask and kicked it over. The naphtha gushed

across the stone, darkening it, and began to flow sluggishly back in the

direction Samlor was fleeing. Samlor dared not ignite the fluid until he was

clear of it. He took a stride and another stride, ignoring Star’s wailing as her

shoulder brushed the tunnel wall. The Cirdonian turned and flung his lantern

towards the naphtha. Lord Tudhaliya batted the light back past the fugitives

with the flat of his sword.

Then the second Beysib trooper stumbled over the cask and banged his own lamp

down into the naphtha. The tunnel boomed into red life. It singed Samlor’s

eyebrows, even though Lord Tud-haliya shielded the Cirdonian from the worst of

it.

The Beysib noble pitched forward. Samlor ran for the boat, clutching the child

now in both arms. The capering fire threw their shadows down the tunnel ahead of

them.

Samlor set Star in the stern of the punt and began shoving the vessel back

towards the water. The sea had retreated since he dragged the punt out of it.

While Samlor thrust at the boat, he glanced back over his shoulder. The blazing

petroleum was creeping down the slope of the tunnel. Just ahead of it, his

clothes afire but a sword gripped still in either hand, came Lord Tudhaliya. The

swordsman’s hair and flesh stank as they burned, but there are men whom no

degree of pain will turn from a task. Samlor recognized the mind-set very well.

The Cirdonian still had a push dagger sheathed on his left wrist, but it was as

useless against this opponent as the knives he had left in bodies cooling on the

temple floor. Samlor snatched up the punt pole, sliding it forward in his grip.

As Tudhaliya feinted with his left sword, Samlor thrust the pole into the centre

of the Beysib’s chest. With enough room to manoeuvre, Tudhaliya would have

avoided the clumsy attack. Instead, his sluggish reflexes bounced him against

the tunnel wall, and the end of the pole knocked him back into the spreading

flames.

The Beysib stood up. Samlor poked at his groin, missed, but caught his opponent

in the ribs with enough force to topple him again. Tudhaliya’s swords snicked

from either side, inches short of where Samlor gripped the pole. Chips flew, but

the pole was seasoned ash and as thick as a man’s wrist. Samlor thrust himself

away, and the Beysib recoiled on to his back in the fire.

The naphtha sucked a fierce breeze from the tunnel to feed its flames. The glare

flickered now around Tudhaliya’s face, as instinct forced him to breathe. There

was no help in that influx, only red tendrils that shrank lung tissues and

blazed back out of Tudhaliya’s mouth as he finally screamed.

‘My sweet, my love,’ Samlor whispered as he turned back to the girl. ‘I’m going

to take you home, now.’ The punt’s flat bottom jounced easily over the stone as

if the executioner’s death had doubled the rescuer’s strength.

‘Are you taking me back to Mama Reia?’ Star asked. She had watched Tudhaliya die

with great eyes, which she now focused on Samlor.

The man splashed beside the boat for a few paces while the shingle foamed. Then

he hopped aboard and thrust outwards for the length of the pole. Since the tide

had turned, there was no longer need to fend off from the corniche. When they

were thirty feet out, the Cirdonian set down the pole and worried loose the

lashings of his oars with his spike-bladed push dagger. ‘Star,’ he said, now

that he had leisure for an answer, ‘Maybe we’ll send for Reia. But we’re going

back to your real home – Cirdon. Do you remember Cirdon?’ Inexpertly, the

caravan-master began to fit the looms through the rope bights that served the

punt for oarlocks.

Star nodded with solemn enthusiasm. She said, ‘Are you really my uncle?’

Poling had raised and burst blisters on both Samlor’s hands. The salt-crusted

oar handles ground like acid-tipped glass as he began the unfamiliar task of

rowing. ‘Yes,’ he said. ‘I promised your mother – your real mother. Star, my

sister … I promised her -‘ and this was true, though Samlane was two years

dead when her brother shouted the words to the sky – ‘that I’d take care of oh.

Oh, Mother Heqt. Oh, to have brought us so close.’

Lord Tudhaliya had not trusted his men on the shore to sweep up the cultists.

Someone in the boat Tudhaliya had stationed off the headland had seen the man

and child. The Beysib craft was a ten-oared cutter. It began to close the

distance from the first strokes that roiled the phosphorescence and brought the

cutter to Samlor’s attention.

An archer stood upright in the cutter’s bow. His first shot was’ wobbly and

short by fifty of the two hundred yards. He nocked another shaft, and the cutter

pulled closer.

Samlor dropped his oars. He knelt and raised his hands. He did not trust his

balance to standing up. ‘Star,’ he said, ‘I’m afraid that these men have caught

us after all. If I try to get away, something bad may happen to you by accident.

And I can’t fight them, I don’t have any way to fight so many.’

Star peered over her shoulder at the Beysib cutter, then turned back to Samlor.

‘I don’t want to go with them. Uncle,’ she said pettishly. ‘I want to go back to

Cirdon. I want to play in the big house.’

‘Honey,’ Samlor said, ‘sweetest … I’m sorry. But we can’t do that now, because

of that boat.’ The cutter was too big to overturn, the caravan-master was

thinking. But perhaps if he jumped into the larger boat with his push dagger, in

the confusion they might –

The Beysib archer pitched into the water.

It was a moment before Samlor realized that the man had fallen forward because

the cutter had come to an abrupt halt beneath him. The swift craft had thrown up

a bone of glowing spray. Now the spray’s remnant curled forward and away from

the cutwater as a diminishing furrow on the sea.

‘Now can we go to Cirdon, Uncle?’ the little girl asked. She lowered the hands

she had turned towards the cutter. Either her voice had dropped an octave, or

the caravan-master’s mind was freezing down in sudden terror. The white tendrils

of Star’s hair blazed and seemed to writhe.

The cutter’s bow lifted. The boat disappeared stern-first with a rush and a roar

and the screams of her crew. A huge, sucker-blotched tentacle uncoiled a hundred

feet skyward, then plunged back into the glowing sea.

Samlor’s hands found the oars again. His mind was ice, and his muscles moved

like flows of ice. ‘Yes, Star,’ he heard his voice say. ‘We can go back to

Cirdon now.’

MIRROR IMAGE

Diana L. Paxson

The big mirror glimmered balefully from the wall, challenging him.

Even from across the room, Lalo could see himself reflected – a short man with

thinning, gingery hair, tending to put on weight around the middle though his

legs were thin; a man with haunted eyes and stubby, paint-stained hands. But it

was not his reflection empty-handed that frightened him. The thing he feared was

his own image copied on to a canvas, if he should dare to face the mirror with

paintbrush in hand.

A shout from the street startled him and he went softly to the window, but’it

was only someone chasing a cutpurse who had mistaken their cul-de-sac for a

shortcut between Slippery Street and the Bazaar. The strangeness of life in

Sanctuary since the Beysib invasion, or infestation, or whatever it should be

called, gave simple theft an almost nostalgic charm.

Lalo gazed out over the jumble of roofs to the blue shimmer of the harbour and

an occasional flash where the sun caught the gilding on a Beysib mast. Ils knew

the Beysib were colourful enough, with their embroidered velvets and jewels that

put a sparkle in even Prince Kitty-Cat’s eye, but Lalo had not been asked to

paint any of them so far. Or to paint anything else, for that matter – not for

some time now. Until the good folk of Sanctuary figured out how to transfer some

of their new neighbours’ wealth into their own coffers, no one was going to have

either the resources or the desire to hire Sanctuary’s only notable native

artist to paint new decorations in their halls. Lalo wondered if Enas Yorl’s

gift to him would work on a Beysib. Did the fish-eyes have souls to be revealed?

Without willing it, Lalo found himself turning towards the mirror again.

‘Lalo!’

Gilla’s voice broke the enchantment. She filled the doorway, frowning at him,

and he flushed guiltily. His preoccupation with the mirror bothered her, but she

would have been more than bothered if she had known why it fascinated him so.

‘I’m going shopping,’ she said abruptly. ‘Anything you want me to get for you?’

He shook his head. ‘Am I supposed to be watching the baby while you’re gone?’

Alfi thrust past her flowing skirts and looked up at his father with bright

eyes.

‘I’m t’ree years old!’ said Alfi. ‘I a big boy now!’

Lalo laughed suddenly and bent to ruffle the mop of fair curls. ‘Of course you

are.’

Gilla towered above him like the statue of Shipri All-Mother in the old temple.

‘I’ll take him with me,’ she said. ‘The streets have been quiet lately, and he

needs the exercise.’

Lalo nodded and, as he straightened, Gilla touched his cheek, and he understood

what she could so rarely manage to put into words, and smiled.

‘Don’t let the fish-eyes gobble you up!’ he replied.

Gilla snorted. ‘In broad daylight? I’d like to see them try! Besides, our Vanda

says they’re only people like ourselves, for all their funny looks, and serving

that Lady Kurrekai, she should know. Will you trust Bazaar tales or your own

daughter’s word?’ She backed out of the doorway, hoisted the child on to one

broad haunch, and scooped up the market basket.

The building shook beneath Gilla’s heavy tread as she went down the stairs, and

Lalo moved back to the window to see her down the street. The hot sunlight

gilded her fading hair until it was as bright as the child’s.

Then she was gone, and he was alone with the mirror and his fear.

A man called Zanderei had asked Lalo if he had ever painted a self-portrait

whether he had ever dared to find out if the gift the sorcerer Enas Yorl had

given him of painting the truth of a man would enable him to make a portrait of

his own soul. In return, Lalo had given Zanderei his life, and at first he had

been so glad to be alive himself that he did not worry about Zanderei’s words.

Then the Beysib fleet had appeared on the horizon, with the sun striking

flame from their mastheads and their carven prows, and no one had had leisure

to worry about anything else for awhile. But now things were quiet and Lalo had

no commissions to occupy him, and he could not keep his eyes from the mirror

that hung on the wall.

Lalo heard a dog barking furiously in the street and two women squabbling in the

courtyard below and, more faintly, the perpetual hubbub of the Bazaar; but here

it was very still. A stretched canvas sat ready on his easel – he had been

planning to spend this morning blocking out a scene of the marriage of Ils and

Shipri. But there was no one else in the house now – no one to peer through his

doorway and ask what he thought he was doing – no one to see.

Like a sleepwalker, Lalo lifted the easel to one side of the mirror, positioned

himself so that the light from the window fell full on his face, and picked up

the paintbrush.

Then, like a lover losing himself for the first time in the body of his beloved,

or an outmatched swordsman opening his guard to his enemy’s final blow, Lalo

began to paint what he saw.

Gilla heaved the basket of groceries on to the table, rescued the sack of flour

from the child’s exploring fingers, and poured it into the bin, then found a

wooden spoon for Alfi and set him down, where he began to bang it merrily

against the floor. She stood for a moment, still a little out of breath from the

stairs, then began to put her other purchases away.

It did not take long. The influx of Beysib had strained Sanctuary’s food supply,

and their wealth had sent prices climbing, and though Gilla had hoarded a fair

amount of silver, there was no telling how long it would be until Lalo was

working regularly again. So it was back to rice and beans for the family, with

an occasional fish in the stew. Now that so many new ships had been added to the

local fleet, fish were the one item in ample supply.

Gilla sighed. She had enjoyed their affluence – enjoyed putting meat on the

table and experimenting with the spices imported from the north. But they had

subsisted on coppers for more years than she liked to remember, and few enough

of those. She was an expert on feeding a family on peas and promises. They would

survive the Beysib as they had survived everything else.

Alfi’s short legs were carrying him determinedly towards the door to Lalo’s

studio. Gilla scooped him up and held him against her, still squirming, and

kissed his plump cheek.

‘No, love, not in there – Papa’s working and we must leave him alone!’

But it was odd that Lalo had not at least called a welcome when he heard her

come in. When he was painting a sitter, Vashanka could have blasted the house

without his noticing, but there had been no commissions for some time, and when

Lalo painted for pleasure he was usually glad for an excuse to break off for a

cup of tea. She called to Latilla to take her little brother into the children’s

room to play, then coaxed a fire to life in the stove and put the kettle on.

Lalo still had not stirred.

‘Lalo, love – I’ve got water heating; d’you want a cup of tea?’ She stood for a

moment, hands on hips, frowning at the shut, unresponsive door; then she marched

across the floor and opened it.

‘You could at least answer me!’ Gilla stopped. Lalo was not at his easel. For a

moment she thought he must have decided to go out, yet the door had not been

locked. But there was something different about the room. Lalo was standing by

the far wall, for all the world like a piece of furniture. It took another

moment for her to realize that he had not moved when she came in. He had not

even looked at her.

Swiftly she went to him. He stood as if he had backed across the room step by

careful step until he ran into the wall. The paintbrush was still clenched in

one hand; she tugged it free and set it down. And still he did not move. His

eyes were fixed, unseeing, on the easel across the room. She glanced at it – a

man’s face, and at this distance she saw nothing remarkable – then turned to him

again.

‘Lalo, are you all right? Did you hear me? Shipri All-Mother have mercy – Lalo,

what’s wrong?’ She shook his arm and still he did not respond to her, and a sick

fear uncoiled itself beneath her heart and began to grow.

Gilla gathered him into her ample embrace and for a moment held him unresisting.

His body was warm, and she could feel his heart beating very slowly against her

own. but she knew with dreadful certainty that he was no longer there. Biting

her lip, she guided him to the pallet and arranged him on it as one of the

children might arrange a doll.

Fear’s chill tentacles extended all the way to her fingertips now. and she

remained kneeling before Lalo, chafing his hands less for his sake than for her

own. His eyes were unfocused, the pupils darkly dilated. He was not looking at

her. He had not been looking at the painting either, although his face had been

turned towards it when she came in. These eyes were focused on something beyond

Sanctuary – some inner darkness into which a man might fall forever and find no

rest.

Shivering, Gilla tried to close his eyelids, but they slid open again upon that

awful, sightless stare. She could feel a scream crouched in her breast, waiting

for her to give way to horror and set it free. but she set her teeth painfully

and heaved herself to her feet.

Hysterics would do neither of them any good now. Time enough to release the

grief that was building in her when – if – there was no hope for him. Perhaps it

was some strange seizure that would soon pass, or a new sickness that time and

her strict nursing would cure. Or perhaps (her mind probed delicately at a

darker thought and flinched away), perhaps it was sorcery.

‘Lalo -‘ she said softly, as if her voice could still reach him somehow, ‘Lalo

my darling, it’s all right. I’ll get you a doctor; I’ll make you get well!’

Already her mind was considering. If he did not wake of himself by tomorrow she

would have to find a physician – perhaps Alien Stulwig – she had heard that his

potions saved more lives than they took.

The teakettle began to wail, and as she hurried across the room. her hip set the

easel teetering. Without stopping, she picked it up and set it in the corner

with the picture facing the wall.

Lalo peered uneasily through murky clouds that roiled about him like the mage

wind that had devastated Sanctuary the year before. But his life was still in

him, though the stink was enough to drive the breath from a man’s lungs. For a

moment he thought himself back in the sewers of the Maze, but there was too much

light. So where in the name of Shalpa Shadow-lord had he gotten to?

He took a step forward, then another, his feet finding their own way over the

uneven ground. The colours that streaked the clouds nauseated him – sulphur

yellow that shaded into a livid pink like an unhealed scar, and then to

something else – an unnameable colour that made his eyes hurt so that he had to

look away.

Perhaps I am dead, he thought then. Poor Cilia will grieve for me, hut she has

her hoard, and the older children are earning money of their own. She will do

better without me than I would if she had left me alone … The thought was

bitter, and he found himself weeping as he stumbled along. But the tears had no

substance and after a little they disappeared. He returned to his probing, as a

man will tongue the sore space where a tooth has gone.

All of the priests were wrong, both the ones who said that the gods take

departed souls to paradise and those who are convinced one is condemned to Hell.

Or perhaps I have such a spineless soul that I have deserved neither, and so

they have sentenced me to wander here!

Lalo had spent half his life dreaming of escape from Sanctuary. But now he had

lost Sanctuary, and he was astonished by the passion of his longing to see it

again.

Something scurried by him and he jumped. Was it a rat? Were there rats here? And

surely now he could see cobblestones beneath his feet. Trembling, Lalo stared

around him as dim forms precipitated from the shadows – walls, perhaps, with

arched doorways and the eaves of roofs peaking like broken teeth against a lurid

sky. There – surely that was the broad facade ofJubal’s place, but that was

impossible – the Stepsons had burned it, hadn’t they? And then he was certain of

the wrongness, for next to it he saw the familiar skewed sign of the Vulgar

Unicorn, but the unicorn’s eyes glowed evilly, and blood dripped down its

spiralled horn.

Abruptly he realized that he was beginning to hear sounds, too – the kind of

drunken laughter that comes from men who watch a bully’s fist smash a boy’s face

to raw meat, or who take a woman one after another: the kind of screaming he had

heard once when he hurried past Kurd’s workshop, and the choked gurgle the

hanged men made as they died in the Palace Yard. He had heard all those sounds

in Sanctuary, and closed his ears to them, but he could not ignore the sobbing

that seemed to come from somewhere just before him, the hushed, incredulous

whimpering of an abused child.

I was wrong, he thought, I am in Hell after all!

Lalo began to run forward, and suddenly figures were all around him. Hawkmasks

and Stepsons struggled as lopped limbs flew like scythed wheat and drops of

blood splattered the cobbles like rain. A man staggered by him and Lalo thought

that it was Zanderei; then the figure turned and he reeled back, for the face

was gone.

Another came towards him – Sjekso Kinsan, with whom he had shared a drink

sometimes in the Vulgar Unicorn, and behind him a woman with long amber hair.

Lord Regli’s wife. Samlane. whom Lalo had painted long ago before he met Enas

Yorl. before the woman had died. There were others whom he thought he

recognized, thieves whose contorted features he had seen on the gallows. Hell

Hounds or mercenaries whom he had seen in Sanctuary for awhile and then saw no

more.

They were looking at him, now. and closing around him. Lalo began to run,

burrowing through the dark maze of this shadow Sanctuary like a maggot in an

ancient corpse, seeking some unimaginable safety.

‘Woman, you were fortunate to get me here at all!’ Alten Stulwig said stiffly.

‘My patients come to me. and I am certainly not accustomed to visiting this part

of town!’

‘But you know that my husband has influential friends who might object if you

let their pet artist die unseen, don’t you!’ said Gilla nastily. ‘So you stop

avoiding my eyes like a whore with her first customer and tell me what’s wrong

with him!’ She lifted an arm as broad as Stulwig’s thigh and he swallowed and

glanced nervously down at the man on the pallet.

‘It’s a complex case, and there’s no need to confuse you with medical

terminology.’ He cleared his throat. ‘I am afraid ‘

‘Now that I will believe!’ Gilla snatched his satchel and held it to her massive

breast.

‘What – what are you doing? Give me that!’

‘I don’t need your leech’s twaddle, nor your evasions either. Master Alten. You

just find something in this bag of yours that will make my man well!’ She thrust

it back at him and he shrugged, sighed, and opened it.

‘This is a stimulant, dograya. You steep it into a tea and spoonfeed him four

times a day. It will strengthen his heart, and who knows, it may bring him

around.’ He tossed the little packet on the coverlet and rummaged around in the

bag again, bringing out several yellowish cones wrapped in a twist of cloth.

‘And you can try burning these – if the smell doesn’t arouse him I don’t know

what will.’ He straightened and held out his hand. ‘Two sheboozim -gold.’

‘Why Alien, I’m surprised – aren’t you going to ask me to share your bed?’

Gilla’s laughter covered bitterness she had not allowed herself to feel for a

long time as he blanched and looked away. She drew from between her breasts the

thin chamois bag in which she kept her reserve of gold. There was more, hidden

cunningly beneath floorboards or in the wall – even Lalo did not know where it

was- but a house could burn. Better to keep something on her person against

emergencies.

She slapped the coins into Stulwig’s moist palm and watched, glaring, as he

packed up his satchel and picked up the staff he had leaned against the door.

‘The blessing of Heqt upon the healing -‘ he mumbled.

‘And upon the hands of the healer,’ Gilla responded automatically, but she was

thinking, I have wasted my money. He doesn’t believe his paltry herbs will do

any good either. She listened to the hurried clatter of Stulwig’s sandals on the

stairs as he hastened to reach his own lodging before darkness fell, but her

eyes were on Lalo’s still face.

And suddenly it seemed to her that his breathing had deepened and there was the

suggestion of a crease between his brows. She stiffened, watching, while hope

fluttered in her heart like a trapped moth, until his features grew smooth

again. She thought of the great waves that sometimes slapped at the wharves

though the sky was clear, that fishermen said were the last ripple from some

great storm far out to sea.

Oh my beloved, she thought in anguish, what bitter storms are raging in the far

reaches where you wander now?

The children were waiting for her when she came out of the studio, all of them

except for her oldest, Wedemir, who was ajunio”-master with the caravans. Her

daughter Vanda had gotten leave from her Beysib lady when Gilla sent for her,

and sat now with Alfi on her lap, looking at her mother with a fair

approximation of the flat Beysib stare. Even her second boy, Ganner, had begged

time from his apprenticeship with Herewick the Jeweller to come home. Only

eight-year-old Latilla, playing with her doll on the floor. seemed oblivious of

the tension in the room.

Gilla glared back at them, knowing they must have heard her argument with Alten

Stulwig. What did they expect her to say?

‘Well?’ she snapped. ‘Stop looking at me like a batch of gaffed cod! And

somebody put the teakettle on!’

Lalo was following the scent, familiar as the stink of a man’s own closestool,

of sorcery.

He knew this much about the strange existence he was caught in now – even a

dauber whose only magic had flowed through his . fingers could smell sorcery

here, and though in that other life Lalo had been wary of wizards, he had not

been quite wary enough, and that was the start of the road that had led him

here.

There, for instance, was the gaudy presence of the Mageguild. a mixture of

odours from the faint aromas of the magelings to the full-blown, exotic

outpourings of the Hazard-class wizards who were their masters – a potpourri

with all the mixed fascination of Prince Kitty-Cat’s garbage bin. Here also was

the alien tang of Beysib ritual, and the fuggy flavours produced by all the

little hedge-wizards and crones, and the wavering scents of those who served in

the temples of the gods.

But what he was seeking was not in the temples, though it came from a place that

was close by – a house whose very foundations were sorcery. Someone was working

a spell there even now, elegant magics that sent spirals of power smoking into

the dim air. Lalo had known that flavour before, though he had not then

recognized it – the unique atmosphere that surrounded Enas

Yorl. Focusing, he found that he could interpret what he was sensing

as colour, a line of light that snaked outward, another crossing it and another,

a net to capture any spirit that might be wandering there. And Lalo could feel

the presence of those Others, beings less conscious than the ghosts he fled, but

more active and aware.

A Symbol flickered into being in the centre of the knot, pulsing lividly,

colour, shape, and flavour all combined to lure its intended prey. Lalo

shuddered as something swept by him. The glowing lines distorted and the Symbol

in their midst dissolved and then reformed, imprisoning a roil of writhing

energy and forcing it into a form that human eyes could, however unwillingly,

see. But the Gateway that had opened for the creature was still there, and Lalo,

frantic for contact, thrust himself through.

“Ehas, barabarishti, azgeldui m ‘hai tsi! Oh thou who dost know the secrets of

Life and Death, come to me! Yevoi! YevadF The Voice snapped shut the gap and set

the imprisoned entity to whirling in a shower of nitrate and sulphur-smelling

sparks.

Lalo contracted like an upset snail, seeking to avoid the touch of that light,

the sound of those words. They were the language of the plane from which the

spirit had come, and Lalo’s present condition gave him the power to directly

apprehend them, and to realize that there were worse places than the one in

which he found himself now.

‘Evgolod sheremin, shinaz, shinaz, tiserra-neh, yevoi!’ The Voice rolled on,

conjuring the creature to bring to him the knowledge of how to separate the soul

from a body to which it had been obscenely and indissolubly fettered by sorcery,

of a way, though the price of it might be annihilation, to set such a soul

forever free. Lalo cowered from knowledge that was never meant for his ears.

But presently the Voice stilled, the echoes died away, and Lalo allowed himself

to focus on tlie insubstantial figure that stood within its own shimmering

circle beyond the triangle within which Lalo and the demon shared an unwilling

captivity. It was Enas Yorl – it must be – yes, he would always know those

glowing eyes.

And at the same moment Enas Yorl appeared to realize that his summoning had been

more successful than he intended. A wand rose, and power swirled and eddied in

the still air.

‘Begone, oh ye intruding spirit, to thine own realm where thou shall wait until

I do summon thee!’

Lalo was tumbled by a riptide of power and for a moment knew a desperate hope

that the sorcerer’s instinctive house-cleaning would send him home. But where

was home, now?

Then the power ebbed, and Lalo sat up, still in the triangle. The demon in the

sigil beside him spat and reached for him with flaming claws.

‘Oh thou spirit who hast come to my summoning, I conjure thee to tell me thy

name.’ Enas Yorl seemed unmoved by his first failure, and Lalo began to

understand the patience and plain nerve required for wizardry.

He got to his feet and approached the edge of the triangle as closely as he

dared. ‘It’s me, Lalo the Limner. Enas Yorl, don’t you recognize me?’

And as he waited for the sorcerer to reply, Lalo realized that he himself

recognized Enas Yorl, and that was very strange, for the essence of the curse

that tormented the sorcerer was that his form should never remain for long the

same. With a kind of horrified fascination, Lalo looked into the true face of

Enas Yorl.

He read there passions and evils at the limit of his comprehension, barely

confined by lines of vision and tormented love. In that face all that was great

and terrible were joined in an eternal conflict that only the slow erosion of

hopeless years might ever hope to reconcile. And those years had already become

so long. It was a face whose planes had been chiselled out by the relentless

blade of power, ground down again by a kind of patient, painful despair. At last

he understood why Enas Yorl had refused to let Lalo paint his portrait. He

wondered which part of it the sorcerer feared most to see.

‘Enas Yorl, I know you, but I don’t know what I am, or why I am here!’

The sorcerer certainly saw him now, and he was laughing. ‘You’re not dead, if

that’s what was worrying you, and there’s no stink of magic about you. Were you

fevered, or did that mountain you are married to knock you senseless at last?’

Lalo sputtered, denying it, while he tried to remember. There was nothing – I

was painting; I was alone, and -‘

Abruptly the sorcerer grew grave. ‘You were painting? Yourself, perhaps? Now I

understand. Poor little pond-fish – you have opened the forbidden weir and been

swept through it into the great sea. Those whose portraits you have painted

could reject the truth they saw, but you could not reject what you painted on

the canvas without denying all you are!’

Lalo was silent, testing his memories. He had been painting a picture, and he

had stepped back from the canvas when he was done, and he had seen … Awareness

lurched beneath him, dizzying – he glimpsed depths and distances, upwelling

springs of light and darkness that could drown him equally, a universe of power

that had been trapped beneath the facade that was the self he knew.

‘And so you have run away from both the truth and its image, and your body lies

abandoned somewhere. I can return you to it, if you truly desire – but don’t you

understand? Now you are free! Do you know what I would give to achieve what you

have inadvert-ently -‘ the sorcerer stopped himself, ‘but I forgot. Your body is

whole, and young …’

Lalo scarcely heard. His first sight of the vastness within had been sufficient

to send him in frantic retreat into the shadow-realm. But whence could he escape

from here? The meaning of his vision hovered on the edge of comprehension,

terrifying, tantalizing, beating at his awareness like mighty wings.

And then the wings were outside of him as well as within; the captive demon

spiralled away in pinwheels of foul sparks like burning wool and the exquisite

lattices of power within which Enas Yorl had imprisoned it were shattered by a

rift between the worlds through which dark wings sliced like swords.

Pain dismemoried and dismembered him, and Lalo’s consciousness was whirled away.

trailed by the sorcerer’s unavailing cry –

‘Sikkintair, sikkintair!’

Gilla pulled her cloak more tightly around her and hurried over the worn

cobblestones ofPrytanis Street, hoping that the patter she had heard behind her

was only wind-drifted leaves. The Jewellers’ Quarter was supposed to be safer

for foot travellers than the Bazaar, but everyone on her home ground knew that

Gilla was not worth tackling.

But of course she was, today. Nervously she fingered the bag at her neck where

the remainder of her little hoard of gold weighed so heavily. The services of

wizards came high. Gilla cursed them all; cursed Alten Stulwig for his

incompetence and Illyra the half-S’danzo who had been able to tell her only that

wizardry was somehow involved, cursed Lalo for having gotten into this mess and

most of all, cursed herself for her fear.

And the rustle behind her resolved into the thud of running feel, and Gilla

wheeled, fear-fuelled anger strengthening the massive arm that smacked into the

first cutpurse as he came on. He buckled with a sound like a sliced bladder, and

a knife glittered through the air to rebound with a tinny clatter from the

nearest wall. Gilla brought her other fist down on the man’s head and waded into

his companion before he quite realized why his point man was down; she

belaboured his ears with all the obscenities that a lifetime on the edge of the

Maze had taught her as she put her full weight into her blows.

The blood was singing in her veins and most of her fear had been washed away by

adrenalin by the time Gilla dusted herself off and resumed her progress. Behind

her two battered figures stirred, groaned, and subsided again.

That martial energy carried her all the way past the last of the carpetmakers’

shops and the stares of their owners, rolling up their wares now as the sun

descended and painted the city with its fiery glow. It carried her all the way

to the door of Enas Yorl.

But there she halted, her eye mazed by the sinuous swirl of brazen dragons that

adorned it, her hand on the chill metal of the knocker, not quite daring to let

it go. All the tales she had ever heard of the sorcerer yammered at her in the

voices her children had used when she told them what she meant to do.

What am I doing here? Who am I to meddle with wizards? The voices were gentle,

reasonable, and then, from some deeper part of her being came the thought: Lalo

passed through this door and came home to me. Where he has gone, I can go too.

Gilla fet the knocker fall.

The door opened silently. The blind servant of whom she had heard was standing

there, with a silken blindfold in his hand. Licking lips that were suddenly dry,

Gilla tied it around her head and let the servant take her hand.

At least she had the advantage of knowledge. Lalo had told her about Darous, and

the blindfold, and the peculiar guardians that laired in the sorcerer’s entry

hall. But the sound of scales on stone and the sense of myriad bodies slithering

about her nearly undid her, for snakes were her particular fear. They ‘re not

snakes’, she told herself. They’re only basilisks’. But her fingers tightened on

the cool hand of her guide and she was breathing hard when they emerged into

another chamber in which some musky incense mingled sick-eningly with the smell

of sulphur.

The blindfold was taken away and Gilla looked around her with a sigh. The stone

walls were stained with carbon, and a melted tangle of metal that had once been

a brazier lay in the middle of the floor. A daybed was set into an embrasure in

the marble walls, and after a moment Gilla realized that the huddle of rich

fabrics upon it covered a man. She crossed her arms beneath her breasts and

stared at him.

‘After the bull, the cow,* Enas Yorl said tiredly. ‘I might have known.’

‘Lalo?’ Gilla saw the thin hand that lay upon the velvet quiver, shift, and

become a more muscular member whose skin bore a thin dusting of bluish scales.

Gilla swallowed and forced herself not to look away. ‘Lalo’s been in some kind

of trance for two weeks now. I want you to get him back into his body again.’

She reached for the bag at her neck.

‘Keep your gold,’ the sorcerer said querulously. ‘Your husband already asked me

that question and I agreed – it would be amusing to see what Sanctuary would

make of a man who has faced his own soul – but Lalo is beyond my reach now.’

‘Beyond your reach?’ Gilla’s voice echoed painfully. ‘But they call you the

greatest wizard in the Empire!’ She met the red glow of the sorcerer’s eyes, and

after a moment it dimmed and he looked away.

‘I am great enough to know the limits of my power,’ he answered bitterly. ‘I

cannot speak for the Beysib, but no mage of Sanctuary will meddle with

Sikkintair. The Flying Knives have taken your husband, woman. Go to the Temple

of Ils and see if Gordonesh the priest will listen to you. Or better still, go

home – Lalo is gods’ business now.’

The Sikkintair devoured Lalo’s flesh and scoured his bones until the wind harped

through his rib cage and drummed out a rhythm with the long bones of his thighs.

His clever painter’s hands, stripped of the muscle that had made their magic,

rattled like winter-bared twigs against the sky.

And when they were done with the skeleton they let it fall, and mother earth

laid down new flesh around his bones. He lay thus enwombed for a season or a

century, and when his time was’ accomplished he found himself naked in a forest

glade starred with flowers like jewels, his new body as supple and strong as a

honed blade.

He jumped up and began to walk, content for the moment simply to enjoy the

colours and the soft air and the singing power of this new body of his. And

presently he heard music and turned his steps towards the sound.

Where the oak trees thinned, a grassy lawn sloped down to a pool fed by a

gurgling waterfall. A table had been set there, covered with a cloth of crimson

damask fringed with gold, and upon that cloth crystal flagons with wine

ofCarronne, platters of roasted meats and loaves of white bread and silver

dishes heaped with oranges from Enlibar. A feast fit for the gods, thought Lalo.

And indeed, the gods were feasting there.

‘We have been expecting you,’ said a voice at his elbow. A maiden more beautiful

than the fairest of Prince Kadakithis’s concubines held out a robe of blue silk

embroidered with dragons for him to put on, then knelt to ease his feet into

sandals of gold. Her black hair curled to her hips, shimmering with blue lights

in the sun, and when she looked up he recognized in her features the face

ofValira, the little whore whom he had painted as Eshi, Lady of Love, and he

trembled, understanding Who was serving him.

She led him to a seat at the end of the table and he began to eat, grateful that

for the moment the other gods were continuing to talk among themselves. Next to

Eshi sat one whom he could only suppose to be Anen – paunched and red-nosed like

the bibbers who had been Lalo’s companions in the days when he sought oblivion

in the bottom of a mug of cheap wine. But the god’s fat was opulence, and his

flushed cheeks burned with a glow to lighten the hopeless heart. Remembering

favours granted in times past, Lalo solemnly saluted him.

And the god saw, and looked at him, and meeting those deep eyes Lalo recognized

a mute sorrow and remembered that this was the god who yearly dies and is

reborn. Then Anen smiled, and as joy fountained in Lalo’s heart, he saw that his

goblet was filling with wine like the blood of a star.

The wine gave him courage to look at the others – gentle Theba the peace

bringer, and swift-footed Shalpa like a shadow beside her, whose face, when Lalo

glimpsed it, reminded him strangely of someone he had seen often in the Vulgar

Unicorn, though he could not for the moment think whom. But he saw the face of

every mercenary he had ever known in the harsh features of Him-whom-we-do-not

name, armed and weaponed even here, and the sharp good humour of the women who

haggled over fabric in the dyers’ stalls in the face of bright-haired Thilli,

until he began to realize that he recognized all of them – that he had painted

all of them, that he had lived among them all in Sanctuary and never known.

‘Father, you have disposed ofVashanka, at least for the present, but the priests

of Savankala still hold a place of honour in Sanctuary!’ Eshi was speaking to

the blaze of light at the head of the table, whom Lalo had still not quite dared

to look upon.

‘Until a new body for Vashanka to use matures, his power is broken,’ the voice

shimmered in Lalo’s ears. ‘The Rankan gods do not trouble Me now. It is this new

goddess, this Bey, that we must consider here.’

‘Her worshippers in Sanctuary are fugitives and the empire they fled from must

still be Her first concern. How much power can She have in Sanctuary?’ asked

Thilli. For a moment her husband Thufir leaned forward to listen and Lalo

flinched away from his eagle glance. The priests called Thufir the friend of the

Sikkintair as Ils was their master. They had taught him their far-seeing. Had he

ordered them to bring Lalo here?

‘I am tired of all this quarrelling,’ sighed Shipri. ‘I thought that when you

had bested the Rankans we would have peace again. I have finally come to an

understanding with Sabellia, and I suppose that this new goddess and I will have

to do the same. At least She is a goddess, and therefore more likely than a god

to be sensible about things.’

Lalo sat back, relieved. He had painted his own wife as Sabellia, and in the

past few minutes he had begun to fear Shipri’s jealousy. But Gilla resembled the

Sharp-Tongued One less and less these days, and he thought he would have

portrayed her as the nurturing Mother ofllsig now.

Then the splendour of the face of Ils was turned fully upon him, and, even in

this remade body unable to gaze into that light, Lalo cried out and hid his

eyes.

‘Son of Ils, come here…’ Sound was light, slivering painfully through Lalo’s

shut lids. He shook his head.

‘Lord, I have served in the temple of your enemies, and I am afraid.’

‘But I have defeated those enemies. Stand on your feet and come to Me!’

I have already died, thought Lalo. What else can He do to me? He opened his

eyes. Thufir Far-Seer was waiting to guide him to his Father, who masked his

radiance with the face of the great marble statue in the Temple of Ils.

‘You have painted many portraits since the Mage touched you, Limner – what did

you see?’

Lalo fixed his eyes upon the silver necklace that glittered from beneath the

god’s dark beard. ‘Beasts…’ he muttered, ‘and demons, sometimes, and

sometimes… gods.’

‘And when you turned your sorcerer’s gift upon yourself?’ the implacable voice

went on.

Lalo shuddered, but Thufir’s grip held him to this reality. He had seen a

pleasure in pettiness that shamed him and beyond that a longing for annihilation

that terrified him and a capacity for love that terrified him even more. He had

seen the depths of his own unguessed, untapped creative power.

‘As you served Enas Yorl and the priests of Savankala, so now, my son, you shall

serve Me,’ said the Voice of Ils.

Before him Lalo saw a white canvas, and brushes that surpassed his own as a

Downwinder’s donkey is surpassed by a horse of Tros, and a palette with pigments

for whose secret the colour-grinders of Sanctuary would have given their souls.

Lalo’s right hand prickled with power that built, built – it must be grounded

somehow – he groped for a paintbrush and dipped it into a colour that was more

than scarlet, touched it to the canvas and felt power surge through it in an

explosive release like the climax of love.

His hand moved swiftly, splashing the canvas with scarlet, then down to the

palette for a lambent gold, and lastly a shading of opalescent blue. Then he

stepped back, the brush falling from his fingers, and the thing on the canvas

stretched, flexed, and launched itself glittering into the air.

Eshi laughed and clapped her white hands, and Thufir smiled his slow, patient

smile. Lalo stared as the miniature sikkintair that had come to life beneath his

hands soared off through the trees.

‘Before, you were able to paint the truth behind reality,’ the whisper of Ils

echoed through the deepest chambers ofLalo’s soul. ‘Now you will give Reality to

the Truth you see. Do you not yet understand Who you are?’

Oh Thou Blessed Mother of All Living,

We wander, children who have lost our way-

Guard us from all danger, and forgiving,

Guide us homeward at the close of day.

‘Holy Shipri, All-Mother, as Thou dost love Thine own lord, hear me now!’

Gilla’s murmur was lost in the hymn’s sweet harmonies. ‘Hear me and guide my own

man back to me …’

Here in the chapel of the Mother, flickering candles struck sparks of colour

from the mosaics and one scarcely noticed the rough repairs where Vashanka’s

thunderbolt had cracked the wall. Gilla huddled in the shadows while the blue

robed priestesses passed back and forth before the marble image of the Goddess,

continuing their song.

Whatever men destroy is for Thy mending,

Forever feeding from Thy fruitful breast;

Thou art the source of life, and at its ending,

Once more within Thy holy womb we rest.

And what if Lalo is already safe within Her arms? Gilla wondered then. Perhaps

the gods need a court painter, and what does Sanctuary have to offer that could

compare? She bowed her head, rocking back and forth while the chanting

continued, sweetly counselling acceptance of life’s eternal round of birth and

death, and the tears she had so long suppressed fell like rain upon the marble

floor.

The priestesses had finished and the chapel was silent when Gilla felt Vanda’s

touch on her shoulder and let her daughter lead her out into the harsh sunlight

of Sanctuary.

‘Don’t tell me,’ said Vanda. ‘Goronesh wouldn’t even see you, and those

hypocrites who served Shipri told you that loss is part of the burden that women

must bear.’

Gilla looked back at the golden dome of the Temple, still half-sheathed in

scaffolding. ‘Am I selfish to want Lalo back? I thought I was the strong one,

but I need him!’

‘Of course you do!’ said Vanda stoutly. ‘And so do we!’ Her hair in the sunlight

was the same bright copper Lalo’s had been when he was young, but her grey eyes

were troubled. Gilla swallowed the last of her tears and briskly wiped her eyes.

‘You’re right -I don’t know what got into me!’

‘And now will you come with me to see the Lady Kurrekai?’ For the first time

since leaving the Temple, Gilla took note other surroundings, and realized that

instead of turning down the Avenue of Temples towards the town they were

walking along the outer wall of the Palace Square. She sighed.

‘Very well. Let us see what the foreigner can do, for it’s certain I’ll get no

help from mage or god of Sanctuary!’

The Prince had obligingly offered rooms for the Beysa and her court in the

Palace, though perhaps he was only making a virtue of necessity. Gilla wondered

how they all managed to fit inside. Certainly the place seemed abustle with

Beysib functionaries in laced breeks and loose doublets or the flared skirts and

high collars they all affected. It seemed to her that they even outnumbered the

silk-sashed Palace servants who went about their duties with such ostentatious

solemnity.

Gilla looked at her daughter, already aping Beysib fashion in a gown cut down

from an old petticoat of her lady’s whose borders glittered with threads of

gold. Whether this Beysib female was any help or no, certainly Gilla and Lalo

had done a good piece of work when they used his Palace connections to get Vanda

a position here. The Lady Kurrekai occupied a chamber on the second floor of the

Palace, close to the roomier apartments near the roof garden, which had been

taken over by the Beysa. If Gilla understood what Vanda had told her of Beysib

politics, Kurrekai was a cousin of Shupansea the Queen, not in direct line for

the lost Imperial throne, but royal enough to keep one of the sacred serpents

and to have been trained as a priestess.

Gilla shuddered, thinking of the beynit. Enas Yorl’s basilisks had been bad

enough, and now she must face this imported horror. / must love that man, she

thought glumly, or I would be running for home.

And then they were at the door, and the choice was gone. She smelled some kind

of incense, like bitter sandalwood.

‘Ah. the mother of my little friend. You are welcome …’ A voice rather deep

and slightly accented greeted them. The figure that rose as they entered was

tall and strongly built enough to make Gilla almost feel small. She blinked at

the magnificence of the quilted petticoat, whose crimson brocade had been

overlaid with gold-work until its original pattern could hardly be discerned,

surmounted by panniers of deep blue cut velvet and a corset of the same material

with long, tight sleeves. She had not realized before now that beneath the

cloaks that Beysib noblewomen wore outside, their breasts were displayed.

Kurrekai’s breasts were large, firm, and bore nipples that had been intricately

painted with a pattern in scarlet and gold.

‘Do be seated. I will send for tea.’ Lady Kurrekai clapped her hands, subsiding

back on to her couch in a rustle of silk. Vanda thrust a hassock behind her

mother, and Gilla, who was finding that her knees had an alarming tendency to

give way, sat down gratefully.

‘Your daughter has been very helpful to me,’ the lady continued languidly. ‘She

is quick, and oh, such pretty hair.’

Vanda blushed and took the tea tray from the Beysib woman who had brought it to

the door, set it on a low table of some intricately carven dark red wood, and

began to pour. The tea service was made from a porcelain so fine it seemed

translucent, and Gilla was abruptly conscious of the fact that she had not

changed her gown since Lalo fell ill, and that her hair was coming down.

She wanted to get to the point of this visit and get out of here, but the Beysib

noblewoman was inhaling the fragrance of her tea as if nothing else in the

universe mattered just now. Vanda remained kneeling before her, until Kurrekai

nodded and finally took one ceremonial sip; then she swivelled around to pour

tea into her mother’s cup and her own. Gilla tasted the brew suspiciously and

found it oddly pleasant. She drank it quickly and then held her cup awkwardly in

her lap while the lady, with endless deliberation, absorbed her own.

Then, finally, she sighed and set the cup down.

‘My Lady,’ said Vanda eagerly, ‘I told you about my father’s strange illness. We

have found no one in this city who can bring him back, but your people are wiser

than we. Will you help us now?’

‘Child, your sorrow is my own, but what do you suppose I could do?’ Kurrekai’s

head turned within the stiff collar and her slow voice held concern.

‘I have heard,’ Vanda swallowed and her voice went up a note, ‘I have heard that

the venom of the beynit has many properties …’

‘Ah, my companion,’ sighed Kurrekai. She leaned back, and from within one hollow

pannier appeared a flicker of crimson, followed by a slim black body as the

serpent slid slowly out of hiding and coiled itself lazily in the fold of her

petticoat. Gilla stared, fascinated, at the darting scarlet tongue and the

jewelled eyes.

‘What you say is true. The venom can be a powerful stimulant if it is properly

… changed … But your father is not of my people. For him, only the venom’s

fatality would be sure.’

‘But there is a chance?’ All the anguish of the past three weeks met in this

moment and Gilla found her voice at last. This woman must agree to help them!

‘I do not wish to, kill a man of Sanctuary.’ The turn of Lady Kurrekai’s head

held finality.

But Gilla rose, and while Vanda still stared and the Beysib woman was just

beginning to look around, launched herself across the room. When she stopped,

the beynit was barely a foot from her outstretched hand. The crimson head darted

upward like a flame and began to sway.

‘Mother, don’t mover Vanda’s shocked whisper hissed in the air.

Gilla remained still, now that she had reached her goal, looking for the first

time directly into Lady Kurrekai’s round eyes. ‘And a woman of Sanctuary?’ she

said hoarsely. ‘Why not? Lalo will die anyway and I will die too. Why not here?’

For an endless moment, Gilla held the other woman’s unblinking stare. Then Lady

Kurrekai shrugged, and with an almost careless movement interposed her fingers

between Gilla and the red blur that was striking at her hand.

Stomach churning, Gilla sagged back on her heels. For perhaps the space of a

minute the beynit hung with its fangs still embedded in the fleshy part of Lady

Kurrekai’s thumb. Then it began to wriggle, and the Beysib woman grasped it by

the middle, with a little shake detached it, and encouraged it to slide back

into the .shelter of her pannier once more.

‘In the name of Bey the Great Mother, the Holy One!’ Kurrekai spoke suddenly,

strongly, and then became very still, and though her eyes were open, they had

become as lightless as Lalo’s. Gilla watched, shivering with nightmares of what

would happen if a woman of the Beysib died here. Vanda had crept to her side and

was holding to her as she used to when she was a little girl.

There was a long sigh as the lady moved at last, and Gilla was not sure from

which of the three of them it had come. A great drop of blood like a cabochon

garnet was welling from Lady Kurrekai’s thumb. She looked around, gesturing to

Vanda with a movement of her head.

‘Get me the little crystal vial fronrthe cabinet – the one with the dipper that

used to hold perfume.’

Vanda got to her feet to obey as Lady Kurrekai faced Gilla again. ‘I have

attempted to transform the venom by altering the nature of my blood, but it must

be used immediately. Scratch your husband’s flesh so that the blood comes and

touch a drop of this to the wound.’ She took the stopper from the vial Vanda was

holding out to her, touched it to the drop of blood, and inserted it back in the

vial with a little shake, squeezed her hand to produce a second drop, and a

third.

‘Go now as I have told you, and quickly.’ She thrust the stopper home firmly and

handed it to Gilla, then delicately licked the smear of blood from her thumb.

‘And remember I warned you – it may fail.’

‘The blessing of the All-Mother be on you. Lady, and be you free of any blame.’

Gilla was already on her feet. ‘At least you were willing to try!’

They hurried down the corridor, Vanda skipping to keep up with her mother’s

longer strides and trying to keep her voice down.

‘Mother, how could you do that? I was terrified! Mother, you could have died!’

Gilla forged ahead silently, while those they encountered scattered from her

path. It was not until they had crossed the Square and passed through the

Westgate that opened out on to the familiar streets of Sanctuary that she paused

for breath and turned to meet her daughter’s wide eyes.

‘Vanda, you are a woman now, old enough to take care of the younger ones if you

must, and old enough, perhaps, to understand. If this works, you must promise

never to tell your father what I have done for him.’

‘And if it doesn’t?’ Vanda said in a very small voice.

Gilla gazed at the teeming life around her, sunlight glaring harshly off browned

faces, sounds of quarrelling and laughter, the rich mixture of odours from the

street, and for a moment felt as if she had lost her skin and had become a part

of all of these.

‘I have borne seven children and seen two die, and lived with the same contrary

man for twenty-six years,’ she said slowly, ‘and I have just realized that I

would sacrifice this whole city for one lock of his hair. If this stuff I am

going to give him kills him,’ she shook the hand in which the crystal vial lay

hidden, ‘I’m sorry, Vanda, but I will go after him.’

Lalo the god was creating a woman, a goddess as beautiful as Eshi, as bountiful

as Shipri, as wise as Sabellia, as dear to him as someone – he could not

remember, but the brush splashed gold like sunlight across Her hair. There, the

ripeness of breasts that could feed a dozen babes, and the opulence of haunch

and thigh, and skin smoother than the silk of Sihan … Lalo smiled, and the

brush moved as if of itself to suffuse that white flesh with a rosy glow like

the inside of a shell.

And then he stepped back from the easel, smiling, and the figure he had been

painting turned to him and took him by the hand.

He had expected that, and he reached with his other arm embrace Her, but She

continued to turn in his grasp, drawing him after her, faster and faster until

the green meadow blurred around him.

‘Wait! Where are we going? Beside the river there is a shady bower where we can

lie, and -‘ Damn! If only She would stop and face him for a moment he would know

Her name!

Clouds boiled around him with a roar of thunder. The difference between up and

down was disappearing and the paintbrush was torn from his hand.

‘Who are you?’ he shouted. ‘Where are you taking me?’

And then he was hurtling through winds that tore away his awareness until he

knew nothing but the implacable grip that held his hand. The world had

disintegrated into pain and darkness, but through the clouds that whirled around

him he glimpsed brief images – the pretentious splendours of a great city where

a beleaguered emperor’s banner flew; armies crawling like lines of ants across

the plains; mountains that shuddered with the struggles of men and mages, and

here and there a pocket of greater darkness where forces worse than human strove

for mastery.

And then he saw below him a familiar curve of harbour and a tangle of houses and

a tarnished golden dome. and pain clapped great hands around him and he fell.

Lalo’s mouth tasted like the midden of the Vulgar Unicorn and he felt as if the

Stepsons had been practising manoeuvres on the inside of his skull. Except for

an annoying throbbing in his arm, he could hardly feel his body at all.

And Gilla was calling him.

Holy Anen blast me if I ever touch that wine again! he thought muzzily, and

perhaps presently he would remember just what wine it had been. But now that he

considered, he could not remember anything about what must have been an epic

binge, and that worried him. Gilla would be furious if she had had to drag him

home, and from the taste in his mouth he must have been sick, too. He groaned,

wishing fervently that he could pass out again.

‘Lalo! Lalo my darling, you’ve got to wake up! You wretched man, I heard you

open your eyes and look at me!’

Something wet ran down his neck and someone near him stifled a sob. Gilla?

Gilla? But she would never weep over him after a drinking bout – a pail of cold

water, maybe, but not tears. How long had he been unconscious, anyway?

As if he were trying to work an old lock with a rusty key, Lalo-opened his eyes.

He was lying on the pallet in his studio. Alfi and Latilla crouched at the foot

of it, watching him with wide, awed eyes. Vanda was behind them, but her face

held the look of one who has been suddenly released from fear. He turned his

eyes – he did not yet trust himself to move his head – to the bedside, and saw

Gilla. Her face was puffy and her eyes red from weeping, and as his gaze met

hers they glistened with another tear.

Without thinking, he reached up and brushed it from her cheek: then he stared at

his hand, pallid and veined and thin. And now that awareness of the rest of his

body was returning, he realized that he felt curiously light, and his other hand

clutched at the bedclothes as if to hold him there.

‘Gilla, have I been ill?’

‘Ill! You might call it that – and I’d rather not know what else it might be -‘

exploded Gilla, and Vanda got to her feet.

‘Father, you’ve been lying in some kind of trance for almost three weeks now,’

Vanda added.

Three weeks? But just this afternoon he had been … painting… He had looked

in the mirror and then … Lalo began to tremble as memory came back to him. His

eyes filled with tears for the beauty of the other world, but Gilla’s hands

closed on his shoulders. and she shook him back to her own reality.

Lalo stared at her, and through the veil of her swollen features he saw the face

of the goddess who had brought him home. It took a kind of inner focussing, and

he found that now he could see another face beneath his daughter’s familiar mask

of cheerfulness too. Only the two younger children remained essentially the

same.

So, he thought, perhaps I will not need a paintbrush to do my seeing now. He lay

back, trying to assimilate the truth of what had happened to him into his memory

of the man he used to be.

‘So, how do you feel? Is there anything you want me to get you now?’ Gilla

finished wiping her eyes and resolutely blew her nose on a corner other apron.

Lalo smiled. ‘Well, I haven’t eaten for three whole weeks -‘

‘Vanda, there’s soup on the stove,’ Gilla said sharply. ‘Go heat it up, and you

little ones go with her. You’ve seen him, and Father doesn’t need you underfoot

here. Everything will be all right now.’

Gilla bustled nervously about the room, smoothing the covers, heaping pillows

behind Lalo so that he could sit, pushing a chair back against the wall. Lalo

flexed his fingers, feeling them tingle as blood began to circulate freely once

more, and wondered how he had gotten the scratch on his arm.

Beside the pallet were piled some scraps of paper and a piece of charcoal. Can I

still draw? he wondered, and seeing that Gilla was not watching him, he pulled a

piece of paper towards him, picked up the charcoal and drew a line, then

another, then some shading, and the paper showed him a deftly drawn

representation of a common Sanctuary dunghill fly. He stared at it for a moment

with a question he dared not even put into words, but it remained unchanged

before him – a drawing of a fly.

Lalo smiled a little wryly and set the charcoal down. What did I expect, here?

Gilla came back to him with the bowl of steaming soup in her hands, sat down

beside the pallet, and dipped in the spoon. Lalo blew gently on his drawing to

get rid of the charcoal dust and laid it aside. When Gilla held the spoon to his

lips he opened his mouth obediently. / could do this myself, he thought, but he

realized that feeding him fulfilled some need of Gilla’s own. The hot liquid

soothed his throat, and his body seemed to absorb the moisture like a sponge.

‘That’s enough for now,’ said Gilla, taking it away.

‘It was very good.’ Lalo looked at her face, wondering how he had ever seen

anything but the goddess there. Then he frowned. ‘I was painting a picture,

Gilla. What happened to it?’

She nodded towards the corner. ‘It’s over there. Do you want to see?’ Before he

could stop her she had gone to pick up the painting and brought it to him,

leaning it against the wall.

He stared at it, reading it as he had read Gilla’s face a moment ago, and

knowing that he would never be able to forget the journey from which he had just

returned. It would take some getting used to.

‘A self-portrait,’ said Gilla meditatively. ‘Of course. I didn’t really want to

look at it before.’

After a moment he cleared his throat, knowing that in this knowledge, at least,

they were equals now. ‘Well?’

‘Well,’ she said slowly, ‘you must know that this is the way you always look to

me.’

Her hand moved to enfold his, and feeling suddenly light-headed. Lalo lay back

against the pillows again. His ears were buzzing – no – it was only a fly

circling in the middle of the room. He thought a moment, then, feeling a little

foolish, glanced down at the piece of paper that still lay on the coverlet.

It was blank. Lalo looked up quickly and saw the fly spiral across to the

mirror, for a moment hover there, then buzz purposefully through the window and

away.

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