FIRST, OF COURSE, I had to find out who had carried out the investigation. I was afraid that the Empire had brought people in from Adrilankha and that these people had already returned, which meant a teleport to our beloved capital, about which idea I was less than thrilled, as you can imagine.
But one step at a time. I could have found a minstrel—I have an arrangement with their Guild—but news travels in both directions by that source, so I tried something different.
I made the tentative assumption that some things are universal, so I walked around until I found the seediest-looking barbershop in the area. Barbershops are more common in the East and in the Easterners’ section of Adrilankha—barbers cut whiskers as well as head hair—but they exist everywhere. I’ll bet you’d never thought of that, Kiera; whiskers aren’t just a distinguishing feature; they have to be tended to. Fortunately, I have sharp enough blades that I don’t have to go to barbershops for my own whiskers, but most Easterners don’t have knives that sharp. But even in the East, Noish-pa tells me, barbershops are pretty much the same as they are here.
The barber, who seemed to be a Vallista, and a particularly ugly one at that, looked at me, looked at Loiosh, looked at my rapier, and opened his mouth—probably to explain that he didn’t serve Easterners—but Loiosh hissed at him before he had a chance to say anything. While he was trying to come up with an answer for Loiosh, I walked over to the chairs where customers waited. There was a little table next to them, and I found what I was looking for in about two seconds.
It had a title, Rutter’s Rag, in big, hand-scrawled letters along the top, and it was mostly full of nasty remarks about city officials I’d never heard of, and it asked the Empire questions about its tax policy, implying that certain pirates were taking lessons from the Empire. It had a list of the banks that had closed suddenly—I assume it included the one our hostess used—and suggested that they were having a race to see which of them could clear out and vanish quickest, while wondering if the Empire, which allowed them to shut their doors on people who had their life savings in them, was really incompetent enough not to have known they were going under, or if this was now to be considered official Imperial policy.
It also, interestingly enough, made some ironic comments about Fyres’s death—suggesting that those who had invested in his companies had gotten what they deserved. But that wasn’t what I was after. Of course, it didn’t give the real name of whoever produced it, but that didn’t matter.
“What do you want?” said the barber.
“I want to know who delivers this to you.”
That confused him, because I didn’t look like a Guardsman, and, besides, they don’t really care about sheets like this. But printing it was technically illegal, and those involved in it certainly wouldn’t want to be known, so I knew I was going to have to persuade him. I tossed an imperial his way just as he was starting to shake his head. He caught it, opened his mouth, closed it, and started to toss it back. I put a couple of knives into the wall on either side of his head. Good thing I’d been practicing or I might have cut his hair. In any case, I do believe I frightened the man, judging by the squeaks he made.
He said, “A kid named Tip.”
“Where can I find him?”
“I don’t know.”
I pulled another throwing knife (my last one, actually—I’d just recently bought them) and waited.
“He lives around here somewhere,” squeaked the barber. “Ask around. You’ll find him.”
“If I don’t,” I said, “when do you expect him to deliver another one of these?”
“A couple of weeks,” he said. “But I don’t know exactly when. I never know when they’ll show up.”
“Good enough,” I said. I took a step toward him and he moved away, but I was only going to get my knives. I put them away and walked back out, turned right at random, and stepped into the first alley I got to. And there they were—another eight urchins, mixed sexes, mixed Houses. Street kids don’t seem to care much what your House is. There may be a moral there, but probably not.
I walked up to them and waited a moment to give them a good look. They studied me with a lot of suspicion, a little curiosity, but not much fear. I mean, I was only an Easterner, and maybe I had a sword, but there were still eight of them. Then I said, “Do any of you know Tip?”
A girl, who seemed to be about seventy and might have been the leader and might have been a Tiassa, said, “Maybe.”
A boy said, “What you want him for? He in trouble?”
Someone else said, “You a bird?”
Someone else asked to see my sword.
“Yeah,” I said. “I’m a bird. I’m going to arrest him as a threat to Imperial security, and then I’m going to haul him away and torture him. Any other questions?”
There were a few chuckles.
“Who are you?” said the girl.
I shrugged and took out an imperial. “A rich man who wants to spread his wealth around. Who are you?”
They all turned to look at the girl. Yes, she was definitely in charge. “Laache,” she said. “Is that thing your pet?” she asked.
“Go ahead, explain it, boss.”
“Shut up, Loiosh.”
“His name is Loiosh,” I said. “He’s my friend. He flies around and looks at things for me.”
“What does he look at?”
“For example, if I were to give this imperial to someone to bring Tip back, he’d fly around and make sure whoever I gave it to didn’t scoot off with it. If someone took this imperial and told me where Tip could be found, Loiosh would wait with that person until I was certain I hadn’t been fooled.”
One of the boys said, “He can’t really tell you where someone went, can he?”
Laache grinned at me. “You think we’d do something like that?”
“Nope.”
“What reason do I give Tip for showing up?”
I brought forth another imperial. “For him,” I said.
“You sure he isn’t in trouble?”
“No. I’ve never seen him before. For all I know, he might have robbed the Imperial Treasury.”
She gave me a very adultlike smile and held out her hand; I gave her one of the coins.
“Wait here,” she said.
“I’m not going anywhere.”
When she left, Loiosh flew off and followed her, which elicited a gasp from the assembled urchinhood.
With her gone, the mood changed—the rest of them seemed suddenly uncomfortable, like they didn’t know quite what to do with me. That worked out all right, because I didn’t know what to do with them, either. I leaned against a wall and tried to look self-assured; they clumped together and held quiet conversations and pretended they were ignoring me.
After about fifteen minutes, Loiosh said, “She’s found someone, boss. She’s talking to him.”
“And . . . ?”
“Okay, they’re coming.”
“Hooray. Where are they now?”
“Just around the corner.”
I said, “Laache and Tip will be here soon.”
They looked at me, and one of them said, “How d’you—” and cut himself off. I smiled enigmatically, noticing the looks of respect and fear. Sort of the way my employees used to look at me, way back when. I wondered if I’d come down in the world. If I handled things just right, I could maybe take the gang over from Laache. Vlad Taltos—toughest little kid on the block. I was the youngest, too.
They appeared then—Laache with a young man who seemed to be about the same age as her, and who I’d have guessed to be an Orca—a bit squat for a Dragaeran, with a pale complexion, light brown hair, and blue eyes. Old memories of being harassed by Orca just about his age came up to annoy me, but I ignored them—what was I going to do, beat him up?
He was looking a bit leery and keeping his distance. Before he could say anything, I flipped him an imperial. He made it vanish.
“What do you want?” he said.
“You’re Tip?”
“What if I am?”
“Let us walk together and talk together, one with the other, out of range of the eager ears of those who would thwart our intentions.”
“Come here a minute, I want to ask you something.”
“Ask me what?”
“I’d rather not say out here where everyone can hear me.”
Someone whispered something, and someone else giggled. Tip scowled and said, “All right.”
I walked up to him and we walked down the alley about twenty yards, and I said, “I’ll give you another imperial if you’ll take me to the man who prints Rutter’s Rag,” and he was off down the alley as fast as his feet could carry him. He turned the corner and was gone.
“You know what to do, Loiosh.”
“Yeah, yeah. On my way, boss.”
I turned back and the kids were all looking at me—and looking at Loiosh flying off into the city.
“Thanks for your help,” I called to them. “See you again, maybe.”
I strolled on down the alley. It was, of course, possible that Laache had told Tip about Loiosh, but, as we followed him, he didn’t seem to be watching above him.
He stayed with the alleys and finally, after looking around him carefully, stepped into a little door. Loiosh returned to me and guided me along the same path he’d taken, and to the door. It wasn’t locked.
It seemed to be a storeroom of some sort; a quick check revealed that what was stored included a great deal of paper and drums of what had to be ink, judging by the smell coming off them and filling up the room.
“Ah ha,” I told Loiosh.
“Lucky,” he said.
“Clever,” I suggested.
“Lucky.”
“Shut up.”
I heard voices coming from my right, where there was a narrow, dark stairway. I took the stairs either silently or carefully—they tend to be the same thing. But you know that, Kiera. When I reached the bottom, I saw them, illuminated by a small lamp. One was Tip, the other was an old man who seemed to be a Tsalmoth, to judge from the ruddiness of his complexion and his build. I couldn’t see what colors he wore. He didn’t see me at all. The man was seated in front of a desk that was filled with desk things. Tip was standing next to him, saying, “I’m sure he was an Easterner. I know an Easterner when I see one,” which was too good an entrance line for me to ignore.
I said, “Judge for yourself,” and had the satisfaction of seeing them both jump.
I gave them my warmest smile, and the Tsalmoth scrabbled around in a drawer in his desk and came out with a narrow rod that, no doubt, had been prepared with some terrible, nasty killing thing. I said, “Don’t be stupid,” and took my own advice by allowing Spellbreaker to fall into my hand.
He pointed the rod at me and said, “What do you want?”
“Don’t blame the boy,” I said. “I’m very hard to lose when I want to follow someone.”
“What do you want?” he said again. His dialogue seemed pretty limited.
“Actually,” I said, “not very much. It won’t even be inconvenient, and I’ll pay you for it. But if you don’t put that thing down, I’m likely to become frightened, and then I’m likely to hurt you.”
He looked at me, then looked at Spellbreaker, which to all appearances is just a length of gold-colored chain, and said, “I think I’ll keep it in hand, if you don’t mind.”
“I mind,” I said.
He looked at me some more. I waited. He put the rod down. I wrapped Spellbreaker back around my left wrist.
“What is it, then?”
“Perhaps the boy should take a walk.”
He nodded to Tip, who seemed a little nervous about walking past me, so I stepped to the side. He almost ran to the stairs, stopping just long enough to take the imperial I threw to him. “Don’t squander it,” I said as he raced past me.
There was another chair near the desk, so I sat down in it, crossed my legs, and said, “My name is Padraic.” Quit laughing, Kiera; it’s a perfectly reasonable Eastern name, and no Dragaeran in the world is going to look at me and decide I don’t look right. Where was I? Oh, yeah. I said, “My name is Padraic.”
He grunted and said, “My name is Tollar, but you might as well call me Rutter; there’s no point in my denying it, I suppose.”
He was a frightened man trying to be brave; I’ve always had a certain amount of sympathy for that type. From this close, he didn’t seem as old as I’d first thought him, but he didn’t seem especially healthy, either, and his hair was thin and sort of wispy—you could see his scalp in places, like an Easterner who is just beginning to go bald.
He said, “You have me at a disadvantage.”
“Sure,” I said. “But there’s no need to worry about it. I just need to find out a couple of things, and I took the easiest method I could think of.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean I ask you a couple of questions that you have no reason not to answer, and then I’m going to give you a couple of imperials for your trouble, and then I’m going to go away. And that’s it.”
“Yeah?” He seemed skeptical. “What sort of questions, and why are you asking me?”
“Because you have that rag of yours. That means you hear things. You pick up gossip. You have ways of finding out things.”
He started to relax a little. “Well, yeah. Some things. Where should I start?”
I shrugged. “Oh, I don’t know. What’s the good gossip since the last rag came out?”
“Local?”
“Or Imperial.”
“The Empress is missing.”
“Again?”
“Yeah. Rumor is she’s off with her lover.”
“That’s four times in three years, isn’t it?”
“Yeah.”
“But she always comes back.”
“First time it was for three days, second time for nine days, the third time for six days.”
“What else?”
“Imperial?”
“Yeah.”
“Someone high up in the Empire dipped his hand into the war chest during the Elde Island war. No one knows who, and probably not for very much, but the Empress is a bit steamed about it.”
“I can imagine.”
“More?”
“Please.”
“I’m better on local things.”
“Know anything that’s both local and Imperial?”
“Well, the whole Fyres thing.”
“What do you know about that?”
“Not much, really. There’s confirmation that his death was accidental.”
“That’s what I hear.”
“I hear the Empire is investigating his death.”
He snorted. “Who doesn’t know that?”
“Right. Who’s doing the investigating?”
He looked at me, and I could see him going, “Ah ha!” just like me. He said, “You mean, their names?”
“Yeah.”
“I have no idea.”
I looked at him. He didn’t seem to be lying. I said, “Where are they working out of?”
“You mean, where do they meet?”
“Right.”
“City Hall.”
“Where in City Hall?”
“Third floor.”
“The whole floor?”
“No, no. The third floor is where the officers of the Phoenix Guard are stationed. There are a couple of rooms set aside for any senior officials who might show up. They’re using those.”
“Which rooms?”
“Two rooms at the east end of the building, one on each side of the hall.”
“And they haven’t gone back to Adrilankha yet?”
“No, no. They’re still hard at it.”
“How could they still be hard at it if they already know what the answer is?”
“I don’t know,” he said. “I imagine they’re just tying up loose ends and doing their final checking. But that’s just a guess.”
“Which wouldn’t stop you from printing it as a fact.”
He shrugged.
I said, “Heard anything about their schedule?”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean when they expect to be finished.”
“Oh. No, I haven’t.”
“Okay.” I dug out three imperials and handed them to him. “See?” I said. “That wasn’t so bad, was it?”
He wasn’t worried anymore. He said, “Why is it you want to know all of this?”
I shook my head. “That’s a dangerous question.”
“If you ask it, I might answer it. And if I answered it, the answer might appear as gossip in your lovely little sheet. And if that happened, I would have to kill you.”
He looked at me and seemed like a frightened old man again. I stood up and walked out without a backward glance.
* * *
I TOLD YOU THEY were getting tired of seeing me at City Hall, which was another problem, so I tried out a disguise. The first problem was my mustache, so it went. It took a lot of time, too, because even after you shave it off, you have to scrape quite a bit at the whiskers to make sure they don’t show at all. The next problem was my height. I found a cobbler who sold me some boots which he then put about eight extra inches on, leaving me about Aliera’s height, which I hoped would be good enough. Then I had to practice walking in them and taking long strides. Have you ever tried walking in boots with eight extra inches of sole? Don’t. Then I broke into a theater to steal a wig with a noble’s point and get some powder to hide the traces of whiskers, then I bought some new clothes, including trousers long enough to hide the shoes but not long enough to trip on. I practiced swaggering just a bit. Kiera, this was not easy—I had to keep my balance, take strides long enough so it wouldn’t look funny with my height, and swagger, for the love of Verra. I felt like a complete idiot. On the other hand, I didn’t draw any funny looks while I was walking around, so I figured I had a chance of pulling it off.
I hid my clothes and my blade behind a handy public house half a mile or so from City Hall. So I did all that, dressing myself up like a Chreotha so people would feel free to push me around. You can learn a lot letting people push you around, and it’s always nice knowing that you can push back whenever you want.
I told Loiosh to wait for me outside, which he didn’t like but was unavoidable. Then I walked into the place like I knew my business, went up a flight of stairs to take me past the nice Lyorn who’d been helping me so far, found another flight of stairs, turned right, and looked down to the end of the hall. There were three or four people sitting on plain wooden chairs in the hall. Three men, one woman, all of them Orca except for one poor fellow who seemed to be a Teckla.
I leaned against a wall and watched for a while, until the right-hand door opened and a middle-aged Orca walked out. A moment later, as she was walking past me, one of those waiting went in. I walked past and entered the door to the left.
There was a sharp-looking young Dragonlord sitting at a desk. He said, “Good day, my lord.”
How long was I a Jhereg, Kiera? Hard to say, I suppose; it depends when you start counting and when you stop. But a long time, anyway, and that’s a long time spent getting so you can smell authority—so you know you’re looking at an officer of the Guard before you really know how you know. Well, I walked through that door, and I knew.
He was, as I said, a Dragonlord, and one who worked for the Phoenix Guards, or for the Empire; yet he was dressed in plain black pants and shirt with only the least bit of silver; his hair was very short, his complexion just a bit dark, his nose just a bit aquiline; he rather looked like Morrolan, now that I think of it. But I’ve never seen Morrolan’s eyes look quite that cold and that calculating; I’ve never seen anyone look like that except for an assassin named Ishtvan, who I used a couple of times and killed not long ago. It took me about a quarter of a second to decide that I didn’t want to go up against this guy if I could avoid it.
I said, “My lord, you are looking into the death of Lord Fyres?”
“That’s right. Who called you in?”
“No one, my lord,” I said, trying to sound humble.
“No one?”
“I came on my own, when I heard about it.”
“Heard about what?”
“The investigation.”
“How did you hear?”
I had no idea how to answer that one, so I shrugged helplessly.
He was starting to look very hard at me. “What’s your name?” he said. I was no longer his lord.
“Kaldor,” I said.
“Where do you live, Kaldor?”
“Number six Coattail Bend, my lord.”
“That’s here in Northport?”
“Yes, my lord, in the city.”
He wrote something down on a piece of paper and said, “My name is Loftis. Wait in the hall; we’ll call you.”
“Yes, my lord.”
I gave him a very humble bow and stepped back into the hall, feeling nervous. I’m a good actor, and I’m okay with disguises, but that guy scared me. I guess I’d been working on the assumption that the Imperial investigators were on the take, and I’d gone from there to the assumption that they must be pretty lousy investigators. Actually, that was stupid; I know from my own dealings with the Guard that just because one of them is on the take doesn’t mean he can’t do his job, but I hadn’t thought it through, and now I was worried; Loftis didn’t seem to be someone I could put much over on, at least not without a lot more work than I’d put in.
So, of course, I listened. I assumed that they’d be able to detect sorcery, but I doubted they’d be looking for witchcraft, so I took the black Phoenix Stone off and slipped it into my pouch—hoping, of course, that the Jhereg wouldn’t pick that moment to attempt a psychic location spell. I leaned my head back against the wall, closed my eyes, and concentrated on sending my hearing through the wall. It took some work, and it took some time, but soon I could hear voices, and after a bit I could distinguish words.
“Who do you think sent him?” I wasn’t sure if that was Loftis.
“Don’t be stupid.” That was Loftis.
“What, you’re saying it was the Candlestick?”
“In the first place, Domm, when you’re around me, you’ll be respectful when speaking of Her Majesty.”
“Oh, well pardon my feet for touching the ground.”
“And in the second place, no. I mean we have no way of knowing who sent him, and if we’re going to do this—”
“We’re going to do this.”
“—we should at least be careful about it. And being careful means finding out.”
“He could have given us his right address.”
“Sure. And he could be the King of Elde Island, too. You follow him, Domm. And don’t let him pick up on you.”
“You want to put those orders in writing, Lieutenant?”
“Would you like to eat nine inches of steel, Lieutenant?”
“Don’t push me, Loftis.”
“Or we could just dump the whole thing on Papa-cat’s lap and let him decide our next step. Want to do that? How do you think he’d feel about it?”
“I could tell him it was your idea.”
“Sure. Do it. I’m sure he’ll believe you, too. You know as sure as Verra’s tits I’ll roll on this as soon as I have a good excuse. Go ahead. My protests are down in writing, Domm. How about you? Did you just shrug and say, ‘Hey, sure, sounds like fun’? Probably. So go ahead.”
“Lieutenant, sir, with all respect, my lord, you tire me.”
“Tough. You’ve got your orders, my lord lieutenant. Carry them out.”
“All right, all right. You know how much I love legwork, and I know how much you care about what I love. I’ll wait until his interview is over, then pick him up. Should I bring some backup?”
“Yeah. Take Timmer; she’s good at tailing, and she hasn’t stirred her butt since she’s been here.”
“Okay. What should I tell Birdie about the interview?”
“Play it straight, see what he has to say, and try to keep the bell ringing.”
“Huh?”
“Battle of Waterford Landing, Domm. Tenth Cycle, early Dragon Reign. A border skirmish between a couple of Lyorn over rights to—”
“Oh, now that’s extremely useful, Loftis. Thanks. Why don’t you skip the history, and the obscure references, and just tell me what you want Birdie to do.”
“I mean Birdie should try to get him talking, and then just keep drawing him out until there isn’t anything left to draw.”
“And if he won’t be drawn?”
“Then that’ll tell us something, too.”
“Okay.”
“You got to admit this is better than just sitting here day after day pretending. At least it’s doing something.”
“I suppose. Mind if I put him in front of the queue so I don’t have to wait all night?”
“Yeah, I mind. Nothing to make him suspicious. You can put him in front of the Teckla if you want.”
“Okay. Hey, Loftis.”
“Yeah?”
“You ever wonder why?”
“Why what? Why we got the word?”
“Yeah.”
“That’s a laugh. I haven’t been doing anything but wondering why for the last two weeks.”
“Yeah.”
They stopped talking. I moved my head forward, replaced the Phoenix Stone around my neck, and didn’t look as someone I didn’t recognize walked out of the door and across the hall. An instant later he came back. I watched him, as did all of the others who were waiting, but he didn’t look at me at all. Assuming that was Domm, my opinion of him went up a bit—it isn’t easy to avoid taking even a quick glance at someone you’re going to be following in a few minutes. I got the uncomfortable feeling that I was dealing with professionals here.
I sat there trying to decide if I should skip out now, which would mean I wouldn’t have to worry about losing the tail and would give them something to wonder about, or if I should go ahead and let them interview me, and hope to pick up more information that way. I decided to gamble, because, now that I had a better idea of what was going on, as well as how they were going to handle me, I felt like I could maybe learn a bit. I was glad Domm had demanded the explanation for “keep ringing the bell,” because it would have been a mistake to have asked Loftis myself.
Someone else showed up, went into the room I’d just come out of, then emerged and took a seat next to me. We didn’t speak. None of us had so much as made eye contact with any of the others. But as I sat there waiting for about an hour and a half planning what kind of story I was going to tell them, I didn’t get any less nervous.
When they finally called out “Kaldor,” it took me a moment to realize that was the name I’d given them. I tell you, Kiera, I’m not made for a life of deception. But I shuffled into the office, still taking long strides and swaggering, but shuffling, too, if you can imagine it, where sat a fairly young, competent-looking Lyorn behind yet another desk. I’ve been seeing a great number of desks lately—it makes me miss my own. I don’t know what it is about a desk that gives one a feeling of power—perhaps it is that, when you are facing someone behind a desk, you don’t know what is concealed within it; the contents of a desk can be worse than a nest of yendi.
The chair he pointed me to was another of the inevitable plain, wooden chairs—there’s something about those, too, now that I think of it.
He said, “I am the Baron of Daythiefnest. You are Kaldor?”
Daythiefnest? Birdie. I didn’t laugh. “Yes, my lord.”
“Number three Coattail Bend?”
“Number six, my lord.” Heh. Caught that one, at least.
“Right, sorry. And you have come in on your own?”
“Yes, my lord.”
“Why?”
“My lord?”
“What brought you here?”
“The investigation, my lord. I have information.”
“Ah. You have information about Fyres’s death?”
“Yes, my lord.”
He studied me carefully, but, as far as intimidation went, he was nothing compared to Loftis. Of course, it wouldn’t do to tell him so; it might hurt his feelings.
“And what is this information?”
“Well, my lord, after work—”
“What sort of work do you do, Kaldor?”
“I mend things, my lord. That is, I mend clothes, and sometimes I mend pots and pans, except my tools got took, which I reported to the Guard, my lord, and I mend sails for sailors sometimes, and—”
“Yes, I understand. Go on.”
“I know that you aren’t the gentlemen who are going to get my tools back, that’s a different outfit.”
“Yes. Go on.”
“Go on?”
“After work . . .”
“Oh, right. Well, after work, on the days I have work, I like to go into the Riversend. Do you know where that is?”
“I can find it.”
“Oh, it’s right nearby. You just take Kelp down to where it curves—”
“Yes, yes. Go on.”
“Right, my lord. Well, I was in there having a nice glass of ale—”
“When was this?”
“Last Marketday, my lord.”
“Very well.”
“Well, I’d been drinking a fair bit, and I’d gotten a kind of early start, so before I knew it I was seeing the room go spinning around me, the way it does when you know you’ve had more than maybe you should?”
“Yes. You were drunk.”
“That’s it, my lord. I was drunk. And then the room spun, and then I must have fallen asleep.”
“Passed out.”
“Yes, my lord.”
“Well?”
“Yes, my lord?”
“Get on with it.”
“Oh. Yes, my lord. I must have been sleeping five, six hours, because when I woke up, needing to relieve myself, you understand, I wasn’t nearly so drunk, and I was lying on one of the benches they have in back, and the place was almost empty—there was Trim, the host, who was in the far corner cleaning up, and there was me, and there were these two gentlemen sitting at a table right next to me, and they were talking kind of quiet, but I could hear them, you know, my lord? And it was pretty dark, and I wasn’t moving, so I don’t think they knew I was there.”
“Well, go on.”
“One of them said, ‘If you ask me, they didn’t get anything.’ And the other one said, ‘Oh, no? Well, I’ll tell you something, they got a lot, and it’s going on the market next week,’ and the first one said, ‘What’s it going for?’ and the other one said, ‘A lot. It has to be a lot. If someone is going to lighten Fyres, especially after he’s dead, and not take anything but a bunch of papers, they must be important.’ And the first one said, ‘Maybe that’s what he was killed for?’ And the other one said, ‘Killed? Naw, he just fell and hit his head.’ And then, my lord, I sort of figured out what they were saying, even though I was still maybe a bit woozy, and I knew I didn’t want to hear any more, so I moaned like I was just waking up, and they saw me, and they stopped talking right then. And I tumbled out of there, singing to myself like I was even drunker than I was, and I went out the back way and I beat it for home as quick as I could, and I didn’t even settle up with Trim until the next day. But, as I was walking out, just at the last minute, I took a quick look at the two gentlemen. I couldn’t see their faces too well, but I could see their colors, and they were both Jhereg. I’ll swear it. And that’s what I have, my lord.”
“That’s what you have?”
“Yes, my lord.”
He stared at me like I was a rotten pear and he’d just bit into me, and he thought for a while. “Why did you come and see us now, and not two weeks ago?”
“Well, because I heard of the reward, and I was thinking about my tools that got stole, and—”
“What reward?”
“The reward for anyone who gives evidence about how Fyres died.”
“There’s no reward.”
“There’s no reward?”
“Not at all. Where did you hear such a thing?”
“Why, just yesterday, down at the Riversend, a lady told me that she’d heard—”
“She was deceived, my friend. And so were you.”
“My lord?”
“There isn’t any reward for anything. We’re just trying to find out what happened.”
“Oh.” I tried to look disappointed.
He said, “How did you learn to come here, by the way?”
“How, my lord?”
“Yes.”
“Why, the lady, she was a Tsalmoth, and she told me.”
“I see. Who was this lady?”
“Well, I don’t know, my lord. I’d never seen her before, but she was—” I squinted as if I was trying to remember. “Oh, she was about eight hundred, and sort of tall, and her hair curled, and she was, you know, a Tsalmoth.”
“Yes,” he said, nodding. “Well, I’m sorry to disappoint you, but there isn’t any reward.”
I looked disappointed but said, “Well, that’s all right, my lord; I’m just glad to have done the right thing.”
“Yes, indeed. Well, we know where to reach you if we have any more questions.”
I stood up and bowed. “Yes, my lord. Thank you.”
“Thank you,” he said, and that was it for the interview.
I walked out the door without seeing anyone except those who were waiting for their turn, and I took my time going down the stairs. As I went, I said, “Loiosh?”
“Right here, boss.”
“I’m going to be followed, so stay back for a while.”
“Okay. Who’s going to follow you, boss?”
“I don’t know, but I think the enemy.”
“Oh, we have an enemy now?”
“I think so. Maybe.”
“It’s nice to have an enemy, boss. Where are you taking them?”
“Good question,” I said. “I’ll let you know when we get there.”