Mihi told me what Mr. Valabar had prepared that evening. Of course, that evening was early afternoon, but let’s not worry about trifles. It was house pepper stew, brisket of beef, Ash Mountain potatoes, roast kethna stuffed with Fenarian sausages, anise-jelled winneasourus steak, and triple onion beef. Then he stepped back a bit and waited. I had always been puzzled by this behavior, until I realized that he was giving us time to think about it, while being available to answer questions.
“What do you recommend?” Telnan asked me.
“Anything. It’s all good.”
I ate some of the garlic bread.
“Langosh” isn’t like anything else in the world. My grandfather makes it too. Loyalty demands I say my grandfather makes it better, but we won’t stress the point.
It consists of a small, round loaf of slightly, very slightly, sweet bread that has been deep-fried. It’s served with a clove of garlic. You bite the garlic in half, then coat the bread with it, burning your fingers just a little. Then you take a bite of the garlic, then you wait, and, as it’s exploding in your mouth, you take a bite of the bread. It’s all in the timing.
I decided on the brisket of beef, Telnan ordered the roast. We told Mihi, who smiled as if we were the cleverest two customers he’d ever had. Telnan studied my technique with the bread, copied it, and broke out in a delighted grin.
A Dzurlord with a big grin on his face. Very odd. But I was glad he liked the food.
“So,” I said, picking up the conversation from some time before. “You’re studying wizardry? Good. Maybe you can tell me just what a wizard is, then. I’ve been wondering for some time.”
He grinned like his schoolmaster had just asked him the very question he had prepared for. “Wizardry,” he said, “is the art of uniting with and controlling disparate forces of nature to produce results unavailable from, or more difficult to obtain with, any single arcane discipline.”
“Ah,” I said. “Well. I see. Thank you very much.”
“You’re welcome,” he said, sounding sincere. “What do you do?”
“Hmmm?”
“Well, I’m a wizard. What do you do?”
“Oh.” I thought about it. “I run in terror, mostly.”
He laughed. Evidently, he didn’t believe me. Probably just as well; if he had, he’d have been required to be scornful, and then I’d have been required to kill him, and Sethra might not like that. It did, however, effectively kill the conversation.
I took another bite of garlic, waited for the explosion, then the bread. Perfect. Each bite of garlic was like a new discovery, exciting even in its confusion; each bite of bread the epiphany that completes it. And the combination took me away from all that had happened in the last few years, and into that time when things were simpler. Of course, they were never really simpler, but, looking back on them now, my senses filled with garlic and fresh bread, it seems like things were simpler then.
Stepping off the Chain Bridge was also a step into the past, as it were. It made me think of a time before I had met Cawti, before I had begun working for the Jhereg, when I was just an Easterner, living along Lower Kieron Road, but walking across this bridge, or else along the waterfront to Carpenter, several times a week to visit my grandfather. My grandfather no longer lived here; now he lived in a manor house just outside of the town of Miska, near Lake Szurke. I’d visited him once a couple of years ago; I decided I should probably do so again, if I could get this matter settled without becoming dead.
My memory told me that all of South Adrilankha stinks all of the time. That isn’t really true. You have to reach the Easterners’ quarter to get the smell, and the Easterners’ quarter is a large part of South Adrilankha, but by no means all of it.
I took the roads that were as familiar to my feet as langosh was to my tongue, though nowhere near as pleasant.
It was a little chilly in Adrilankha, but the cloak kept the ocean breeze off me. Loiosh and Rocza shifted on my shoulder; I could feel them looking around.
I tapped the hilt of my rapier, just to reassure myself that it was there. Lady Teldra hung just in front of it.
My boots were a fine, soft darr skin; quite comfortable, and good for walking across grasslands, and even feeling your way carefully along rocky mountain passes; but they didn’t suit the stone streets of Adrilankha. My old boots, however, were gone with my old life.
I made it to Six Corners, which is as much the heart of the Easterners’ district as anywhere, and looked around. I was surrounded by humans, by my
own kind; I felt the easing of a tension I hadn’t known was there. Even being by yourself isn’t quite the same as having your own people around you.
Now, it’s never been all that clear who my own people are, but I’m telling it to you as it felt at the time.
Six Corners is, as they say, no place to found a dynasty. I’m told that, before the Interregnum, it was an area frequented by the higher class of merchant, but it was destroyed by fire and never rebuilt. As no one wanted it, the Easterners moved in, migrating from, well, from the East. After that, it was built up slowly and haphazardly; no one cared what happened there, or what things looked like. Or, for that matter, who did what to whom. The patrols by the Phoenix Guards were cursory during the day, and non-existent at night. Not, I suspect, because they were scared to be there; just because they didn’t much care what happened.
A few walls that had once been painted green, a roof that was sagging in the middle, and a doorway covered by a torn burlap curtain led the way into the abode of the finest bootmaker in South Adrilankha, maybe in the Empire. Since this wasn’t Valabar’s, Jakoub stared at me with undisguised astonishment, before saying, “Lord Taltos! You’re back!”
I agreed that I was. “How are things, Jakoub?” I knew it was a mistake the instant the words were out of my mouth.
“Well enough, Lord Taltos. We’ve had a bit of rain, you know, and that always means an increase in custom. And Nickolas injured his hand, a few weeks ago, and still isn’t able to work, so most of his regulars are coming to me now. Of course, Lady Ciatha has chosen to let half her land lie fallow for the season, so I’m not getting any—”
“Good to hear,” I said, before he could get really warmed up.
He took the hint, praise be to Verra. “How are you, my lord?”
“Well enough, thanks.”
He glanced down at my feet. “What are those?”
“Darr skin,” I said. “I’ve been spending a lot of time walking through wilderness.”
“Ah, I see. And, because it’s the wilderness, your arches won’t collapse? Your heel won’t callus? Your instep—”
“Do you still have my measurements?”
He looked hurt. “Of course.”
“Then make me something suitable for travel outdoors or on paved streets.”
He looked thoughtful. “For the soles, I can—”
“I want to wear them, not hear about them.” I tossed him enough silver to make up for the second hurt look.
He cleared his throat. “Now, uh, your special needs … .”
“Not as much as in the past. Just a knife in each, about this size.” I made one appear and showed it to him.
“Can I keep it?”
I set it on the counter.
“Nothing else? Are you certain?”
“Nothing else for the boots, but I also need a new sheath for my rapier. The last one you made for me was, uh, damaged.”
He came around the counter, bent over, and inspected it. “It’s been horribly bent. And the tip’s been cut off. What happened?”
“It got stuck in me.”
He stared at me, I think wanting to ask how that had happened but not daring. I said, “It was an apprentice physicker, and I have no clear memory of just what he did or why, but I guess it worked.”
“Eh … yes, m’lord. The new sheath—”
“Use the same design.”
“And all of the additions?”
“May as well.”
“Very good, m’lord.” He bowed very low.
“How long will it take?”
“Four days.”
I raised an eyebrow.
“Day after tomorrow.”
I nodded. “Good. Now let’s chat.”
“M’lord?”
“Close up the shop, Jakoub. We have to talk.”
He turned just the least bit pale, though I had never, in our long acquaintance, either harmed or threatened him. I guess word gets out. I waited.
He coughed, shuffled past me, and hung a ribbon across the door. Then he led the way into his back room, filled with leather, leather smells, oils, and oil smells.
Jakoub had a full head of black hair, brushed back like a Dragaeran trying to show off a noble’s point (which Jakoub didn’t have). I’ve never been able to determine if it’s a hairpiece, or his own hair that he dyes. He was missing a couple of lower teeth, which was made more noticeable by a protruding jaw. His eyebrows were wispy gray, in sharp contrast to his hair, and his ears were small. His fingers were short and always dirty.
He pulled out the one stool and offered it to me. I sat down. He said, “My lord?”
I nodded. “Who has been running things, Jakoub?”
“My lord?”
I gave him Patented Jhereg Look Number Six. He melted, more or less. “You mean, who collects for the game here?”
I smiled at him. “That is exactly what I mean, Jakoub. Well?”
“I deliver it to a nice young gentleman of your House. His name is Fayavik.”
“And who does he deliver it to?”
“My lord? I wouldn’t know—”
He cut off as I leaned toward him just a little.
Before I’d shown up to run things, Jakoub had had a piece of everything that happened around Six Corners, and had ears that extended even farther. His piece might be smaller now, but it was still there. And his ears would still be in place. I knew it, and he knew I knew it.
He nodded a little. “All right,” he said. “A few weeks ago, everything changed. More of you—that is, more Jhereg showed up, and—”
“Men or women?”
He frowned. “Men, m’lord.”
“All right.”
“And they started, well, just being around more. It made all of my friends nervous, so I started asking questions.”
“Uh huh.”
“It seems there was someone else in charge. Someone from the City.”
I nodded. “The City” was how people in South Adrilankha referred to the part of Adrilankha north of the river. Or, well, west of the river.
“I’ve heard,” he said, “that there is some group called the Strangers Group that gets the money.”
“Named for Stranger’s Road, or some other reason?”
“Stranger’s Road. They work out of a private house there.”
“Whose house?”
“I don’t know.”
I gave him the narrowed-eyed quick glance, and he said, “I really don’t. It used to belong to an old lady named Coletti, but she died last year, and I don’t know who bought it.”
“Okay,” I said.
It’s funny how my mind works: it at once jumped to who I could get to bribe the appropriate clerk to check ownership records, forgetting that, well, I didn’t have any “who”s anymore. After being gone for years, I was only back for one day and I was thinking like a Jhereg again.
This could be good or bad.
All right, now I knew the place. What next? Check it out? Sure, why not? What could possibly happen?
“You’re starting to second-guess yourself, Boss. Careful.”
“Yeah. I’m not used to this sort of thing anymore. Crime requires constant practice.”
“Write that down to pass on to your successors. In the meantime—”
“Yeah.” Point taken.
“What about collections?”
“My lord?”
“Do runners go to them, or do they send a bagman?”
“Oh. Runners go to the house. That’s what I do.”
“Are runners going there every day, or just once a week?”
“Every day, m’lord.”
I nodded and considered a bit more. They certainly weren’t making a secret of what they were up to. Did they want someone coming after them, or was it just that they felt so secure that they didn’t care? Or were they doing it in order to be seen to be doing it?
That way lieth the headache.
“Okay,” I said. “Oh. About those boots … .”
“Yes, m’lord. Warm in the cold, but let the air in. Soft, comfortable above all, good support. I can put in enchantments to ward against blisters as well. That will help when you break them in.”
I nodded.
“Day after tomorrow, my lord.”
I touched the hilt of Lady Teldra and gave him as warm a smile as I could manage, which probably wasn’t very. Hey, I get credit for trying, don’t I?
Jakoub held the curtain aside for me. Loiosh flew out and scanned the area quickly, let me know it was safe, then returned to my shoulder as I stepped outside. The curtain closed behind me, taking away the smells of leather and oils and returning the smells of South Adrilankha, about which the less said the better.
The walk to Stranger’s Road was short. I stopped in front of a dirty gray pawnshop forty or fifty yards shy of the place, and looked it over. The house was a three-story old red stonework thing, with a wraparound wooden porch that seemed to have been an afterthought. It had a pair of glass windows on each of the first two floors, and a single one on the top story.
I leaned against the pawnshop and practiced patience. It was evening, just shy of darkness. Over at Six Corners, things would be just starting to get busy with the usual nighttime activity; here there were few pedestrians, just an old man walking a short, ugly dog and a few children kneeling on the street intent on some game or another.
“Loiosh?”
“We’re on our way.”
They left my shoulders and flew up, making a spiral above the house, then slowly circling around it, lower, then lower again, then returned.
“No activity, Boss. And all the windows are curtained.” He sounded mildly offended.
“I’ll speak to them about that.”
The “no activity” part changed abruptly. The door opened, and someone in Jhereg gray—someone Dragaeran and female—stepped onto the porch. She stood there, with something like a rod in her right hand, and looked about the street, I pulled myself in close to the pawnshop, so I could no longer see the house, which meant she couldn’t see me. Loiosh peeked his head out from around the corner.
“What’s she doing, Loiosh?”
“Just looking around. Oh, and now she’s making gestures with that stick.”
“What sort of gestures?”
“Small ones. She makes a little circle, changes direction a bit, then—she’s moving around the side of the porch now. She’s out of sight.”
“Well, I think we’ve established two things, at any rate. The Left Hand is, indeed, controlling this area, and they can tell when I’m nearby. Unless you want to chalk it up to coincidence that she came out right now.”
“How could they tell, Boss? They shouldn’t be able—”
“Lady Teldra,” I said.
“Oh.”
Even I am aware whenever a Morganti weapon is nearby, unless it is in a sheath that dampens the psychic effect of the thing. With a weapon as powerful as Lady Teldra, yeah, any skilled sorcerer would be sensitive enough to at least be aware that there was something in the area.
“You know, Boss, this is going to mess with your general sneakiness.”
“Yep. I’ll have to see about an improved scabbard for her, or something.”
“Another one just came out. Time to make an exit?”
“Or an entrance.”
“Boss?”
“Don’t worry. It’s tempting, but not yet. I need to know more.”
“Good. I was going to start worshiping Crow.”
“Crow?”
“His dominion is things that fall.”
“Where did you pick up that bit of information?”
“A few minutes ago, passing by a shrine. I heard some people talking.”
“I never knew.”
“You’re pretty distracted.”
“I prefer to call it ‘concentrating.’”
“Whatever you say, Boss.”
“Okay, let’s move.”
We didn’t speak during the long walk across the river. I suppose the visit had been productive; I’d at least confirmed that the Left Hand was, indeed, running things. And I’d ordered boots and a new scabbard for my rapier.
I walked along the right-hand side of the Chain Bridge while the water swirled under me. I glanced upriver, speculating on who and what might live there; all of those people being born, living, and dying along its banks. Maybe, if I lived through this, that’s where I’d go next; just follow the river and see where it brought me. The East Bank, of course.
When the two miles or so of the bridge were behind me, I found a cabriolet and had myself brought north to a district that overlooked the docks. A few miles away, on the other side of the river, were the slaughterhouses; on this side were houses: public, private, and ware, as well as the stalls of the poorer craftsmen and the shops of the more prosperous ones.
It was becoming dark as I entered a house whose sign depicted a ship’s lantern hanging from a mast. There would, I suspected, be a lot of Orca in here. There were a lot of Orca in all the taverns in this part of Adrilankha, so it wasn’t a terribly daring guess.
It was a long, narrow room. I spotted a door on the far end that would, no doubt, lead to smaller rooms. Near the door was a small raised area for musicians. And standing near it was a pale-looking Dragaeran in blue and white, holding some sort of instrument with lots of strings and an oddly curved body.
Years before I had made a deal with the Minstrels’ Guild; expensive, but one of the smarter things I’d done. You don’t need to hear the whole conversation. I showed him a ring I carry, asked him a couple of questions, got a couple of answers, and slipped him some coins. Then it was out the door quickly, before some of those looks I was getting from the assembled Orca turned themselves into action which would result in more attention than I cared for.
I followed the musician’s directions, which took me west a bit less than a mile. I want to say something like, “No one tried to kill me,” just to let you know that the whole being killed thing was never far from my mind; but it’ll be played out pretty fast, so if I don’t say anything about it, you can assume I didn’t get killed.
This house, marked by a newly painted sign showing a sleeping dog, was a bit larger than the last and more nearly square. The stage was off to the left, and the fellow I was looking for was standing next to it, holding a wide, curved drum.
“Aibynn,” I said after the twenty steps or so between the doorway and the stage.
He blinked a couple of times, as if the word were in some foreign language, then gave me a smile. “Hey, Vlad,” he said. “I got a new drum.”
“Yeah,” I told him. “That’s why I came back.”
“Oh? You’ve been away?”
“Uh, yeah.”
Aibynn was thin even for the thin Dragaerans, and as tall as Morrolan. He was not native to the Empire; I’d met him on an island while involved in a complicated business involving a god, a king, an empress, political conspiracies, and other sundry entertainments. Of all the Dragaerans I’d ever met, he was the one I understood the least, but also one of the few I was certain had no interest in using me for his purposes.
We found a table and sat down. A barmaid gave him something clear, batted her eyelashes at him, and then remembered to ask if I wanted anything. I didn’t.
Aibynn said, “You sticking around for the show? I’m playing with this guy—”
“Probably not,” I said. “To tell you the truth, I don’t actually like music.”
“Yeah, neither do I,” said Aibynn.
“No, I mean it,” I said.
He nodded. “Yeah, me too.”
Aibynn was a musician. I wasn’t.
I said, “It’s not like I’m tone-deaf or anything. And, I mean, there are some things I like. Simple tunes, that you can hum, with words that are kind of clever. But most things that people call real music—”
“Yeah,” said Aibynn. “Sometimes I want to be just done with the whole thing.” As he spoke, his fingers were drumming on the tabletop. I don’t mean tapping, like I might do if I were bored, I mean drumming—making complex rhythms, and doing rolls, and frills. He seemed entirely unaware of what his fingers were doing. But then, Aibynn usually seemed entirely unaware of most of what was going on.
“I don’t think he’s going to get it, Boss,” said my familiar.
“I think you’re right, Loiosh.”
“Anyway,” I said, “I actually came because there are some questions I wanted to ask you.”
“Oh.” He said it as if it had never before occurred to him that he might know the answer to any conceivable question. “All right.”
“You used to go to South Adrilankha fairly often. Do you still?”
His eyes widened slightly, but from him that didn’t mean much. “Yes, I do. The Easterners have an instrument called—”
“Is this guy bothering you?”
We both glanced up. A particularly ugly specimen of Orca-hood was speaking to Aibynn. Funny how differently people react to you when you aren’t dressed as a Jhereg.
Aibynn frowned at the fellow, as if he had to translate. I reached for my rapier, but my hand came in contact with the hilt of Lady Teldra instead. I leaned back in my chair, and waited for Aibynn to answer.
He said, “No, no. We’re friends.”
The Orca gave him an odd look, started to say something, then shrugged and shuffled off. Five years ago, there would have been blood on the floor. Ten years ago, there would have been a body. I guess I’d changed.
I returned my attention to Aibynn.
“Do you know the area called Six Corners?”
He nodded. “I used to play at a place there called, uh, I don’t know what it’s called. But, yeah.”
“Good. That was going to be my next question.”
“What was?”
“Never mind. Tell me about the place.”
“Well, the acoustics are really nice because—”
“No, no. Uh …”
Eventually I managed to get the information I wanted, and even to communicate what I wanted him to do. He shrugged and agreed because he had no reason not to. I got out of the place without any untoward incidents, and slipped around behind it to give myself time to figure out my next move.
“Think that’s going to do any good, Boss?”
“Any reason not to have it set up, just in case?”
“Well, no, I guess not. Rocza is hungry.”
“Already?”
“Boss, it’s been hours.”
“But it was Valabar’s. Doesn’t that count extra?”
“I’m sure it does in some ways they’ve found you, Boss.”
“Huh?”
“Boss, someone just found you.”
“How … what?”
“I don’t know. I felt something. You’re being looked at.”
“Through you?”
“I don’t know.”
As we were talking, I was moving—walking as quickly as I could without appearing to rush. I passed a few tradesmen and Teckla, none of whom paid any attention to me. I turned right onto a street whose name I didn’t know.
I carried a charm that prevented anyone from finding me by sorcery. I was also protected against witchcraft, just on the off-chance the Jhereg would use it. There are other arcane disciplines, to be sure, but could they be used to track me? I wished I knew more.
Sethra Lavode had once located Loiosh. That was one possibility. But there weren’t many Sethra Lavodes in the world. Could they have tracked Lady Teldra, even inside her sheath? If I were given to muttering, I’d have muttered.
Loiosh and Rocza took off from my shoulders, to keep an eye on things from above, and so that, if it was Loiosh who had been located, I wouldn’t be in his immediate proximity. I guess it was having the Bitch Patrol on my mind, but I kept seeing visions of some sorceress showing up in front of me and blasting me to pieces before I could move.
Okay, I had three choices. I could find an alley where they had to come at me from one direction, and wait. I could gamble that I could remove the amulet and complete a teleport before they showed up. Or I could keep moving until I thought of something else.
I went for option three.
I took another street to the left, and wished I still had Spellbreaker.
Well, that was silly. I did still have Spellbreaker.
I reached past my rapier, gripped Lady Teldra, and drew her.
Then I stared at her.
Like me, she had changed.