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She stepped back and considered him. 'True,' she agreed. 'You're valiant, yes, but you're also flighty and lazy and - Well, don't despair. I will mould you.'
Cappen gulped and shuffled aside. 'Jamie,' he said, 'uh, Jamie, I feel wrung dry, dead on my feet. I'd be worse than no use - I'd be a drogue on things just when they have to move fast. Better I find me a doss, and you take the ladies home. Come over here and I'll tell you how to convey the story in fewest words.
Excuse us, ladies. Some of those words you oughtn't to hear.'
A week thence, Cappen Varra sat drinking in the Vulgar Unicorn. It was mid afternoon and none else were present but the a.s.sociate tapster, his wound knitted.
A man filled the doorway and came in, to Cappen's table. 'Been casting about everywhere for you,' the Northerner grumbled. 'Where've you been?'
'Lying low,' Cappen replied. 'I've taken a place here in the Maze which'll do till I've dropped back into obscurity, or decide to drift elsewhere altogether.'
He sipped his wine. Sunbeams slanted through windows; dust motes danced golden in their warmth; a cat lay on a sill and purred. 'Trouble is, my purse is flat.'
'We're free of such woes for a goodly while.' Jamie flung his length into a chair and signalled the attendant. 'Beer!' he thundered.
'You collected a reward, then?' the minstrel asked eagerly.
Jamie nodded. 'Aye. In the way you whispered I should, before you left us. I'm baffled why and it went sore against the grain. But I did give Molin the notion that the rescue was my idea and you naught but a hanger-on whom I'd slip a few royals. He filled a box with gold and silver money, and said he wished he could afford ten times that. He offered to get me Rankan citizens.h.i.+p and a t.i.tle as well, and make a bureaucrat of me, but I said no, thanks. We share, you and I, half and half. But right this now, drinks are on me.'
'What about the plotters?' Cappen inquired.
'Ah, those. The matter's been kept quiet, as you'd await. Still, while the temple of Ils can't be abolished, seemingly it's been tamed.' Jamie's regard sought across the table and sharpened. 'After you disappeared, Danlis agreed to let me claim the whole honour. She knew better - Rosanda never noticed - but Danlis wanted a man of the hour to carry her redes to the prince, and none remained save me. She supposed you were simply worn out. When last I saw her, though, she ... um-m ... she "expressed disappointment".' He c.o.c.ked his ruddy head. 'Yon's quite a girl. I thought you loved her.'
Cappen Varra took a fresh draught of wine. Old summers glowed along his tongue.
'I did,' he confessed. 'I do. My heart is broken, and in part I drink to numb the pain.'
Jamie raised his brows. 'What? Makes no sense.'
'Oh, it makes very basic sense,' Cappen answered. 'Broken hearts tend to heal rather soon. Meanwhile, if I may recite from a rondel I completed before you found me - 'Each sword of sorrow that would maim or slay, My lady of the morning deftly parries.
Yet G.o.ds forbid I be the one she marries!
I rise from bed the latest hour I may.
My lady comes to me like break of day; I dream in darkness if it chance she tarries.'
A FEW REMARKS BY FURTWAN COINPINCH, MERCHANT.
The first thing I noticed about him, just that first impression you -understand, was that he couldn't be a poor man. Or boy, or youth, or whatever he was then.
Not with all those weapons on him. From the s.h.a.green belt he was wearing over a scarlet sash - a violently scarlet sas.h.!.+ - swung a curved dagger on his left hip and on the right one of those Ilbarsi 'knives' long as your arm. Not a proper sword, no. Not a military man, then. That isn't all, though. Some few of us know that his left buskin is equipped with a sheath; the slim thing and knife-hilt appear to be only a decoration. Gift from a woman, I heard him tell Old Thumpfoot one afternoon in the bazaar. I doubt it.
(I've been told he has another sticker strapped less than comfortably to his inner thigh, probably the right. Maybe that's part of the reason he walks the way he does. Cat-supple and yet sort of stiff of leg all at ,once. A tumbler's gait - or a punk's swagger. Don't tell him I said!) Anyhow, about the weapons and my first impression that he couldn't be poor.
There's a throwing knife in that leather and copper armlet, on his right upper arm, and another in the long bracer of black leather on that same arm. Both are short. The stickers I mean, not the bracers or the arms either.
All that armament would be enough to scare anybody on a dark night, or even a moonbright one. Imagine being in the Maze or some place like that and out of the shadows comes this young bravo, swaggering, wearing all that sharp metal! Right at you out of the shadows that sp.a.w.ned him. Enough to chill even one of those h.e.l.l Hounds. Even one ofyou-know-who's boys in the blue hawk-masks might step aside.
That was my impression. Shadowsp.a.w.n. About as pleasant as gout or dropsy.
SHADOWSp.a.w.n.
by Andrew Offutt
His mop of hair was blacker than black and his eyes nearly so, under brows that just missed meeting above a nose not quite falcate. His walk reminded some of one of those red-and-black gamec.o.c.ks brought over from Mrsevada. They called him Shadow-sp.a.w.n. No compliment was intended, and he objected until Cudget told him it was good to have a nickname - although he wished his own weren't Cudget Swearoath. Besides, Shadowsp.a.w.n had a romantic and rather sinister sound, and that appealed to his ego, which was the largest thing about him. His height was almost average and he was rangy, wiry; swiftly wiry, with those bulgy rocks in his biceps and calves that other males wished they had.
Shadowsp.a.w.n. It was descriptive enough. No one knew where he'd been sp.a.w.ned, which was shadowy, and he worked among shadows. Perhaps it was down in the shadows of the 'streets' of Downwind and maybe it was over in Syr that he'd been birthed. It didn't matter. He belonged to Sanctuary and wished it belonged to him. He acted as if it did. If he knew or suspected that he'd come out of Downwind, he was sure he had risen above it. He just didn't have time for those street-gangs of which surely he'd have been chieftain.
He was no more sure of his age than anyone else. He might have lived a score of years. It might have been fewer. Had a creditable moustache before he was fifteen.
The raven-wing hair, tending to an indecisive curl, covered his ears without reaching his shoulders. He'd an earring under that hair, on the left. Few knew it. Had it done at fourteen, to impress her who took his virginity that year.
(She was twoscore-and-two then, married to a man like a building stone with a belly. She's a hag with a belly out to here, now.) 'The lashes under those thick glossy brows of his are so black and thick they look almost kohled, like a woman's or a priest over in Yenized,' a man called Weasel told Cusharlain, in the Vulgar Unicorn. 'Some fool made that remark once, in his presence. The fellow wears the scar still and knows he's lucky to be wearing tongue and life. Should have known that a bravo who wears two .throwing knives on his right arm is dangerous, and left-handed. And with a name like Shadowsp.a.w.n ...!'
His name was not Shadowsp.a.w.n, of course. True, many did not know or no longer remembered his name. It was Hanse. Just Hanse. Not Hanse Shadowsp.a.w.n; people called him the one or the other or nothing at all.
He seemed to wear a cloak about him at all times, a thoughtful S'danzo told Cusharlain. Not a cloak of fabric; this one concealed his features, his mind.
Eyes hooded like a cobra's, some said. They weren't, really. They just did not seem directed outward, those glittering black onyxes he had for eyes. Perhaps their gaze was fixed on the plank-sized chips on his shoulders. Mighty easily knocked off.
By night he did not swagger, save when he entered a public place. Night of course was Hanse's time, as it had been Cudgel's. By night ... 'Hanse walks like a hungry cat,' some said, and they might s.h.i.+ver a bit. In truth he did not. He glided. His buskins' soft soles lifting only a finger's breadth with each step.
They came down on the b.a.l.l.s of the feet, not the heels. Some made fun of that not to Hanse - because it made for a sinuous glide strange in appearance. The better-born watched him with an aesthetic fascination. And some horripilation.
Among females, highborn or otherwise, the fascination was often layered with interest, however unwilling. Most then said the predictable: a distasteful, rather s.e.xy animal; that Hanse, that Shadowsp.a.w.n.
It had been suggested to him that a bit of committed practice could make him a real sword-slinger: he was a natural. Employment, a uniform ... Hanse was not interested. Indeed he sneered at soldiers, at uniforms. And now he hated them, with a sort of unreasoning reason.
These things Cusharlain learned, and he began to know him called Shadowsp.a.w.n.
And to dislike him. Hanse sounded the sort of too-competent young snot you step aside for - and hate yourself for doing it.
'Hanse is a b.a.s.t.a.r.d!' This from s.h.i.+ve the Changer, with a thump of his fist on the broad table on which he dealt with such as Hanse, changing loot into coin.
'Ah.' Cusharlain looked innocently at him. 'You mean by nature.'
'Probably by birth too. A b.a.s.t.a.r.d by birth and by nature! Better that all such c.o.c.ky snotty stealthy arrogant bravos were stillborn!'
'He's bitten you then, s.h.i.+ve?'
'A bravo and a lowborn punk he is, and that's all.'
'Punk?'
'Well ... perhaps a cut above punk.' s.h.i.+ve touched his mous-tachioes, which he kept curled like the horns of a mountain goat. 'Cudget was a d.a.m.ned good thief.
The sort of fellow who made the trade honourable. An art form. A pleasure doing business with. And Hanse was his apprentice, or nearly, sort of ... and he has the potential of being an even better thief. Not man - thief.' s.h.i.+ve wagged a finger made s.h.i.+ny by wax. 'The potential, mind you. He'll never realize it.' The finger paused on its way back to stroke one moustachio.
'You think not,' Cusharlain said, drawing s.h.i.+ve out, pulling words from a man who knew how to keep his mouth shut and was alive and wealthy because he did.
'I think not. He'll absorb a foot or so of sharp metal long before. Or dance on the air.'
'As, I remind you, Cudget did,' Cusharlain said, noting that within the trade no one said 'hanged'.
s.h.i.+ve took umbrage. 'After a long career! And Cudget was respected! He's respected still.'
'Umm. Pity you admire the master but not the apprentice. He could use you, surely. And you him. If he's a successful thief, there'll be profit for the fence he chooses to -' 'Fence? Fence?'
'Sorry, s.h.i.+ve. The Changer he chooses to exchange his... goods with, for Rankan coin. There's always a profit to -'
'He cheated me!'
So. At last s.h.i.+ve admitted it. That's how he'd been bitten by this Hanse. Fat and fifty and the second most experienced Changer in Sanctuary, s.h.i.+ve had been cheated by a c.o.c.ky youngster. 'Oh,' Cusharlain said. He rose, showing s.h.i.+ve a satirical little smile. 'You know, s.h.i.+ve ... you shouldn't admit that. You are after all a man with some twenty years' experience ... and he has only that many years of life, if not less.'
s.h.i.+ve stared after the customs inspector. An Aurveshan raised in Sanctuary and now employed by their mutual conqueror, Ranke. As well as by an informal league of Changers and Sanctuary's foremost thieves; those so successful they employed other thieves. With a distinct curl of his lip - a cultivated artificial manoeuvre - and a brush of his double-curled left moustachio, s.h.i.+ve returned his attention to the prying of a nice ruby from its entirely too recognizable setting.
Just now Cusharlain's prowling the Maze was in service of still another employer, for he was an ambitious and ever-hungry man. An amenable man, to opportunities for profit and new contracts. Today he was merely collecting information about the former apprentice ofCudget Swearoath, who had been swung shortly after the new Prince-Governor came out from Ranke to 'whip this Thieves'
World of a town into shape'. Above bribery, beyond threat, the (very) young a.s.s actually meant to govern Sanctuary! To clean it up! Young Kadakithis, whom they called Kittycat!
So far he had angered the priesthood and every thief and Changer in Sanctuary.
And a good three-fifths of the taverners. And even a number of the garrison soldiers, with those baby-clean, revolting competent h.e.l.l Hounds of his. Some of the old villa-dwellers thought he was just wonderful.
Probably wets his bed, Cusharlain thought with a jerk of his head - at the same time as he expertly twitched his robe's hem away from the touch of a legless beggar. Cusharlain knew very well that the fellow's legs were single-strapped up under his long, long, tattered coat. Well, and well. So one boy of nineteen or twenty, a thief, hated another, a half-brother of the Emperor sent out here because it was the a.n.u.s of the Empire, good and far from the Rankan imperial seat! This the customs inspector had learned today, while gathering information for his secretive and clandestine employer. Hanse, Hanse. In all his life this Hanse had held regard for one person other than his c.o.c.ky self: Cudget Swearoath. Respected senior thief. And Cudget had been arrested, which certainly would not have happened in the old days. The days BDP, Cusharlain thought; Before this d.a.m.ned Prince! Far more incredibly, if there could be grades of incredibility, Cudget had been hanged!
Prince Stupid!
'Ah, the lad knows he can't hope to do injury on the prince,' someone had told the night proprietor of the Golden Lizard, who had told Cusharlain's old friend Gelicia, proprietor of the popular House of Mermaids. 'He schemes to steal from the very Prince-Governor, and make a quick large profit in the doing.'
Cusharlain stared at her. 'This young gamec.o.c.k means to try to rob the very palace?' he said, feeling stupid instantly; so she'd said, yes.
'Don't scoff, Cusher,' Gelicia said, waving a doughy hand well leavened with rings. This noon she was wearing apple-green and purple and lavender and mauve and orange, all in a way that exposed a large portion of her unrivalled bosom, which resembled two white cus.h.i.+ons for a large divan and which Cusharlain was singularly uninterested in viewing.
'If it can be done, Shadowsp.a.w.n'll do it,' she said. 'Oh, go ahead, tip yourself some more wine. Did you hear about the ring he tugged from under Corlas's pillow - while Corlas's head was on it, sleeping? You know, Corlas the camel-dealer.
Or've you heard tell of how our boy Hanse dumb up and stole the eagle off the roof of Barracks Three for a lark?'
'I wondered what had happened to that!'
She nodded wisely with a trembling of chin and a flas.h.i.+ng wing of earrings whose diameter was the same as his wine-cup - which was of silver. Her wine-cup, that is; the one he was using. 'Shadowsp.a.w.n,' she said, 'as Es.h.i.+ is my witness. Had a prodigal offer from some richie up in Twand, too - and do you know Hanse wouldn't take it? Said he liked having the thing. p.i.s.ses on it every morning on rising, he says.'
Cusharlain smiled. 'And ... if it can't be done? Reaching the palace, I mean.'
Gelicia's shrug imparted to her bosom a quake of seismic proportions. 'Why then Sanctuary will be minus one more c.o.c.kroach, and no one'll miss him. Oh, my Lycansha will moon for a while, but she'll soon be over it.'
'Lycansha? Who's Lycansha?'
Nine rings flashed on Gelicia's hands as she sketched a form in the air exactly as a man would have done. 'Ah, the sweetest little Cadite oral-submissive you ever laid eyes on, who fancies that leanness and those midnight eyes of his, Cusher. Like to ... meet her? She's at liberty just now.'
'I'm on business, Gelicia.' His sigh was carefully elaborate.
'Asking about our little Shadowsp.a.w.n?' Gelicia's meaty face took on a businesslike expression, which some would have called crafty-furtive.
'Aye.'
'Well. Whoever you're reporting to, Cusher - you haven't talked to me!'
'Of course not, Gelicia! Don't be silly. I haven't talked with anyone with a name, or an address, or a face. I enjoy my ... relations.h.i.+p with some of you more enterprising citizens' - he paused for her mirthful snort - 'and have no wish to jeopardize it. Or to lose the physical attributes necessary to my availing myself of your dear girls from time to time.'
Her snickering laugh rose and went on up to whoops about the time he reached the street, a.s.suring him that eventually the successful Gelicia had got his parting joke. Red Lanterns was a quiet neighbourhood this time of day, after the sweeping up of the dust and tracks of last night's customers. Now sheets were being washed. A few deliveries made. A couple of workmen were occupied with a broken door-hasp at a House down the street. Cusharlain squinted upwards. The Enemy, a horrid white ball in a horrid sky going the colour of turmeric powder laced with saffron, was high, nigh to pa.s.sing noon. One-Thumb should be stirring himself about now. Cusharlain decided to go and have a talk with him, too, and maybe he could get his report made by sunset. His employer did not seem as long on patience as on funds. The customs inspector of a fading city whose chief business was theft and the disposal of its product had learned the former, and was ever at work on increasing his share of the latter.
'Did what?' the startlingly good-looking woman said. 'Roaching? What's roaching mean?'
Her companion, who was only a little older than her seventeen or eighteen years, stiffened his neck to keep from looking anxiously around. 'Sh - not so loud.
When do c.o.c.kroaches come out?'
She blinked at the dark, so-intense young man. 'Why - at night.'
'So do thieves.'
'Oh!' She laughed, struck her hands together with a jangling of bangles - gold, definitely - and touched his arm. 'Oh, Hanse, I know so little! You know just about everything, don't you.' Her face changed. 'My, these hairs are soft.' And she left her hand on that arm with its dark, dark hairs.
'The streets are my home,' he told her. 'They birthed me and gave me suck. I know quite a bit, yes.'
He could hardly believe his luck, sitting here in a decent tavern out of the Maze with this genuinely beautiful Lirain who was ... by the Thousand Eyes and by Es.h.i.+, too, could it be? - one of the concubines the Prince-Governor had brought over from Ranke! And she's obviously fascinated with me, Hanse thought.
He acted as if he sat here in the Golden Oasis every afternoon with such as she.
What a coincidence, what great good fortune to have run into her in the bazaar that way! Run into her indeed! She had been hurrying and he'd been turning, glancing back at one of those child-affrighters of Jubal's, and they had slammed together and had to cling to each other to avoid falling. She had been so apologetic and in seeming need to make amends and - here they were, Hanse and a palace conky unguarded or watched, and a beauty at that - and wearing enough to support him for a year. He strove to be oh so cool, 'You certainly do like my gourds, don't you.'
'Wha-'
'Oh, don't dissemble. I'm not mad. Really, Hanse. If I didn't want 'em looked at I'd cover 'em in high-necked homespun.'
'Uh ... Lirain, I've seen one other pearl-sewn halter of silk in my life, and it didn't have those swirls of gold thread, or so many pearls. I wasn't this close, either.' d.a.m.n, he thought. Should have complimented her, not let her know my interest is greed for the container!
'Oh! Here I am, one of seven women for one man and bored, and I thought you were wanting to get into my bandeau, when what you really want is it. What's a poor girl to do, used to the flatteries of courtiers and servants, when she meets a real man who speaks his real thoughts?'