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"Did you find out anything else?"
"No. Rudenes Schneidel is an accomplished sorcerer. He has no trouble covering himself."
The woman refilled Hecht's cup, then left. Hecht said, "She doesn't look much like her father."
"You knew him only as a dying cripple. And none of Grade's children took after him. She's the image of her mother."
"How many kids did he have?"
"Four. Two sons, two daughters. All on the wrong side of the blanket. While he was overseas. By a woman he freed from Praman captivity. She'd been captured by pirates as a child and purchased by a merchant in Aselin who treated her badly. Grade was in the field for the first time. The Brotherhood and the Gisela Frakier had taken Aselin by surprise. Grade saved the woman from the Frakier when he recognized her rusty Old Brothen. She came from a family of education and standing."
Though key words had been butchered in transition from Peqaad to Firaldian, Hecht understood the Princ.i.p.ate. Gisela was a transliteration of a tribal name. Frakier, roundabout, came from a phrase meaning "beloved traitor." In common usage in the Holy Lands, Frakier were Pramans who allied themselves with the crusaders.
"I apologize if I've made you uncomfortable, sir."
"You haven't. I'm at peace with all that. I'm guilty of the same indiscretion. I did do a better job of seeing my son to his maturity. I never had to leave him behind because of my martial obligations."
"You didn't want him to be a soldier."
"Nor a priest. But he was of age. He chose. When he created a family he did the best he could. But three of the four were lost."
Hecht could think of no appropriate response. That was the way of the world. As the world had been, always.
Harsh. Cruel. Unforgiving. Merciless. That was the world Piper Hecht knew. Happiness and pleasure were fleeting. Each moment had to be seized. The positive constants he had known were the brotherhood of the Sha-lug and the loyalties soldiers shared. Which, with limited success, he had been trying to recapture in exile.
"You seem troubled, Piper."
"My faith has been shaken lately, sir. I'm troubled in spirit"
"What more can you ask than what you have?"
"I don't know. That's part of the problem. A higher purpose? I owned one, once."
Princ.i.p.ate Delari looked disappointed yet again. "We'd better get back downstairs. Leave the cup. Heris will take't are of it."
"Who was that woman you kept staring at?" Anna demanded as they left Delari's house.
"Delari's granddaughter. Drocker was her father. He wanted me to see her for some reason. Maybe to show how he takes care of family. Drocker kind of adopted me. I kept thinking I'd seen her before. I was trying to remember where."
He was not concentrating, though. There was something not right. He beckoned a soldier from the City Regiment. "Where did the rest of the men go?" He saw none of his own guards, nor anyone from the Brotherhood of War.
"Sir. Armed men were spotted up that way. Where the coaches would pa.s.s. Maybe setting an ambush. So the Brothers and the Patriarchals decided to ambush them back."
A distant tumult began on cue, metal rattling on metal. Anna heard it, too. She dropped her nag immediately. "There may be problems bigger than my insecurities."
"Huh?" Piper Hecht was not a man who caught things unspoken by women. Till Anna he had spent very little time around them.
"Let's get the children home. By a different route."
This was something Hecht did understand. "No. We'll go the way we know what the situation is. Somebody may want people to go another direction."
"You're the expert." She began harrying the children into the coach.
The kids were excited. Hecht thought that Vali might break down and talk. But Pella would not shut up long enough for anyone else to get a word in edgewise.
Hecht had the coach stop at the scene of ambush. A young officer hurried over.
"We got them all, Captain-General."
"Indeed? Any prisoners, Mr. Studio?"
"Uh... No, sir. The Brotherhood guys killed everything that moved. They were seriously angry."
Hecht sighed. "Claim some of the bodies. Maybe somebody interesting will come looking for their dead." At a glance, in the poor light, he saw nothing unusual about the bodies. "We might yet come up with a clue about who to hunt." d.a.m.nit, prisoners should have been taken! "And see that any wounds get taken care of right away."
Hecht's amulet gave him a series of tweaks, none of any weight. Things of the Night were about, drawn by pain and fierce emotion. As he was about to climb back into his coach, he asked, "Was this a diversion or the main attraction?"
'The Brothers say this was it."
"Interesting. Drive on," he told the coachman, then considered his improvised family. Vali was pale as paper. She stared at him fixedly. Pella, suddenly, was as quiet as Vali. Anna had grabbed hold of his arm, so tight it hurt. "I had a good time. Really. Everyone treated me better than I expected."
She started s.h.i.+vering. The night was not that cool.
"Maybe because the only married man who brought his wife was t.i.tus." Other than Consent's whelps, Vali and Pella had been the only children, too. They had milked all the spoiling possible from celebrants in their cups, Pella selling the tragedy of the poor little mute girl. "Why wouldn't they fawn over you? They're all goats. And you were the most beautiful woman there. I'd have been worried about leaving you alone with the Princ.i.p.ate. Poor little Armand."
"Piper!" But Anna liked it. She had seized the day, s.h.i.+pping a cargo of fine wine. "Where did you and the old man disappear to? Or is that too secret for girls?"
"We had coffee. Fresh roasted Ambonypsgan. Maybe he didn't want to share with the whole mob." Hecht shuddered suddenly.
"What?"
"Creepy feeling. Like something we might not want to meet just started following us around."
"The women in the square talk like that happens all the time. A lot of people won't go out after dark anymore."
Not an entirely remarkable state of affairs. Brothe was dangerous at the best of times. A glance outside revealed nothing unusual. The street was empty except for one man in tattered brown who staggered along without showing any interest in the coach.
Piper Hecht and Anna Mozilla moved in distinct circles when they were apart. His life was all studies of companies and regiments and how to feed, arm, pay, transport, and keep happy the troops who formed them. He had to outthink the ambitious warlords of the Grail Empire, his employer's lesser enemies, and Sublime himself. The latter was his biggest headache. He never saw the man. There was little reason to his decisions, which were subject to whimsical s.h.i.+fts. Too many, like letters of marque granted to Haiden Backe, originated deep inside a circle of cronies so intimate that even Sublime's cousin, Bronte Doneto, seldom knew what would happen next.
Hecht said, "I get the feeling that I keep disappointing Princ.i.p.ate Delari. But I can't figure out how."
"You'll have to tell me more than you have. Unless it involves your super-secret Collegium business."
He described recent visits with Muniero Delari. Anna asked questions. Good questions.
"Obviously, there's more than a big map down there. Just having it buried like that, all secret, means you have to think that it's a powerful magic artifact. Or will be when they finish it. It sounds like they're still building it."
"We're home. Let me look around first." He still had that sense of a presence close by. Though his amulet remained dormant. "You kids need to get right to bed." That would not be a hard sell. Vali was groggy, all reserves exhausted, and would have to be carried. Pella was dragging.
Hecht saw nothing unusual. He paid the coachman, adding a generous gratuity. The man fawned. Times were hard.
The coach team clip-clopped away, on damp cobblestones. A light sprinkle had begun. Hecht entered the house last, backing in, like a rearguard covering a desperate retreat. There was no light outside once the coach and its lamps turned a corner, the driver in a hurry to get away.
Hecht made sure of the locks and shutters while Anna put the children to bed. Vali had to be carried.
In bed, still nervously alert, Hecht remarked, "What you said about the Princ.i.p.ate's map. That's why I love you. I never thought of that." Could his blindness be the cause of Princ.i.p.ate Delari's disappointment?
"Talk to me about that ambush, Piper. Were they after you?"
"I don't think so."
"What did you and the old man talk about? When you were having coffee."
"Rudenes Schneidel."
"Does he think you know something you're not telling?" Plainly, she thought he was holding out on her.
"Honey, I never heard of Rudenes Schneidel till a couple weeks ago."
"So maybe he never heard of Piper Hecht, either. Or you might know each other by different names. There's a lot of that going around."
Worth reflection, Hecht thought.
He was about to say he knew no one from Artecipea, nor had he heard of the High Athaphile or Artecipea before hearing that Schneidel called them home. He stopped as his mouth opened. He had had a thought about Vali. Which should have occurred to him long ago. One that meant a visit with the newest Episcopal Chaldarean before Consent's information sources dried up.
Anna continued. "There's been some fibbing about where people really come from, too. But forget that. It's time to find out if I drank too much to enjoy anything else."
The nightmare was so real it remained convincing after Hecht awakened. Anna demanded, "What was it? You're shaking."
"Nightmare. Haven't had it for a long time."
"The one about your mother?"
Hecht frowned. He did not believe Anna was psychic. She made no such claims. But she surprised him sometimes.
"It started there. Same as always." The same as memories he had had when he had cried himself to sleep in the Vibrant Spring School, back when they took the new slave boy in. He doubted he would recognize his mother today, even as she had been then, if she walked up and boxed his ears.
"Must be awful, being little and having no family."
"You make your own family there. Or you don't survive. That's the whole point." The Sha-lug schools produced hard men who disdained anyone who was not Sha-lug.
Piper Hecht feared he had softened during his sojourn amongst the Infidel, but his core remained adamantine Sha-lug. The Sha-lug were still his brothers, his family.
"It started out?"
"Huh? Oh. Yeah. Then it turned dark. There was a monster I couldn't see but I knew what it was. If I could catch it I could kill it. But I couldn't catch it. It kept doing awful things to people I cared about. And getting closer and closer to ambus.h.i.+ng me. Meaning I wasn't really the hunter."
"That's ugly, Piper, but it sounds like standard dream fare."
Hecht grunted. He agreed. But... "It had more than a dream flavor. Like my mind was trying to create images it could understand."
"Think you can lay down and go back to sleep?"
"Probably not. But I'll try."
Sleep came more swiftly than he expected, though that sense of the nearness of horror never went all the way away.
Anna let him sleep in. She wakened him, though, when neighbors came looking for someone who could act in an official capacity. "They don't know where else to turn," she told him as he pulled himself together.
Grumbling, he stumbled out into the cold to see the body some children had found. Pella and Vali ducked around Anna, tagged along, though not so close that Hecht would notice and send them home.
Hecht stiffened when he saw the corpse. Not because of the atrocities he had suffered but because he knew the man. Who had no business being anywhere within a thousand miles of the Mother City.
"You know him, Your Honor?"
"Sorry. No. It's the wounds."
One gawker said, "This ain't the first one that's been chewed up like that."
Another agreed. "And this one, he's got a foreign look to him."
Hecht nodded. The dead man looked like someone pretending to be Brothen without knowing the nuances.
Alive, he had been Hagid, son of Na.s.sim Alizarin al-Jebal, a soldier in Else Tage's company. He had been placed there by his father, for seasoning in the field. Na.s.sim Alizarin, called the Mountain, was a crony of Gordimer the Lion. A cla.s.smate from his old school. Na.s.sim had sent Hagid out with the unstated understanding that the boy would come home if everyone else had to die to make it so.
Back in the house, with the kids still outside, Hecht told Anna, "He was a good kid. He tried hard. But he started fifteen years behind the rest of the company. I can't imagine him ever leaving al-Qarn once I got him home alive."
"You're sure it isn't somebody who looks like the boy?"
"I'm sure!" He was angry. "Here's another mystery I don't have time to solve. And I can't hand it off to anyone else."