by Glen Cook
"What is it?" Else asked.
"There have been developments. They found your friend who fled before the attack. They think they know who they're looking for, now, too. Someone named Sir Aelford daSkees. Because he's the only passenger off Vivia Infanti who hasn't been accounted for. Because you named names before you didn't kill that Brother on the ship."
"The kid can't help it. He was born stupid."
"There's more. It's more interesting."
"I'm listening."
"Vivia Infanti's master complained publicly about the bad behavior and murderous intentions of the Special Office wizard he was forced to bring over from Runch. Here's an interesting piece of trivia. Your captain is the brother of Don Aleano Durandanti."
"Who would be a big name in that family. Right?"
"The top dog. And the way the Brotherhood started acting after this sorcerer showed up has everybody pissed off at them." The dwarf rocked double time. "Even the Fermi are grumbling."
"What happened?" Else scarcely noticed Stewpo's ticks, now.
"The Durandanti foreclosed on the Brotherhood barracks. The Brotherhood took a major loan against it a while back. And they weren't making payments."
"You don't seem disheartened."
"The Brotherhood of War are the worst predators in Suriet. Their order is built on stolen wealth and the sale of slaves."
Most Deves outside the Holy Lands, these days, were the descendants of peoples who had been sold around the shores of the Mother Sea.
"I understand," Else said.
"Can you keep information from those who sent you, Sha-lug?"
"I shouldn't. My reports are supposed to include anything al-Qarn might find interesting."
"There are things that I'd rather al-Qarn didn't know. Not Gordimer, particularly. But the other one. The wizard."
"Er-Rashal? Why?"
"He's a sorcerer. And we hear rumors about him. As a Devedian there are things I don't want him to know. If you feel obligated to report everything you observe, then I won't always be willing to help you."
"I can fail to see those small matters that don't pose any threat to my family, my people, my country, or my God." This one dwarf could not be a threat to Dreanger.
"Good. Very good. So I'll take a huge risk and assume that a Sha-lug's word is as precious as the Sha-lug want the world to believe."
Else growled a soft imprecation. Hell. The dwarf was making fun. And the truth was, al-Prama saw nothing wrong with deceiving unbelievers.
"You need to remember that Gledius Stewpo is no Sha-lug. Gledius Stewpo is a Devedian patriot helping his people by assisting the enemies of their enemies."
"I understand that."
The Deves of the diaspora kept quiet but those who survived in the Holy Lands professed it publicly. They wanted all invaders evicted from Suriet. Their Suriet.
Their dogma ignored the historical truth that they had been invaders themselves, in their time.
“I want you clear on the point Before I show you what I'm considering showing you."
The history of the Holy Lands was one of war and invasion again and again as one people after another tried to get control of the Wells of Ihrian.
Why had there been no empire, ever, based in the Holy Lands?
Else said, "We're clear on where we stand. If you think that something needs to be kept between just us two, I'll honor your wish."
"Good. Because I'm afraid we Sonsan Devedians are going to need the assistance of a real warrior soon."
Else grunted an interrogative.
"The Brotherhood aren't accepting the inevitable. They aren't walking away. They believe God is on their side. They won't leave their barracks. They're willing to fight. One Durandanti retainer has been killed already."
"And this ties in with me keeping secrets from al-Qarn?"
"The inevitable next stage — while the Brotherhood is temporizing and hoping for help from somewhere else — will be to lay off blame for the crisis on foreigners and unbelievers.
"They always attack the Devedian quarter when they riot. In the republics the ruling families discourage bigotry because it's bad for business. They depend on Devedian artisans and clerks. But the intolerance is still there in the mob."
Devedians were important in many Praman cities, too. In Praman Direcia the Devedian minority formed a bureaucratic class that supported its Praman rulers enthusiastically.
Stewpo added, "This new Patriarch, though… He has no tolerance at all. He preaches against everyone. Even his own people when they fail to agree that he's the Infallible Voice of God."
"You think something is going to happen?"
"I think the Sonsan mob will try to ran the Brotherhood out The Three Families will sit on their hands. People will get hurt. The Brotherhood will claim that it's all our fault. So the mob will turn on the easy victims. Meanwhile, the Brotherhood will work out an accommodation with the Three Families and nothing will change."
"And you want what from me?"
"Professional advice. On how to defend ourselves. Preferably in a way that keeps the casualties down so the mob doesn't get outraged because we did defend ourselves."
"Good luck with that" Else knew of no way to fight people without making them angrier than they already were. All you could do was hurt them until they were in so much pain that they let the anger go.
"So what's the point of asking me not to pass information on to al-Qarn?" He had seen nothing unusual yet.
"Oh. I thought you understood. We'll fight if we're attacked.
"Again, how does that concern al-Qarn?"
"Our methods might be of interest to the sorcerer."
"Fighting back might not be the smartest thing to do."
The dwarf shrugged. "So be it. Come with me."
The Devedian Quarter was quiet and dark. Else noticed pairs of armed men in its shadows. There was a racket in the direction of the Sawn. At least one large fire illuminated the underbellies of dense, low clouds.
"Looks like rain," Else told Stewpo.
"That would be good. It'd cool tempers."
They traveled barely a quarter mile, which was a large fraction of the width of the Devedian quarter. The quarter was densely populated. It occupied very little ground. Deves had to bury their dead outside the wall, in unhallowed ground set aside by the Church.
The dwarf muttered, "There are spies everywhere."
Two determined-looking youths challenged the dwarf quietly. Stewpo responded. One youth hurried ahead to open the door of what looked like a rich man's home. It had no shops at street level.
The door opened on a narrow hallway illuminated by a single candle. The floor was worn hardwood. Four doors opened off on that central hallway. Each was shut.
At the end of the hall a door opened on a steep cellar stairway. The dwarf needed no guide.
Stewpo stopped at the bottom, said nothing until their guide climbed back up the narrow stairs. Then he opened what appeared to be a derelict clothes cupboard stuffed with castoffs, reached through the clothing, pushed sideways. The back panel moved slightly, men swung away to reveal a darkness behind the cupboard.
Stewpo said, "There isn't anything lurking in this darkness."
"I'll be right behind you," Else said. And, "Have you visited Suriet yourself?"
"No. Have you?”
"Yes. Nowhere is the night so dark as it is there."
The dwarf pushed into the darkness. Which proved to be hanging strips of black felt.
There was no light on the other side of the felt, though. Until Stewpo said something that must have been a password.
An ancient Deve in traditional costume, wearing a huge beard, appeared behind a tiny candle. He said nothing while Stewpo and Else eased past and pushed through another set of felt hangings into a large underground room.
Else suspected the whole neighborhood was rife with tunnels and underground rooms, escape routes and places to hide. He wondered what the Deves had done with the surplus
earth.
These Deves had been getting ready for trouble for a long time.
The underground room contained an arsenal and seven wizened, shrunken old men. Stewpo said, "These are the Devedian Elders of Sonsa."
Else noted forests of gray facial fur. These old men might not have seen the real world in a generation. One old man looked like he might have been around, criticizing and complaining, when the Creator was putting together his great, flawed clockwork piece of art.
Else considered them, pigeonholed them, shifted attention to the arsenal.
He was impressed. "There must be a lot of money in the Devedian quarter." He saw fire-throwing weapons from the Eastern Empire and Lucidian crossbows of the sort any fool could use with almost no training. He saw weapons meant for use by specialist troops like grenadiers. He saw amphorae marked as containing deadly poisons suitable for use on arrowheads, spearheads, crossbow bolts, swords, and knives.
It all suggested a ferocious determination.
The Devedians of Sonsa had suffered all they were going to take.
"I'm here," he said. "And I see that you're serious. What do you expect me to do?"
"Nothing if we're not attacked," Stewpo said. "Everything if we are. You'll be our general. You'll be our hope. But no one who isn't in this room now will ever know that a foreign soldier was involved."
Else felt his arm being twisted figuratively.
"Let's see what we have to work with." They did have him at their mercy.
Five minutes later, Else told the elders, "What'll happen is, you'll get yourselves massacred. First time they roll a wizard in on you." Sorcery, even in the hands of its masters, seldom operated on a large scale. In a large battle a single sorcerer was almost irrelevant because he could impact only a tiny fraction of the struggle at a time. But on the close, intimate battleground of a house-to-house struggle, the ability of a sorcerer to crush resistance systematically could be terrifying.
Else asked, "Why do Chaldareans want to attack Devedians?"
One old gray shrub with eyes said, "They say we're a worldwide conspiracy to bring on a permanent darkness."
"I guess that explains why Devedians are everywhere. Never mind that you arrived as slaves. You don't want to confuse true believers with facts." Also, there had been two earlier Devedian diasporas, before the most recent, brought about by the crusades. Those came during the age of the Old Empire.
Stewpo demanded, "What are you driving at?"
"A mob breaks into the Devedian quarter. It runs into military weapons used by determined fighters. What happens next?"
"A lot of pople get killed."
"Confirming the universal suspicion that the Deves are up to no good and need to be wiped out before they overthrow the Church and corrupt every Chaldarean virgin."
There was no point reasoning. These people wanted a fight They did not intend to let good sense get in the way. "What's this?" he asked, having just discovered an instrument of destruction that had no business existing outside Dreanger.
It was a firepowder weapon of smaller bore and longer tube than the falcon that had gone to Andesqueluz. A craftsman had been working on it only moments ago. The smell of hot iron still tainted the air.
The tube had been created by wrapping iron wire around a steel rod, then heating the metal and hammering it. "Is a swordsmith doing this?" It was a stretch but a similar concept underlay the making of the best swords. And the best swordsmiths in Praman Direcia were Devedian.
Would this be something he was supposed to report? The existence of the weapon? Or the fact that there were Deve agents inside er-Rashal's secret workshops? Firepowder weapons had seen field use only rarely. Until the incident of the bogon they had attracted no attention because of their freedom from success.
Stewpo finally confessed, "It's an experimental weapon. I don't pretend to understand it. I'm told it'll give us a way to deal with unfriendly sorcerers."
So. The elders were not blind to reality after all. Their chances would be improved if they could protect themselves against sorcery. Particularly if they were a quarter as wicked as the Church accused them of being.
Else said, "If you really want to fight back and live you'll get that toy finished fast"
How could the concept behind it have gotten to Sonsa so fast?
Silver-tipped arrows and poisoned iron daggers were the stuff of legend. However, any marginally competent sorcerer could surround himself with spells that would weaken or destroy the wood, feathers, bone, cotton or flax, and animal-glue parts of any missile, leaving nothing but a tumbling silver point that would cause harm only by chance.
A man with a dagger was easily frustrated, too, if the sorcerer was not napping.
Else realized that the Deves had trapped him neatly. Their most insidious lure was his need to find out what they were doing and the true depth of their resources. They betrayed themselves a little so he would feel compelled to find out more.
His discovery of the firepowder weapon was no accident.
That left him more convinced that there were Devedian spies close to er-Rashal al-Dhulquarnen and, perhaps, even Gordimer the Lion.
Conflict arose predictably, following a tediously unsurprising escalation. A band of adolescents got into the Devedian quarter and threw rocks at Devedian youths, tried to break into a shop, attempted to assault a Devedian girl — then found themselves surrounded by unsmiling men who were not amused by their gentle ethnic jests. They beat me invaders senseless, then flung them into the filth of a midstreet gutter.
The fathers and brothers and cousins of the injured boys took umbrage. That led to confrontations that escalated into the use of weapons. A dozen Chaldareans perished.
In time, a too bold mob of drunks started a battle during which overly enthusiastic Devedian crossbowmen slaughtered scores of raiders.
Every confrontation occurred inside the Devedian quarter. For what little value that was as an arguing point before the city's masters.
Escalation took eight days. Else played the restraining general where no general was necessary and no restraint was possible. On the eighth evening the ruling families felt compelled to take notice because the rioters, turning to Color politics, began starting fires on the Chaldarean side of the Devedian quarter wall. They directed their household troops to restore order. But those forces were besieging the barracks filled with Brotherhood of War squatters.
Knowing success might doom Sonsa's Devedians, Else nevertheless organized an ambush that embarrassed the household forces.
The outrage of Sonsa's Chaldareans, naturally, knew no bounds.
Else told the elders, "Now they'll make war on you. You won't like the way it turns out. There are a hundred of them for every one of you."
"There always have been," Gledius Stewpo said. The Deves were drunk on success. To this point they had suffered no dead at all. One of the beards said, "The weapon is ready." Another said, "The business of Sonsa is business. That business can't go on without us. The Three Families have to let this run its course."
Sonsa became quiet. Order returned outside the devedian quarter. The ruling families did try to let emotions cool. But too many people preferred otherwise. Especially the Brotherhood of War, guided by the unidentified sorcerer off Vivia Infanti.
A rumor said foreign mercenaries were behind the uprising. One description of a Ferris Renfrow was good enough to get Else lynched.
Circumstances were changing. Else began to consider risking trying to get out of Sonsa.
He would be of no use to Dreanger if he got killed in a local uprising.
News of the uprising reached Brothe. The Patriarch had, already, issued a bull insisting on complete obliteration of the unbelievers. He ordered the Three Families to place all their armed men at the disposal of the Brotherhood of War.
Because the Devedian community had friends and spies, because the Brotherhood had enemies determined to see it embarrassed, those who schemed against the Deves had few secrets.
The Brothers were no fools. They would not believe that they could surprise the Deves. And because they numbered fewer than two score they would not be eager to lead an assault.
"Isn't that always the way? Those most eager get behind somebody who doesn't want to be there and push," Else said.
Bad timing. Right now the old men were solidly behind the young men but had no pushing to do. The youngsters were more eager than the old folks. Their situation had not yet grown grim.
Else asked, "What do you expect to do when the Brotherhood comes? They won't run from a few missiles. They'll bring their sorcerers. And they'll kill anybody who isn't one of them. I've seen it before."
Blank looks. Cold stares. The old men did not want to listen. And Else was trapped in their nightmare.
Not once since his first visit to the armory had he been alone. But he was sure he could shed his Deve shadows if he wanted.
The Brotherhood's attack came at night, as expected. Sorcerers felt more comfortable working in the dark. The family household forces, more afraid of the Brothers behind them than the Deves ahead, broke through the barricade barring entry to the Devedian quarter. Others climbed over the wall, which was slight and less than ten feet high. Its purpose was not defensive, it was intended to contain.
They met no resistance. Nervously, they moved ahead, cautious to a fault, anticipating some deadly trap.
It was dark, after all. And Deves were agents of the Will of the Night. Everybody knew that.
The invaders found the Deve buildings boarded up. They were empty when broken into. Not only were the occupants gone, so were their valuables.
The Three Families had told their soldiers to hurt as few people as possible. Deves were critical to Sonsa's prosperity.
The Brotherhood of War moved in as soon as they heard that there was no resistance, determined to plunder.
The household troops grew ever more unsettled.
Any minute now, those Deve sorcerers would unleash all the hounds of darkness.
Else observed the invasion through a crack in an unglazed cellar window. As he had anticipated, the invaders had worked themselves up immensely in anticipation of a desperate fight. Many were drunk. They did not know what to do if there was nobody to fight. They were standing around scaring one another, not even looking for something to steal.