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Rojan Dizon 03 - Last to Rise

Page 28

by Francis Knight


  “Finally decided to ask, eh?” Hadrian chuckled.

  “I will need to know if I am going to book you passage.”

  “I can take care of that myself. Assuming, of course, you are actually taking me to a barge and not just to some dark corner where you’ll clunk me on the head and do a more thorough job of robbing me.”

  Pickles looked hurt. “I would do no such thing. Do you think me such a fool? First, I have seen what you do to people who try to clunk you on the head. Second, we have already passed a dozen perfectly dark corners.” Pickles beamed his big smile, which Hadrian took to be one part mischief, one part pride, and two parts just-plain-happy-to-be-alive joy. He couldn’t argue with that. He also couldn’t remember the last time he felt the way Pickles looked.

  The press-gang leader was right. Pickles could only be four or five years younger than Hadrian. Five, he thought. He’s five years younger than I am. He’s me before I left. Did I smile like that back then? He wondered how long Pickles had been on his own and if he’d still have that smile in five years.

  “Hadrian, Hadrian Blackwater.” He extended his hand.

  The boy nodded. “A good name. Very good. Better than Pickles – but then what is not?”

  “Did your mother name you that?”

  “Oh, most certainly. Rumor has it I was both conceived and born on the same crate of pickles. How can one deny such a legend? Even if it isn’t true, I think it should be.”

  Crawling out of the labyrinth, they emerged onto a wider avenue. They had gained height, and Hadrian could see the pier and the masts of the ship he arrived on below. A good-sized crowd was still gathered – people looking for a place to stay or searching for belongings. Hadrian remembered the bag that had rolled into the harbor. How many others would find themselves stranded in a new city with little to nothing?

  The bark of a dog caused Hadrian to turn. Looking down the narrow street, he thought he caught movement but couldn’t be sure. The twisted length of the alley had but one lantern. Moonlight illuminated the rest, casting patches of blue-gray. A square here, a rectangle there, not nearly enough to see by and barely enough to judge distance. Had it been another rat? Seemed bigger. He waited, staring. Nothing moved.

  When he looked back, Pickles had crossed most of the plaza to the far side where, to Hadrian’s delight, there was another dock. This one sat on the mouth of the great Bernum River, which in the night appeared as a wide expanse of darkness. He cast one last look backward toward the narrow streets. Still nothing moved. Ghosts. That’s all – his past stalking him.

  Hadrian reeked of death. It wasn’t the sort of stench others could smell or that water could wash, but it lingered on him like sweat-saturated pores after a long night of drinking. Only this odor didn’t come from alcohol; it came from blood. Not from drinking it – although Hadrian knew some who had. His stink came from wallowing in it. But all that was over now, or so he told himself with the certainty of the recently sober. That had been a different Hadrian, a younger version who he’d left on the other side of the world and who he was still running from.

  Realizing Pickles still had his bag, Hadrian ran to close the distance. Before he caught up, Pickles was in trouble again.

  “It is his!” Pickles cried, pointing at Hadrian. “I was helping him reach the barge before it left.”

  The boy was surrounded by six soldiers. Most wore chain and held square shields. The one in the middle, with a fancy plume on his helmet, wore layered plate on his shoulders and chest as well as a studded leather skirt. He was the one Pickles was speaking to while two others restrained the boy. They all looked over as Hadrian approached.

  “This your bag?” the officer asked.

  “It is, and he’s telling the truth.” Hadrian pointed. “He is escorting me to that barge over there.”

  “In a hurry to leave our fair city, are you?” The officer’s tone was suspicious, and his eyes scanned Hadrian as he talked.

  “No offense to Vernes, but yes. I have business up north.”

  The officer moved a step closer. “What’s your name?”

  “Hadrian Blackwater.”

  “Where you from?”

  “Hintindar originally.”

  “Originally?” The skepticism in his voice rose along with his eyebrows.

  Hadrian nodded. “I’ve been in Calis for several years. Just returned from Dagastan on that ship down there.”

  The officer glanced at the dock, then at Hadrian’s knee-length thawb, loose cotton pants, and keffiyeh headdress. He leaned in, sniffed, and grimaced. “You’ve definitely been on a ship, and that outfit is certainly Calian.” He sighed, then turned to Pickles. “But this one hasn’t been on any ship. He says he’s going with you. Is that right?”

  Hadrian glanced at Pickles and saw the hope in the boy’s eyes. “Yeah. I’ve hired him to be my… ah… my… servant.”

  “Whose idea was that? His or yours?”

  “His, but he’s been very helpful. I wouldn’t have found this barge without him.”

  “You just got off one ship,” the officer said. “Seems odd you’re so eager to get on another.”

  “Well, actually I’m not, but Pickles says the barge is about to leave and there won’t be another for days. Is that true?”

  “Yes,” the officer said, “and awfully convenient too.”

  “Can I ask what the problem is? Is there a law against hiring a guide and paying for him to travel with you?”

  “No, but we’ve had some nasty business here in town – real nasty business. So naturally we’re interested in anyone eager to leave, at least anyone who’s been around during the last few days.” He looked squarely at Pickles.

  “I haven’t done anything,” Pickles said.

  “So you say, but even if you haven’t, maybe you know something about it. Either way you might feel the need to disappear, and latching on to someone above suspicion would be a good way to get clear of trouble, wouldn’t it?”

  “But I don’t know anything about the killings.”

  The officer turned to Hadrian. “You’re free to go your way, and you’d best be quick. They’ve already called for boarders.”

  “What about Pickles?”

  He shook his head. “I can’t let him go with you. Unlikely he’s guilty of murder, but he might know who is. Street orphans see a lot that they don’t like to talk about if they think they can avoid it.”

  “But I’m telling you, I don’t know anything. I haven’t even been on the hill.”

  “Then you’ve nothing to worry about.”

  “But —” Pickles looked as if he might cry. “He was going to take me out of here. We were going to go north. We were going to go to a university.”

  “Hoy! Hoy! Last call for passengers! Barge to Colnora! Last call!” a voice bellowed.

  “Listen” – Hadrian opened his purse – “you did me a service, and that’s worth payment. Now, after you finish with their questions, if you still want to work for me, you can use this money to meet me in Sheridan. Catch the next barge or buckboard north, whatever. I’ll be there for a month maybe, a couple of weeks at least.” Hadrian pressed a coin into the boy’s hand. “If you come, ask for Professor Arcadius. He’s the one I’m meeting with, and he should be able to tell you how to find me. Okay?”

  Pickles nodded and looked a bit better. Glancing down at the coin, his eyes widened, and the old giant smile of his returned. “Yes, sir! I will be there straightaway. You can most certainly count on me. Now you must run before the barge leaves.”

  Hadrian gave him a nod, picked up his bag, and jogged to the dock where a man waited at the gangway of a long flat boat.

 

 

 
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