by Martin Scott
“Rittius is down on you like a bad spell. He’ll make sure it does.”
Cicerius raises one eyebrow slightly. Which means, I imagine, that he still has enough influence around here to hush it up, providing there is no court case.
“How long do I have?”
“It generally takes one week till the preliminary hearing. After that it will be too late.”
I point out that I am already busy, far too busy to be wading into another case.
Cicerius points out that the public scandal will undoubtedly hand the election to Rittius. Which isn’t so good for me, I must admit. Even if I don’t care about politics, my life would be easier if the Deputy Consul wasn’t a man who hated me. If I help Cicerius here, and he wins the election, then the new Deputy Consul would be in my debt. I become slightly more enthusiastic. Maybe I’ll get back into the Palace one of these days after all.
Really I’m too busy to take on the case. I think about the money I owe the Brotherhood. I’m not scared of Karlox, but I can’t fight them all.
“I’ll take the case.”
I pick up my standard retainer and another thirty for expenses, and promise to get on the job first thing in the morning. The Praetor departs. Makri, waiting silently all this time, is of the opinion that I am foolish to take on more work.
“That’s three difficult cases at once. You’ll end up making a mess of all of them.”
“I need the money. I got two days left to pay off Yubaxas, and who knows if I’ll recover the Cloth in time to get paid before the Brotherhood come after me. I’m in no position to turn down employment. And don’t bother lecturing me about my gambling, I’m too tired to take it in.”
I clear the junk off my mattress and sleep, but not for long. Kerk wakes me up by kicking my door. He has some information to sell and badly needs his morning dose of dwa. The early interruption to my slumbers puts me in a foul mood.
“Make it quick,” I snap.
“Well you look as happy as a dragon with a headache,” mutters Kerk, and grins stupidly. “I got some information about Prince Frisen-Akan.”
I frown. I’ve already had enough of the Royal Family. “What about him?”
“He’s importing dwa.”
I’m almost moved to laughter. That the heir to the throne should be a drug dealer is quite in line with our national character these days.
“What’s that got to do with me?”
“He’s a friend of Cerius.”
Word has got around quick about this one. I don’t bother asking Kerk how he knows about Cerius. He’s generally well informed about drug-related matters in Turai.
“And?”
“Cerius was holding on to the dwa for him.”
I frown again. It’s going to be difficult clearing young Cerius’s name if it involves implicating Prince Frisen-Akan. Hardly the sort of result Cicerius is looking for.
I place a small coin in Kerk’s hand. He looks at it with contempt, and demands more.
“Or I won’t tell you who else is involved.”
I press another coin in his hand. His hand trembles. He needs his dwa, and quickly.
“Glixius Dragon Killer.”
“That’s all I need. You sure?”
“Absolutely. He’s overseeing the operation in the city. He’s working with the Society of Friends. And the Prince is bankrolling them. They’re bringing in Choirs of Angels. Very good. Very strong. And cheap.”
I demand to know how Kerk knows all this.
“Simple,” he says. “Cerius told me. He can’t hold his dwa. Rambles like an old man.”
Kerk laughs, but it costs his broken-down body a great deal of effort. I ask him who’s supplying the Choirs of Angels, but Kerk doesn’t know. He’s becoming too desperate to speak much more. He holds out his hand urgently. I give him more money and he hurries off to buy dwa.
I head back to bed, not wishing to think about what I’ve just learned. Maybe if I just ignore it it will go away. Unfortunately my bedroom is already too hot to sleep in. I fling open the window. Outside a stallholder starts shouting about his produce and enters an argument with a customer. I shut my window in disgust. There’s no getting away from the heat and the noise in Twelve Seas. I detest it.
My two Elvish clients pick this moment to visit me. As I open the door, the argument outside intensifies into a screaming match and several bystanders get involved in the uproar.
“Just ignore it,” I say, shutting the door and motioning them in. They look round at the wreckage in bewilderment.
“Just tidying up,” I say as I clear some space by kicking junk into the corners of my room. Young Kaby unfortunately chooses this moment to burst through my outside door with her boyfriend Palax in her arms. She lets him go and he falls to the ground, where he’s sick on the rug.
“He’s overdosed!” she wails. “Help him.”
Out in the street people are screaming. My room is as hot as Minarixa’s oven. Broken furniture is strewn everywhere. Palax’s face is turning blue. Makri rushes in with a sword in her hand to see what all the fuss is about. The Elves are close to panic.
“So how are you enjoying your visit to the city?” I ask, and offer them a beer.
Chapter Nineteen
The Elves pass on the beer. Callis-ar-Del, the younger of the two, swiftly draws a pouch from his bag, crosses over to the vomiting Palax, and places a small leaf in his mouth.
“Swallow,” he orders.
Kaby brings water. Palax swallows. He stops being sick. Colour returns to his features. Callis cradles his head in his hands for a few moments, and concentrates. Palax falls asleep.
“He’ll be fine now,” says the young Elf, gently releasing his head.
I’m impressed. “You a healer?”
Callis nods, before turning to Kaby, who is squatting beside her sleeping lover, still concerned.
“Don’t worry,” says the Elf. “He will be fine. The leaf of the ledasa plant is very effective in clearing poison from the system, and I have stabilised the colours of his life energy. But he is very unwise to partake of dwa. It is an evil drug.”
“I know,” says Kaby. “And Choirs of Angels is the worst kind. I didn’t know he was taking it till I found he’d spent our week’s earnings.”
Kaby and Makri carry Palax down to the caravan. I thank Callis for coming to the rescue.
“Are these ledasa leaves any good for hangovers?”
He says they are so I grab a few off him. Clever, these Elves. Talk to the trees and cure your hangover. I fill them in on the case, though in reality there isn’t much to fill them in on. I tell them about my theory that the Red Elvish Cloth was inside the dragon but have to report that, if it was, it was spirited away before I got there.
They listen with interest and seem quite willing to believe my theory. Well, they have heard that I am an honest and competent man. I still like that. They take their leave, satisfied at least that I am working hard.
Makri arrives back in my room and reports that Palax seems to be out of danger.
“More than he deserves,” I say. “He should know better than to mess with this new dwa. It’s too strong. Addicts all over the city are going to be taking their usual dose and ending up dead.”
“But it feels good when you get it right,” says Makri.
I glance at her suspiciously.
“Well that’s what I’m told,” she adds.
I hope she is not indulging in it herself.
“The Elves said to thank you for your help with Palax,” I tell Makri. “They must be getting used to you.”
“Well that makes me happy as a drunken mercenary,” says Makri, wryly, and departs.
I clean up some of the mess and ask Gurd if he’ll bring in a servant to do something with my rooms. He will, but it will cost me extra.
I head on out. I have an appointment at the Thamlin gymnasium, a place where aristocrats go to bathe, exercise and relax. It’s a very respectable establishment. Senators and their
families only. No young girls or pretty boys for hire, at least not openly. Just Senators bathing, reminiscing and talking about politics, while their sons look on respectfully. As in all gymnasia, women are not allowed, one of the many things which aggravate Makri about Turai, although she does claim that given the choice she would rather not see the naked bodies of Turai’s rich and flabby upper classes.
There are some very flabby bodies here, though I’m not one to talk, and I feel self-conscious and annoyed as I’m obliged to waddle naked past young athletes disporting themselves in the water, or reclining on couches while servants rub oil into their bodies. I’d rather have kept my towel on but it’s frowned upon. I feel more at home when I reach the room at the far end of the gymnasium where elderly Senators and their retinues are gathered, mostly as unfit as me. Also they have less hair. I may get mine oiled, brushed and perfumed while I’m here.
This gymnasium is, incidentally, another of Turai’s architectural marvels. It has more than its fair share of splendid friezes, statues and sculptures, although I’m in no mood to appreciate them. I’m here to talk to Cerius. He doesn’t want to talk to me. I drag him to a private alcove and shove him on a bench. He’s long-haired and skinny and again I feel ridiculous without a good baggy tunic to cover my obesity.
“I’m working for your father.”
Cerius immediately clams up, and stares at his feet. Incongruously, he’s clutching a bag of grapes, which servants distribute for free.
“Tell me about it,” I say.
Cerius remains silent and hostile. The inside of the marble gymnasium is marginally cooler than the baking city outside, but it’s still uncomfortable. I get a strong urge to walk away from this foolish young man and leap in the bathing pool. I think about my gambling debts, and try again.
“You’re going to court in a week, Cerius. Dwa dealing’s a serious charge. Your family’s influence won’t get you off, because Deputy Consul Rittius is prosecuting and he’s an enemy of your father. Do you want to see your father disgraced?”
No reaction.
“You want to end up pushing an oar in a convicts’ galley?”
Cerius puts a grape in his mouth. I consider slapping him. Better not, with so many Senators around. I just can’t get him to speak. I don’t understand it.
“Who are you protecting? The Prince? They’ll find out in court, so you might as well spill it while it can do you some good.”
Cerius sits slumped in sullen silence. This is hopeless.
“I’ll find out, you know. I’ll study your past in the kuriya pool and see where the Choirs of Angels came from.”
All of a sudden the young man looks anguished.
“Don’t!” he pleads.
“Why not? Who are you scared of?”
Cerius abruptly rises from his couch and rushes off. He leaves his bag of grapes behind. I watch him go then pick up the bag and help myself to the rest of the grapes. I notice he’s been doodling on the paper. Odd, ugly shapes, scratched in ink. I rise slowly from the bench. Across the hall there’s a fresco of two beautiful water nymphs frolicking with a young man with wings on his feet. He floats gracefully over the water. Lucky guy. I drag my body outside. I’m pleased to leave. All these young bodies make me feel old.
I walk down Moon and Stars Boulevard till I reach the centre of town, then take a shortcut through the ruined temple of Saint Isinius. I’m passing a broken-down column when all of a sudden something smacks into the marble in front of me, sending splinters cascading around my head. I drop into a fighting crouch and spin round, sword in hand. No one’s in sight. I pad softly round the column, then through the archway in front of me. Still no one. Not even a footprint in this dried-out ground. The ruins are silent and when I sniff the air I can’t sense anything. Very carefully, I go back to the column. I have a shrewd idea what struck it.
Lying on the ground is a crossbow bolt, nine inches long. I stare at it, and I don’t like it one bit. The crossbow is a lethal weapon, extremely powerful. It can send a bolt through solid armour, take a knight off his horse at a hundred yards. I finger the bolt uneasily, wondering who fired it. I’ve never heard of the Assassins using such a weapon. Nor the Society of Friends. Very strange. I place the bolt in my bag and hurry on, sword still in hand, which earns me a few funny looks when I pass out of the ruins and back into the main street beyond.
Back at the Avenging Axe, Gurd, a slow reader, is ponderously working his way through The Renowned and Truthful Chronicle.
“Bad weapons,” he says.
“Huh?”
“Crossbow. Brotherhood boss got killed up in Kushni yesterday. Crossbow bolt through the neck.”
I read the report. Apparently that was the second important Brotherhood man to be killed in two days, both by crossbow. It seems like the Society of Friends might be getting the upper hand in the drug war. Aided by the mysterious crossbow wielder. It has to be the same person who shot at me. The crossbow is a specialised art. You need a serious amount of training before you can start firing bolts through people’s necks from a distance.
Later Makri wonders why the Society of Friends should be firing at me. It’s not like I’m on the best of terms with the Brotherhood. I can’t think of an explanation. If the Society still think I’ve got the Red Elvish Cloth, killing me outright isn’t going to get it back for them. Maybe I’m just good for some target practice.
My rooms are back in some sort of order. Time I think for a little sorcery.
Chapter Twenty
I stare at the kuriya pool with fury. I’m looking at a picture of the Fairy Glade. I presume the magic pool is once more making a fool of me. Having spent a considerable time working myself into a trance looking for information all I get is a picture of the place where my ex-wife had her assignations with the young Sorcerer. I thought it was all in the past but it must still be troubling me to interfere with the kuriya like this. Any strong image in your own mind can cause interference. Sorcerer’s Apprentices often get pictures of their favourite actresses. So do Sorcerers.
This is the last of my kuriya. A waste of money. I’m about to give up in disgust when the pleasant vision of grass and flowers suddenly darkens and a malevolent face begins to take shape. I try to break the connection but it’s too late, I’m trapped and I lack the power to pull away.
“Bad mistake, Thraxas,” growls the malevolent image. “You should know better than to meddle with me.”
“And who the hell are you?” I demand.
“I am Horm the Dead.”
I cringe. My skin crawls. I’m scared. I try not to show it. “Well, nice to meet you, Horm. But I’ve a few things to be getting on with—”
Horm rasps out some evil spell and my room seems to explode. I’m blinded by a searing light and flung against the wall. My desk bounces on to my chest and shards of broken glass rain down on my head as I crumple to the floor. Makri hears the noise and rushes in to find me lying hurt and confused with most of my furniture piled on top of me. She hauls the desk off me then helps me to my feet.
“What happened?”
It takes me a while to get my breath. “A message from Horm the Dead,” I gasp, eventually.
Makri unsheathes her sword and whirls round.
“Not here. In the pool. He sent a spell through.”
“Can you do that?”
“No,” I reply. “Well, not according to what I learned anyway. I guess Horm the Dead might have some tricks we don’t know in the west.”
Makri bursts out laughing.
“What’s funny?”
“You’re covered in ink.”
“Makri, I just suffered an attack from one of the world’s most deadly Sorcerers. I don’t see anything funny in that.”
This makes Makri laugh some more. “You shouldn’t have pawned your protection charm. Why is Horm trying to kill you?”
I really can’t say. Just something I’ve blundered into as usual. But if Horm has been wrecking my room, I must have got closer to h
is business than he’d like.
Even Makri has heard tales of the malevolent power of Horm the Dead. “Didn’t I hear you say one time that you’d never go up against him?”
I shrug, pretending to be unconcerned. Makri is not fooled. She lectures me on the stupidity of getting involved in too many cases at once.
“You don’t even know why people are trying to kill you any more.”
“I keep telling you I need the money.”
“You shouldn’t have got in debt to the Brotherhood.”
“You think I don’t know that? Can’t you do something useful instead of lecturing me all the time?”
I hate it when I find myself involved with powerful Sorcerers. I should stick to divorce work.
Gurd is furious about the room. Destroyed three times in three days. A new record. He mutters darkly about looking for a tenant who won’t keep ruining his furniture, and I have to divert him by steering the conversation round towards Tanrose, which I don’t really have time for.
Later I tell Makri about the latest developments with Cerius, and the crossbow attack.
“I used the last of my kuriya looking for some clues but all I got was a vision of the Fairy Glade.”
“What’s it like?”
“Like a puddle of black ink.”
“Not the kuriya, idiot. The Fairy Glade.”
“Oh. Well, it’s idyllic, during the days. Fairies flying around, unicorns wandering through the trees, Nymphs and Dryads playing music, beautiful flowers, sparkling streams. You should go, Makri, you’d like it.”
“Maybe. I could use a bit of peace after living in this stinking city for a year. But Gurd says no one with Orcish blood can get in.”
This is true. The Fairy Glade is deep in the woods, a long way from the city, and it’s protected from harm by various natural magics, one of which does not allow an Orc to enter.
“You’re only one quarter Orc. And you’re one quarter Elf. The Fairies are big on Elves. They might take to you.”