The Thief Who Pulled on Trouble's Braids

Home > Other > The Thief Who Pulled on Trouble's Braids > Page 10
The Thief Who Pulled on Trouble's Braids Page 10

by Michael McClung


  The Gates Close Half a Glass Before Sunset.

  Be Ye on the Outside Before Then.

  No Littering

  No Blood-Spilling

  No Hurdy-Gurdy Music

  No Fornication

  It made me wonder. Was all of this to keep the dead safe, or the living? The answer, as I was to find out later, was a little of both. And neither.

  Once in the gate I was surrounded by mausoleums. Some were little bigger than doll houses, others dwarfed my rented rooms. Headstones and statuary squeezed higgledy-piggledy in between.

  There was one gravel path. I took it, but the task of finding Corbin’s funeral was daunting. The place was a giant maze.

  “It’s over there, on the hill with the large, not terribly well done Weeping Mother statue.”

  I spun around. It was the boy in the penitent’s robes.

  “What is?”

  “Your friend’s funeral.”

  “Who the hells are you?”

  “Arhat,” he said, as if that cleared everything up.

  “What do you want, Arhat?”

  “To pay my respects. I... failed your friend, in a manner of speaking. I’m sorry.”

  “Failed him how?” I asked, but he just shook his shaved head and said “Now is not the time.” And then he disappeared. Literally, before my eyes.

  I just stood there for a second. I mean, what would you do? Myself, I blew out a big breath of air and cursed.

  “Lucernis,” I muttered to myself as I made my way up to the hill he’d indicated, “gets weirder every damned day.”

  I was a little late. They’d already had the ceremonial meal and were cleaning up from that. Which was fine; as much as I cared for Corbin, he wasn’t smelling like a flower, and despite the careful makeup he looked like what he was- a corpse propped up in a comfy chair at the head of the funerary table. It reminded me of nothing so much as some sort of gruesome child’s tea party, but like I said, I’m not from Lucernis. Where I come from, somebody dies, you bury them if you have some land or burn them if you don’t. You say a few words, and then get back to the business of living and grieving. Or celebrating, as the case may be.

  Osskil sat on his brother’s right, and three other men I didn’t know took up the other seats, except for the one at the foot of the table. The one reserved for spouses or significant others. That one was empty. I wondered if Estra knew of the funeral, or if she’d simply chosen not to come.

  The men were all of advanced age, with impressive facial hair. They looked so alike they had to be brothers. They were dressed in finery that looked just a tad threadbare. Professional mourners, I supposed. The other noble houses weren’t going to be sending representatives; Corbin was an embarrassment. They’d all just politely ignore the whole thing.

  Osskil rose and bowed when he saw me, but addressed himself to Corbin.

  “Your friend Amra has come, Corbin. I told you she would. She’s a bit late for the meal, but perhaps we can persuade her to have a drink with us?” The other men nodded and smiled encouragement.

  “A drink would be very welcome,” I managed, and Osskil made a bottle appear and filled glasses for everyone, including Corbin of course.

  “Perhaps we could persuade Amra to give us a toast, Corbin?”

  “Oh, I don’t think—”

  “A toast! A toast!” The other men quickly started up, and Osskil gave me a look that more or less said, ‘Give the dead man a toast, you mannerless savage.’ And so I did.

  I raised my glass, cleared my throat, and said “Corbin knew—” A glare from Osskil. “—that is to say, Corbin, you know that I am not one for public speaking. You, ah, are a good man. I am lucky to count you as my friend.”

  A chorus of ‘Hear her! Hear her!’ from the others. I had no idea what else to say. I cast a desperate glance at Osskil and he nodded and put back his drink, so I did as well, expecting wine.

  It looked like wine, and tasted like wine for the most part, but there was something else to it and my head almost immediately began to spin and my heart started thumping up in my ears. I looked at Osskil again and he tilted his head toward his brother.

  Corbin sat, grinning, at the head of the table. He was looking straight at me, and I knew that grin. It was one he reserved for the petty, hilarious misfortunes of others. No malice in it, just good humor. Then he looked over at his brother, and his face sobered. He raised his glass to Osskil and nodded, and Osskil did the same.

  And then the world rushed back in, and Corbin was just a corpse once more. But his cup had tumbled to the grass. Empty.

  Then it was time to bundle him up and stick him in his tomb. They just lifted him, chair and all, and walked him into the mausoleum. Put him in a patch of light from a stained glass window. Put a delicate little wrought-iron table next to him, and loaded it up with food and drink. And that was that. Or so I thought.

  Osskil was the last one out. I heard him whisper ‘Farewell, little brother’ and saw him kiss the top of Corbin’s head. Then he came out and closed the door.

  The thief in me wondered where the lock was, and said so out loud.

  “What need for locks in the City of the Dead? The dead know their own, Amra, as you have seen. You are welcome here, for Corbin has acknowledged you. And if an interloper were to dare disturb his rest, well, that’s what the Guardian is for.”

  “The Guardian? I thought that was just some kind of granny tale to keep the kids out of the graveyard.”

  “Most assuredly not. The Guardian of the Dead is as real as you are, and ancient, and hideously powerful. The strictures posted at the gate are there to keep us living safe from it.”

  “Even the one about hurdy-gurdy music?”

  He smiled. “Perhaps not that one. I suspect it’s there just to preserve a sense of class.”

  “So blood, fornicating and littering all make the Guardian upset, eh?”

  “Absolutely. Especially blood. Never, ever spill blood here, Amra. The Guardian will notice, and investigate. You don’t want to meet it.”

  “No offense, Lord Osskil, but I’m just the slightest bit sceptical.”

  “Look over there. You see that mausoleum, the one with the gargoyles doing unspeakable things to each other? That’s the final resting place of Borkin Breaves.”

  “The richest man in Lucernis?”

  “Indeed he was. Still is. Inside his crypt I know for a fact are sacks and sacks of gold and jewels. I was at the funeral when they carted it all in. I was just a boy, then.”

  “You do realize who you’re talking to, right?”

  He gave me a sober look. “Please don’t think about trying to rob Breaves’ crypt, Amra.”

  “Why the hells not?”

  “Besides the fact that it is incredibly gauche to rob the dead, you mean? Because when Breaves was put into his tomb, there were no gargoyles adorning the edifice. No adornment of any sort, in fact. It was just a big, ugly, plain marble cube. People were scandalized.”

  “Oh, please,” I said. “You’re saying the Guardian transformed those who tried to rob the tomb into that?”

  “The Guardian has a vile sense of humor. Go and take a look. I know you won’t take my word for it.”

  “Absolutely.”

  The other men had packed up all the funeral oddments and were waiting for Osskil.

  “Farewell, Amra. Thank you for coming. It meant much to Corbin.”

  “It meant a lot to me as well.” I stuck out my hand and he shook it, then held onto it for an extra beat.

  “Call upon me when you are ready to move on Corbin’s murderer. Please.”

  “All right.”

  He moved off down the hill with his group of rented mourners, and I ambled over to Borkin Breaves’s tomb. The gargoyles were indeed doing things to each other, and by the looks on their disturbingly human faces, nobody was having much fun with it. Didn’t prove anything, of course. I didn’t believe a word of it. But then I doubted there was even a single gold mark in the
mausoleum, either.

  There was one gargoyle down low, half-obscured by weeds. Something about it made me take a second look. I pushed back the milky stalks and stared right into the scream-frozen face of Tolum Handy.

  Tolum Handy was a thief who worked with Daruvner, same as me.

  He’d disappeared the year before.

  Chapter Seventeen

  It was well past midnight when Holgren and I arrived at the Cock’s Spur. I’d pulled Holgren away from his ‘meditation’–which to me looked suspiciously like a nap. Unless his whistling snore was actually a magely chant of sorts. If so, Bone’s rumbling, snuffling snore was the perfect counterpoint.

  I told him what I intended to do, and what Daruvner had made me promise. Holgren had agreed with Daruvner, in a bleary-eyed, grumpy sort of way.

  I’d made one stop on our way to the Rookery, at Temple Street, north of Temple Market. At the modest temple of Bath the Silent, to be more precise. God of secrets. Where people went to unburden their souls, secure in the knowledge someone would listen, and never tell. Holgren waited outside, insisting his secrets were his own and that he intended to keep it that way. I shrugged and climbed the well-worn steps to the small, unassuming nave.

  A lesser-known aspect of Bath was that he didn’t just receive confessions. He, or rather his priests, also held on to valuables. Anything that could be considered a secret was safe with the Silent One.

  This was where I kept my retirement money. It earned no interest as it would with a money lender, but it also incurred no fees, and it was as safe in Bath’s Temple as it would be anywhere in the world. I certainly wouldn’t try to steal from him. What happened to the bodies of those who had tried was a secret, too.

  An acolyte met me at the narrow door, quite nondescript except for the fact that his lips had been sewn shut. I’d always wondered how they ate. Another of Bath’s secrets, I suppose. He led me through silent halls bathed in soft candlelight and faintly scented with some unfamiliar, musky incense. I had come to think of that scent as the smell of secrets, and for all I know that’s exactly what it was.

  The place was bigger inside, somehow, than it appeared to be from the street. How much bigger I didn’t know, but big enough to make me believe Bath had potent magics at his disposal.

  A short time later we stopped at a plain oak door, and the acolyte ushered me through. Inside was a small, bare white room. The only furniture was a small table, on which rested eleven chains: Long, narrow bars of buttery gold cast to break precisely into ten even pieces, or staves. Ten marks to a stave. Ten staves to a chain. Eleven hundred gold marks. Which left me with about a half-dozen marks to my name.

  No secrets from Bath.

  I loaded the chains into a satchel I’d brought along for the purpose, and turned to go. I was surprised to find the acolyte still standing in the doorway.

  “My master has a message for you.”

  The little hairs on the back of my neck shot up, half because of the magic that had flooded the room, half because him talking to me was very, very creepy. It had certainly never happened before.

  “How do you do that with your lips sewn shut?”

  He smiled, which was rather ghastly to look at. “I can’t tell you. I could show you...?”

  “Um. No, thanks. What message does the high priest have for me?”

  He shook his head. “Not Dalthas.”

  “Oh. You mean—” The goose bumps were crawling, now. I shivered despite myself.

  “Yes.”

  Bath himself had a message for me? What the hells?

  “My Master bids me tell you to beware She Who Casts Eight Shadows.”

  “Who might that be?” But I remembered the bloodwitch’s warning about the Eightfold Bitch.

  “My master does not say.”

  “I’m surprised he said anything. Being the Silent and all.”

  The acolyte smiled that horrid little smile again. “Secrets are my master’s coin. And while he is frugal, he is not a miser. He spends carefully, but that is not the same as hoarding.”

  “So, not Bath the Silent. What then? Bath the Very Quiet? Bath the Extremely Reticent?”

  “As you like. But now you too have a secret, of sorts. You would be wise to keep it.”

  “Is that a warning from your master?”

  “Advice from my lowly self. Those who come here to admit faults, failings, sins... well, would they come if they knew the Silent One sometimes spoke?”

  I shrugged. “Bath chose to share a secret with me. I think I can stand to keep a secret about him.”

  He bowed his head and drifted out the door. I followed, and met Holgren on the steps. As we walked towards the Rookery, I asked him “Have you ever heard of somebody called She Who Casts Eight Shadows?”

  “A goddess. Killed during the Wars of the Gods. Why?”

  “I don’t know. I’m supposed to beware her, apparently. But if she’s dead—Did you say wars, as in more than one?”

  “Oh yes. There were several leading up to the last. Everyone tends to focus on the last one. But what’s this about bewaring a goddess?”

  I smiled. “It’s a secret. If you’d come in with me....”

  He arched one eyebrow and frowned. And let the matter drop.

  ~ ~ ~

  The Rookery after midnight was unpleasant. Human wreckage littered the gutters, sometimes indistinguishable from all the garbage until a head moved or a hand was held out in mute appeal. I’d forgotten how depressing the Rookery was, along with how awful the stench could be in summer.

  The darkened streets fairly seethed with bad intent, along with misery and abject poverty. Bravos loitered in front of taverns and shuttered shops, passing bottles of piss ale and laughing too loudly for genuine humor. Eyes tracked us as we walked to the front of the Cock’s Spur, weighed us, judged whether we were predators or prey. Or maybe that was too easy a conceit. Everyone was meat here. It was just a question of how tough the meat might be, whether it was worth the bother of bringing it down and chewing it up.

  “The big fish eat the little fish,” Holgren murmured, echoing my thoughts in a way, “Except, I suppose, when the little fish band together to eat the big fish.”

  I grunted. If these surroundings made Holgren philosophical it shouldn’t have surprised me. He chose to live next to the charnel grounds, after all. For myself, it just reminded me of the bad old days. Bellarius. Another city, another time, even another life, it sometimes seemed to me. But not long enough ago and not far enough away, and if I happened to forget, I needed only to look at my own scarred face reflected in a mirror, or a stranger’s eyes.

  I took in the leaning, ramshackle two story building in front of us. It was all of wood, and rotting. It hadn’t seen paint in a generation. The termites probably had to hold hands to keep it standing.

  “Do termites have hands?” I asked Holgren.

  “I doubt it. I’ve never checked. Why?”

  “Come on,” I said, “let’s get this done. The sooner we’re out of here, the better.” And I walked in through the slightly skewed door of the Cock’s Spur, Holgren at my heels.

  ~ ~ ~

  In a place like the Cock’s Spur, they don’t even bother putting out chairs or benches that don’t face the door. Nobody wants their back to any trouble that enters. As I came through the door, a couple dozen pairs of eyes skewered me. Well, except for the one hairy brute that had lost a beady, pig-like peeper somewhere, and in the not-too distant past, judging from the puss weeping out of the socket. He really should have considered an eye patch; if not for himself, then at least for anyone forced to look at him.

  After a heartbeat, all the eyes slid right off me onto Holgren, which gave me faith in the fetish he’d given me. Or maybe it was the quality of his clothes. I heard Holgren sniff behind me.

  “What’s that smell?” he murmured.

  “I think they’re brewing ale.”

  “Oh. I thought it was cat urine. Is it supposed to smell that way?”


  “Maybe the house recipe calls for cat piss.” I’d heard of stranger ingredients, if not less disgusting. Bludgeoned roosters and the like. There was a reason I generally stuck to wine.

  “I find myself appallingly unthirsty,” said Holgren.

  “Come on, let’s brace the bartender.”

  “About the ingredients?”

  “About the owner.”

  “Good idea. Take your complaint to the top, I always say.” Holgren was nervous. He joked when he was nervous, I’d finally figured out. That Holgren was nervous made me nervous. Which made me pissy. I strode over to the bar along the left-hand wall where the tap man was pushing a filthy rag along the filthy bar top.

  “When you’re done rearranging the dirt, I want to speak to Gavon.”

  “Ee innt ear,” the spindly man said, or something like it.

  “Sorry, could you speak a human language?”

  He hawked and spat. “Gavon’s not ‘ere.”

  I lifted the heavy satchel to the bar top and lifted the flap so he could see. “Get him here, and soon, or I’ll let everybody in the place have a look at this. If I do that, they’ll try to take it away from me, and then me and my friend will have to kill them all. That won’t be good for business.”

  He stared at me for a second. “You couldn’t take um all.”

  “If they take Gavon’s gold, it won’t matter if we could or couldn’t. Not to you, anyway, because he’ll kill you for pissing around instead of minding his business.”

  He thought about that. “That’s a point. Stay ‘ere.”

  He drifted up a set of decrepit stairs into the gloom above. Three of the bigger patrons seemed to take that as a signal of opportunity. They got up and walked toward Holgren and me, bad intent written all over their faces. I slipped a knife into the palm of my hand, but Holgren stepped between me and them.

  “Gentlemen,” he said, purple light suddenly arcing from hand to hand, “the tap man will be back shortly. I’m sure he’ll see to refills then. Until such time, I suggest you remain seated.”

 

‹ Prev