by Martin Scott
"Well?"
"We're down here on business at the request of Senator Mursius. And we met some Orcs. Didn't you find the bodies?"
He didn't. Nor did he find any trace of a fight. Not even a footprint.
"The rain must have washed it all away."
"Very convenient. And would the rain also wash their aura away?"
"No, it wouldn't."
"Well, we went there with a Sorcerer. A very important local man. He wasn't at all pleased to have the Army dragging him outdoors on a day like this. He was just settling down with a glass of wine and a new book of spells. But we told him it was important. A sudden appearance of Orcs." The Captain fixes me with a grim stare. "The Sorcerer couldn't find any sign of them. Not the slightest trace of an Orc's aura. So what have you got to say about that?"
"Maybe he's out of practice . . ."
"Out of practice?" roars the Captain. "I'm talking about Kemlath Orc Slayer! Back in the war he detected enough Orcs to fill the Stadium Superbius."
"Really? Kemlath Orc Slayer? I'd no idea he lived down this way."
"Well, he does. And he's not at all pleased at being hauled out of his villa on a wild Orc chase. Thanks to you the country's in an uproar and I've spent the afternoon up to my knees in mud instead of sitting warm and dry in the barracks."
He goes on for some time, much of it in language he really should not be using in front of a young female servant of good birth. I'm pretty sure he's about to turn us over to the local Civil Guards just to teach us a lesson but eventually he seems to run out of steam and simply tells us to leave and never come back.
"If we see you round this way again, you'll be sorry."
"What about our investigation?" protests Makri.
The Captain turns to his Sergeant. "This is what it's like in Turai these days. Degenerate. They have Orcs dressed in bikinis working as Investigators."
For a moment I think Makri's about to explode. I quickly pick up the magic dry cloak and toss it at her.
"Fine, Captain. Sorry to bother you. We'll be on our way . . ."
I drag Makri out of the room and outside as quick as I can.
"If you attack eight soldiers it'll only lead to more trouble."
We find our horses and start back to Turai. The rain is pouring down in torrents. Makri is in such a bad mood about the Captain calling her an Orc that I let her keep the magic dry cloak. Meanwhile I am as wet as a Mermaid's blanket. What a waste of time. As we pass the spot where the Orcs confronted us I halt and sniff the air, trying to pick up any trace of their aura. I certainly have enough of my old sorcerous skill left to detect the aura of Orcs for some time after they've departed.
"Nothing," I grunt. "It's gone. Someone has magically cleaned it away."
A huge flash of lightning rips the sky apart. Another storm. It's a two-hour ride home. A long journey in the pouring rain and all I get for my troubles is a Senator's wife throwing up over me.
"Hello, Thraxas!"
I recognise that voice. A Sorcerer, resplendent in the most luxurious rainbow cloak I've ever seen, steps out from his shelter underneath a tree.
"Never did learn to control the weather!" he booms, in a loud, hearty voice I haven't heard for fifteen years.
"Kemlath!"
"Any good with weather spells?" he asks.
"I'm no good at any spells," I admit. "I never took up my studies after the war."
I introduce Makri. Kemlath, being a powerful Sorcerer, will of course immediately realise that she is one quarter Orc but for once it makes no difference. He's a large, hearty man with a great black beard and mounds of gold and silver jewellery. He's obviously done well for himself since we last met.
"Kemlath and I fought beside each other in the Orc Wars," I explain to Makri, who's puzzled at the appearance of this large, colourful stranger. He earned the name of Orc Slayer from the fine military power of his spells. He sent many an Orc to an early grave and brought the Orcish war dragons crashing down from the sky. Afterwards he was held high in the city's esteem and became an important man in the Sorcerers Guild. He was a brave man too. He didn't just hide behind his sorcery. When his magic ran out, as every Sorcerer's did eventually during the relentless assault, he picked up a sword and stood with us in the last desperate defence.
"What brings you here?"
I tell him I'm doing a little work for Senator Mursius.
"I didn't know you'd moved down to Ferias."
"Yes. It suits me well here, on the coast. The weather's milder—apart from this damned rain—and I've built a villa. I grew fed up with the city some years ago. It's not the place it used to be."
I agree with him there.
"What's this about Orcs?" he asks me.
I tell him the story.
He nods. "Well, Thraxas, if it was anybody but an old fighting companion I'd say they were lying, or hallucinating, but I know you too well for that. If you say there were Orcs here, that's good enough for me. But I can find no trace of them. And tracking Orcs is a speciality of mine. I'd swear I could tell if an Orc had been here, no matter how much another Sorcerer might have cleaned the area."
The rain beats down. Kemlath invites us back to his villa. We refuse, albeit reluctantly, as we both have to get back to Turai. He promises to look into the matter more fully, and report to me if he comes up with anything.
"Now you know where I am. Be sure to visit!" he says in parting.
"Not a bad guy for a Sorcerer," says Makri, as we ride off.
"One of the best," I agree. "I always liked him. When the weather clears up I'll take him up on his invitation. As King's Sorcerer in Ferias he is bound to be rich. Did you see the amount of gold and silver he was wearing?"
It's deep into the night when we arrive back at the city. Our horses are exhausted from plodding through mud. It's past the time when the gates are normally shut but I know the gatekeeper and he lets us in.
"Working late, Thraxas?" he calls down from his vantage point.
"Sure am."
"Going well?"
"Better than rowing a slave galley."
Makri, as ever, is impressed at my wide range of acquaintances. Most people south of the river know Thraxas.
It's forbidden to ride in the city at night, but it's so wet and we are so miserable that we risk it. I can't see many Civil Guard patrols out doing their duty on a night like this, with the thunder still rolling overhead and the rain coming down in sheets.
In the Avenging Axe late-night drinking is well under way, fuelled by some raucous singing to the accompaniment of Palax and Kaby, two street musicians who live in a horse-drawn caravan out the back. They spend their days busking and their nights playing and drinking in the tavern. Gurd gives them free drinks for entertaining the customers, which makes me feel somewhat jealous as I grab a beer and he chalks it up on my slate. If I don't make some progress on the Mursius case I'm going to have difficulty paying my bill at the end of the month.
Makri takes a beer and joins me at a table.
"What a waste of time that was."
She nods in agreement. "Although I did pick up these," she says, drawing out some small plants from her bag. They have tiny blue flowers, quite unlike anything I've ever seen before.
"Unusual, I think. I took them from the window box while the soldiers were berating you."
"Well done. I hope it keeps the Professor happy."
We wonder what the Orcs were doing in Ferias. Makri asks me if I'm going to report it to the authorities. I shake my head. The city isn't under attack, so I presume it was some private business being carried out by one of the rich citizens of Ferias. Something to do with dwa, probably. A lot of it comes in from the east. I can't see why anyone would want to make life difficult for themselves by involving Orcs, but who knows what goes on behind closed doors in a place like that?
I grab another beer and a few pastries Tanrose has left over from dinner. Palax and Kaby take a break from playing music and join me at my table. They shar
e some of their thazis with me; they always manage to have the best thazis in town. I start to mellow out. Today was a waste of time but at least I'm sitting comfortably with a few beers and some happy drinkers. Usually, when I'm on a case, things get much worse than this.
Makri has changed into her man's tunic. Some sailors shout across, asking where her bikini is. Makri shouts back that she's not working tonight. They look disappointed. She notices that I'm cheerful, despite the arduous day we've had. I tell her I'm always happy when I'm about to win two hundred and forty gurans. She's still sceptical.
"You might lose. It wasn't even the favourite."
"Troll Mangler is not going to lose. I keep telling you, I know the owner. It's by far the best chariot in that race. It was only six to one because they hadn't heard of it down in Juval. It's the surest thing I've backed in years. If you had any sense you'd go out early tomorrow and back it yourself."
Makri doesn't seem to approve. That's the trouble with people who are always working. It annoys them when you pick up a little spare money without making an effort.
Chapter Five
Next day I sleep late and don't wake until I'm disturbed by noises in my office. I only have two rooms, one for sleeping and the other for working. It's small but it ought to be private. I rise quietly and creep to the connecting door, sword in hand. There's someone in there all right. I burst through, ready to confront intruders.
It's Makri. She appears to be searching under the couch.
"What the hell are you doing under my couch?" I demand, not particularly pleased to have been woken up after last night's drinking session.
Makri leaps to her feet, a furious expression on her face.
"You idiot," she yells, and then carries on with some harsh abuse. I'm not fully awake and I find this hard to take in.
"What have I done?"
"I lost my money because of you."
"What money?"
"The money I was collecting for the Association of Gentlewomen!"
Makri insults me some more. I can't understand what she's talking about till I hear the words Troll Mangler mixed in with her tirade.
"Troll Mangler? Are you talking about the race in Juval?"
"Of course I'm talking about the race. You said Troll Mangler couldn't lose! You and your stupid tips!"
"Didn't it win?"
"No it didn't," cries Makri. "A wheel fell off at the first corner! And I went out this morning and put all my money on it!"
This is a staggering piece of news. I sink on to the couch, a broken man. "Are you sure?"
Makri's sure. She's been down at Mox's watching the gamblers who bet on the favourite pick up their winnings, and she's not very pleased about it. I'm stunned by these terrible tidings and struggle to defend myself against Makri's accusations.
"I didn't force you to bet your money on it, did I? This is bad enough for me, without you making it worse. Troll Mangler beaten! I can't believe it. I was depending on that chariot. There's been some dirty sorcery afoot in Juval."
"The only thing that's afoot is your inability to pick a winner! I never should've listened to you. Now what am I going to do? I'm broke and I need fifty gurans—today!"
Makri's behaviour starts to make sense. I have a fifty-guran piece hidden under my couch. It's my emergency reserve and is meant to be a secret.
"Is that what you were doing under my couch?" I demand.
"Yes."
"You thought you'd just take it while I was sleeping?"
"Yes."
"Why?"
"Because it was your fault I lost my money and I need it in a hurry. I promised it to the A.G. today."
This is such an outrageous statement that I am left practically gasping for breath.
"You promised it to the A.G.? The Association of Gentlewomen? You promised that bunch of harridans fifty gurans of my money?"
"No," replies Makri. "Any fifty gurans would do. But I need it today. And they're not a bunch of harridans. You don't mind me borrowing it, do you? You know I'm good for it. It's the least you can do in the circumstances."
"That fifty gurans is my emergency reserve," I roar, dragging Makri away from the couch. "You go anywhere near it and I'll run you through like a dog. You already owe me the forty gurans I lent you to pay for last term's exam fees."
Makri is now madder than a mad dragon. So am I.
"How dare you rob my office! You think I want to donate the last of my money to that lunatic women's organisation? Are you insane?"
"I only wanted to borrow it," protests Makri, wiping some dust off her knees.
"Why do you need fifty gurans for the A.G. anyway?"
"It's the money I collected for them. I spent two months raising that cash. You know how hard it is in Twelve Seas. Everyone's poor and the men won't give anything anyway. I had to move heaven, earth and the three moons to raise even that. I've had easier times fighting dragons."
"Don't tell me about fighting dragons," I retort. "I was fighting dragons before you were born."
I seem to be straying from the point here. I get back to berating the Association of Gentlewomen, which, while not illegal, is not exactly well thought of by a large part of the city, namely the male part.
The King doesn't like it, the True Church fulminates against it from the pulpit and the Senate has condemned it as seditious. It was established to raise the status of women in the city. After a slow start it has gathered an increasing amount of support from the most unlikely quarters. Membership is not made public, but I happen to know that Princess Du-Akai is a supporter, as are various powerful female Sorcerers.
The Sorcerers Guild admits women. Most other guilds do not, which is something the Association intends to put right. Or put wrong, depending on your point of view. The Association has official recognition and admittance into the Revered Federation of Guilds as its first objective, but that's an expensive business, with fees and bribes needed all along the line. Fifty thousand was the figure Makri mentioned, I believe.
"So, can I borrow it?"
"Of course you can't borrow it. If you promised that money to the A.G. you shouldn't have gambled it away. It's unethical."
"Don't lecture me on ethics, you fraud!" roars Makri.
I start to laugh. I can't help it.
"So. You lost your money on a chariot. Very amusing. Miss Austerity herself gambled it away. The Queen of Sensible Behaviour blows her cash at the races."
Makri doesn't take this too well. "It was your fault, you Orc lover! I'd never have backed that chariot if you hadn't said it was a sure thing."
Makri is livid at me for giving her a bad tip, but she's even angrier at herself for losing the money. She's had to work hard to get the respect of the local businesswomen who support the A.G. and this isn't going to help.
"I've got to take it Minarixa the baker by noon! You have to help!"
I wave this away. "I'll forgive you for trying to burgle my offices. I'll put it down to the rashness of youth. But let this be a valuable lesson to you. Never blow the last of your money at the races."
Makri stares at me. I stare back at her.
"I really worked hard collecting that money. And I came and supported you in court. I'll pay you back."
I shake my head.
"Come on, Thraxas. It's not like you to be as mean as a Pontifex when it comes to money."
"I need that fifty gurans," I tell her
"What for?"
"To win back my money at Mox's. Now depart. I need to be alone with the bad news about Troll Mangler."
There's a knock at my outside door. Makri departs, looking dispirited. I shake my head. Give my last fifty gurans to the Association of Gentlewomen indeed. Big joke.
The knock sounds again, angry and urgent. My door is generally sealed with a locking spell. This is a common minor spell that I can use at will without having to learn it afresh every time, like one of the major spells, but it can be employed by anyone with the slightest knowledge of the mystical a
rts. While it's reasonably effective against petty theft, it wouldn't keep out someone who was seriously determined. A few months ago Hanama the Assassin came here uninvited and it didn't keep her out for more than a second. I mutter the appropriate incantation, and the door springs open.
It turns out to be Carilis, the not very friendly employee whom we met yesterday in Ferias, looking after Sarija. She has mud all over her fancy black boots and water drips from her elegant blue cloak.
She strides in and looks around with disapproval. "What a mess."
"If I knew you were coming I'd have had it cleaned."
"How can you live in such squalor? It's disgusting."
I glare at her. I'm starting to feel some disgust myself.
"Did you just come here to lecture me about the state of my office?"
"Doesn't everyone?"
"Some people are too polite. The rest are in too much trouble to care."
"Well, I find it very offputting. You should do something about it."
"I will. I'll throw you out on your ear if you don't get down to business. What do you want?"
She stares at me like I'm something that just crawled out from under a rock, but swallows the rest of her criticism and gets down to business.
"Mursius's belongings."
"What about them?"
"He's hired you to find them?"
"Maybe."
She leans over the desk and drops a scrap of paper in front of me.
"You'll find them there if you hurry," she says. She rises swiftly and departs without a backward glance.
I look at the paper. It has an address written on it. One of the old warehouses next to the docks.
I find my magic dry cloak. This case might be even easier than I thought.
The rain has halted and a hot breeze blows in from the sea, raising steam from the streets. The stals, the small black birds that infest the city, risk a few chirrups and venture from their perches high up on the tenement roofs. In the Hot Rainy Season they usually hang around looking miserable like everyone else.
When I'm halfway down Quintessence Street I realise I haven't had any breakfast. I'm hungry. It strikes me that it will soon be time for prayers. I hurry through the mud, keen to get indoors before Sabam, the call for morning prayers which rings out through the city as regularly as clockwork every morning. It's a legal obligation for all citizens to kneel and pray, no matter where they are. Anyone found not complying is charged with impiety, and there's no way round it. Naturally, most citizens take care to be in some suitable place, but if you happen to be in the street at the time, then you have to pray there. Three times a day. It gets me down. It could be worse. Up in Nioj, where things are much more strict, they have six prayer calls a day. Last time I was there on a case my knees ached for a month.