“Nothing, sir,” Talsu answered. Eventually, this would end.
“Nothing?” Now disbelief filled the officer’s voice. “Nothing? I can’t believe my ears. Well, that’s not what your pretty little Gailisa had to say. She sang like a redbreast—and she sang about you.” He pointed a forefinger at Talsu as if it were a stick.
That bit of overacting convinced Talsu of what he’d only hoped before: that the captain was lying. He was sure Gailisa would never betray him, not like that, not for anything. He said, “Well, sir, you’ve already got me.”
“And we’ll have all the rebels in Skrunda before long,” the constabulary captain said. “Make it easy on yourself like your wife did. Help us.”
“But I have no names to give you,” Talsu said, more than a little desperation in his voice. “We’ve cut these trousers before.” He knew what would come at the end of such protestations, too: another beating. If that was the routine for interrogations, he wouldn’t be sorry to disrupt it.
Sure enough, the guards behind him growled in eager anticipation. They knew what would come, too, and they looked forward to it. So much in life depended on whether one did or was done to.
“Here.” The captain picked up a sheet of paper with writing on it and waved it in Talsu’s face. “Your wife has given us a list of names. You see? She’s not so shy, not so shy at all. And now, for both your sakes, I’d better have a list of names from you. And a good many of the names on it had better match the ones on this list here, or you’ll be even sorrier than you are already. You may take that to the bank, Talsu son of Traku.”
Seeing the list did rock Talsu. Was the constable lying? Or had Gailisa given him names? Would she do that, in the hope of freeing Talsu? She might. Talsu knew only too well that she might. She’d never betray him, but she might betray others to save him. He might have done the same for her.
What names would she give, though? She wouldn’t know anyone who really was involved in fighting the Algarvian occupiers. Such people did not advertise. Talsu had gone looking for them when he started learning classical Kaunian, and whom had he found? Kugu the silversmith, Kugu the traitor. Which meant …
“Curse you,” Talsu said, and the guards behind him growled again. But, before they could do anything more than growl, he went on, “Let me have some paper and a pen. I’ll give you what you want. Just leave my wife alone.”
“I knew we would find a key to pick your lock.” The constabulary captain smiled broadly. With an almost Algarvian flourish, he passed Talsu the writing tools. “Remember what I told you.”
“I’m not likely to forget,” Talsu mumbled as he started to write.
He still didn’t know for a fact that Gailisa had given the constabulary captain any names at all. The fellow hadn’t let him get a good enough look at the list to recognize her writing. But if she had written down names, whose names would they be?
Most likely, Talsu judged, the names of people who liked the Algarvians well enough but weren’t out-and-out lickspittles—using those would have made what she was up to only too clear. Talsu knew a good many people of that sort. And the redheads and their Jelgavan hounds wouldn’t be able to trust people like that: after all, such folk might just be putting up a good front.
And so, wishing the worst to those who seemed happy under an Algarvian puppet king, Talsu set down a dozen names and then, after a little thought, three or four more. He passed his list back to the constabulary captain. “These are the ones I can think of.”
“Let’s see what we’ve got.” The captain compared the sheet he’d got from Talsu to the one he’d waved. Maybe Gailisa really had given him a list. Maybe he wasn’t such a dreadful actor after all. He clicked his tongue between his teeth. “Isn’t that interesting?” he murmured. “There are some matches. I must admit I’m a little surprised. You took a long time coming to your senses, Talsu son of Traku, but I’m glad you’ve finally seen who has the strength in this new and greater Jelgava.”
“That’s pretty plain,” Talsu said, which wasn’t altogether untrue: had things been the other way round, men who served redheaded King Mainardo could never had laid hands on Gailisa.
“We shall have to do some more investigating—aye, indeed we shall,” the captain said, at least half to himself. “Powers above only know what may have been going on right under our noses. Well, if it was, we’ll put a stop to it. Aye, we will.”
“What about me?” Talsu demanded. “I’ve given you what you wanted.” He sounded like a girl who’d just let a seducer have his way with her. He felt like that, too. He’d yielded, but the constabulary captain wasn’t doing anything for him.
The captain tapped the list with a fingernail. “What about you? I don’t know yet. We’ll find out. If you’ve done us some good, we’ll do you some good. If you haven’t …” He tapped it again. “If you haven’t, you’ll be sorry you tried to get clever with us.” He nodded to the guards. “Take him back to his cell.”
Back Talsu went. The guards didn’t work him over. That was something. He returned to his place in time for supper. That was something, too. Routine returned. He wondered when it would end again … when, and how.
Pybba the pottery magnate was about fifty, with energy enough to wear down any three men half his age. He certainly left Ealstan panting. “Don’t complain,” he boomed. “Don’t carp. Just do the work, young fellow. As long as you do the work, everything will be fine. That’s why I sacked the bookkeeper I had before you: he couldn’t keep up. Couldn’t come close to keeping up. I need someone who will attend. If you will, I’ll pay you. If you won’t, I’ll boot you out on your arse. Is that plain enough?”
He’d been standing much too close to Ealstan, and all but bellowing in his ear. With his most innocent expression, Ealstan looked up from the accounts he’d been casting and said, “No, sir. I’m sorry, but I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
Pybba stared. “Wha-at?” he rumbled. Then he realized Ealstan was pulling his leg. He rumbled again, this time with laughter. “You’ve got spunk, young fellow, I’ll say that for you. But have you got staying power?—and I don’t want to hear what your wife thinks.”
That made Ealstan laugh, too, if a little uncomfortably. “I’m managing so far. And you pay well enough.”
“Do the work and you earn the money. That’s only fair,” Pybba said. “Do the work. If you don’t do the work, the powers below are welcome to you—and I’ll give’em horseradish and capers to eat you with.”
Ealstan could have done the work better and faster if Pybba hadn’t hovered there haranguing him. But Pybba, as best he could see, harangued everybody about everything. He also worked harder than any of his employees. As far as Ealstan was concerned, his example was a lot more persuasive than his lectures.
Eventually, Pybba went off to yell at someone else: the kilnmaster, as Ealstan—and everyone else within earshot—soon realized. Not paying attention to Pybba when he wasn’t talking to them was a skill a lot of people who worked for him had acquired. Ealstan hadn’t, not yet, but he was learning.
He was also learning a demon of a lot about bookkeeping. Nobody back in Gromheort ran a business a quarter the size of Pybba’s. Ethelhelm had made almost as much money, but his accounts were straightforward by comparison. With Pybba, it wasn’t just the right hand not knowing what the left was doing. A lot of his fingers hadn’t been introduced to one another.
“Well, what do you think this is?” he demanded when Ealstan asked him about an incidental expense.
“It looks like a bribe to keep the Algarvians sweet,” Ealstan answered.
Pybba beamed at him. “Ah, good. You’re not a blind man. Have to stay in business, you know.”
“Aye,” Ealstan said. Pybba was a full-blooded Forthwegian; he had to pay out less than Ethelhelm had to stay in business. The Algarvians couldn’t seize him merely for existing, as they could with the half-breed band leader. After some thought, Ealstan shook his head. The Algarvians could do that
if they wanted to badly enough; they could do anything if they wanted to badly enough. But they had far less reason to want to than they did with Ethelhelm.
Because the Algarvians didn’t force his bribes to rise out of the range of ordinary thievery, Pybba was making money almost faster than he knew what to do with it. “And he should be making even more than he is,” Ealstan said to Vanai one evening over supper. “I don’t quite know where some of it’s going.”
“Well, you said he pays his people well,” she answered around one of a long series of yawns. “He’s paying you well, that’s certain. And he hired you just about full-time soon enough.”
“Oh, he does,” Ealstan agreed. “And he is, and he did. But that’s all in the open—all in the books. Somewhere, money’s leaking out of things. Not a whole lot, mind you, but it is.”
“Is somebody stealing from Pybba?” Vanai asked. “Or is that what he’s paying Mezentio’s men so they won’t bother him?” She knew how the redheads operated.
“It’s not bribes,” Ealstan said. “Those are on the books, too, though that’s not what they’re called. Someone stealing? I don’t know. It wouldn’t be easy, and you’re right—he pays well enough, you’d have to be a greedy fool to want more.”
“Plenty of people are greedy fools,” Vanai pointed out. Ealstan couldn’t disagree with that.
He still had clients other than Pybba, though the pottery magnate swallowed more and more of his hours. He kept trying to find out how and why Pybba wasn’t making quite so much money as he should have. He kept trying, and kept failing. He imagined his father looking over his shoulder and making disapproving noises. As far as Hestan was concerned, numbers were as transparent as glass. Ealstan had thought they were, too, but all he found here was opacity.
At last, baffled, he brought the matter to Pybba’s notice, saying, “I think you have a thief, but I’m cursed if I can see where. Whoever’s doing this is more clever than I am. Maybe you ought to have him casting your accounts instead of me.”
“A thief?” Pybba’s hard face darkened with anger. “You’d better show me what you’ve found, lad. If I can figure out who the son of a whore is, I’ll break him in half.” He didn’t sound as if he were joking.
“I hope you can figure it out, because I can’t,” Ealstan answered. “And I have to tell you, I haven’t really found anything. All I’ve noticed is that something is lost, and I’m not even sure where.”
“Let me have a look,” Pybba said.
Ealstan guided him through it, showing how things didn’t quite add up. He said, “I’ve been looking back through the books, too, trying to find out how long this has been going on. I’m sure it was happening while your last bookkeeper before me was here. The other thing I’m sure of is that he didn’t even notice.”
“Him? He wouldn’t have noticed a naked woman if she got into bed with him, he wouldn’t.” Pybba snorted in fine contempt. The finger he used to mark his place darted now here, now there, as he followed the track Ealstan set out for him. He clicked his tongue between his teeth. “Well, well, young fellow. Isn’t that interesting?”
“That’s not the word I’d use,” Ealstan answered. “The word I’d use is larcenous.” He hated cooked books. They offended his sense of order. In that as in so many things, he was very much his father’s son.
Then Pybba astonished him. Instead of furiously bursting like an egg and blasting his bookkeeper—and maybe the office, too—to smithereens, he set a hand on Ealstan’s shoulder and said, “I’m going to pay you a bonus for finding this. You’ve earned it; I don’t think one man in ten would have noticed any of it, let alone all of it. But it’s not so much of a much. You don’t need to fret yourself over it, the way you’ve been doing.”
“Are you sure?” Ealstan asked, in lieu of, Are you out of your mind? “Somebody’s stealing from you. If he’s stealing not so much from you now, he’s liable to steal a lot more later. And even a little hurts. And it’s wrong.” He spoke that last with great conviction.
Pybba said, “All sorts of things are wrong. You can start with the redheads and go on from there. I’m not going to get excited about this. It’s not big enough to get excited about. And if you’ve got any sense, you won’t get excited about it, either.”
He phrased that as a request but plainly meant it as an order. Ealstan didn’t see how he could disobey it, however much he might want to. But he did speak up, in plaintive tones: “I don’t understand.”
“I know that. I noticed.” Pybba let out a gruff chuckle. “But you don’t get silver for understanding. You get silver for keeping my books. You’re good at that. You’ve proved it. You’ll get your bonus, too, like I said. But if I’m not worried about this, nobody else needs to be.”
That made the third time he’d said pretty much the same thing. Ealstan was—had to be—convinced he meant it, which brought him no closer to following Pybba’s mind. He slammed the ledgers shut one after another, to show without words what he thought. Pybba only chuckled again, which irked him further.
But the pottery magnate, though he could be as sharp-tongued as the sherds that sprang from his trade, was a man of his word. When he gave Ealstan his next week’s pay, he included the promised bonus. The size of it made Ealstan’s eyes go big. “This is too much,” he blurted.
Pybba threw back his head and roared laughter. “By the powers above, I’ve heard plenty whine that they got too little, but never till now the other way round. Go on, go home; spend it. You’ve said your wife is big with child, haven’t you? Aye, I know you have. With a brat on the way, there’s no such thing as too much money.”
Coins heavy and jingling in his belt pouch, Ealstan went back to his flat in something of a daze. Vanai clapped her hands together in delight when she saw how much Pybba had given him. “He knows you’re good,” she said proudly.
Ealstan shook his head. He separated the silver into two gleaming piles. Pointing to the smaller one, he said, “This is what he pays me for being good.” Then he pointed to the bigger one. “And this is what he paid me for … powers above only know what.”
“For being good at what you do,” Vanai repeated, showing more faith in him than he had in himself. “If you weren’t good, you wouldn’t have seen what you saw, and you wouldn’t have got this.”
Her logic was as good as a geometry master’s—up to a point. Ealstan said, “I still don’t know what in blazes I saw. And he’s not paying me because I saw it. He’d be pushing hard after whoever was stealing from him if that were so. No. He’s paying me—” He broke off. When he spoke again, it was with sudden new certainty: “He’s paying me to keep my mouth shut, that’s what he’s doing. It can’t be anything else.”
“Keep your mouth shut about what?” Vanai asked.
“About seeing this—whatever it is,” Ealstan answered. “He was surprised when I did. His last bookkeeper hadn’t. I’m sure of that. He’s bribing me, the same way he’s bribing the Algarvians.”
Vanai found the next question: “Are you going to let him bribe you?”
“I don’t know.” Ealstan scratched his head. “If he’s hiring robbers or murderers with that missing money, then I don’t want anything to do with him, either. If he’s got a lady friend somewhere, that’s his wife’s worry. But if he’s doing something to the redheads with the money … If he’s doing something like that, by the powers above, the only thing I’d want to do was join him.”
He wondered how he could tell Pybba that. He wondered if he ought to tell Pybba that. He couldn’t prove the pottery magnate wasn’t working for the Algarvians. Plenty of Forthwegians were. And Ealstan, with a Kaunian wife—and with a baby on the way—had even more to lose from a wrong guess than most of his countrymen would have.
With a regretful sigh, he said, “I don’t dare try to find out. Too many bad things could happen.”
“You’re probably right.” But Vanai sighed, too. “I wish you had the chance.”
“So do I.” Ealstan pl
ucked a hair from his beard, looked at it, and let it fall to the floor. “If I ever find out where that money’s going—find out for sure, I mean, not just that it’s going missing somewhere—then I’ll know what to do.”
But Pybba had no intention of making that easy for him. When Ealstan came into the office the next day, his employer said, “Remember why you got your extra silver. No more snooping around, or you’ll be sorry.”
“I remember,” Ealstan assured him.
That wasn’t the same as promising he wouldn’t snoop anymore. Most people wouldn’t have noticed. Pybba did. “No getting cute with me, either, or your arse’ll be out on the sidewalk before you’ve got time to fart. Do you understand me? Do you believe me? I won’t just give you the boot, either. I’ll blacken your name all over town. Don’t you even think about doubting me.”
“I wouldn’t,” Ealstan answered, thinking of nothing else.
Like most educated folk in the eastern regions of Derlavai and the islands lying near the mainland, the Kuusaman physician spoke classical Kaunian along with her own language. Nodding to Fernao, she said, “You will have to strengthen that leg a good deal more, you know.”
The Lagoan mage looked down at the limb in question. It was only about half as thick as its mate. “Really?” he said in pretty convincing astonishment. “And here I was planning a fifty-mile hike tomorrow morning. What shall I do now?”
For a moment, the physician took him seriously. Then she exhaled in loud exasperation. “People who cannot take even their own health seriously do not deserve to keep it,” she said.
Fernao said, “I’m sorry,” in Kuusaman. That mollified the physician, who smiled at him instead of wearing that severe frown. He went on his way with nothing but a cane to help him walk. I’ll probably limp all my days, he thought as he walked toward the dining room of the isolated hostel in the Naantali district. I’ll probably limp, but I’ll be able to walk.
Rulers of the Darkness Page 32