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Valdemar 07 - Take a Thief

Page 14

by Mercedes Lackey


  Jarmin took him by the elbow and hauled him to his feet. Shock sealed his mouth and made him docile, though his aching eyes still streamed tears, his gut ached, and deep inside he wanted to strike out at whatever was nearest.

  To strike out at himself.

  Gone, all gone!

  They picked their way to the street, with Jarmin still holding tightly to Skif’s elbow, and once there, Jarmin headed determinedly toward his own shop. Skif just went along, too heartbroken to think, too full of bottomless mourning to care if Jarmin was about to lead him off somewhere to kill him for his loot.

  Let him. I deserve it. I wasn’t there.

  They entered the shop, all of its tawdriness only too apparent by day. The girls were nowhere to be seen as Jarmin shoved Skif before him, past the counter, through a flap of hanging cloth, then up a narrow staircase that ended in a room just under the roof. A single dirty window covered with oiled parchment let in enough light to see by. There was a pallet there, and blankets, and some storage boxes; nothing else. Jarmin had to stoop to fit under the rooftree, and he shoved Skif roughly down onto the pallet, and gestured impatiently at his tunic.

  Skif read the gesture for the demand that it was, and slowly undid his clothing to pull out the jewelry he’d taken last night. He laid it out on the pallet. Jarmin squatted down beside him and examined it piece by piece, grunting a little, but otherwise saying nothing.

  Now he’s gonna kill me. Skif could form the thought, but couldn’t muster anything beyond the grief to care what happened to him. Care? No, that wasn’t true. He cared. He deserved death. If he’d gotten back sooner, if he hadn’t been so determined to bring back every damned piece that couldn’t be traced—

  I’d have been there. I’d have noticed in time. I’d have gotten them out.

  Gone. All gone.

  He just sat where he was, staring at his own hands, while Jarmin turned the jewelry over and over in his hands.

  Finally the fence pulled the kerchief off his own neck and bundled it all up. He shoved the ends under his belt and knotted them, got up slowly and painfully, then descended the staircase. It looked from where Skif sat as if he was sinking into the floor. . . .

  Tears began again, burning his eyes and his raw cheeks, and Skif didn’t even bother to wipe them away. His nose closed up, his gut spasmed, and his thoughts ran around and around in a tight little spiral, like a mouse in a trap. Gone. My fault. I should have been there.

  A moment later Jarmin was back again, a bundle of cloth under one arm, a jug in his hand.

  “Here,” he said gruffly. “These ought to fit you.” He dropped the clothing down next to Skif, who stared at it without comprehension. “Even swap; the swag for these, food, and this room for three moons. After that, you get another place or start paying.” As Skif stared at him as if he was speaking in a foreign tongue, he glanced at the jug in his hand as if he was surprised by its presence. “Oh, aye. And you get this.”

  He shoved it at Skif until Skif took it from him perforce.

  “Go on. Pop the cork and drink it,” Jarmin said fiercely.

  Numbly, Skif obeyed. The cork came out with difficulty; the liquid inside tasted of cherries and burned like fire, burned him from his tongue to his gut, all the way down.

  He knew as soon as he tasted it what it was, though he had never done more than sip a bit before this, the dregs left in some rich man’s glass; spirits-of-wine, and worth its weight in silver. He gasped at the fire in it, but didn’t spill a drop; it would bring blessed oblivion, which now he wanted more than he’d ever wanted anything. It went to the head quickly; in a few swallows, he was dizzy. A few swallows more, and he had trouble holding the jug. Jarmin, his eyes gleaming fiercely in the half light, steadied it for him and helped him lift it to his mouth.

  “Keep drinking, boy,” he heard, as from a far distant land. “’Twon’t take the hurt away, but it’ll numb it for a while.”

  Numb . . . Numb was good. Maybe if he was numb, he wouldn’t keep seeing Bazie and the boys . . . and the flames.

  He swallowed again, the stuff burning its way down into his belly. Now he was more than dizzy; the room swam around him and tilted disconcertingly. Jarmin took the jug, corked it, and set it aside as he sagged down onto the pallet.

  The room was definitely moving, but he didn’t care. He just didn’t want to have to watch it, so he closed his eyes. “Best thing for you, boy,” he heard, then footsteps on the stair.

  He didn’t actually pass out; he hadn’t drunk quite enough for that. But every time the numbness and the dizziness started to wear off, he heaved himself up onto his elbow and took another long pull at the jug until it came back again. Now and again he tired of simply feeling the room circling him and opened his eyes to watch the ceiling rotate. When the light started to fade, Jarmin appeared again with a lantern and bread and sops, a chamberpot, and a big jug of water. He made Skif eat and drink all of the water before he took the lantern and the plates away. Skif took some more pulls on the jug, then, and as shrill voices and the cajolery of the girls drifted in through the window, he let the liquor take him away to a place where nothing mattered anymore.

  Jarmin told him later that he’d stayed drunk for a week. Sometimes he cried, but only when he was alone. Sometimes he heard someone moaning, and dimly realized that it was himself. All he knew was that the jug was, temporarily, his best friend. Jarmin kept it full, but insisted on his eating and drinking water, an annoyance he put up with because it meant that Jarmin would top off the jug.

  He retained enough of sense and the cleanliness Bazie had drummed into him to make proper use of the chamberpot. It never seemed to stink, so Jarmin must have kept it clean as well.

  Jarmin also came up to talk to him now and again. For a while, he ignored the words and the man because he didn’t want to go to the place where words meant something. For a while, that is, until something Jarmin said jarred him back into thinking.

  “Word is,” Jarmin said, into Skif’s rosy fog, “That fire was set.”

  Set? Skif opened his eyes with an effort. “Wha?” he managed, mouth tasting of old leather and liquor.

  Jarmin didn’t look at him, and his tone was casual. “Word is that the landlord got a surprise inspection, and was going to have to fix the place. Or get fined. Going to cost him dearly, either way. So he burned it instead, and is calling it a terrible accident.”

  Understanding—and anger—stirred sluggishly. “He—burned it?”

  Jarmin shrugged, as if it all mattered not a whit to him. “Word is, that’s the case. Don’t who the landlord is—was,” he corrected. “You know how it is. Probably some high-necked merchant, or even highborn. Couldn’t possibly be connected with us, nor where we live. Couldn’t soil himself by openly owning the place, but takes our copper right enough. So long as no one knows where he got it. But he wouldn’t want to have to spend good coin either, not when burning it costs him less and allows him to sell the lot afterward.”

  Anger burned away the fumes of the liquor—hot as the flames that had destroyed his only family. “He burned it?” Skif repeated, sitting up, fists clenching.

  “Word is that. Whoever he is.” Jarmin shrugged, then with a sly look, pushed the jug toward Skif.

  Skif pushed it back, still dizzy, but head getting clearer by the moment.

  He burned it. Or ordered it burned, whoever he is.

  “No warning, of course,” Jarmin continued casually. “Because that would tip off the inspectors that he didn’t mean to fix it. And the highborn don’t care how many of us burn, so long as an inconvenient building is gotten rid of. That is how it is.”

  There was light in the window and relative quiet on the street. It must be day, and the girls were asleep. Skif was still drunk, and he knew it, but he was getting sober, more so with every breath, as his anger rose and rose, burning like the flames that had taken his family. He looked down at himself, and saw that he was still wearing the filthy clothing he’d been brought here in.
The pile of clean stuff still lay at the foot of the pallet. “Wanta bath, Jarmin.”

  “Comes with the room,” Jarmin said indifferently. “I’ll tell madam. Get yourself downstairs when you can.”

  He descended the stairs, and Skif waited until he could stand without too much wavering. Then he picked up a shirt, trews, and socks, and followed.

  Jarmin was behind the counter tending to a customer, but waved him out the door. Skif tottered out, blinking owlishly at the daylight, and the door of the brothel next to Jarmin’s shop opened. An oily-looking fellow beckoned to him, and Skif went in.

  He wasn’t given any time to look around the shabby-luxurious “parlor” where customers came to choose from the girls if they hadn’t already picked one. The oily fellow hustled him into the back where there was—

  A laundry.

  Only the remains of the liquor and the firmest of controls kept Skif from breaking down right there and then. The urge to wail was so great he practically choked.

  There were several tubs, two of which had girls in them, three of which had laundry. Before he could lose his head and bawl, a burly woman with work-reddened hands and a tight, angry mouth stripped him before he could open his mouth and shoved him into the last of the tubs. She didn’t give him a chance to wash himself either; she used the same brush and lye soap that she used on the linen on his hide, with the same lack of gentleness.

  The bristles lacerated his skin, his scalp. He didn’t let out a single sound as she scrubbed as if she intended to take his skin off, then made him stand, rinsed him with a bucket of water cold enough to make him gasp, and bundled him in a sheet. His own clothing went into one of the tubs with laundry in it, and she handed him the plain trews, socks, and shirt he brought with him, leaving him to clothe himself as she turned back to her work. He noticed that the girls didn’t get the same ungentle treatment. They were allowed to bathe themselves and did so lazily, completely ignoring his presence.

  Well, that was all right. He didn’t want any stupid whores fussing over him like he was some sort of animate doll. He didn’t want their sympathy. He didn’t want anyone’s pity.

  Hard. I gotta be hard. That’s what I gotta do.

  He dried himself off—the laundress snatched the sheet away from him before he could lay it down and popped it back into a tub—and got the clothing on. It was rather too big, but that hardly mattered. All he had left now were his own boots, which he pulled on, and left without a backward glance.

  His head was clear enough now, and while the laundress had scrubbed him, his grief had somehow changed, shrunk, condensed down into a hard, cold little gem that formed the core of a terrible anger that seemed almost too large to contain in so small a compass as his heart.

  Revenge. That was what he wanted, more than anything in the world. And he wasn’t going to rest until he got it.

  He walked into Jarmin’s shop, and the old man gave him a sharp glance, then a nod of satisfaction. “You’ll do,” was all he said, and tossed him a pouch.

  It clinked. Skif opened it and found a little money; mostly copper, a bit of silver. He tucked it inside his shirt. It was little enough. Jarmin was cheating him, of course. The room, the food, the clothing, the baths—none of that was worth a fraction of what he’d stolen. Jarmin wasn’t giving him anything.

  And Skif didn’t want anything but this—the expected cheating, the usual grifting. No more kindness. No more generosity. He could move on from here without looking back or regretting anything. This was a business transaction for Jarmin. Save one of the best thieves he knew and ensure a steady supply of goods for his shop—as simple as that.

  So he didn’t thank the man for the money; he just nodded curtly and went back out into the street. He knew what the money was for—tongues weren’t loose without money. And Skif was going to have to find a lot of tongues to loosen. It was going to take a long time, he already knew that. That was fine, too. When revenge came, it would come out of nowhere. The enemy would never know who it was that hit him, or why.

  Just as disaster had come upon him, and with equal destruction in its claws. When he was finished, whoever had killed Bazie would be left with nothing, contemplating the wreckage of what had been his life, with everything he valued and loved gone in an instant.

  Just like Skif.

  Skif smiled at the thought. It was the last smile he would wear for a very long time.

  9

  SMOKE drifted over the heads of the customers; it wasn’t from the fireplace, but from the tallow dips set in crude clay holders on the tables and wedged into spaces between the bricks around the room. Skif sat as far from the door as it was possible to be, in the “odd” corner of The Broken Arms, a kind of rectangular alcove just before the walls met, into which someone had wedged a broken-legged stool, making a seat hemmed in on three sides with brick. The brick was newer here, so this might be an old entrance; gone now, since the next building over was built right up against this one. Or maybe it had been a window slit; you couldn’t have used it as a door, not really. It was too short and too narrow. Maybe a former fireplace, before the big one was put in, before this room became a tavern. No, it wasn’t big enough for a man to be comfortable sitting here, but it was perfect for him. Here he could spend hours unnoticed, the wenches had gotten so used to it being empty.

  Before things got so crowded, he’d bought himself a jack of small beer and a piece of bread and dripping, so his stomach was full but not full enough to make him drowsy. Meanwhile the number of customers rose, and the place got warmer. This nook was a good place to tuck himself into when he wanted to eavesdrop on conversations. Eavesdropping was almost as good as paying for information, and it cost nothing. He’d become adept at being able to sort one set of voices from all of the babble and concentrate on them. Once in a while one of the wenches would notice that he was there, and like this afternoon, he’d buy a mugful of small beer and a piece of bread so that they’d leave him alone, but that was only when the place was less than half full. When it was crammed tight, as it was now, he’d be overlooked all night.

  He’d already wedged himself up onto the seat, knees just under his chin and his arms wrapped around them, so not even his feet were in anyone’s way. Every bench and stool at every table was full; not a surprise with rain coming down in barrel loads outside. Not a good night for “business,” except within walls.

  Not that anyone in the Arms was going to do any business. That sign over the door wasn’t there for a joke. That was what made and kept the Arms so popular; when you walked in here, you knew you’d come out with your purse no lighter than the cost of your food and drink. The women wouldn’t try and get you drunk so they could talk you into paying for wine for them either. The wenches here weren’t hired for their looks, gods knew—absolute harridans, most of ’em. They’d been hired because they knew the liftin’ lay, and how to spot someone at business. One whistle from one of them, and the miscreant would find himself on the street with his own arms looking just like the ones on the sign. It was a good dodge for the wenches, for certain-sure; a young thing, plain though she might be, would still have an excuse to come sidling alongside of a fellow with a bit of an invitation. An old hag wouldn’t; and though her fingers might still be wise, they weren’t as nimble as a young thing’s, so if she tried the old dodge of stumbling into a fellow, the odds were that he’d be clapping his hand to his belt pouch before she could get into it. And if he didn’t, and she got it, her feet wouldn’t carry her as far or as fast anymore. The older you got in the trade, the likelier it was you’d be caught that fatal third time, and unless she got herself a gaggle of littles to teach the trade to—taking everything they lifted, of course—there wasn’t much an aging woman could do to turn a penny. There weren’t a lot of women who learned the high roads or the ketchin’ lay, professions that could keep you going for a long time, so long as you were limber enough to climb or bold enough to cosh.

  Not that Skif held with the ketchin’ lay. Bazie�
�d turned up his nose at it; didn’t take a mort of skill nor brains to take a cosh to a fellow’s head and make off with his goods. And the Watch and the Guards didn’t give a third or even second chance to anyone caught at that trade; caught once, you saw ten years of hard labor for the Guard.

  The women Skif knew didn’t hold with the ketchin’ lay either, though he wasn’t sure what the difference was between laying a fellow out with a cosh and taking his goods when he was drunk dead asleep. Whatever, that was still another trade, and an old hag couldn’t ply it either.

  So it was good business all around for “Pappa” Serens. He had the reputation now, and always had himself a full complement of cheap serving wenches, seeing as he gave them all bed space, drink, board, and a couple of coppers now and again. They got free access to the cheapest beer after closing, as much as they cared to drink, and to the dregs of every barrel and mug of whatever price during the hours of custom, so long as they didn’t get drunk. Every one of Serens’ four “girls” had her own pottery pitcher back in the kitchen, and no mug belonging to the tavern ever went back out to the custom without being drained—every drop—into one of those pitchers. Since by this point in their lives what they were mostly interested in was a warm bed and enough drink to knock them out every night, nobody was complaining about the low wages. The drinking killed them off, of course, but the moment that one was carried out the door on a board, another came in on her own two feet to replace her.

  Serens supplied a unique commodity for this part of the city. You could go to a dozen taverns to lift skirts, to a dozen more for a cheaper drunk than you got here, even to a couple for a bigger meal at the same price. The Arms, however, was the only place Skif knew of where you could set yourself down without worrying about fingers at your belt pouch, have beer that wouldn’t choke you and a meal that wouldn’t sicken you, and talk about anything to anyone, unmolested. The wenches were ugly, but they kept their mouths shut, and their eyes on their own business. There were occasional fights, but it was generally some young bullyboy trying to prove something, it usually went outside, and the older, wiser sell-sword he’d picked would settle him down quick enough. And if it didn’t go outside and racketed among the benches, Seren himself, big as a bull and quick as a stag, would settle it, and The Broken Arms would have another gutter-side advertisement of how the proprietor treated those who broke the rules.

 

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