by Ben Galley
It took Heles seventeen flights of stairs, a rickety lift and innumerable corridors to reach the offices of the chamberlain. Good silver had been spent on tall doors, drapes and gold leaf, when it could have been spent on scrutinisers, proctors, or perhaps diminishing the soaring piles of claims in the halls below. Heles glowered at the patterned marble as she dug into it with her boot heels.
The ring of guards around Rebene’s desk parted to admit her, and she stamped her foot as she halted. Chamberlain Rebene looked up from his papyrus, looking almost surprised. The man was perpetually sweating, even in the cool of the Chamber. His black hair, normally slicked to the side to cover his balding patches, fell in greased curls.
‘Scrutiniser Heles, reporting as ordered.’
Rebene placed his writing reed in its inkwell. ‘I didn’t expect you so soon, Scrutiniser.’
‘The clerk did say “immediately,” sir.’
‘Forgive me. I am not used to such punctuality.’
‘This city seems to have forgotten the word, sir. But I have not.’
Rebene leaned back in his grand chair of mahogany and silver palm frond. ‘And that is precisely why I summoned you. We have an issue, as I’m sure you’re aware.’
‘We have many issues, Chamberlain. To which do you refer?’
‘The disappearance and possible soulstealing of several nobles. A handful of medium-level tors and tals.’
Heles had no love for noble blood. She couldn’t respect those who idly watched the poor and the dead from their lofty windows while drinking from golden goblets. ‘Allow me to guess: the Cloud Court have clicked their fingers now it’s their kind getting murdered. Funny, that. They don’t normally spare a drop of piss when it’s commoners or tourists.’
There fell an awkward silence. One of the guards cleared his throat.
‘Careful, Heles. I’ve demoted others for kinder words, but I’ll give you leeway considering the recent death of your colleague, Scrutiniser Damses.’
Heles bit off the end of his sentence. ‘Murder. The recent murder of Scrutiniser Damses. Nobody has a knife shoved through their teeth and down their throat by accident.’
‘Fine. Murder.’ Rebene sighed. ‘In any case, he was a good man.’
‘He was a terrible man. A drinker, a cheat, and as faithful to his wife as a vulture is to a corpse. But he was a fine scrutiniser. He believed in the salvation of this city, and that’s hard to find these days.’
‘As do you, I hear?’
‘Passionately, sir.’
‘Well, these recent developments may give you a chance to bring such a fable into existence.’
Heles cocked her head, bringing her eyes down from the back wall to his.
‘In fact, it’s Her Highness the empress-in-waiting who’s asked me to solve this matter. To put a stop to these disappearances… or murders. Find out who’s behind them and hunt them down. Bring them to justice any way we can: subterfuge, bribes, torture, the lot. Paperwork be damned. I’ve decided I want you leading this matter.’
‘Why?’
Rebene templed his fingers. ‘Because, Heles, despite what the rest say about you, nobody has cleared as many claims nor sent as many stealers to the boiling pots as you have in the last ten years.’
‘Twelve. And do you expect me to do this on my own?’
‘Hardly. I have other scrutinisers across the city tackling this as well as you. The princess and the emperor have provided silver.’ He took a moment to wet his lips. ‘And shades for districts outside the Core.’
Heles almost laughed. ‘Shades? Working for the Chamber?’
‘I don’t like it either, but these are dire times—’
‘You’re right about that. I bet Ghoor and the other magistrates jumped at the chance to spend more time on his bloated arses.’
Rebene flushed. ‘Mind your tongue, Scrutiniser!’ The cracking of his voice withered him, and he pressed his sweaty palms together, prayer-like. ‘Do we have an agreement, then? I can leave this important matter in your hands?’
Heles put her fists to his desk and leaned over the sea of papyrus that adorned it. ‘I want independence. Autonomy, I think they call it. And first say over resources.’
‘No scrutiniser has ever—’
‘Autonomy, or you can pass this job onto Scrutiniser Faph and the others and watch the tors and tals disappear one by one. Don’t call me the best and then treat me like the rest.’
‘This is serious, Heles.’
‘Deadly serious, sir.’
Rebene threw up his hands. ‘Fine. You have it.’
An ordinary person might have grinned, or at least smiled, but Heles curled her lip. With a squeak of boot leather on mosaicked marble, she left the chamberlain to his scribbling and headed for the bowels of the great Chamber building. To the torture holes with their white plaster-wall corridors filled with screams. They were a good place to glean some rumours from the underbelly of Araxes. Plus, there was nothing like seeing a criminal suffer to make her feel marginally better about the world.
Chapter 2
A Fresh Hell
When examining the rise and fall of empires, one forgets the forces of fashion. I do not mean threads and silks, but the power of obsession. Indenturement was a fashion once, and it dissolved religion. Then came phantoms, ripping souls from animals. That led to deadbinding and strangebinding. Despite those fashions being banned, each further dehumanised the soul and solidified the Arc’s obsession with death. Now look at it: the so-called greatest empire ever known. More dead than alive. More wishing for breath than taking it. I fear their greed will one day overtake my borders.
Writings of Konin Felust, philosopher and current ruler of Krass
The wardrobe was fancy. Gilded, carved and solidly made. There was barely a joint to be seen in its construction, and only one thin sliver of a seam between its doors to peek through. Not that I could see much through the rough sacking that covered my head. Just a featureless line of a grey, unlit room. There was just my glow, blue wood, and iron spotted with black rust. Nothing to tell me of my exact whereabouts.
Nowhere good, I know that.
The sacking over my head had convinced me of that rather quickly.
Somewhere I shouldn’t be.
That, too, was obvious.
A tower or mansion.
I’d heard the squeak of feet on marble. Felt the ascent up stairs. Many stairs.
But whose?
I was sure I would find out. Hopefully sooner rather than later.
The manner in which I had been seized and attacked pointed to a theft. A ghost-napping, we called it in Krass. It was like stealing cattle, or sheep, but it came with a higher penalty. It was much the same in the Arc, I was sure. In any case, I fumed. I had been robbed twice. Physically and personally. To land myself an opportunity for freedom only to have Vex interfere was infuriating. That eyeless bastard of a ghost would get his, I swore it. Either I or Horix would see to that. I had a sneaky suspicion it was the latter, and felt no disappointment in that. Justice at the hands of others can still be justice well served.
All I could focus on now was not thinking of how much the wardrobe felt like the sarcophagus. Whenever I reminded myself, I was thrown into a cyclical argument of not thinking about it, and therefore thinking it, over and over.
Mercifully, at last I heard a scrape of a key in a lock. I tensed and wondered briefly whether I should come out swinging. Before I made my decision, just as I was leaning away from violence, the door was wrenched open and a bright light stunned me.
Lamplight filled the room, making the stone and furnishings glow yellow and an inordinate amount of metal sparkle. At first I thought I had been stashed in an armoury. I eyed the room between blinks, and found it somewhat lacking compared to Horix’s tower. This place was still opulent, but the widow had been classier.
It was no armoury. It was a sitting room disguised as some sort of tasteless gallery. Glass and stone and metal mixed freely. Curves
clashed with corners. Naked sculptures had been draped with furs and dressed in silks. Ancient things poked from the walls between gaudy nomad tapestries. Rugs of all colours and threads battled for domination of the floor. Decorative weapons jutted from hooks in the low ceiling. I counted a Krass halberd, a bow of oryx horn, and a black sword on the mantle of a fireplace. In the corner, a full suit of armour had been encrusted with gems.
The man was clearly a collector of some kind. As a thief, I would have cheered; this was the sort of house that deserved to be burgled, even just to jilt its owner for his poor taste. As a fellow appreciator of fine things, I was disturbed.
Four shapes stood against the light. One was wearing a vast coat. The others wore white tunics, dark gloves, and skullcaps of bronze. They held clubs that shone with copper. I was immediately grateful I hadn’t chosen the fighting option.
The one in the coat spoke. A dark smudge of a moustache lurked beneath his nose, as if he’d wiped his lip after playing with charcoal. Though the rest of him was balloon-shaped, his pasty northern face was as narrow as an axe-head. I remembered noticing a man of similar description not so long ago, amongst the crowd of a soulmarket.
‘Will my men need to instil some manners in you, or are you able to talk like the man you once were?’
I got to my feet, looking at the bronze-capped men standing around me. Their arm muscles bunched, straining against their sleeves. They were clearly eager to use their clubs.
‘I’m perfectly able to be civil,’ I replied.
With a hand heavy with golden rings, the man gestured to a nearby chair. ‘Then if you please?’
I was pushed into it before I could shake a leg. It was a great armchair; the kind that swallowed a person in an embrace that was far too comfortable for its own good. The kind that were perfect for pointing towards fireplaces and counting time in the crackling of flames.
I found no comfort in this one, just more uncertainty. The man stayed standing between me and the guards, who looked somewhat disappointed.
This was the first time I’d been ghost-napped, but not the first time a sack had been forced over my head. It was how many dealers in my trade liked to say hello. If word was put out that somebody wanted to talk to somebody, that word had a habit of growing legs and scampering around where it didn’t belong. That’s why it was normal to forgo the invite and use some strong men and a sack instead. The result was the same, just with less talk scampering around town.
‘What is your name?’ enquired the man.
‘Jerub.’
‘Your real name.’
‘That is my name.’
‘I thought you were able to talk as a man? I order you to tell me your name.’
‘I am still bound to Widow Horix. You can’t order me to do anything.’
‘Very well, shade.’ He nodded to a house-guard, who promptly came to batter me across the head. I took four blows before the bastard clicked his fingers.
‘Enough!’
The copper stung me, sizzling down my back. I twitched involuntarily. Normally, a summoning by sack ended in a shake of hands, a lucrative offer of shares in some shady deed, and took barely any time at all. With this moustachioed prick, I got the feeling I would be sitting there some time, and eventually end up doing something for the terrible price of yet more strife.
He sat down across from me, keeping a glass table between us. The table looked to have real tiger’s legs at each corner. Their claws had been painted a bright red. I had half a mind to smash it.
‘What do you want?’ I asked him.
‘Your real name.’
‘And I told you. Jerub.’
He tutted.
‘Do the tors of this city make a habit of going about thieving other people’s property?’ I challenged him.
The guard raised his club. I put up my hands, ready to dampen another beating, but the man had other ideas.
‘It’s a kind of sport in this city, Jerub. Haven’t you heard? It’s how we stay sane in this strange world the Arctians built. We do it quietly, cleverly, usually taking our time. Unfortunately, in this case, certain elements have forced my hand.’
With a thumb, I prodded the widow’s seal on the chest of my smock. ‘Tal Horix won’t be pleased. She’ll come for me. She’ll realise it’s you, whoever you are.’
It was a clumsily cast line, and he didn’t bite. The moustache shivered as he chuckled. ‘A lowly shade like you? Why is that?’
‘I’m not lowly. I’m rather important to the tal.’
‘Then I take it she has discovered your… past, shall we say?’
That stalled me. Clearly this man also knew of my past, otherwise I’d have been swiftly reminded of my place in society. Ghosts didn’t have a past unless it was either useful or worth coin.
I played nonchalant. ‘I don’t know what you mean.’
‘If you must have it, my name is Tor Simeon Busk. I collect rich and expensive items, and have made my fortune doing so. I have a knack for seeing the value hidden under smears of dust and decay. An eye for detail, they call it. Looking at your rounder jaw, I know a foreigner to the Arc when I see one. Krassman, I’d guess?’
‘Perhaps.’
‘I’m a Skolman myself. Arrived in this city aged thirteen. Since then, I’ve worked myself up to tordom, and made a space for myself amongst the nobles.’
A lowly one at that, I silently wagered.
‘A man doesn’t manage that without learning to accept the true business of ascension. One must sometimes consort with less savoury characters to accomplish it. I’ve known many in my years.’
‘I’m sure.’
Busk grinned, showing golden caps at the back of his mouth. ‘The unscrupulous come in many forms, as you know. Tors, tals, generals, all the way to fences, thugs, even locksmiths.’
Here we have it. Perhaps it wasn’t just Widow Horix who needed to recite a soliloquy before circling to a point. Maybe it was how Arctian nobles did their business. Krass lords, on the other hand, liked to spit the truth at you like an apple seed, and I preferred it.
As he spoke, Busk dug into his coat pocket and withdrew something narrow and long, like a reed. I heard the clink of metal as he laid it on the glass table. Leaning closer, there was something familiar about it.
A second piece came down, thin and flat like the other, but with a hooked end. This piece I knew well. I had battered that hook into it with my own hands. And a hammer, of course. I was no wizard.
Another and another came, until there were six. I raised my impassive gaze to his, giving nothing away. His eyes were avid with expectation. I held back a sigh as I plotted where this conversation would lead. ‘Go on.’
‘I knew of one locksmith in particular. Bright young fellow once, up and coming. Knew his way around all sorts of doors and vaults. Fell off the map until only recently. Bad reputation, or something. Had a peculiar name even for a Krassman.’
‘And what might that be, I wonder?’
‘Something with a C and a B if I remember rightly.’ Busk held up one piece of metal and tapped it with his finger.
‘How interesting.’
This time, Busk didn’t spare me the club. It struck me across the shoulders, knocking me half out of the chair. The pain clawed at my skull.
The tor leaned down to stare into my face. ‘Was it Caltro Basalt?’
I was already nodding before I could stop it.
‘Was it Boran Temsa who bound and sold you?’
My eyes rolled.
‘I thought it strange how Temsa sold a Krassman only to summon me to inspect the tools of a renowned Krassman locksmith barely a week after.’ Busk chuckled. ‘I was at the soulmarket that day. I would have paid double had I known who you were. Had they given your old name. You are different from your description, Caltro. They didn’t paint you as a large man.’
Somewhat recovered, I let the chair swallow me. ‘It’s a recent addition.’
‘As is the scarf, I imagine?’
/> A hand moved to my neck and hovered there.
Busk leaned closer. ‘So you admit it? You are indeed Caltro Basalt? Second-best locksmith in all the Reaches?’
I scowled. There was no point pretending any more. The man knew his locksmiths. Well, almost. ‘The best, or so I’ve been told.’
The tor clapped his hands before performing a victory lap of the gaudy room. He grinned to his guards. ‘I knew it!’
‘Now that you do, what do you want with me?’
‘Straight to the point. Krass through and through.’
‘You have stolen me from Horix against my will, imprisoned me in a wardrobe and now beaten me. I think it’s fair to assume this is all for your own personal gain. So, seeing as you intend to fuck me over, I’d rather skip the foreplay if it’s all the same to you.’
Tor Busk stared at me as if I was a sandfly in his wine. ‘Very well.’
He gestured to the slivers of metal. ‘Your tools. You clearly came here to use them before you ended up on the wrong side of the knife. I want you to put them to good use.’
With his foot, he pushed the tiger-footed table towards me until it trapped my knees.
My fingers went to work instinctively. In truth, I’d missed the familiar feel of my tools; their weight; the cold of the metal. With smart clicks, the slivers came together, forming a long pick and a hooked file. I undid them, and within moments I had them arranged in the shape of the pincers. With these weapons, I could open half the doors in the Reaches. The rest of them would be opened by my mind, but I wasn’t about to tell Busk that.
‘What a resourceful and effective way of disguising your trade.’
‘Just like any assassin wouldn’t strut about covered in blades. Where are the rest of them? There should be several more pieces.’
‘With another party, currently. I have replacements if needed.’
‘What is it, then?’ I asked. ‘And don’t try to test me first. I hate that.’
‘Fear not. Your reputation precedes you. I have a chest that refuses to open.’