“Well,” he said, and flung wide his arms, leaned from one side of the way to the other to block her attempt to walk around him … a little fun, he reckoned. And again, owlishly: “Well.”—but she made a quick move to go past him and he seized her in that swift pass, grabbed and grasped and felt female roundnesses in delightful proportions. His prey writhed and pushed and kneed at him, and he gripped her hair through the hood, drew her head back and kissed her with fair aim and rising passion.
She struggled, which motion only felt the better in his hands, and she gave out muffled cries, which were far from loud, his mouth covering hers the while. He held her tight and sought with his eyes for some more convenient alcove among the broken amphorae and barrels, a place where they might not be disturbed.
All at once another sound penetrated the fog of sense and sound, the scuff of another foot near him. Sjekso started to spin himself and his victim about, went the least bit over to that foot and had a hand clamped on to his own chin, his head jerked back, and a deadly keen blade at his throat in the same instant.
“Let the lady go,” a male whisper suggested, and he carefully, trading in all his remaining advantage, relaxed his hands and let them fall, wondering wildly all the while whether his only chance might be in some wild try at escape. The woman in the edge of his vision stepped back, brushed at her robes, adjusted her hood. The knife rode razor-edged at his throat and the hand which held his chin gave him nothing.
****
MRADHON VIS KEPT his grip and held the ruffian just off his balance, looked in a moment’s distraction at the lady in question … at a severe and dusky face in the faint light of the alleyway. She was beautiful. His romantical soul was touched—that seldom-afforded self which launched itself mostly in the wake of more profitable motives. “Be off,” he told Sjekso, and flung the villain a good several body lengths down the alley; and Sjekso scrambled up and set to his heels without stopping to see anything.
“Wait!” the woman called after Sjekso. The would-be rapist spun about with his back to a wall, ducking an imagined blow from behind. Mradhon Vis, dagger still in hand, stood facing him, utterly confounded.
“The boy and I are old friends,” she said—and to Sjekso: “Isn’t it so?”
Sjekso straightened with his back against the wall and managed a bow, if a wobbling one … managed a sneer, his braggadocio recovered in the face of a man he, after all, knew from the dice table that night—and Mradhon Vis took a tighter and furious grip on his dagger, knowing this vermin at least from the tables at the Unicorn.
But feminine fingers touched very lightly on his bare arm. “A misunderstanding,” the woman said, very soft and low. “But thank you for stepping in, all the same. You have some skill, don’t you? Out of the army, maybe—I ask you, sir … I have need to find someone … with that skill. To guard me. I have to come and go hereabouts. I could pay, if you could find me someone like yourself, a friend maybe—who might serve…”
“At your service,” Sjekso said, with a second grander flourish. “I know my way around.”
But the woman never turned to see. Her eyes were all for Mradhon, dark and glittering in the night. “He’s one, in fact, I might sometimes want protection from—Do you know someone who might be interested?”
Mradhon straightened his back and took a superior stance. “I’ve served as bodyguard now and again. And as it happens, I’m at liberty.”
“Ah,” she said, a hand to her robed breast, which outlined female curves in the shadow. And she turned at once to the confused villain, who had taken advantage of the moment to slip towards the shadows and the corner. “No, no, wait. I did promise you this evening. I had no right to put you off; and I want to talk with you. Be patient.”—A glance then back, her hand bringing a purse from beneath her robes. She loosed the strings and took out a gold coin that caught Mradhon’s whole attention, the more so when she dropped the heavy purse into his hand. Only the one coin she held, it winking colourless bright in the moonlight, and she held that up like an icon for Sjekso’s eyes—another look at Mradhon: “I lodge seventh down from this corner, the first steps you’ll come to that have a newel on the rail: on your right as you go. Go there. Learn the place so you can find it tomorrow morning, and be waiting there for me at midmorning. I’ll be there. And the purse is yours.”
He considered the weight in his palm, heavy as with gold. “I’ll find it,” he said, and, less than confident of the situation at hand: “Are you sure you don’t want me to stay about?”
Black brows drew together, a frown uncommonly grim. “I have no doubts to my safety—Ah, your name, sir. When I pay, I like to know that.”
“Vis. Mradhon Vis.”
“From—”
“Northward. A lot of places.”
“We’ll talk. Tomorrow morning. Go on, now. Believe me, that the quarrel wasn’t what it seemed.”
“Lady,” he murmured—he had known polite company once. He clenched the purse in his fist and turned off in the direction she had named—not without a backward look. Sjekso still waited where he had fixed himself against the wall; but the lady seemed to know he would look back, and turned a shadowy look on him.
Mradhon moved on quickly and further along the winding way, stopped and anxiously shook out the purse into his hand, a spill of five heavy pieces in gold and half a dozen of silver. Hot and cold went through him, like the shock of a blow, a tremor through things that were … A second glance back, but buildings had come between him and the woman and her bought-boy Sjekso. Well, he had hired to stranger folk and no few worse to look on. He gave a twitch of his shoulders at that proceedings back there and shrugged it off. There was gold in his possession, a flood of gold. His gallantry had come from his own poverty, from one look at the woman’s fine clothing and a sure knowledge that Sjekso Kinzan was all hollow when pushed. And for that gold in his hand he would have waited in the alley all night, or beaten Sjekso to fine rags, no questions asked.
It occurred to him while he went that it might involve more than that, but he went, all the same.
****
THE WOMAN LOOKED back at Sjekso and smiled, a fervid smile which made wider and wider chaos of Sjekso’s grasp of the situation. He stood away from his wall and—sobered as he had been in the encounter, deprived of the vaporous warmth of the wine in his blood—still he recovered something of anticipation, re estimated his own considerable animal charm in the light of the lady’s sultry dark eyes, in the moonlike gleam of the gold coin she held up before him. He grinned, his confidence restored, stood. easier still as she came to him—it might have been the wine after all, this new blush of heat; it might have been her slim fingers which touched at his collar and drew a line with the edge of the coin down among the fine hairs of his chest, disturbing there the chain of the luckpiece he wore.
His luck had improved, he reckoned, laying it all to his way with women. She had liked it after all… they all did; and she might be parted from more than a golden coin, and if she thought of using him and that bastard northerner one against the other, good: there was a chance of paying off Mradhon Vis. He had skills the northerner did not; and he knew how to get the most out of them. He took most of his living from women, in one way or the other.
“What’s your name?” she asked him.
“Sjekso Kinzan.”
“Sjekso. I have a place … not the lodgings where I sent that fellow; that’s business. But my real house… near the river. A little wine, a soft bed … I’ll bet you’re good.”
He laughed. “I make it a rule never to go out of my own territory till I know the terms. Here’s good enough. Right over here. And I’ll bet you don’t care.”
“Mine’s Ischade,” she murmured distractedly, as he put his hands up under the robes. She swayed against him, her own hands on him, and he found the coin and took it from her unresisting fingers. She brushed his lips with her own and urged him on. “My name’s Ischade.”
Chapter 2
A CORPSE WAS
no uncommon sight in the Maze. But one sprawled in the middle of the Serpentine, in the first light of the sun—the potboy of the Unicorn found the blond male corpse when he came out to heave the slops, a corpse on the inn’s very doorstep, a body quite stiff and cold, and he knew Sjekso Kinzan. He spun on his heel and started to run back in—thought again and darted, back to search for valuables … after all, some less acquainted and deserving person might come along. He found the brass luckpiece, found the purse … empty, except for an old nail and a bit of lint—dropped the luckpiece down his own collar, jumped up and ran inside in breathless haste, to spill his news to the morning’s first stirrers-forth in the tavern; and the fact of one of the Unicorn’s regular patrons lying stiff at the door brought a stamping up and down the stair and a general outpouring of curious and half-awake overnighters.
That was how it came to Hanse, a disturbance under Minsy Zithyk’s rented window next door.
****
THE GATHERING AROUND the body in the street was solemn … partly a kind of respect and partly morning headaches, more and more onlookers arriving as the commotion became its own reason for being. Hanse was one of the first, stood with his arms clenched into a tight fold—he had his daggers: had them about his person natural as breathing. His scowl and awakened-owl stare at the corpse of Sjekso Kinzan, his arms about his ribs holding his spine stiff—warned Minsy Zithyk off. She stood snuffling and holding her own ribs, doubtless with the other half of a throbbing headache. Hanse wanted no hanging-on, now, of Sjekso’s longtime woman. The dice game and the wager stuck in his mind and he felt eyes on him, himself part of the morning’s gossip, with a man he had diced with lying cold in the soiled stream of a drain.
“Who got him?” Hanse asked finally, and there was a general shrugging of shoulders. “Who?” Hanse snapped, looking round at the onlookers. A corpse was indeed no novelty in the Maze, but an otherwise young and healthy one, with no mark of violence on it… but a man on the doorstep of the tavern he frequented, a turn or two of the alleys to his own lodgings …
There were amenities like territory. A man was never assured … but there were places and places, and when he was in his own place, he was least likely to end up among the morning’s debris. There were stirrings among the crowd, discomfort—with Hanse, for one, whose smallish size meant a temper backed with knives, a bad reputation for every kind of mischief.
And his sullen, headachy stare passed right round to a stranger in the territory—to one Mradhon Vis; to a new and frequent patron at the Unicorn. “You,” Hanse said. “You left about the same time last night. You see anything?”
A shrug. A useless question. No one in the Maze saw anything. But Vis looked too thin-lipped about the shrug and Hanse looked back with a blacker stare still had sudden awareness of the silence of the crowd when he spoke, of eyes on him; and he unfolded his arms and thought of how they had jostled in a doorway last night, Sjekso and Mradhon Vis, and Sjekso had laughed and acted his usual flippant self at Vis’s expense. Hanse drew quiet conclusions—quiet because he cut a mean figure at the moment, having got off with a dead man’s last cash and last pleasure … he swept a glance about at faces dour with their own private conclusions. No love lost on him or dead Sjekso; but Sjekso being local and dead was the focus of pity, while regarding himself—there was quite another thing in the air.
Vis started to leave, edging away through the crowd. “That’s the one to look at,” Hanse said. “Hey, you! You don’t like the questions, do you? The garrison threw you out, hey? You come back here, whoreson coward, you don’t turn your back on me.”
“He’s crazy,” Vis said, stopped behind an unwilling screen of onlookers who were trying to melt in all directions, but Mradhon kept with the migrating cover. “Figure who got his money and his woman, you figure that and wonder who did for him, that’s who…”
Hanse went for the knives. “Wasn’t no mark on him,” a youngish voice was shrilling. The crowd was swinging wildly out of the interval Vis was busy preserving. Minsy yelled, and several strong and larger arms wound themselves into Hanse’s elbows and about his middle. He heaved and kicked to no use while Mradhon Vis, in the clear, straightened his person and his clothing.
“Crazy,” Vis said again, and Hanse poured invective on him and most especially on those holding him from his knives—cold, sweating afraid, because Vis might do anything, or the crowd might, and the knives were all he had. But Vis walked off then, at an increasing pace, and Hanse launched another kick and a torrent of abuse on those holding him.
“Easy.” The grip on his left was Cappen Varra’s, an arm tucked elbow to elbow into his arm and a hand locked on his wrist; he had no grudge with the minstrel. It was a calm voice, a cultivated, better-than-thou voice: Hanse hated Varra at the moment, but the grip persuaded and the object of his rage was off down the street. He took his weight on his own feet and slowly, brushing off his clothes while he stood fairly shaking with his anger, Varra eased up and let him go. Igan on the other side, big, not very bright Igan, let go his other arm, and claps on his shoulders and sympathy offered … started to settle his stomach and persuade him he had some credit here. “Let’s have a drink,” Varra said. “The corpse-takers will get the rumour—do you want to be standing here conspicuous? Come on inside.”
He went as far as the door of the Unicorn, looked back, and there was Minsy standing over Sjekso, sniffling; and Sjekso lying there a great deal sadder, open-eyed, while the crowd started away under the same logic.
Hanse wanted the drink.
****
MRADHON VIS TURNED the corner, none following, stopped against an alley wall and let the tremors pass from his limbs. Ugly, that back there. Corpses, he had seen—had created his share, in and out of mercenary service. He had no wish to take on useless trouble … not now, not with gold in his boot and a real prospect of more. A bodyguard sometimes, but he was not big enough for hired muscle; and with a surly and foreign look—even guard jobs were hard come by. He meant to be on time for this one. A patron who could come up with a fistful of gold on a whim was one to cultivate—if only her throat was still uncut. And that thought worried him: that was what had drawn him, against his natural and wary instincts, to that noisy scene outside the Vulgar Unicorn—a body he had last seen alive and escorting the patron who was his latest and most fervent hope. He was more than concerned.
Other alarums sounded in his mind, warnings of greater complexity, but he refused them, because they led to suspicions of traps, and connivances; he had a knife in his belt, his wits about him, and no little experience of employers of all sorts, no few of whom had had notions of refusing him his pay at the end … one way and the other.
Chapter 3
THE VULGAR UNICORN still thumped with comings and goings, an untidy lot of early-morning patrons and irregulars. For his own part Hanse drank down his ale and nursed his head back to size, across the table from Cappen. He had no inclination to talk or to be the centre of anything at the moment.
“They’ve got him off,” the potboy said from the door. So the corpse was gone. That cleared out some of the traffic. Inquiry and snoopery might be close behind the corpsetakers. “Excuse me,” Cappen Varra said, likewise discreet, and left his place at the table, bound for the door. Hanse recovered his equilibrium and stood up from the bench amid the general flow of bodies outward.
Someone touched his arm, a feathery light hand. He looked back, expecting Minsy, in no mood for her—and looked up instead into eyes like a statue’s eyes, as unfocused and as vague, in a male face old/young and beardless. The man was blind.
“Hanse called Shadowspawn?” The voice was like the man, smooth and sere.
“What’s my business with you?”
“You lost a friend.”
“Ha. No friend. Acquaintance. What’s it to you and me?”
The groping hand caught his arm and directed it to the other hand, which caught his fingers—he began to resist this eerie familiarity, and then felt the unmistak
able metal heaviness of a coin.
“I’m listening.”
“My employer has more for you.”
“Where?”
“Not here. Do you want a name? Come outside.”
The blind man would have taken him out the front, among the others, following the crowd. Hanse pulled him instead to another door, out into the back alley where few had gone and those already vanished. “Now,” Hanse said, taking the blind man by the arm and backing him against the wall. “Who?”
“Enas Yorl.”
He dropped his hand from the blind man’s arm. “Him. For what?”
“He wants to talk to you. You come—recommended. And you’ll be paid.”
Hanse took in his breath and fingered his coin, looked down at it a space, found it new minted and heavy silver, and reckoned uneasily in what quarters he was recommended. Coin of that denomination was not so easily come by … but Enas Yorl—the wizard took few visitors … and there were things lately amiss in Sanctuary. Things larger than Hanse Shadowspawn. Rumours filtered down into the Maze.
Sjekso dead, unmarked, and Enas Yorl—offering money to talk to a thief: the world was mad. He walked it for the narrow lane it was.
“All right,” he said, because Yorl had a long reach and because ignorance scared him. “You show me.”
The blind man took his hand, and they went, down the alley and out again. It was so unfaltering a progress, so lacking a blind man’s moves, that Hanse inevitably suspected some sham, such as beggars used—an actor and a good one, he thought, appreciating art.
****
MRADHON VIS FRETTED, paced below the balcony at the wooden stairs he had found last night. It was a place as sordid as any in the Maze, unpainted boards and age-slimed stone, a place atilt towards the alley and propped on boards and braces. It breathed decrepitude.
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