How in the names of the gods did the girl get herself into these situations?
Kersh nodded to the lamplighters as they passed him on the street. The trio of men waved back, their iron reaching-hooks resting against their shoulders. They were sooty standard-bearers. The soft glow of flickering lights followed in their wake.
This time of night always made Kersh think of Meren, and tonight the feeling was heightened. They’d been on patrol together ten winters ago and had become fast friends. Meren had been young and, with all the wisdom of youth, had believed the quiet streets of North Ward held no threat for someone as spry and as skilled as he.
Meren learned differently, and Kersh lost his first real friend in Waterdeep. Kersh remembered the day vividly. The boy had had no kin, but his former employer had come with his great-niece to claim the boy’s body.
Icelin had been only a child at the time, but Kersh had never met a person who acted as she did. Bristling with opinions and outlandish teasing, she had seemed a fully formed adult merely lost in a child’s wrappings.
Kersh remembered how, in the midst of his grieving, this strange child had walked right up to him and greeted him by name, as if they’d been friends for all their lives. Later, Kersh learned that she’d memorized the names and faces of almost all the Watch officers, simply by passing through the barracks when she’d escaped her great-uncle’s sight.
After their first meeting at the funeral, she visited him regularly. She told him stories about Meren—silly, adorable boy, she’d called him—and his time working for her great-uncle in his sundries store. No detail or behavior escaped her memory.
Their friendship had continued, and Kersh had watched the odd child blossom into a lovely, confident woman. But he never forgot the affection with which she’d reached out to him all those years ago. It had been a balm to the terrible grief. The only being she paid more attention to was her great-uncle. She trailed his heels as if he were the center of her vast playing field.
So when the order came down that Icelin was to be taken for thievery and questioning for Brant’s death, Kersh knew something was terribly amiss. Icelin was in trouble. And if Kersh knew her at all, he knew she wouldn’t prefer the idea of surrendering to the Watch.
After the lamplighters had passed by, Kersh slid to a crouch on the bridge. Directly below his feet, between two of the bridge’s supports, stood Icelin herself.
She was knee-deep in the perfect, midnight blue water, her thin frame concealed by the shadows. Behind her, a huge man emerged from a metal grate at water level. He crouched beside her, hissing at the cold water. Kersh had never seen the man before, but the small bridge barely concealed his massive frame. If the lamplighters came back this way to chase an errant flame, they would spot the pair in a heartbeat.
“Icelin, what web have you gotten yourself caught in?” Kersh said through his teeth. “And why meet here, bare-bottomed to the world?”
“Hello, old friend,” Icelin said, “lovely to see you too. I’m afraid the risk was necessary, as I’m a bit pressed for time.”
She shivered with cold and had deep circles under her eyes. Her hands gripped the bridge pilings as if for support. There were dark stains under her fingernails. Kersh suppressed a gasp.
“Icelin, what happened?” he demanded. “The patrols are getting your description as we speak. We’re supposed to bring you in—subdued, if necessary.”
“Then it’s fortunate I’m a master of subtlety,” Icelin jested. “Stand up and pretend to enjoy the night, you dolt, so no one looks under the bridge.”
“This is serious,” Kersh said, but he did as she asked. “How can you be so reckless?”
“I am taking this situation very seriously, my friend,” Icelin said coldly. “Brant is dead. I assume you heard that too. He died in my arms.”
“I’m sorry, Icelin. Who did it?”
“You’ll recognize the name. Cerest Elenithil.”
Kersh started. “The one who wants you brought in?”
“The same,” Icelin said. “Obviously, he has a grudge against me that demands attention. Setting the Watch on my trail was an expedient way to corner me. I need a place to hide from him, somewhere the Watch won’t readily find me.”
“Unless you’re sitting with the gods, there’s no such place,” Kersh said. “All the patrols have been alerted, and if that wasn’t enough….” He didn’t know how to say it.
She did it for him. “They all remember Icelin Tearn. I have no illusions about my reputation among your fellows.”
“Told you we should have made a run for it.” The big man spoke up for the first time.
“Who’s that?” Kersh wanted to know.
“Sull’s my butcher,” Icelin said, elbowing the big man into silence. “There must be somewhere we can go, Kersh.”
Kersh hesitated. “You could come in with me.”
“Hah.”
“I’d speak for you,” Kersh insisted. “My word doesn’t carry as much weight as a swordcaptain’s, but I know your character.”
“The Watch has no desire to help me,” Icelin said. “And I will not sit idly in a dungeon cell, waiting for them to deliberate my fate, while Brant’s murderer plots my demise.”
She stopped speaking. Kersh heard a soft sob, then silence. He waited for her to gather herself. He had never seen her fall apart before, not in all the years he’d known her.
“Kersh?” Her voice sounded strained.
“I’m here.”
“What if—I know this will sound like lunacy—I could find a guide, someone who knows the city well and could hide me for the time being? Just until I figure out what to do about Cerest.” Her voice grew stronger. “There is one person I can think of who would be perfect for the job.”
It took Kersh a moment to realize where she was leading him. “Absolutely not!” he hissed. “You’re right. You’re talking lunacy.”
“Who are we talking about?” the butcher wanted to know.
“Kersh used to work a night watch in the dungeons,” Icelin said. “He told me a story once after several goblets of wine of a famous rogue he made the acquaintance of. A man named Ruen Morleth.”
“He’s nothing special, except he stole a fortune in paintings from a noble in North Ward, a great collector of odd and obscure art,” Kersh said. “Brought the largest bounty on his head I’ve ever seen offered in the city.”
“So he was caught?” Sull said. “Doesn’t sound like a very good thief to me.”
“Exactly. And he’d been imprisoned for some years,” Kersh said. It was a stupid story. He couldn’t believe he was reciting it now. “He asked me to get his hat back from some guards who were dicing over the thing.” Of course Icelin would remember the whole tale perfectly, damn her. “I don’t know why he bothered. It was the ugliest hat I’d ever seen.”
“Kersh said the rogue offered to tell him a secret if he got his hat back,” Icelin added. “So Kersh, being the curious thickhead that he is, set out to win the hat back from the guards. Fortunately, our Kersh has a good hand at dice. Tell him how grateful the rogue was, Kersh.”
“I gave him back his hat, and he informed me very solemnly that he believed the secret of my parentage involved a tavern wench and several barnyard animals, and did I want to hear more?”
“Sounds like a lovely fellow,” Sull snorted. “But you can’t blame him for being angry over losing his hat.”
“Oh, but you see, Kersh didn’t tell the rogue that to get his precious hat back, Kersh had to gamble away half his wage for all the month of Ches,” Icelin said. “The rogue got wind of it though, and this is the important part. Go on, Kersh. Tell him what Morleth said.”
Kersh sighed. “He apologized, told me that he appreciated my looking after his hat, and said that if I ever needed a favor in return, I should go to Mistshore.”
“Mistshore?” the butcher echoed incredulously. “That’s the worst section of the city. He wanted to send you to Waterdeep’s bowels to reclaim a
favor?”
“At the Dusk and Dawn Inn,” Kersh said. “I was to inquire at the dicing rounds.”
“Those were his exact words,” Icelin said.
“You would know.” Kersh rolled his eyes.
“Except it’s bollocks and cream,” said the butcher. “Even if you were to brave the journey to the harbor, how’s this thief goin’ to be any help to anyone when he’s locked in a cage?”
“He’s not in a cage,” Icelin said. Kersh glanced down and saw her leaning against the slime-clad piling, looking like a smug queen surveying her holdings. “He escaped not six nights after he got his hat back. He’s the only man who has ever escaped from Waterdeep’s dungeons.”
“You think because he offered me a favor he’ll help you hide from the Watch?” Kersh shook his head.
“And the elf,” Icelin reminded him. “All I need is permission to call in your marker.”
“Icelin, he’s dangerous—dangerous and strange. You don’t want to get tangled up with someone you can’t trust, not when I’m here to—” he stopped, cursing under his breath.
“I would trust you with my life,” Icelin said softly. “But folk have been turning up dead around me today, and I don’t want you joining them.”
“Then what’s the butcher doing here?” Kersh asked, a little sullenly.
“Noisome baggage, but I can’t shake him,” Icelin said. “Please, Kersh. Give me your marker and let me be gone.”
Reluctantly, Kersh reached into his coin-purse and pulled out a pair of cracked dice. They fit comfortably in his hand, clicking softly together. It had been years since he’d examined them, but for some reason he always carried them close. He handed them down to Icelin’s cold fingers.
“Thank you,” she said.
The butcher leaned in to look. “Are those bosoms where the sixes should be?”
“They are,” Kersh said. “He handed them to me, clasped my left hand between both of his for a breath, then he nodded, like he was satisfied with a shift in the weather. He said, ‘enjoy a long life, friend,’ and smiled like he was having some jest. But I could have sworn, by any god you’d care to name, that he was serious—relieved, almost. That part of the story I never told to anyone, not even you, Icelin.”
Kersh went about his patrol as usual that night. When he was finished, he headed back to the barracks to report to the rordan on duty.
Icelin was his friend. He would lay down his life for her, and he would not sit idle while she wandered the most dangerous paths of Waterdeep.
Mistshore was a product of neglect more than anything else, but it had grown into a rotting infection on the back of an already struggling city. Waterdeep’s harbor had become a steadily growing source of pollution and despair over the last century. The water had turned murky brown, and the breeze that blew off the harbor was rank with filth.
Ships had been scuttled haphazardly on the north shore of the old Naval Harbor; their owners were dead, gone, or content to leave them to the poisonous waters. One atop another, they’d gradually stretched wooden talons out into the brown harbor, forming their own private continent. The landscape on this strange plain could shift dramatically from day to day, with old wreckages dropping off into the depths and fresh tangles being added to the pile.
No one knew who it was that first discovered you could live on the floating, twisted wreckage—if living was what it could be called—but since then the newly christened Mistshore had become a beaching ground for wreckage of a different sort: the poorest, most desperate folk of Waterdeep.
Mistshore had earned such a dark reputation that the Watch patrols rarely visited the place. Their efforts to restore order on the battered harbor had earned them several slain officers and grief from the rest of the city, who preferred that Mistshore be left to its own devices. Kersh thought it comforted them in some way to have all the worst elements in the city confined to one area. As long as the violence didn’t bleed over into the other wards, the people were content.
But Icelin was striding right into the center of the chaos. Worse, Kersh had sent her there.
Kersh entered a low-ceilinged building that housed the Watch garrison. Passing through with a wave to comrades he recognized, Kersh kept going, ascending a short flight of steps to a separate complex. Torches clung to the walls on either side of his path. The soot piles they left on the stone gave the air a dense, pressed-in feeling.
Or maybe that’s your conscience prickling you, Kersh thought. He knew Icelin was innocent; it was the elf that worried him. Icelin would need the protection of the Watch, whether she wanted to admit it or not.
Turning down a south hall, Kersh stopped in front of an iron-bound wooden door. He rapped twice on the solid planks.
“Come.”
The gruff voice sounded much deeper than Taythe’s—the rordan who worked the night watch. Kersh felt a sinking in his gut.
He entered the small office. A broad table dominated the center of the room, lit by flickering candles that dribbled pools of white wax down the table legs.
A gray-haired man stood hunched behind the table, surveying a crinkled map spread out before him. A bronze, boxed compass sat at his right elbow. He looked up when Kersh entered the room.
Kersh swallowed and immediately saluted, tapping his forefinger against his temple. Gods, he’d come looking for a superior officer and found the commander of the Watch himself.
The Watch Warden of Waterdeep, Daerovus Tallmantle, surveyed Kersh through steely, narrowed eyes. A gray moustache draped the lower half of his face. In Waterdeep he was known as the Wolfhound, and Kersh could well see why. He moved around the table with a graceful, predatory air, despite the years on his body.
“Well?” the Warden asked, knocking Kersh from his stupefied staring. “What have you, lad? Don’t lurk in the door. Close it behind you.”
Kersh shut the door and came to stand in front of the table. Now that he was here, before the Watch Warden, he felt even more the betrayer. Icelin would never forgive him.
“I have news,” Kersh said, “on the whereabouts of Icelin Tearn.”
The Warden nodded. “Your patrol spotted her?”
“Not my patrol,” Kersh said, “myself alone.”
“Did you apprehend her?”
Kersh felt his throat dry up, but he was an honest man. “I did not. I spoke to her, and I let her go.”
The Wolfhound sank slowly into his chair. He leaned back, crossing his arms. “So you’ve a tale to tell me about why you acted thus. Out with it, lad.”
Kersh had expected fury from the Watch commander. He hadn’t counted on the man’s cool-eyed assessment, which, by its sheer weight, was harder to bear than any shouted censure.
“I believe Icelin Tearn has been wrongfully accused of theft,” Kersh said. He relayed to the commander the whole tale, as Icelin had told him from under the bridge. He didn’t have her gift of memory, but he thought he recalled the details as near perfect as he could manage.
“Do you believe her?” the commander said when he’d finished. “Do you think this elf, Cerest Elenithil, is responsible for Brant Tearn’s murder?”
“I do,” said Kersh. “I believe he has a personal vendetta against Icelin, and that she needs our protection.”
“You have no proof that your friend isn’t spinning her own tales,” the commander pointed out. “Her name is known in this barracks, and among many in the Watch.”
Kersh felt a flare of indignation. “That does not exempt her from our protection, should her claims prove true.”
“You don’t believe the murder of a Watchman should warrant our enmity?”
Kersh felt his face flush with shame and something else. Righteous indignation, he might have called it, though he’d never thought himself capable of such emotions. However you termed it, the wrongness sat bitterly in his mouth. “There was no murder,” he said. “It was an accident, as all involved are aware. Blame the gods if you will, but no man or woman should be punished for th
e fell magic that has gripped this city since the Spellplague.”
The Warden gazed at him steadily. Kersh felt his heart hammering against his ribs, whether from anger or fear of a reprimand, he couldn’t say. He’d never been so bold before.
“As it happens,” the commander said softly, “I agree with you, lad.”
Kersh offered a quiet prayer of thanks. “I want to take a patrol into Mistshore.” He spoke faster, planning it out in his head. “I should never have let her go. She could be killed—”
The Warden held up a hand. “Before you break ranks, lad, and start leading your own patrols, hear me out. You say she intends to seek out this thief, Ruen Morleth?”
“That was her intention when she left me,” Kersh said.
“Then our solution resides with him.”
Kersh kept his mouth from falling open with an effort, but he couldn’t keep his tongue from moving, not now that it had got going. “He’s an escaped criminal; he’s not to be trusted with her safety. How can you consider such a thing?”
The Watch Warden almost smiled. Kersh could see the quiver in his moustache. “Ruen Morleth has never escaped from anything in his whole life.”
This time Kersh did gape. “You know where he is?”
“Indeed. He is a fine thief and as crooked as they come, but he’s also smart. Ruen Morleth is a survivor. He has contacts in Mistshore and the Warrens, and probably other places we aren’t aware of. We made him a generous bargain: his freedom in exchange for access to those contacts in Mistshore. With Morleth as our agent, we can work within Mistshore, and none of our own men need die. It’s a bargain both sides were more than willing to make.”
“Why are you telling me this?” Kersh asked. He felt hollow, betrayed by his own ignorance.
“Morleth is many things, but he won’t harm your friend,” the Warden said, as if sensing his distress. “We’ll contact him immediately. When he finds Icelin, he’ll bring her in, and I’ll see to her protection personally until this matter can be resolved to your satisfaction and mine,” he said.
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