"You know I will teach you everything, eventually. But-"
Marype made a pa.s.s and the stack of gold turned to a heap of stinking dung. "Cheap,"
Mizraith said, wrinkling his nose. He held his elbow a certain way and the gold came back.
"Don"t you see he wants to take advantage of you?"
"I can see that he wants access to you. He was quite open about that."
"Stefab," Mizraith whispered. "Nesteph."
"You need the help of my brothers?"
The two older brothers appeared, flanking Mizraith. "What I need is some sense out of you." To the others: "Stay him!"
Heavy golden chains bound his wrists and ankles to sudden rings in the floor. He strained and one broke; a block of blue ice encased him. The ice began to melt.
Mizraith turned to One-Thumb and Amoli. "You weaken us with your presence." A bar of gold floated over to the woman. "That will compensate you. Lastel, you will have the krrf, once I take care of this. Be careful for the next few hours. Go."
As they backed out, other figures began to gather in the room. One-Thumb recognized the outline of Markmor flickering.
In the foyer, Amoli handed the gold to her eunuch. "Let"s get back to the Maze," she said.
"This place is dangerous."
One-Thumb sent the pirate cook home and spent the rest of the night in the familiar business of dispensing drink and krrf and haggling over rates of exchange. He took a judicious amount of krrf himself-the domestic kind-to keep alert. But nothing supernatural happened, and nothing more exciting than a routine eye-gouging over a dice dispute. He did have to step over a deceased ex-patron when he went to lock up at dawn. At least he"d had the decency to die outside, so no report had to be made.
One reason he liked to take the death shift was the interesting ambience of Sanctuary in the early morning. The sunlight was hard, revealing rather than cleansing. Litter and excrement in the gutters. A few exhausted revelers, staggering in small groups or sitting half-awake, blade out, waiting for a bunk to clear at first bell. Dogs nosing the evening"s remains. Decadent, stale, worn, mortal. He took dark pleasure in it. Double pleasure this morning, a light krrf overdose singing deathsong in his brain.
He almost went east, to check on Mizraith. "Be careful for the next few hours"-that must have meant his bond to Mizraith made him somehow vulnerable in the weird struggle with Markmor over Marype. But he had to go back to the estate and dispose of the bones in the dogs" troughs and then be Lastel for a noon meeting.
There was one drab wh.o.r.e in the waiting room of the Lily Garden, who gave him a thick smile and then recognized him and slumped back to doze. He went through the velvet curtain to where the eunuch sat with his back against the wall, glaive across his lap.
He didn"t stand. "Any trouble, One-Thumb?"
"No trouble. No krrf, either." He heaved aside the bolt on the ma.s.sive door to the tunnel.
"For all I know, it"s still going on. If Mizraith had lost, I"d know by now, I think."
"Or if he"d won," the eunuch said.
"Possibly. I"ll be in touch with your mistress if I have anything for her." One-Thumb lit the waiting lamp and swung the door closed behind him.
Before he"d reached the bottom of the stairs, he knew something was wrong. Too much light. He turned the wick all the way down; the air was slightly glowing. At the foot of the stairs, he set down the lamp, drew his rapier, and waited.
The glow coalesced into a fuzzy image of Mizraith. It whispered, "You are finally in dark, Lastel. One-Thumb. Listen: I may die soon. Your charm, I"ve transferred to Stefab, and it holds. Pay him as you"ve paid me. . . ." He wavered, disappeared, came back. "Your krrf is in this tunnel. It cost more than you can know." Darkness again.
One-Thumb waited a few minutes more in the darkness and silence (fifty steps from the light above) before relighting the lamp. The block of krrf was at his feet. He tucked it under his left arm and proceeded down the tunnel, rapier in hand. Not that steel would be much use against sorcery, if that was to be the end of this. But an empty hand was less.
The tunnel kinked every fifty steps or so, to restrict line-of-sight. One-Thumb went through three corners and thought he saw light at the fourth. He stopped, doused the lamp again, and listened. No footfalls. He set down the krrf and lamp and filled his left hand with a dagger, then headed for the light. It didn"t have to be magic; three times he had surprised interlopers in the tunnel. Their husks were secreted here and there, adding to the musty odor.
But no stranger this time. He peered around the corner and saw Lastel, himself, waiting with sword out.
"Don"t hold back there," his alter ego said. "Only one of us leaves this tunnel."
One-Thumb raised his rapier slowly. "Wait . . . if you kill me, you die forever. If I kill you, the same. This is a sorcerer"s trap."
"No, Mizraith"s dead."
"His son is holding the spell."
Lastel advanced, crabwise dueler"s gait. "Then how am I here?"
One-Thumb struggled with his limited knowledge of the logic of sorcery. Instinct moved him forward, point in line, left-hand weapon ready for side parry or high block. He kept his eye on Lastel"s point, krrf-steady as his own. The krrf sang doom and lifted his spirit.
It was like fencing with a mirror. Every attack drew instant parry, reprise, parry, reprise, parry, re-reprise, break to counter. For several minutes, a swift yet careful ballet, large twins mincing, the tunnel echoing clash.
One-Thumb knew he had to do something random, unpredictable; he lunged with a cutover, impressing to the right. Lastel knew he had to do something random, unpredictable; he lunged with a double-disengage, impressing to the right. They missed each other"s blades.
Slammed home.
One-Thumb saw his red blade emerge from the rich brocade over Lastel"s back, tried to shout, and coughed blood over his killer"s shoulder. Lastel"s rapier had cracked breastbone and heart and slit a lung as well.
They clung to each other. One-Thumb watched bright blood spurt from the other"s back and heard his own blood falling, as the pain grew. The dagger still in his left hand, he stabbed, almost idly. Again he stabbed. It seemed to take a long time. The pain grew. The other man was doing the same. A third stab, he watched the blade rise and slowly fall, and inching slide back out of the flesh. With every second, the pain seemed to double; with every second, the flow of time slowed by half. Even the splash of blood was slowed, like a viscous oil falling through water as it sprayed away. And now it stopped completely, a thick scarlet web frozen there between his dagger and Lastel"s back-his own back-and as the pain spread and grew, marrow itself on fire, he knew he would look at that forever. For a flickering moment he saw the image of two sorcerers, smiling.