Long Sun - Nightside The Long Sun

Chapter looks after you, and if it ever got out that we did for you-I mean just talk, because they"d never be able to prove anything-it would get people stirred up and be bad for business."

"I see. No, of course not."

"That"s good. I"m happy to hear you being reasonable. Just look at it You broke into my house hoping to take my property-it"s Musk"s, but you didn"t know that. You"ve admitted that to Musk and me, and we"re ready to swear to it in front of a judge if we have to."

Silk smiled; it seemed to him a very long time since he had last smiled. "You aren"t really going to have me killed, are you, Blood? You"re not willing to take the risk."

Blood"s finger found the trigger of the needier. "Keep on talking like that and I might, Patera."

"I don"t believe so. You"d have someone else do it, probably Musk. You"re not even going to do that, however. You"re trying to frighten me before you let me go."



Blood glanced at Musk, who nodded and circled behind Silk"s chair. Silk felt the tips of Musk"s fingers brush his

ears.

"If you go on talking to me like you have been, Patera, you"re going to get hurt. It won"t leave any marks, but you won"t like it at all. Musk has done it before. He"s good at it."

"Not to an augur. Those who harm an augur in any way suffer the displeasure of all the G.o.ds."

The pain was as sudden as a blow, and so sharp it left Silk breathless, an explosion of agony; he felt as though his head had been crushed.

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"There"s places behind your ears," Blood explained. "Musk pushes them in with his knuckles."

Gasping for air, his hands to his mastoids, Silk could not even nod.

"We can do that again and again if we have to," Blood continued. "And if we finally give up and go to bed, we can start over in the morning."

A red mist had blotted out Silk"s vision, but it was clearing. He managed, "You don"t have to explain my situation to me."

"Maybe not. I"ll do it whenever I want to, just the same. So to get on with this-you"re right, we"d just as soon not kill you if we don"t have to. There"s three or four diffei^nt reasons for that, all of them pretty good. You"re an augur, to start with. If the G.o.ds ever paid any attention to Viron, they quit a long time ago. Myself, I don"t think there was ever anything in it except a way for people like you to get everything they wanted without working. But the Chapter looks after you, and if it ever got out that we did for you-I mean just talk, because they"d never be able to prove anything-it would get people stirred up and be bad for business."

Silk said, "Then I would not have died for nothing," and felt Musk"s fingers behind his ears again.

Blood shook his head, and the contingent agony halted, poised at the edge of possibility. "Then too, we just bought your place so that might make some people think of us. Did you tell anybody you were coming?"

Here it was. Silk was prepared to lie if he must, but preferred to dodge if he could. He said, "You mean one of our sibyls? No, nothing like that"

Blood nodded, and the danger was past. "It could get somebody"s attention anyway, and I can"t be sure who"s seen you. Hy has, and talked with you and so on. Probably even knows your name."

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Gene Wolfe

Silk could not remember, but he said, "Yes, she does. Can"t you trust her? She"s your wife."

Musk t.i.ttered behind him. Blood roared, his free hand slapping his thigh.

Silk shrugged. "One of your servants referred to her as his mistress. He thought that I was one of your guests, of course."

Blood wiped his eyes. "I like her, Patera, and she"s the best-looking wh.o.r.e in Viron, which makes her a valuable commodity. But as for that-" Blood waved the topic aside. "What I was going to say is I"d rather have you as a friend." Seeing Silk"s expression, he laughed again.

Silk strove to sound casual. "My friendship"s easily gained." This was the conversation he had imagined when he had spied on the villa from the top of the wall; frantically he searched for the smooth phrases he had rehea.r.s.ed. "Return my manteion to the Chapter, and I"ll bless you for the rest of my life." A drop of sweat trickled from his forehead into his eyes. Fearing that Musk might think he was reaching for a weapon if he got out his handkerchief, he wiped his face on his sleeve.

"That wouldn"t be what I"d call easy for me, Patera. Thirteen thousand I"ve laid out for your place, and I"d never see a card of it again. But I"ve thought of a way we can be friends that will put money in my pocket, and I always like that. You"re a common thief. You"ve admitted it. Well, so am I." Blood rose from his chair, stretched, and seemed to admire the rich furnishings of the room. "Why should we, two of a kind, circle around like a couple of tomcats, trying to knife each other?"

Musk stroked Silk"s hair; it made him feel unclean, and he said, "Stop that!"

Musk did.

"You"re a brave man, Patera, as well as a resourceful one." Blood strode across the room to study a gray and

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gold painting of Pas condemning the lost spirits, one head livid with rage while the other p.r.o.nounced their doom. "If I had been sitting where you are, I wouldn"t have tried that with Musk, but you tried it and got away with it. You"re young, you"re strong, and you"ve got a couple of advantages besides that the rest of us haven"t. n.o.body ever suspects an augur, and you"ve had a pretty fair education-a better education than mine, I don"t deny that. Tell me now, as one thief to another, didn"t you know down in the cracks of your guts that it was wrong to try to steal my property?"

"Yes, of course." Silk paused to gather his thoughts. "There are times, however, when one must choose among evils. You"re a wealthy man; stripped of my manteion, you would be a wealthy man still. Without my manteion, hundreds of families in our quarter-people who are already very poor-would be a great deal poorer. I found that a compelling argument." He waited for the crushing pain of Musk"s knuckles. When it did not come he added, "You suggested that we speak as one thief to another, and I a.s.sumed that you intended for us to speak freely. To speak frankly, I find it just as compelling now."

Blood turned to face him again. "Sure you do, Patera. I"m surprised you couldn"t come up with just as good a reason for shooting Hy. These G.o.ds of yours did worse pretty often, didn"t they?"

Silk nodded. "Worse superficially, yes. But the G.o.ds are our superiors and may act toward us as they see fit, just as you could clip your pet"s wings without guilt. I am not Hyacinth"s superior."

Blood chuckled. "You"re the only man alive who doesn"t think so, Patera. Well, I"ll leave morality to you. That"s your business after all. Business is mine, and what we have here is a very simple little business problem. I paid the city thirteen thousand for your manteion. What do you think it"s really worth?"

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Silk recalled the fresh young faces of the children in the palaestra, and the tired, happy smiles of their mothers; the sweet smoke of sacrifice rising from the altar through the G.o.d-gate in the roof. "In money? It is beyond price."

"Exactly." Blood glanced at the needier he still held and dropped it into the pocket of his embroidered trousers. "That"s how you feel, and that"s why you came out here, even though you must have known there was a good chance you"d get killed. You"re not the first who"s tried to break in here, by the way, but you"re the first who got inside the house."

"That is some consolation."

"So I admire you, and I think we might be able to do a little business. On the open market, Patera, your place is worth exactly thirteen thousand cards, and not one miserable cardbit more or less. We know that, because it was on the market just a few days ago, and thirteen thousand"s what it brought. So that"s the businessman"s price. You understand what I"m telling you?" Silk nodded.

"I"ve got plans for it, sure. Profitable plans. But it"s not the only possible site, so here"s my proposition. You say it"s priceless. That"s a lot of money, priceless." Blood licked his lips, his eyes narrowed, their gaze fixed on Silk"s face. "So as a man that takes a lily profit wherever he can find one but never gouges anybody, I say we split the difference. You pay me twice what I paid, and I"ll sell it to you."

Silk started to speak, but Blood raised a hand. "Let"s pin it down like a couple of dimber thieves ought to. I"ll sell it to you for twenty-six thousand flat, and I"ll pay all costs. No tricks, and no splitting up the property. You"ll get everything that I got."

Silk"s hopes, which had mounted higher with every word, collapsed. Did Blood really imagine that he was rich? There were laymen, he knew, who thought all augurs rich. He

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