his offer. Alas, he bid me make it anyway. Very good. Iâll take my leave now, with compliments to you and your lovely wife.â Malden stood up from behind the desk and sketched a graceful bow.
âIf I see you againââ
âOh, you shanât,â Malden told the merchant as he strode toward the door. âWhen next I come, you wonât see me at all.â
He walked directly past the merchant and reached for the latch of the door.
He didnât make it that far.
âWait,â Doral said. âWe can negotiate something, surely.â
âI listen attentively,â Malden said, and leaned up against the wall.
Chapter Three
I t was a long ride from the Golden Slope to the Ashes. Malden had a small wagon and an old, spavined horse to drive down the steep hill that took him from the houses of the wealthy through the district of workshops and manufactories called the Smoke. There he entered a maze of narrow streets that led farther downhill into the Stink, where the poor had their homes. It was just as he entered that zone of wattle-and-daub houses, where the streets and the alleys between them were hard to tell apart, that he heard the first groan from behind him.
The wagon appeared to be full of hay. If he were stopped, Malden could claim to be making a delivery to the stables of an inn nearbyâit was close enough to dawn to make sense for such trafficâbut if a watchman heard the hay moaning in pain, he might ask questions that Malden would find uncomfortable to answer. So he pulled his team into a very dark, very deserted byway, and leaned back over his cargo. He thumped the side of the wagon very hard with the pommel of his bodkin and waited until he heard another grunt. âI know you can hear me,â he said to the hay. The three men underneath it, the thieves from Doralâs house, were just now waking from their drugged stupor. They would be unable to use their limbs for a while yet, but their ears would be fully recovered. The drug Malden had used on his darts was measured out quite carefully, and he knew its effects wellâheâd even tested it on himself, to be sure of its efficacy. He knew how groggy and listless it would leave them, and how unable to defend themselves.
Still the hay rustled as they tried to rouse themselves and escape. Malden sighed and said, âIf I tell you to be quiet, I expect you will try to shout. Itâs what I would do in your situation. Allow me to point out one thing, however. If I wished to kill you, I could have done so quite easily, hours ago. Instead I did you a very great favor: I saved you from the hangmanâs noose. Iâd like to do you another favor, but it depends on my getting to my destination without incident. You may therefore remain silent, and keep your groans to yourself. Or I can stop your breath right now, while youâre still too weak to fend me off. Do we have a deal? Cry once for yes, or twice if you wish to die.â
âOooh,â one of them moaned.
âPluh-pluh-pluz,â the second begged.
âGah,â the third one muttered. That must be the one heâd struck in the tongue.
âVery good. Lie still, then, and youâll live, for now.â Malden got his horse under way again and headed for the Ashes.
That ancient district of the Free City of Ness was named for a calamity that happened well before Malden was born, the Seven Day Fire that claimed half the city. There was very little evidence of the conflagration left in Ness, save for a small zone of houses that had been so decrepit before the fireâand their owners so desperately poorâthat they had never been rebuilt. The Ashes had become a section so desolate no one ever wanted to live there again. It was a grim place of streets that verged on nothing but charred ruin, all of it hid during the day by the shadow of the cityâs towering wall. It was a place decent folkâand thus the city