to single anyone out for punishment, there were others who had far worse records than the quaestor. Besides, the church must have been largely satisfied with his work for them over the last few years, or else they would not have allowed his caravan to grow so large and to travel such important trade routes. He had a good relationship with the cathedral officials he dealt with, and — though none of them would ever have admitted it — a reputation for fairness when it came to dealing with traders like Crozet. So what was the purpose of this surprise visit?

He hoped it had nothing to do with blood. It was well known that the closer you got to cathedral business, the more likely you were to come into contact with the agents of the Office of Bloodwork, that clerical body which promulgated the literal blood of Quaiche. Bloodwork was an organ of the Clocktower, he knew that. But this far from the Way, Quaiche’s blood ran thin and diluted. It was hard to live in the country, beyond the iron sanctuary of the cathedrals. You needed to think about icefalls and geysers. You needed detachment and clarity of mind, not the chemical piety of an indoctrinal virus. But what if there had been a change of policy, a broadening of the reach of Bloodwork?

‘It’s that Crozet,’ he said, ‘always brings bad luck. Shouldn’t have let him aboard this late in the run. Should’ve sent him back with his tail between his legs. He’s a lazy good-for-nothing, that one.’

Peppermint looked up at him. The little mouthparts said, ‘Let he who is without sin cast the first stone.’

‘Yes, thank you, Peppermint.’ The quaestor opened his desk drawer. ‘Now why don’t you climb in there until we’ve seen our visitor? And keep your trap shut.’

He reached out for the creature, ready to fold it gently into a form that would fit within the drawer. But the door to his office was already opening, the stranger’s passkey working even here.

The suited figure walked in, stopped and closed the door behind him. He rested the cane against the side of the table and placed the white case on the ground. Then he reached up and unlatched his helmet seal. The helmet was a rococo affair, with bas-relief gargoyles worked around the visor. He slid it over his head and set it down on the end of the table.

Rather to his surprise, the quaestor did not recognise the man. He had been expecting one of the usual church officials he dealt with, but this was truly a stranger.

‘Might I have a wee word, Quaestor?’ the man asked, gesturing towards the seat on his side of the desk.

‘Yes, yes,’ Quaestor Jones said hastily. ‘Please sit down. How was your, um… ?’

‘My journey from the Way?’ The man blinked, as if momentarily narcotised by the utter dullness of the quaestor’s question. ‘Unremarkable. ’ Then he looked at the creature that the quaestor had not had time to hide. ‘Yours, is it?’

‘My Pep… my Petnermint. My Peppermint. Pet. Mine.’

‘A genetic toy, isn’t it? Let me have a guess: one part stick insect, one part chameleon, one part something mammalian?’

‘There’s cat in him,’ the quaestor said. ‘Definitely cat. Isn’t there, Peppermint?’ He pushed some of the seeds towards the visitor. ‘Would you like to, um… ?’

Again to the quaestor’s surprise — and he wasn’t quite sure why he had asked in the first place — the stranger took a pinch of the seeds and offered his hand up to Peppermint’s head. He did it very gently. The creature’s mandibles began to eat the seeds, one by one.

‘Charming,’ the man said, leaving his hand where it was. ‘I’d get one for myself, but I hear they’re very hard to come by.’

‘Devils to keep healthy,’ the quaestor said.

‘I’m sure they are. Well, to business.’

‘Business,’ the quaestor said, nodding.

The man had a long, thin face with a very flat nose and a strong jaw. He had a shock of white hair sticking straight up from his brow, stiff as a brush and mathematically planar on top, as if sliced off with a laser. Under the room’s lights it shone with a faint blue aura. He wore a high-collared side-buttoned tunic marked with the Clocktower insignia: that odd, mummylike spacesuit radiating light through cracks in its shell. But there was something about him that made the quaestor doubt that he was a cleric. He didn’t have the smell of someone with Quaiche blood in them. Some high-ranking technical official, then.

‘Don’t you want to know my name?’ the man asked.

‘Not unless you want to tell me.’

‘You’re curious, though?’

‘I was told to expect a visitor. That’s all I need to know.’

The man smiled. ‘That’s a very good policy. You can call me Grelier.’

The quaestor inclined his head. There had been a Grelier involved in Hela’s affairs since the very earliest days of the settlement, after the witnessing of the first vanishing. He presumed the Grelier family had continued to play a role in the church ever since, down through the generations. ‘It’s a pleasure to have you aboard the caravan, Mr Grelier.’

‘I won’t be here long. Just wanted, as I said, a wee word.’ He stopped feeding Peppermint, dropping the remaining seeds on the floor. Then he bent down and retrieved the white case, setting it on his lap. Peppermint started cleaning itself, making prayerlike motions. ‘Has anyone come aboard lately, Quaestor?’

‘There are always people coming and going.’

‘I mean lately, last few days.’

‘Well, there’s Crozet, I suppose.’

The man nodded and flipped open the lid of his case. It was, the quaestor saw, a medical kit. It was full of syringes, racked next to each other like little pointy-headed soldiers. ‘Tell me about Crozet.’

‘One of our regular traders. Makes his living in the Vigrid region, keeps himself to himself. Has a wife named Linxe, and a son, Culver.’

‘They’re here now? I saw an icejammer winched against your machine as I came in.’

‘That’s his,’ the quaestor said.

‘Anyone else come in on it?’

‘Just the girl.’

The man raised his eyebrows. Like his hair, they were the colour of new snow under moonlight. ‘Girl? You said he had a son, not a daughter.’

‘She was travelling with them. Not a relative, a hitchhiker. Name of…’ The quaestor pretended to rack his memory. ‘Rashmika. Rashmika Els. Sixteen, seventeen standard years.’

‘Had your eye on her, did you?’

‘She made an impression. She couldn’t help but make an impression. ’ The quaestor’s hands felt like two balls of eels, sliding slickly against each other. ‘She had a certainty about her, a determination you don’t see very often, especially not in one her age. She seemed to be on a mission.’

The man reached into the case and took out a clear syringe. ‘What was her relationship to Crozet? Everything above board?’

‘As far as I know she was just his passenger.’

‘You heard about the missing-persons report? A girl running away from her family in the Vigrid badlands? The local constabulary enquiring after a possible saboteur?’

‘That was her? I didn’t put two and two together, I’m afraid.’

‘Good for you that you didn’t.’ He held the syringe up to the light, his face distorted through the glass. ‘Or you might have sent her back where she came from.’

‘That wouldn’t have been good?’

‘We’d rather she stayed on the caravan for now. She’s of interest to us, you see. Give me your arm.’

The quaestor rolled up his sleeve and leant across the table. Peppermint eyed him, pausing in its ablutions. The quaestor could not refuse. The command had been issued so calmly that there could be no prospect of disobedience. The syringe was clear: he had come to take blood, not give it.

The quaestor forced himself to remain calm. ‘Why does she have to stay on the caravan?’

‘So she gets to where she has to get to.’ Grelier slid the needle in.

‘Any complaints from your usual acquisitions department, Quaestor?’

‘Complaints?’

‘About Crozet. About him making a bit more out of his scuttler junk than he normally does.’

Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату