down. He held this city down. Why should Altapasaeda be ruled from a palace in the far-distant north? Why should it be ruled at all? Why, in fact, should it not govern the Castoval from end to end?'

There arose another ragged cheer, and this time Mounteban let it run its course.

So there it was. Mounteban's endgame. He wanted to run Altapasaeda, and he wanted Altapasaeda to run the Castoval. Say what you like about his sanity, but you couldn't fault his ambition.

'That time will come,' he went on. 'For all of us. Altapasaedan independence means Castovalian independence. Castovalian independence means prosperity and influence the likes of which you've only dreamed. The first phase of our plan is complete. The city is secure. The dangers within its borders have been contained.'

At this, I noticed a number of the more finely dressed members of the audience wince. Mounteban must be referring to the Altapasaedan Palace Guard, who would have fought tooth and nail against his new order — likely with the tacit support of many of the families. I wondered what 'contained' meant. It would have depended on how far Mounteban dared go. Based on the available evidence, my guess would be pretty damned far.

'Our next step is to begin the return to normality: to resume trade, to rejoin with the world outside. I realise the last few days have been trying and disruptive for many of you. I'll take it as said that you understand the necessity of what we've done. With that in mind, gentlemen… do any of you have questions?'

The offer was phrased in such a tone that only an idiot would take it literally. Of course there were no questions. Anyone with the least experience of tyrannical madmen knew better than that. Anyone with the slightest spark of wit would understand to keep their tongue still and their head down.

Mounteban's gaze honed in on movement. Forty stricken faces turned to follow.

Suddenly, everyone in the room was looking at me.

No. Not me. At Eldunzi. The simpering moron had actually raised his hand.

'Ah…'

I earnestly wanted to snap that hand off and shove it down his throat.

'Lord Eldunzi,' said Mounteban. His courtesy was chilling.

'Well… the thing is…'

Before Eldunzi could say more, a new expression interrupted Mounteban's studied disdain. For one brief moment, his features registered purest astonishment. Then he stepped back, placed his mouth to the assassin Synza's ear.

I didn't need to guess what he'd whispered. The snake of ice uncoiling in my stomach told me all I needed to know. I was already on my feet and moving by the time he looked back.

'Stop that thief!'

Had Mounteban chosen his words more carefully, I'd never have left that room. If he'd taken into account just who he was addressing, I'd barely have made it out of my seat. To the wealthy patresfamilias, anyone who wasn't one of their own was a thief of some sort or another.

I was at the door by the time it occurred to anyone even to look my way.

That still left the three on the gate.

'Help! Mounteban's in trouble,' I cried. 'They've turned on him!'

The fear in my voice was genuine enough. It did the trick for the northerner soldier — he had most invested in Mounteban's continued survival. He rushed past me with an inarticulate roar.

The family retainer looked noncommittal. What was it to him if Mounteban was torn apart by his audience?

Last came the thug. He wasn't moving — and now he had a knife out. Maybe he hadn't liked me calling him a lowlife earlier. Maybe settling that slight was more important than anything happening inside. He was big. So was the knife. There was no way I was getting by him in one piece.

I zagged right, towards the retainer. Before he could get his arms up, I struck him with my shoulder and all my weight. It was enough to hurl him back against the thug, who barely had the presence of mind not to gut his companion. The three of us went down together in an eruption of gravel and thrashing limbs.

Cushioned by two bodies, I came off lightest. My momentum carried me free, and I rolled back to my feet. But those seconds of delay had cost me dearly. Now there were running steps pounding the carriageway behind me, and a dozen voices shouting over each other.

The shriek of a whistle cut the night air.

'To the stables!' someone bellowed.

Stables? I couldn't outrun horses! I was already halfwinded. I needed to get off the streets. But there was no way off these wide, open boulevards. To the south lay only the walls. In any other direction, I was two roads or more from anything even approaching an alley.

I ran on. There was nothing else to do. Out of the gate, I chose the direction I'd come from, where at least I'd know my way towards the Market District.

Luck was against me. I'd barely left the carriageway when a crowd came crashing from a wide side street ahead. One or more of the patrols had arrived in answer to the whistle's summons. To their credit, they grasped the situation quickly. In seconds, they were moving to cut me off.

From behind came the clatter of hooves on stone.

I glanced back, caught a dizzying glimpse of a single rider bursting from the arch I'd just left. More eager than his colleagues, he hadn't even waited to saddle his mount. I knew him as one of Mounteban's bodyguards, and before that as bouncer for his bar in Muena Palaiya. That and the fact the Red-Eyed Dog was the most dangerous dive in the Castoval told me all I needed to know.

If it hadn't, the cudgel he held, with nails hammered through its head, would have filled in any blanks.

Ahead, the line of bodies was spreading out, preempting my next thought. I might have dashed for one of the other mansions, but they were close enough now to see me wherever I went. That first mad sprint was already lashing my ribs with fire. Try as I might, I was losing pace.

What did it matter? I had nowhere to go. I faltered, the pain in my lungs struggling against hopelessness for my attention.

Mounteban was nothing like Moaradrid. He wouldn't try to take me alive. He didn't care about questioning me. If the darker rumours I'd heard in Muena Palaiya were true — and I was confident now that they were — then his method of dealing with problems like me was to make damn sure they never bothered him again.

That was the message the bouncer's cudgel sent, like a clarion into my brain. I couldn't tear my eyes from it. As he galloped nearer, each crack of hooves sent light glinting from those fiendishly spiked points. The thing was fully as long as my leg. Every time it tore the air, I could feel, with clarity beyond imagination, what it would do to flesh and bone.

I'd almost staggered to a halt. He could easily have trampled me where I stood. Instead, he reined in, steadying his mount for a blow. The horse whickered furiously as he forced it through a tight half circle, striving to cut in front of me. I dropped to one knee and flung an arm over my head — as though that would do anything to stop the club from shattering both arm and skull. He gave me an almost friendly grin, perhaps grateful I was making life easier by staying still. Tug ging the reins harder, digging with his heels, he controlled the panicked horse. Then he lifted the obscene cudgel, almost casually.

I pulled my new knife from its sheath and jabbed it into his thigh.

I did it more from spite than any hope of saving myself. It was hardly more than a prick; the blade was no longer than my middle finger. Insomuch as I'd thought the attack through, I'd hoped to pull it free for another try.

The bouncer ruined that plan by tumbling down his horse's other side and onto the cobbles, landing with a bone-crunching thud and muffled cry.

Damn it, why could I never hold onto a knife?

Still, a horse was some recompense.

Bolstered by my unexpected victory, I leapt up and clutched the reins. I thought the horse might fight the unexpected change of rider, but apparently he was as eager to be off as I was. He shot to a gallop with the barest encouragement, and didn't flinch when our course took us directly towards the men ahead. For a moment, their heads swung between the figure crumpled on the cobbles and the excited animal bearing down on them. Then the line broke. Two of them dashed one way, three the other, and we sailed between.

I tried to guide us towards the nearest turn-off. I'd had more than enough of this street. However, the horse

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