the door, Quaeryt could see his eyes widen.
“Ah … sirs … Lady … what … are you interested in boots, perhaps?” the cobbler finally stammered, clear puzzlement in his eyes in seeing a major, a lady, and a scholar, followed by two armed men.
“You’re Chelgyst?” asked Quaeryt.
“Yes, scholar.”
“One of those who is a member of the Army of Tela?”
“No longer, sir. Not for more than a year.” The cobbler’s voice was tired. “Not since they started to carry spears. Spears are against the laws.”
“Then perhaps you could tell us who was the one who decided that they should carry spears.”
“There were several, but they were shouting from the back. I left right then. I wish I’d never gone to the first meetings. They were talking about marching in parades and reminding folks about the great deeds of the past. My great-grandfather had a knife that came from the fall of Noveault. We still have it.”
Quaeryt asked a few more questions, but the cobbler avoided giving names, and Quaeryt didn’t feel like pressing him, and they left the shop after less than a quint.
The second name on Ghanyst’s listing was Aelphar, a cooper, but there was a tailor’s shop at the address, and the tailor told Duffryt that Aelphar had died the fall before, and that he was renting half the space from the widow.
The third name was that of Shubatar, a fuller, five blocks to the west.
He was a stocky graying man, but voluble in his replies.
“… went to some of the meetings. I really didn’t care about all their parades. I figured that all those uniforms, the way they talked about them, they’d need fullering now and again … and some of them might come to me, rather than to Casseon.”
“Who seemed to be the most outspoken?” asked Quaeryt.
“Chausyn was pretty loud. So was Dymeyt … and sometimes another fellow with him Shar-something or other…”
Once they left the fuller’s shop, Quaeryt checked the names they’d obtained from Shubatar against those on Ghanyst’s list. All three names were on the list, but near the bottom. Since Dymeyt was listed as a tinker, with a stall in the hill market, and that was the closest to where they were, according to Choryn, that was where Quaeryt directed the clerk to lead them.
Choryn swallowed.
Quaeryt noted his reaction and appeared to ignore it.
Another quint passed by the time they were riding up the rough cobblestones of the side lane that held the hill market.
“His stall … should be up there, past the poulterer…”
Quaeryt squinted. Did he see a man in grays easing away? He urged the mare forward at a faster walk. The man began to walk faster, then to run.
Quaeryt imaged goose grease-or what he thought of as goose grease-onto the bottom of the man’s boots. The fugitive went down hard, then tried to scramble to his feet. By then Quaeryt was less than ten yards away, but the man staggered up and took two steps, before falling hard again-helped not only by the slipperiness of his boots, but by the momentary hardening of the air-similar to the composition of Quaeryt’s shields-that the scholar had imaged in front of his shins.
“I wouldn’t try to flee any farther, if I were you, Dymeyt!” snapped Quaeryt as he reined up.
Heads had turned from all around the market, but the onlookers backed away from all the riders.
“I didn’t do nothing … I didn’t.” The man, still on his knees, looked up at the riders who surrounded him, including the rankers with unsheathed blades.
“Then why did you run? Might it have something to do with what happened yesterday?”
“I didn’t think Sharmyt’d do something like that, sir … I didn’t. I just thought he’d say something from the alleyway.”
“How did he know we were coming?”
“He didn’t, sir. Leastwise, he didn’t say he did. He was headed over to Shubatar the fuller’s place when we saw all the riders coming up the avenue. Then he saw the lady-begging your pardon, mistress-and he ran out. I saw his spear come back and go through him, and I ran back down the alley, fearing for my life.”
“Why did he have a spear?”
“He said…” The man swallowed.
“Go on…”
“He said Shubatar wasn’t no true Ryntaran … just a fat fuller wanting to make coppers off us all. He was going to talk to him. That was what he said … he really did, sir.”
“Where did Sharmyt live … or work?”
“His brother’s a tinsmith, down off the river road, Crafters’ Way.”
“What’s Sharmyt’s full name?”
“Sharmyt Frydersyn…”
“And his brother?”
“Sheam.”
Quaeryt shook his head, then turned to the squad leader. “Bind his hands, and bring him along. The major’s men can turn him over to the Civic Patrol when we’re done.”
“Yes, sir.”
Getting to the tinsmith’s shop required retracing their path back over the ridge and almost down to the River Acliano. Crafters’ Way was all of a hundred yards long, and the tinsmith was at the end of the narrow street, distinguished by missing almost as many cobblestones as it had for what passed as paving.
Quaeryt had barely stepped inside the small shop when he faced a wiry man with a lined face-and two women, one a redhead nearly as young as Vaelora, and another who looked to be closer to Quaeryt’s age.
“Sirs … Lady…” offered the man. “What can I do for you?”
“You’re Sheam Frydersyn?”
“Yes, sir.”
“You have a brother named Sharmyt, and he was seen yesterday wearing the uniform of the so-called Army of Tela?”
“He’s my brother,” admitted the tinsmith, warily. “What of him?”
“He tried to kill someone,” replied Quaeryt, giving Duffryt a sharp glance.
“I told you!” hissed the younger red-haired woman. “I said he’d lead us all to no good with that foolishness.”
For a time, Sheam said nothing. Then he shook his head slowly.
Quaeryt could see his eyes brighten, most likely with barely unshed tears.
“I told him…” The tinsmith shook his head again. “He didn’t listen.”
“He never did,” added the redhead.
“Where is he?” asked the tinsmith. “In the patrol gaol?”
“He’s dead,” replied Quaeryt. “One of the people he tried to kill turned his spear on him.”
The older woman sniffled. Tears rolled down her cheeks.
“I’m sorry, sirs … I’m sorry…” Sheam looked helplessly at Quaeryt. “His body…?”
Quaeryt looked to Duffryt.
“It will be at the main patrol station,” said the major.
After a few more questions that revealed nothing new, Quaeryt led the others out of the shop, and they remounted.
“We’ll head back to the post now,” he announced.
Duffryt looked puzzled, but said nothing.
“What are you going to do, Governor?” asked Choryn.
“I don’t see the need to do anything more right now. If people want to wear old uniforms and praise the old times, they can do that. The one man who used a weapon is dead. Punishing others for doing that will just cause more of them to be unhappy.”