scrawny when compared to Hull. As the middle son, I of course represent the perfect balance. Wit, physical prowess and a multitude of talents to match my natural grace. When combined with my extraordinary ability to waste it all, you see, standing before you, the exquisite culmination.’
‘A fine and pathetic speech,’ Bugg said with a nod.
‘It was, wasn’t it? I shall be on my way now.’ Tehol gestured as he walked to the ladder. ‘Clean up the place. We might have guests this evening.’
‘I will, if I find the time.’
Tehol paused at the ragged edge of the section of roof that had collapsed. ‘Ah yes, you have trousers to make – have you enough wool for that?’
‘Well, I can make one leg down all the way, or I can make both short.’
‘How short?’
‘Pretty short.’
‘Go with the one leg.’
‘Aye, master. And then I have to find us something to eat. And drink.’
Tehol turned, hands on his hips. ‘Haven’t we sold virtually everything, sparing one bed and a lone stool? So, just how much tidying up is required?’
Bugg squinted. ‘Not much,’ he conceded. ‘What do you want we should eat tonight?’
‘Something that needs cooking.’
‘Would that be something better when cooked, or something that has to be cooked?’
‘Either way’s fine.’
‘How about wood?’
‘I’m not eating-’
‘For the hearth.’
‘Oh, right. Well, find some. Look at that stool you’re sitting on – it doesn’t really need all three legs, does it? When scrounging doesn’t pay, it’s time to improvise. I’m off to meet my three destinies, Bugg. Pray the Errant’s looking the other way, will you?’
‘Of course.’
Tehol made his way down the ladder, discovering, in a moment of panic, that only one rung in three remained.
The ground-level room was bare except for a thin mattress rolled up against one wall. A single battered pot rested on the hearth’s flatstone, which sat beneath the front-facing window, a pair of wooden spoons and bowls on the floor nearby. All in all, Tehol reflected, elegant in its severity.
He swung aside the ratty curtain that served as a door, reminding himself to tell Bugg to retrieve the door latch from the hearth-bed. A bit of polishing and it might earn a dock or two from Cusp the Tinkerer. Tehol stepped outside.
He was in a narrow aisle, so narrow he was forced to sidle sideways out to the street, kicking rubbish aside with each step.
The street beyond was empty save for three Nerek, a mother and two half-blood children, who’d found in the recessed niche in the wall opposite a new home and seemed to do nothing but sleep. He strode past their huddled forms, kicking at a rat that had been edging closer, and threaded his way between the high-stacked wooden crates that virtually blocked this end of the street. Biri’s warehouse was perpetually overstocked, and Biri viewed the last reach of Cul Street this side of Quillas Canal as his own personal compound.
Chalas, the watchman of the yard, was sprawled on a bench on the other side, where Cul opened out onto Burl Square, his leather-wrapped clout resting on his thighs. Red-shot eyes found Tehol. ‘Nice skirt,’ the guard said.
‘You’ve lightened my step, Chalas.’
‘Happy to oblige, Tehol.’
Tehol paused, hands on hips, and surveyed the crowded square. ‘The city thrives.’
‘No change there… exceptin’ the last time.’
‘Oh, that was a minor sideways tug, as far as currents go.’
‘Not to hear Biri talk of it. He still wants your head salted and in a barrel rolling out to sea.’
‘Biri always did run in place.’
Chalas grunted. ‘It’s been weeks since you last came down. Special occasion?’
‘I have a date with three women.’
‘Want my clout?’
Tehol glanced down and studied the battered weapon. ‘I wouldn’t want to leave you defenceless.’
‘It’s my face scares ’em away. Exceptin’ those Nerek. Got past me, those ones did.’
‘Giving you trouble?’
‘No. The rat count’s way down, in fact. But you know Biri.’
‘Better than he knows himself. Remind him of that, Chalas, if he starts thinking of giving them trouble.’
‘I will.’
Tehol set out, winding through the seething press in the square. The Down Markets opened out onto it from three sides; a more decrepit collection of useless items for sale Tehol had yet to see. And the people bought in a frenzy, day after blessed day.
He reached the other side, entered Red Lane. Thirty strides on and he came opposite the arched entrance to Huldo’s. Down the shadowed walkway and back into the courtyard’s sunlight. A half-dozen tables, all occupied. Repose for the blissfully ignorant or those without the coin to sample the pits in Huldo’s inner sanctum, where various sordid activities were conducted day and night, said activities occasionally approaching the artistic expression of the absurd. One more example, Tehol reflected, of what people would pay for, given the chance.
The three women at a table in the far corner stood out for not just the obvious detail – they were the only women present – but for a host of subtler distinctions.
The one on the left was red-haired, the fiery tresses sun-bleached and hanging in reluctant ripples down onto her broad shoulders. She was drinking from a clay-wrapped bottle, disdaining or perhaps not understanding the function of the cup that had accompanied it. Her face belonged to a heroic statue lining a colonnade, strong and smooth and perfect, her blue eyes casting a stony regard with the serene indifference of all such statues. Next to her, and leaning with both forearms on the small tabletop, was a woman with a hint of Faraed blood in her, given the honeyed hue of her skin and the faint up-tilt of her dark eyes. Her hair was either dark brown or black, and had been tied back, leaving clear her heart-shaped face. The third woman sat slouched back in her chair, left leg tipped out to one side, the right incessantly jittering up and down – fine legs, Tehol observed, clad in tight rawhide, tanned very nearly white. Her head was shaved, the pale skin gleaming. Wide-set, light grey eyes lazily scanning the other patrons, finally coming to rest on Tehol where he stood at the courtyard’s threshold.
He smiled.
She sneered.
Urul, Huldo’s chief server, edged out from a nearby shadow and beckoned Tehol over.
He came as close as he dared. ‘You’re looking… well, Urul. Is Huldo here?’
The man’s need for a bath was legendary. Patrons gave their orders with decisive brevity and rarely called Urul over for more wine until the meal was finished. He stood before Tehol now, brow gleaming with oily sweat, hands fidgeting over the wide sash of his belt. ‘Huldo? No, Errant be praised. He’s on the Low Walk at the Drownings. Tehol, those women – they’ve been here all morning! They frighten me, the way they scowl whenever I get close.’
‘Leave them to me, Urul,’ Tehol said, risking a pat on the man’s damp shoulder.
‘You?’
‘Why not?’ With that, Tehol adjusted his skirt, checked his sleeves, and threaded his way between the tables.