‘Impressively droll, Bugg. So, you want to check on their hidden abode. Is that all you’re up to today?’
‘That’s just the morning. In the afternoon-’
‘Can you manage a short visit?’
‘Where?’
‘Rat Catchers’ Guild.’
‘Scale House?’
Tehol nodded. ‘I have a contract for them. I want a meeting – clandestine – with the Guild Master. Tomorrow night, if possible.’
Bugg looked troubled. ‘That guild-’
‘I know.’
‘I can drop by on my way to the gravel quarry.’
‘Excellent. Why are you going to the gravel quarry?’
‘Curiosity. They opened up a new hill to fill my last order, and found something.’
‘What?’
‘Not sure. Only that they hired a necromancer to deal with it. And the poor fool disappeared, apart from some hair and toe nails.’
‘Hmm, that
‘As always, master. And what have you planned for today?’
‘I thought I’d go back to bed.’
Brys lifted his gaze from the meticulous scroll and studied the scribe seated across from him. ‘There must be some mistake,’ he said.
‘No sir. Never, sir.’
‘Well, if these are just the reported disappearances, what about those that haven’t been reported?’
‘Between thirty and fifty per cent, I would say, sir. Added on to what we have. But those would be the blue- edged scrolls. They’re stored on the Projected Shelf.’
‘The what?’
‘Projected. That one, the one sticking out from the wall over there.’
‘And what is the significance of the blue edges?’
‘Posited realities, sir, that which exists beyond the statistics. We use the statistics for formal, public statements and pronouncements, but we operate on the posited realities or, if possible, the measurable realities.’
‘Different sets of data?’
‘Yes, sir. It’s the only way to operate an effective government. The alternative would lead to anarchy. Riots, that sort of thing. We have posited realities for those projections, of course, and they’re not pretty.’
‘But’ – Brys looked back down at the scroll – ‘seven thousand disappearances in Letheras last year?’
‘Six thousand nine hundred and twenty-one, sir.’
‘With a possible additional thirty-five hundred?’
‘Three thousand four hundred and sixty and a half, sir.’
‘And is anyone assigned to conduct investigations on these?’
‘That has been contracted out, sir.’
‘Clearly a waste of coin, then-’
‘Oh no, the coin is well spent.’
‘How so?’
‘A respectable amount, sir, which we can use in our formal and public pronouncements.’
‘Well, who holds this contract?’
‘Wrong office, sir. That information is housed in the Chamber of Contracts and Royal Charters.’
‘I’ve never heard of it. Where is it?’
The scribe rose and walked to a small door squeezed between scroll-cases. ‘In here. Follow me, sir.’
The room beyond was not much larger than a walk-in closet. Blue-edged scrolls filled cubby-holes from floor to ceiling on all sides. Rummaging in one cubby-hole at the far wall, the scribe removed a scroll and unfurled it. ‘Here we are. It’s a relatively new contract. Three years so far. Ongoing investigations, biannual reports delivered precisely on the due dates, yielding no queries, each one approved without prejudice.’
‘With whom?’
‘The Rat Catchers’ Guild.’
Brys frowned. ‘Now I am well and truly confused.’
The scribe shrugged and rolled up the scroll to put it away. Over his shoulder he said, ‘No need to be, sir. The guild is profoundly competent in a whole host of endeavours-’
‘Competence doesn’t seem a relevant notion in this matter,’ Brys observed.
‘I disagree. Punctual reports. No queries. Two renewals without challenge. Highly competent, I would say, sir.’
‘Nor is there any shortage of rats in the city, as one would readily see with even a short walk down any street.’
‘Population management, sir. I dread to think what the situation would be like without the guild.’
Brys said nothing.
A defensiveness came to the scribe’s expression as he studied the Finadd for a long moment. ‘We have nothing but praise for the Rat Catchers’ Guild, sir.’
‘Thank you for your efforts,’ Brys said. ‘I will find my own way out. Good day.’
‘And to you, sir. Pleased to have been of some service.’
Out in the corridor, Brys paused, rubbing at his eyes. Archival chambers were thick with dust. He needed to get outside, into what passed for fresh air in Letheras.
Seven thousand disappearances every year. He was appalled.
The mere thought that such a scheme might exist worried Brys. His brother had revealed, on occasion, frightening competence and ruthlessness. Tehol possessed few loyalties. He was capable of anything.
All things considered, the less Brys knew of Tehol’s activities, the better. He did not want his own loyalties challenged, and his brother might well challenge them.
Questions without answers. There seemed to be too many of those these days.
He made his way into the more familiar passages of the palace. Weapons training awaited him, and he found himself anticipating that period of blissful exhaustion. If only to silence the cacophony of his thoughts.
There were clear advantages to being dead, Bugg reflected, as he lifted the flagstone from the warehouse office floor, revealing a black gaping hole and the top rung of a pitted bronze ladder. Dead fugitives, after all, needed no food, no water. No air, come to that. Made hiding them almost effortless.
He descended the ladder, twenty-three rungs, to arrive at a tunnel roughly cut from the heavy clay and then fired to form a hard shell. Ten paces forward to a crooked stone arch beneath which was a cracked stone door crowded with hieroglyphs. Old tombs like this were rare. Most had long since collapsed beneath the weight of the city overhead or had simply sunk so far down in the mud as to be unreachable. Scholars had sought to decipher the strange sigils on the doors of the tombs, while common folk had long wondered why tombs should have doors at all. The language had only been partially deciphered, sufficient to reveal that the glyphs were curse-laden and aspected to the Errant in some mysterious way. All in all, cause enough to avoid them, especially since, after a few had been broken into, it became known that the tombs contained nothing of value, and were peculiar in that the featureless plain stone sarcophagus each tomb housed was empty. There was the added unsubstantiated rumour that those tomb-robbers had subsequently suffered horrid fates.
The door to this particular tomb had surrendered its seal to the uneven heaving descent of the entire structure. Modest effort could push it to one side.