for the best, Ladisla was insufferable. I had to dig him out of more than one scandal. Never could keep his trousers closed, the damn halfwit. Raynault seems to be a different kind of a man. Sober, sensible. Do as he’s bloody told. Better all round. Providing he doesn’t go and get himself killed, of course, we’d be in a pickle then.” Sult took another swig from his glass and worked it round his mouth with some satisfaction.
Glokta cleared his throat.
But Sult was ahead of him once again. “I know. An Eater.”
“Who gives advice about such things as these?” The Arch Lector only flashed his silky smile. “You must be tired. The weather over there can be so very draining. All that heat and dust, even in the winter. Take a rest. You deserve it. I’ll send for you if anything comes up.” And Sult took up his pen and looked back to his papers, leaving Glokta with nothing to do but shuffle for the door, a look of profound puzzlement on his face. “You almost look like you’re still alive,” muttered Vitari as he hobbled out into the anteroom.
“He damn well should be, after the talking-up I gave you.”
“Huh.” Glokta frowned. “It seems I owe you an apology.”
“Keep it. It isn’t worth shit to me. Just trust me next time.”
“A fair demand,” he conceded, glancing sideways at her.
The chamber was filled with fine furniture.
“Good,” said Glokta as he looked round. “Very good.”
“Of course,” muttered Fallow, head bowed respectfully, hat halfway to being crushed in his hands. “Of course, Superior, I have done everything possible. Most of the furniture I had… I had sold already, and so I replaced with better, the best I could find. The rest of the house is just the same. I hope that… I hope that it’s adequate?”
“I hope so too. Is it adequate?”
Ardee was scowling at Fallow. “It will serve.”
“Excellent,” said the moneylender nervously, glancing briefly at Frost and then down at his boots. “Excellent! Please accept my very deepest apologies! I had no idea, of course, absolutely no idea, Superior, that you were involved in any way. Of course, I would never… I am so very sorry.”
“It really isn’t me you should be apologising to, is it?”
“No, no, of course.” He turned slowly to Ardee. “My lady, please accept my deepest apologies.”
Ardee glared at him, lip curled, and said nothing.
“Perhaps if you were to beg,” suggested Glokta. “On your knees. That might do it.”
Fallow dropped to his knees without hesitation. He wrung his hands “My lady, please—”
“Lower,” said Glokta.
“Of course,” he muttered as he fell to all fours. “I do apologise, my lady. Most humbly. If you could only find it in your heart, I beg you—” He reached out gingerly to touch the hem of her dress and she jerked back, then swung her foot and kicked him savagely in the face.
“Gah!” squawked the moneylender, rolling onto his side, dark blood bubbling out of his nose and all over the new carpet. Glokta felt his brows go up.
“That’s for you, fucker!” The next kick caught him in the mouth and his head snapped back, spots of blood spattering onto the far wall. Ardee’s shoe thudded into his gut and folded him up tight.
“You,” she snarled, “you…” She kicked him again and again and Fallow shuddered and grunted and sighed, curling up in a ball. Frost moved away from the wall a step, and Glokta held up his finger.
“That’s alright,” he murmured, “I think she has it covered.”
The kicks began to slow. Glokta could hear Ardee gasping for air. Her heel dug into Fallow’s ribs, her toe cracked into his nose again.
“Happy?” asked Glokta.
She stared up at him through her tangled hair. “Not really.”
“Will kicking him some more make you happier?”
Her brows wrinkled as she looked down at Fallow, wheezing on his side on the carpet. She took a step forward and booted him hard in the chest one more time, rocked away, wiping some snot from under her nose. She pushed her hair out of her face. “I’m done.”
“Fine. Get out,” hissed Glokta. “Out, worm!”
“Of course,” Fallow drooled through his bloody lips, crawling for the door, Frost looming over him the whole way. “Of course! Thank you! Thank you all so much!” The front door banged shut.
Ardee sat down heavily in one of the chairs, elbows resting on her knees, forehead resting on her palms. Glokta could see her hands trembling slightly.
She looked up, and her eyes were hard. “I don’t. He deserves worse.”
She swallowed, slowly sat back. “No.”
“Up to you.”
She looked down. “Oh.” Spots of Fallow’s blood were spattered as far as her knees. “I don’t have anything —”
“There’s a room full of new ones, upstairs. I made sure of it. I’ll arrange for some dependable servants as well.”
“I don’t need them.”
“Yes, you do. I won’t hear of you here alone.”
She shrugged her shoulders hopelessly. “I have nothing to pay them with.”
“Don’t worry. I’ll take care of it.”
Ardee looked up sharply, her mouth slightly open. “You don’t know?”
“Know what?”
She swallowed, and stared down at the floor. “Collem was with Prince Ladisla, at this battle that everyone is talking of. Some prisoners were taken, have been ransomed—he wasn’t among them. They presume…” She paused for a moment, staring at the blood on her dress. “They presume he was killed.”
“Killed?” Glokta’s eyelid fluttered. His knees felt suddenly weak. He took a lurching step back and sank into a chair. His own hands were trembling now, and he clasped them together.