'I-and Maeve,' the Gur added in return for the wizardess's sharp kick under the table, 'Maeve and me have compassed the whole of the place on this sheet. See this here'-he jabbed at a scratch mark on the sheet-'be the main gate, and that little mark there is their postern. Guard walks are here and go around in this fashion.' The finger drew out the path on the sheet. 'This cup and knife is kept in the tower-'

'I know, I saw it. Catchpoles?'

'The watch don't patrol the area heavy, according to the locals. They leave it to the priests to mind the peace.'

'Good. What about spells and locks, Maeve?'

'Well, Pinch, love, I couldn't get a good read on the spells.' Maeve looked down, sheepish that she hadn't been able to fulfill her role. 'Those priests are awful leery. Felt like the standard set of wards on the doors and windows, but I'd wager the walls ain't guarded that way. Probably rely on watchmen for that.'

'Beasts?'

'No scent, no track,' Therin said.

'Well, thank Mask for that.' Pinch leaned back and considered the map before speaking again. 'Looks like it'll be a climbing job,' he finally decided with disgust. Any hope of an easier way was dashed by the map laid out before him. 'Sprite, it'll be you and me. We'll need rope and dark clothes.'

The halfling spit a wad of something onto the floor and nodded.

'Therin, Maeve-get yourselves back to the palace. Get word to Cleedis that I need his package tonight. He'll find us across the square from the temple. Understood?'

'Aye, Pinch.'

'Well then, summon up the landlord and get us more drink,' Pinch ordered with grim cheer. 'We're out to do some breaking tonight.'

14

Night Work

The nightly steam was curling into the square from the streets and arcades. It was a thin mist but full of the flavor of fish grease and onions, bad cheese and night slops. Pinch didn't mind the stink where he sat, nestled in a dark corner. Sprite squatted at his feet, playing with his- dagger in the dust. The watch had come by twice already, calling the hours past midnight. Beyond the constables, men to be studiously avoided, the square was barely alive with the dregs of the night trade-drunken sailors vainly searching for the docks, noodle vendors closing up their carts, festhall ladies returning from assignations, and rakes prowling the ways for a fight. Pinch amused himself by picking out the foins and cutpurses among the dwindling revelers. They were easy enough to spot for a man who knew how to look: men who traveled in groups and pretended not to know each other, who circled around their mark like vultures in the sky.

Pinch watched his brothers as they watched their prey, always observant but never looking. He watched them with an idle professional interest, hoping to see a strike or a swindle new to him. Of particular interest was a trio of cardsharps who set up their game on the temple steps. It was a poor choice of place, with no privacy or distracting drink, which only meant this lot was a scrounging crew. The setter lured a coney in, the verser dealt him the cards, and the barnacle, the third, egged their mark on. Even from a distance, Pinch could see the verser was an amateur. He fumbled a chopped card so badly that only the quick thinking of the barnacle kept their coney from getting suspicious. It was clear that, at least on the basis of professional interest, there was nothing to be learned from these three.

Perhaps if Pinch had not been so absorbed by the antics of the card players, he might have noticed another soul hovering at the edge of the square-but perhaps not. There was little to note, just the bend of a low-hanging branch and the way a cur kept itself far from a certain spot as it prowled the plaza. It was not that Pinch was supposed to know that invisible eyes lay upon him.

Cleedis came skulking though the darkest part of the alley as had been arranged by messenger. Pinch winced, purely from professional concern, as the old warrior stumbled over the hidden snares of the alley. Prudently the rogue had arranged their meeting beyond the range of the temple guards' hearing or suspicion. The rogue nodded to his companion and the halfling obligingly melted from sight.

No greeting was said between them, the old man's impulse to talk shushed by Pinch's admonishing finger. Cleedis handed over a bag of lusterless black and Pinch wasted no time in unwrapping the cord. Inside were the false treasures passed on by the late Manferic.

Pinch nodded in satisfaction and then steered Cleedis farther into the darkness of the alley.

'Now, tell Manferic to keep his pet jailers away from me,' he hissed into the old man's warty ear, 'or there'll be no job tonight or ever.'

The chamberlain squinched up his face in indignation. 'Don't you make threats to me, you bastard knave! The Morninglord's priests would still like to roast you- or have you forgotten?'

Pinch answered with a smile in his voice. 'I forget nothing. It's just that I think now they are more likely to suspect you than me. Be sure of your threats, old man.'

'I–I don't understand,' Cleedis weakly stammered, unbalanced by this rapid upheaval of roles. He was supposed to be the threatener, the blackmailer, not Pinch. 'What pet?' It was a weak stall, but all the flustered courtier could assemble.

'In the tunnels,' Pinch snarled.

'You've been beneath the palace?'

'I met Ikrit there. He tried to flail the husk off me.'

'Ikrit-' Cleedis choked, holding back a gasp, '- lives?'

Pinch stepped closer, pinning the old man along the alley wall. He could sense the advantage slipping his way. 'And some lady. Why do they hunt me?'

'Lady? There was a lady?… I don't know,' the nobleman floundered.

'You are a poor deceiver, Cleedis.'

'Perhaps it was a prisoner from long ago. You know Manferic-people who angered him tended to disappear.'

'But you know about Ikrit.' The rogue wasn't about to let his catch slip from the hook.

'It was just that… that was so long ago. I was surprised to hear the creature was still alive.'

'And the woman? She took great interest in me.'

'I don't know. Can you describe her?'

'No. Who is she?'

Cleedis found his backbone and became defiant. 'I can't tell you. There were so many. It could have been a scullery maid who broke a prized dish, for all I know. There were times when whole staffs disappeared because Manferic was convinced they'd tried to poison him.'

'Hmmph. I just thought he had them executed.'

'He did at first. Later, death was not enough for him. He let the quaggoths hunt prisoners in those tunnels while he watched through a scrying ball.'

That matched Pinch's images of his guardian. 'So you're saying this woman was part of one of his hunts?'

The old man nodded with a suggestive leer. 'I would guess she had charms or maybe spells to please Ikrit.'

Pinch thought on this. It had the ring of those tales like Duric the Fool-too implausible to be real-but there was a chance it was true the way Duric's tales were sometimes real under a different name.

'When I get back, old man, we will talk more.' It was not threat or promise, but the cold assurance that this matter was not done. Before the other could challenge his claim, Pinch took the bag and abandoned the chamberlain to the wet darkness.

'What was that all on?' Sprite probed as Pinch rejoined him and they slipped along the shadows of the square. 'Ladies and tunnels and what.'

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