'No,' Benard lied.
'You are to ask for Poppy Delight and say Mist sent you. And if it really is a brothel, you come straight back here, Benard Celebre!'
'That would attract suspicion. Maybe you should send the packleader instead.'
A hint of Ingeld metal glinted through the meekness paint. 'No,' she said.
¦
Tryfors was ugly, petrified childhood nightmares. Walled cities were rare, relics of far-off days before Weru founded His cult of Heroes, or at least of days almost as ancient when savage hill tribes had not yet been brought to know the benefits of civilization. Tryfors retained only fragments of its ancient fortifications, but it still had a grim, fortresslike air. Its buildings were single-story slabs of somber gray stone, without cornices or pilasters or any other decoration, and that day all the windows were'shut-tered against the rain.
Werists were everywhere on the streets, but not all wore Satrap Therek's orange. Benard also saw Horold's purple, and although those men were not necessarily from Kosord itself, running into Cutrath or his friends would bring disaster. He must complete his mission quickly and leave.
He also saw many Florengians, because slaves had been cheap in Tryfors until the trade dried up. He expected them to be a ready source of information, but in practice this was not quite true. Checking that his hood hid his ears, he fell into step beside a white-haired man pushing a barrow. 'Which way to Sixty Ways, brother?'
The carter rolled his eyes. 'Man! That's not for the likes of us.'
'Got lucky. Master pleased with me.'
'Or mistress tired of you?'
'She never tires of me, man.'
That won a scornful laugh. 'Chickens'll all be roosting, man! Left at the grain exchange, bear right to the temple of Nula, go up the steps beside the—' And so on.
On his third attempt, Benard learned that the house he sought was near the palace and guessed that the palace was the building with the tower. That brought him close, and two more inquiries led him to a door under a crudely painted sign, not artistic but explicit. He reached for the equally explicit bronze knocker, and the door swung open.
'Enter, Master Artist Celebre,' said the seer.
¦
She led him through silent corridors and several doors, down into a cellar and back up again, until he was certain they had moved into another building. Eventually they came to a small room lit only by a crackling fire and furnished with two stools, a couple of wicker hampers, and a sleeping platform much too narrow to suit the uses of Sixty Ways. The shutters were closed; several garments hung on nails. The place smelled of herbs and old lady, and now, no doubt, of wet Benard. Producing a towel from a hamper, his hostess bade him remove his cape and be seated. By the time she returned, he was steaming happily. She closed the door and handed him a beaker of a hot, spicy beverage.
'We have important business to discuss, master.'
'I was told to ask for Poppy Delight.'
'I am Poppy. The other is a code.' She was small, slightly stooped, but alert in her movements, businesslike. She sat on the edge of a stool and folded spidery hands in her lap.
'Mist sent me,' he told her featureless white veil.
'I guessed as much—sometimes even we have to rely on inference. But
He took a sip of wine while he considered this remarkable speech. 'I'm not sure.' Something about a woman without a face? He did not feel the same unease with Poppy. 'Because I thought that she was not being honest with me.'
'Tell me, please.'
He told of the seer's warning in the Bull Concourse, back in Kosord.
'Mist must be careful!' Poppy said sharply. 'The division in our cult is deep and bitter. I tell you, Hand, that there are five Witnesses in Tryfors just now and all of us are Mist supporters. That did not happen by chance. We and certain others seek the overthrow of the bloodlord and all his house—are you not on our side?'
Could seers be
'Sides do not attract me. The war does not interest me. I will do anything in the world to defend the woman I love and our unborn child.' He smiled apologetically. 'That done, I would also help my sister escape forced marriage to the worm Cutrath.'
'Horoldson left town two days ago for the mustering at Nardalborg. The weather upcountry is very bad, and he is now beyond my sight anyway. Who is the woman you adore so greatly? She is beyond my range.'
Herded by sharp questions, Benard told how he had fled with Ingeld, how Saltaja and Fabia would soon arrive at Tryfors, and how Ingeld believed her husband to be on his way, also. Something about Witness Poppy reminded him of his deportment teacher back in the palace of Kosord—polite, gracious, and inflexible as marble. She had never failed to cuff any juvenile ear in need of cuffing.
'Things may be coming to a head at last,' this other old lady mused, 'if both Saltaja Hragsdor and Horold Hragson are coming here, to Therek. Or may not be. Opportunities for good or evil are equally manifest. I fear Saltaja more than either of her brothers, and a gathering of all three of them is a baleful development. I shall be happy when Mist arrives and takes charge.'
None of which meant anything, but Benard's suspicions had been softened by wine and warmth. A seer would