The four nodded, and Mareshe began to explain the limitations of life in Elantris as he divided the food. Raoden watched for a moment, then turned away to think.
"Sule, my hama would love you. She always complained that I don't get enough exercise." Raoden looked up as Galladon strode into the room. "Welcome back, my friend," Raoden said with a smile. "I was beginning to
worry.
Galladon snorted. "I didn't see you worrying when you shoved me out into that courtyard. Seen worms on hooks treated more kindly. Kolo?"
"Ah, but you made such fantastic bait," Raoden said. "Besides, it worked. We got the newcomers, and you appear remarkably bruise-free."
"A state of being that is most likely a source of grand displeasure to Shaor's dogs."
"How did you escape them?" Raoden asked, handing Galladon the loaf of bread he had grabbed for the Dula. Galladon regarded it, then ripped it in half and offered one part to Raoden, who held up his hand forestallingly.
Galladon shrugged an 'okay, starve if it suits you" shrug, and began to gnaw on the loaf. "Ran into a building with a collapsed set of stairs, then went out the back door," he explained between mouthfuls. "I threw some rocks up onto the roof when Shaor's men entered. After what you did to them the other day. they just assumed I was up there. They're probably stiIl sitting there waiting for me."
"Smooth," Raoden said.
"Somebody didn't leave me much choice."
Galladon continued to eat in quiet. listening to the newcomers discuss their various "important duties." "You going to tell all of them that?" he asked in a quiet voice.
"What's that?"
"The newcomers, sule. You made them all think they are of vital importance. just like Mareshe. Shoes are nice, but not a matter of life and death."
Raoden shrugged. "People do a better job when they assume they're important."
Galladon was quiet for another short moment before speaking again. "They're right."
'Who?"
"The other gangs. You are starting your own gang."
Raoden shook his head. "Galladon, that is just a tiny part of it. No one accomplishes anything in Elantris-they're all either too busy squabbling over food or contemplating their misery. The city needs a sense of purpose."
"We're dead. sule," Galladon said. "What purpose can we have besides suffering?"
"That's exactly the problem. Everyone's convinced that their lives are over just because their hearts stopped beating."
"That's usually a pretty good indication, sule." Galladon said dryly.
"Not in our case, my friend. We need to convince ourselves that we can go on. The Shaod isn't causing all the pain here-I've seen people on the outside lose hope too, and their souls end up just as emaciated as those poor wretches in the square. If we can restore even a tiny bit of hope to these people, then their lives will improve drastically." He emphasized the word "lives." looking Galladon right in the eyes.
"The other gangs aren't just going to sit around and watch you steal all their offerings, sule," Galladon said. "They're going to get tired of you very quickly." "Then I'll just have to be ready for them." Raoden nodded toward the large
building around them. "This will make a rather good base of operations, wouldn't you say? It has this open room in the middle, with all of those smaller ones at the back."
Galladon squinted upward. "You could have picked a building with a roof." "Yes, I know," Raoden replied. "But this one suits my purpose. I wonder what it used to be."
"A church," Galladon said. "Korathi."
"How do you know?" Raoden asked with surprise.
"Has the feel, sule."
"Why would there be a Korathi church in Elantris?" Raoden argued. "The Elantrians were their own gods."
"But they were very lenient gods. There was supposed to be a grand Korathi chapel here in Elantris, the most beautiful of its kind. It was built as an offering of friendship to the people of Teod."
"That seems so odd," Raoden said with a shake of his head. "Gods of one religion building a monument to Domi."
"Like I said. The Elantrians were very lax gods. They didn't really care if the people worshipped them-they were secure in their divinity. Until the Reod came along. Kolo?"
"You seem to know quite a bit, Galladon," Raoden noted.
"And since when has that been a sin?" Galladon said with a huff. "You've lived in Kae all your life, sule. Maybe instead of asking why I know these things, you should wonder why you don't."
"Point taken," Raoden said, glancing to the side. Mareshe was still deeply involved in his explanation of an Elantrian's danger-fraught life. -Iie's not going to be done anytime soon. Come on, there's something I want to do."
"Does it involve running?" Galladon asked in a pained voice.
"Only if they spot us."
Raoden recognized Aanden. It was difficult to see-the Shaod brought profound changes-but Raoden had a knack for faces. The so-called Baron of Elantris was a short man with a sizable paunch and a long drooping mustache that was obviously fake. Aanden did not look noble-of course, few noblemen Raoden knew looked very aristocratic.
Regardless, Aanden was no baron. The man before Raoden, seated on a throne of gold and presiding over a court of sickly-looking Elantrians, had been called Taan. He had been one of Kae's finest sculptors before the Shaod took him, but he had not been of noble blood. Of course, Raoden's own father had been nothing more than a simple trader until chance had made him king. In Elantris, Taan had apparently taken advantage of a similar opportunity.
The years in Elantris had not been kind to Taan. The man was blubbering incoherently to his court of rejects.
"He's mad?" Raoden asked, crouched outside the window they were using to spy on Aanden's court.
"We each have our own way of dealing with death, sule," Galladon whispered. "The rumors say Aanden's insanity was a conscious decision. They say that after being thrown into Elantris he looked around and said, 'There's no way I can face this sane.' After that, he declared himself Baron Aanden of Elantris and began giving orders."
"And people follow him?"
"Some do," Galladon whispered with a shrug. "He may be mad, bur so is the rest of the world-at least, to the eyes of one who's been thrown in here. Kolo? Aanden is a source of authority. Besides, maybe he was a baron on the outside."
"He wasn't. He was a sculptor."
"You knew him?"
"I met him once," Raoden said with a nod. Then he looked back at Galladon with inquisitive eyes. "Where did you hear the rumors about him?"
"Can we move back first, sule?" Galladon requested. "I'd rather not end up a participant in one of Aanden's mock trials and executions."
"Mock?"
"Everything's mock but the axe."
"Ah. Good idea-I've seen all I needed to."
The two men moved back, and as soon as they were a few streets away from the university, Galladon answered Raoden's question. "I talk to people. sule; that's where I get my information. Granted, the great majority of the city's people are Hoed, but there're enough conscious ones around to talk with. Of course, my mouth is what got me in trouble with you. Maybe if I'd kept it shut I'd still be sitting on those steps enjoying myself, rather than spying on one of the most dangerous men in the city."
"Perhaps," Raoden said. "But you wouldn't be having half as much fun. You'd be chained to your boredom."
"I'm so glad you liberated me, sule."
"Anytime."
Raoden thought as they walked, crying to decide on a plan of action should Aanden ever come looking for him. It hadn't taken Raoden long to adjust to walking on Elantris's uneven, slime-covered streets; his still painful toe was a wonderful motivator. He was actually beginning to regard the dun-colored walls and grime as normal, which bothered him much more than the city's dirtiness ever had.