“Wasn’t his sel-sense he lost, just his freedom. He’s a deviant, Captain Falston. He didn’t mean to, but he caused that explosion, and he was sent to the Bone Tower to figure out just how that trick of his worked.”
Falston sucked air through his two front teeth, gapped just like his little girl’s, and stared at the silty bottom of his empty glass. Latia scurried to refill it. He took another long draw. “Heard rumors of that nature. Never counted ‘em for much.”
“And?” she pressed, stomach sinking.
“Heard rumors of the Bone Tower, too, and those I thought likely enough. Nasty shit, there. Is it true?”
“Worse than the rumors know.”
“Pitsdamn. What is our Dame doing, letting those vipers in her house?”
Ripka shook her head. She wasn’t quite sure she knew herself, but the last thing she wanted was the watchers turning against their Dame now, when everything was on the line.
“Couldn’t rightly tell you. I think they got into her head, Detan told me–” She had to clear her throat. “–told me they talked her up with ideas of curing him, of making him safe again. I think she bought it all. Regrets it now, more than like, but he hasn’t been home since he went to that tower. I don’t know that they ever talked about it.” Her gaze tracked to the window, toward the blown head of the firemount. “Bet they’re talking about it now.”
“What in the fiery pits is he doing back here, then, if his power’s so unstable? I’d want to stay far away from firemounts, in his position.”
Tibal snorted, and Ripka cut him a look. Falston might be tired and a touch drunk, but he picked up on it in an instant. “What’s that you’ve got to say then, man?”
“Now’s not the time for this,” Ripka urged.
“Pits it isn’t.” Falston set his glass down and gripped his knees with both hands as he leaned forward. “You’re telling me a mountain of a tale, Captain. I got a lot of respect for you, you know that, but something this big, I gotta make sure I see all the faces. Tell your part then, man.”
Tibal nudged back his ashy hat and frowned at them both. “Detan was a friend of mine, long time now. Just reckoning that he ain’t ever been known for his sense.”
Falston grimaced. “All that power, and no sense? We got to get him the pits out of this city.”
She could see the notion dancing around in his red-webbed, glassy eyes. Quick as he said the words, his mind caught up with the possibility. If they couldn’t get him out safely, they’d have to kill him. To protect the city. After tonight’s demonstration, Ripka’d be thinking the same thing if their roles were reversed. If Detan had so much as made the firemount of Aransa hiccup while she’d been the city’s watch-captain, she’d put an arrow in his eye and mourn the loss as necessary for the greater good.
Even now, she didn’t know the man’s state of mind. Had only her own intuition and experience with him to rely upon, but she had to believe he hadn’t done tonight’s damage on purpose. The man she’d known, the man she knew, would rather run than risk an innocent. Which meant he was cornered so hard he had nowhere to flee.
“He’s a prisoner,” she said slowly, rolling every word over in her mind before she spoke. “What happened tonight? That was his doing, but not his will.”
“You can’t promise that,” Falston protested. “He’s a Honding. Solid leaders, but known for their tempers.”
She couldn’t promise him, not really, and it tore her up right to the core. She struggled with something else to say, something to convince the man that keeping Detan safe – and getting him away from his captors – was the best possible course of action. But every one of those paths was a lie, and the words died halfway to her lips.
Silence stretched, and with every passing moment an empty maw inside her grew, gnawing up her hope and her sympathy. Removing Detan – assassinating Detan – was the best thing for this city. Thratia wouldn’t have her pawn, her weapon, and the city’d be safe from his outbursts. It made terrible, terrible sense.
“I promise it,” Tibal said.
He pushed his hat all the way back so the room could see his eyes, the mudcrack fractures of wrinkles radiating from the corners. In the dim candlelight, caked all over with the dust of rubble, he seemed older. Ancient. Something in the sharp edge of his wiry jaw reminded her of Dame Honding when she was putting on her game face.
“Forgive me, sir.” Falston swung around to face Tibal. “But who the pits are you to guarantee such a thing?”
Tibal thought a moment, lips pursing as he chewed over an answer. “His friend. And that’s all that should thrice-damned matter.”
He cut Ripka a glance that made her wince. “Tibal’s right. Doesn’t matter what Thratia’s done to him, Detan’s no killer. He’s a prisoner, and he needs our help. I’ve no doubt he’s planning to undermine Thratia before this is all done. He’ll need the watch’s help, too.”
Falston leaned back, wicker creaking, and stared hard at Tibal for a while. If he saw the family resemblance, diluted though it was, he didn’t say anything. Just chucked back the rest of his drink and nodded.
“Right, then. We have an awful lot to plan, and very little time. When do you lot suppose he’ll make his move?”
Tibal snort-laughed. “The wedding, no doubt. Damn fool likes an audience for his self-diagnosed cleverness.”
“Hmm.” Falston stroked his whiskers and frowned. “Watch is looking kind of thin lately, and the wedding’ll draw out a big crowd. Hard to keep our corners covered, especially with a chunk of the inner wall down.”
“Wedding’s a week out,” Ripka offered. “Not a lot of time to train, but we could get some bodies on board all the same.”
Dranik jumped to his feet. “A citizen’s brigade!”
Falston frowned. “A what now?”
“Citizen’s brigade,” he over-pronounced each word as he paced, rubbing his raw hands together. “After the quake tonight, it should be no trouble to get people interested in joining up to protect their neighborhoods. Tell them it’s a preparedness plan, in case of emergencies natural and political. They’ll get it, I’m sure. So many people in this city are just looking for a way to help it themselves. They love their homes, Captain. Let them throw in.”
“And how would we go about getting the word out about something like that?”
Dranik beamed from ear-to-ear. “The forum, of course. Tomorrow is a free speech day, you won’t even have to sign up in advance, Ripka.”
“Me?” She coughed on a drop of wine gone down wrong. “Need I remind you I’m a fugitive of the palace?”
“Bah,” he waved a hand, “everyone around here’s heard of the watch-captain of Aransa. And I bet Captain Lakon’s watchers will be just too busy with the rebuilding effort to go after you. Isn’t that right, Captain?”
Falston grinned. “Better her up there than me.”
Chapter Forty-Three
Coss insisted she was being paranoid, but what in the Black did he know? The crew avoided her. Barely spoke to her. Kept their eyes averted every time she passed. She might be a sick woman in both bone and brain, but she wasn’t stupid. Never that. Paranoia ran in her blood but it didn’t own her. Nothing did. Not even the land that’d birthed her.
She reveled in the silence of the light step she’d spent her whole life cultivating as she paced back and forth across her cabin, back and forth, hands clasped tight behind the small of her back, head pointed down. She wasn’t foolish enough to risk catching another glimpse of her naked face in the mirror, not after what she’d seen last time. Her mother’s face, staring back at her, young again and eyes bright with the madness that had taken her grandmother to her grave. Sweating and raving and beating her breasts.