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"Well, nobody's come bothering me."

"Right." Ruso was beginning to wonder if the second spear was doing anything at all about the dead girls. At this rate Innocens would die of old age before anyone found the time to question him. "Well, if you should happen to hear anything-"

"If we get anyone around here, I'll tell them what I'm telling you. I don't want nothing to do with it."

The woman began to pound the door with the heel of her hand.

The man leaned forward to be heard over the din and said, "From what I heard, those girls were well looked after at Merula's. Compared to some of the places down the Dock road, Merula's bar is a palace. They took it into their heads to run off-" He broke off. "Will you stop that, woman? The old bat might be daft but she's not deaf!" He turned back to Ruso. leaving the wife to deliver another tirade in British. "Don't take a genius to work out what happened to them, does it?"

"I know what happened to them, and at least one of them didn't die by accident. What nobody seems to be able to find out is who did it."

"If I was you, Doctor, I'd stay out of it. You start asking too many questions, you upset people. I know who I buy from. I don't buy from murderers."

"I wasn't suggesting-"

"'Course you weren't. But you should be careful who you ask. People who go around poking into other people's business can end up in a whole lot of trouble."

"Why would anybody shelter a murderer?"

"I'm not saying they would. I'm just saying, watch out. Me, I mind my own affairs and I don't let my woman wander around this place after dark." The man rocked his stool back to lean against the wall and turned to the aforementioned woman. "Did I just hear you tell her I'd take the door down?"

The woman stabbed a finger toward Ruso. "Our money is sitting there, doing nothing!"

"Do you know how much it costs to fix a door, woman?"

Ruso rubbed his chin and decided to ask now before he or the barber drank any more of the beer. He gestured toward the shop, which since it opened westward onto the street would still catch the best of the daylight. "Any chance of a shave while I'm waiting?"

An hour or so later the patient lay on her bed in a drugged stupor, minus two disgusting black molars that had now vanished into the dusk along with her grandson. Ruso had a smooth chin, short hair, and he hadn't been bitten once.

As he closed his case he was still weighing whether to knock the cost of the haircut off the fee. Charges tended to fluctuate depending upon the means of the patient, but asking too little was as bad as asking too much. Word got around. Precedents were hard to break.

"About the fee…"

The barber frowned. "I know you had a bit of a wait, Doc. But you did have professional services during the waiting time."

"Exactly."

"The other officer told the lad it was a flat rate."

Ruso's face must have betrayed his confusion. "The other officer?"

"Old what shisname-Priscus. Up at the hospital. Recommended you very highly."

"I see."

"He said you'd got an arrangement. We pay him and he passes it on to you."

"Ah," said Ruso, "that arrangement."

Ruso strode across the paved area toward the fountain, the fall of each boot on the flagstones coinciding with the rhythm of the speech he was rehearsing for Priscus. "And exactly what right have you…?" He was distracted by a gaggle of children gathered by the steps that ran up the outside of the amphitheater. On the wall behind them he could just make out the white of a chalk scrawl announcing the forthcoming visit of L. CURTIUS SILVANUS, DEALER IN SLAVES: RELIABLE STAFF FOR THE DISCERNING EMPLOYER. Below, half a dozen children were scrabbling to peer into the hand of a boy whom he recognized as the barber's son.

"Ugh, look, there's roots!"

"Look at the blood on them!"

"Did you see the worms wriggling?"

He was passing the entrance to the oil merchant's when one of them shouted, "Hey, mister! Got a penny, mister?"

Ruso ignored him. Others joined in the chorus. He could hear their footsteps running up behind him. "Mister! Mister!"

Ruso spun on his heel and the gang stopped dead, a small and ragged bunch gathered just out of arm's reach. He pointed to the barber's son. "Does your father know you beg in the street?"

The boy hesitated, then grinned. "I know something you don't," he said.

"No doubt."

"I'll tell you, but you got to pay me first."

"Why would I do that?"

The boy glanced at his comrades, then sidled closer to Ruso. "I know something about red hair."

Ruso stared at him.

"I heard you ask. You want to know about somebody selling red hair."

"Somebody sold red hair to your father?"

The boy held out one hand, and made a show of clamping the other over his mouth.

Ruso sighed, and filched out the one meager coin inside his purse.

The boy took it and removed his hand from his mouth to let out the words, "It was a man."

"Do you know his name?"

"No."

"What sort of a man? What did he look like?"

The boy looked at his friends for support. "I don't know. He was just a man."

"Old, young, fat, thin? It's no good holding out, I haven't got any more money."

The boy frowned. "He was old."

"Was he a soldier?"

"I don't know," said the boy, backing away.

"When was this?"

The boy's friends closed around him. "He was just a man!" he called as they turned and fled.

A man. Ruso frowned at the backs of the retreating children. With a little effort civilian liaison could have found that out-and probably more-days ago. In the morning H Q would be receiving another report, and might even have to interrupt their hunting trips to go and question the barber. In the meantime, Ruso had told the boy the truth. Despite treating his second private patient in Deva, he had no cash in his purse.

Another thought struck him. Priscus's lodgings were somewhere on the east side of the town. He might be at home. According to Decimus, who was not as discreet as Albanus, the miserable old weasel had gone home to keep an appointment with his decorator.

Ruso tightened his grip on the handle of his case. Why wait for morning? He spun around. He was going to straighten out this business of the fees right now.

"Ow!"

The girl he collided with stumbled back against the wall. He made a grab to steady her and knocked something from her hand. It clanged as it hit the pavement. "Sorry," he said as the noise reverberated down the narrow street. "I didn't see you."

The girl shook off his hand and bent to retrieve the item she had dropped. "If this bloody thing's broken again, you'll pay for it. It's only just been-"

"Chloe?"

"Oh! Hullo, Doctor." Chloe held a large saucepan up for inspection.

She wiggled the handle experimentally. "Still attached. No harm done."

Ruso frowned. "Should you be wandering alone out here? It's getting dark."

He was conscious of an arm snaking around the back of his neck.

"Mm," Chloe murmured, "you never know who you might run into."

Cheap perfume wafted over him as a husky voice whispered in his ear, "Fancy a little stroll?"

"No," said Ruso's mouth before the rest of him had a chance to argue.

Chloe detached herself and shrugged. "Oh well, it was worth a try Sweet dreams, Doctor." Swinging the pan by her side, she set off in the direction of Merula's.

She had not gone ten paces when Ruso caught up with her.

"Change your mind?"

"I need to know where the street of the Weavers is."

"Ask me nicely."

"Tell me and I'll walk you back. Why didn't they send someone with you?"

"What for? I'm not going to run away, am I?"

"That wasn't what I meant," he said, falling into step with her.