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He tried to pull free, but Silk retained his grip on his sleeve. “How were you caught, Auk? What was it that you did wrong? Tell me, please, so I won’t make the same mistake.”

“You done it already, Patera.” Auk sounded apologetic. “Look here. I’d solved a few places, and I got pretty hot on myself and thought I couldn’t get caught. I had some picks, know what I mean? And I showed ’em off and called myself a master of the art, thinking Tartaros himself would pull his hat off to me. Got to where I never troubled to look things over the way a flash buck ought to.”

Auk fell silent, and Silk asked, “What was the detail you overlooked?”

“Debt, Patera.” Auk chuckled. “That don’t go with Blood, ’cause it’s not him you got to worry about.”

“Tell me anyway,” Silk insisted.

“Well, Patera, this bucko that had the house had a good lay, see? Taking care of all the shoes and such like up at Ermine’s. You know about Ermine’s? A goldboy or maybe two for supper. Gilt places like that deal on Scylsday, ’cause Sphigxday’s their plum night, see? So I gleaned once he’d got off he’d put down a few and snoodge like a soldier. If I was to flush his fussock—rouse up his wife, Patera—she’d stave her broom getting him off straw, and I’d beat the hoof to my own tune. Only he owed ’em, you see? Up to Ermine’s. They’re holding his lowre back on him, so he was straight up, or nearly. So he napped me and I owed it.”

Silk nodded.

“Now you tonight, Patera, you’re doing the same thing. You’re not flash. You don’t know who’s there or who ain’t, or how big the rooms might be, or what kind of windows. Not a pip of the scavy you got to have right in your hand.”

“You must be able to tell me something,” Silk said.

Auk adjusted the heavy hanger he wore. “The house’s a tidy stone place with a wing to each side. Three floors in ’em, and the middle’s two. When you come in the front like I did, there’s a big front room, and that’s the farthest I got. Him that told me about floors says there’s a capital cellar and another underneath. There’s guards. You saw one of that quality in my glass. And there’s a tall ass, begging your pardon, Patera. Like what I told you already.”

“Have you any idea where Blood sleeps?”

Auk shook his head, the motion scarcely visible. “But he don’t sleep a hour, nightside. The flash never do, see? His business’ll keep him out of bed till shadeup.” Sensing Silk’s incomprehension, Auk elaborated. “People coming to talk to him like I did, or the ones that work for him with their hats off so he can tell where they come from and where they’re going, Patera.”

“I see.”

Auk took the reins of the smaller donkey and mounted his own. “You got four, maybe five hours to shadeup. Then you got to get back. I wouldn’t be too close to that wall then if I was you, Patera. There might come a guard walking the top. I’ve known ’em to do that.”

“All right.” Silk nodded, reflecting that he had some ground to cover before he was near the wall at all. “Thank you again. I won’t betray you, whatever you may think; and I won’t get caught if I can help it.”

As he watched Auk ride away, Silk wondered what he had really been like as a schoolboy, and what Maytera Mint had found to say to that much younger Auk that had left so deep an impression. For Auk believed, despite his hard looks and thieves’ cant; and unlike many superficially better men, his faith was more than superstition. Scylla’s smiling picture on the wall of that dismal, barren room had not come to its place by accident. Its presence there had revealed more to Silk than Auk’s glass: deep within his being, Auk’s spirit knelt in adoration.

Inspired by the thought, Silk knelt himself, though the sharp flints of the hilltop gouged his knees. The Outsider had warned him that he would receive no aid—still, it was licit, surely, to ask help of other gods; and dark Tartaros was the patron of all who acted outside the law.

“A black lamb to you alone, kindly Tartaros, as quickly as I can afford another. Be mindful of me, who come in the service of a minor god.”

But Blood, too, acted outside the law, dealing in rust and women and even smuggled goods, or so Auk had indicated; it was more than possible that Tartaros would favor Blood.

Sighing, Silk stood, dusted off the legs of his oldest trousers, and began to pick his way down the rocky hillside. Things would be as they would be, and he had no choice but to proceed, whether with the aid of the dark god or without it. Pas the Twice-Seeing might side with him, or Scalding Scylla, who wielded more influence here than her brother. Surely Scylla would not wish the city that most honored her to lose a manteion! Encouraged, Silk scrambled along.

The faint golden lights of Blood’s house soon vanished behind the treetops, and the breeze with them. Below the hill, the air lay hot and close again, stale, and overripe with a summer protracted beyond reason.

Or perhaps not. As Silk groped among close-set trunks, with leaves crackling and twigs popping beneath his feet, he reflected that if the year had been a more normal one, this forest might now lie deep in snow, and what he was doing would be next to impossible. Could it be that this parched, overheated, and seemingly immutable season had in actuality been prolonged for his benefit?

For a few seconds the thought halted him between step and step. All this heat and sweat, for him? Poor Maytera Marble’s daily sufferings, the children’s angry rashes, the withered crops and shrinking streams?

No sooner had he had the thought than he came close to falling into the gully of one, catching hold by purest luck to a branch he could not see. Cautiously he clambered down the uneven bank, then knelt on the water-smoothed stones of the streambed to seek water with his fingers, finding none. There might be pools higher or lower, but here at least what had been a stream could be no drier.

With head cocked, he listened for the familiar music of fast-flowing water over stones. Far away a nightjar called; the harsh sound died away, and the stillness of the forest closed in once more, the hushed expectancy of the thirsting trees.

This forest had been planted in the days of the caldé (or so one of his teachers at the schola had informed him) in order that its watershed might fill the city’s wells; and though the Ayuntamiento now permitted men of wealth to build within its borders, it remained vast, stretching more than fifty leagues toward Palustria. If its streams were this dry now, how long could Viron live? Would it be necessary to build a new city, if only a temporary one, on the lakeshore?

Wishing for light as well as water, Silk climbed the opposite bank, and after a hundred strides saw through the bare, close-ranked trees the welcome gleam of skylight on dressed and polished stone.

The wall surrounding Blood’s villa loomed higher and higher as he drew nearer. Auk had indicated a height of ten cubits or so; to Silk, standing before its massive base and peering up at the fugitive glints of skylight on the points of its ominous spikes, that estimate appeared unnecessarily conservative. Somewhat discouraged already, he uncoiled the thin horsehair rope he had worn about his waist, thrust the hatchet into his waistband, tied a running noose in one end of the rope as Auk had suggested, and hurled it up at those towering points.

For a moment that seemed at least a minute, the rope hung over him like a miracle, jet black against the shining skylands, lost in blind dark where it crossed the boundless, sooty smear of the shade. A moment more, and it lay limp at his feet.

Biting his lips, he gathered it, reopened the noose, and hurled it again. Unlooked-for, the last words of the dying stableman to whom he had carried the forgiveness of the gods a week earlier returned, the summation of fifty years of toiclass="underline" “I tried, Patera. I tried.” With them, the broiling heat of the four-flight bedroom, the torn and faded horsecloths on the bed, the earthenware jug of water, and the hard end of bread (bread that some man of substance had no doubt intended for his mount) that the stableman could no longer chew.