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“You have friends down here?” Tylar asked Rogger.

“Aye… as well as anyone could have friends in Punt.”

Delia slunk closer to them. Dressed in her finery, she was as out of place as a diamond in a sow’s ear. Throughout their long flight, he had tried to get her to flee, to head back to Summer Mount.

Her answer was always the same: “I have nothing back there. All I cherish is tied to you.”

He hadn’t pushed too hard. He had a thousand questions he wanted answered, and she seemed to know more than she let on.

But the handmaiden wasn’t the only one with secrets.

Tylar watched as Rogger led the way now, heading toward whatever low friends he knew down here. He remembered the thief’s shout as his sword hand was pulped under the hammer, repeating words supposedly spoken by himself in ancient Littick.

Agee wan clyy… nee wan dred ghawl.

Break the bone… and free the dark spirit.

After what happened, the truth of those words could not be denied. There was clearly more to this bearded thief than lice and larceny.

Rogger wended down byways and crawl throughs. Here the walls ran thick with black mold, and the buildings tilted drunkenly. Windows, when not broken, were shuttered tight against the night. The trio had to fight through piles of refuse, chasing rats and dire vermin from underfoot. The air reeked of fetid humours, blood and bile of every ilk.

As they marched, Delia paled even further. With her black-daubed lips and dark hazel eyes, she looked like some risen ghoul, fresh from the grave. Her dress was soiled and clung heavily to her. She had long shed her lace cap, revealing black hair, lanky and loose to her shoulders.

Occasionally some scabber would spy at them from afar, but Tylar kept his sword in plain sight. None could mistake the weapon… nor the stripes on his face.

Let them think me a knight if it will hold the worst at bay.

But Tylar suspected there was a clearer reason they passed the narrows unmolested. The underfolk had an uncanny ability to pass information from one mouth to another. The creatures of Punt knew a godslayer walked their streets and stayed away.

Delia spoke at his side, her voice soft and concerned. “Are you hurt?”

Tylar glanced to her as he walked, the confusion plain on his face. Was she asking if there were any repercussions from his torture?

“You’re limping,” she said, nodding to his gait. “And hunched oddly.”

Tylar straightened. Distracted, he hadn’t even noticed himself falling into old patterns, moving as if his body were still broken. He continued onward, forcing himself to walk more evenly.

Rogger cocked an eyebrow at him. “Your bones may be healed, but I ’spect it’ll take a bit longer for your mind to catch up.”

Tylar scowled and waved him onward.

At last, Rogger ducked along a dark alleyway and marched up to a low door made of rusted iron. “Here we are.” He knocked.

A small window opened, enough to peer through.

“Show yourself,” a dark figure spat at them.

Rogger turned, lifted the edge of his pilfered cloak, and bared his naked arse to the doorman.

Delia covered her mouth at such a rude introduction.

Rogger, still bent over, noted her response. “Have to prove I’m a thief.”

Tylar recalled the sigil branded on the man’s buttock. A sliding bolt scraped, and the door swung open on oiled hinges.

“What is this place?” Tylar asked.

“Guildhouse of the Black Flag,” Rogger answered, straightening and covering himself.

“Black Flaggers?” Delia lowered her hand. “Scuttlers and pirates? These are your friends?”

Rogger shrugged. “Now’s not the time to be choosy, my dear. We need a way off this island.”

Tylar couldn’t argue with that.

“Besides, I’m owed a favor here.”

“A favor?” Tylar asked.

Rogger waved a hand. “From another life, ser knight… one life among many.” He glanced significantly at Tylar. “Truly, who lives only one life?”

Tylar motioned with his sword. “Let’s get this done.”

Rogger climbed down a narrow passage, surprisingly clean. Tiny braziers blazed merrily at corners, scented with thyme and honeythistle to drive away the worst of Punt’s odors.

After crossing several side passages, the main chamber opened at the end of the corridor. A pair of men, faces blackened by ash, flanked the entry. They dwarfed Bargo and Yorga, clearly loam-giants, young men blessed in the Grace of loam. They leaned on heavy axes, looking bored, but Tylar knew how swiftly such giants could move.

Rogger nodded to them, good-naturedly. They followed his passage as if he were a scrabbling ant.

The same could not be said for the room’s lone occupant. A voice boomed from beyond a desk. “Rogger! I can’t believe it!”

A tall figure rose, dressed in a fine cut of black leather, from boots to cap. The man’s face was ash blackened, a custom among the Flaggers, making them harder to identify, even among their own guild.

But no one could mistake this pirate. His hair was snowy white from years of salt and sun. The length was knotted and hung over one shoulder, striking against his black leathers.

Rogger pulled on his beard and crossed to shake the man’s hand. “Krevan! It is good to see that no shear has come within a lick of you! Before long you’ll be tripping over that rat’s nest.”

“The same could be said of that beard of yours.”

They clasped hands.

The sun-crinkled eyes of the pirate traveled past Rogger to Tylar and Delia. “I see you brought the godslayer with you.”

Tylar started, his fingers tightening on his sword.

Rogger merely shrugged.

Krevan released the thief’s hand with a short laugh. “Then again, you always kept the strangest companions. I remember that blood witch from Nevering who-”

“Please!” Rogger interrupted. “There is a lady present.”

“Of course.” Krevan broke into a soft smile, gentle and respectful. “My lady, be welcome.”

Delia offered the smallest curtsy.

Rogger opened his mouth, but Krevan cut him off with a lifted hand.

“Yes, a boat. I know. Arrangements are already under way.

The Flaggers know how to repay a debt, even one owed as long as yours. But…?” His smile faded into harder lines.

Rogger nodded. “To cross ships downline, many palms will need pressing.”

Krevan sank back to lean on his desk.

“We have this sword to trade,” Tylar said, stepping up.

Rogger shook his head at the offer.

Krevan leaned back. “He is amusing. Wherever did you find him?”

Rogger shrugged. “Dungeons.”

“Ah, same as the blood witch.”

The thief scratched his beard thoughtfully. “You’d be surprised what can be found abandoned with the rats and chains.”

Tylar flipped the sword hilt up. “What about this diamond on the pommel? It must be worth a handful of gold marches.”

Krevan sighed. “Aye, but you’ll need ten times that to press the proper palms.”

Tylar’s eyes widened.

Rogger explained,“To silence the passage of someone of… well, of your reputation, does not come cheaply. We’ll need to hide your trail in gold.” He turned to Delia. “But luckily we brought with us something of considerable worth.”

Delia paled and backed up a step.

Tylar put up a protective arm. “I will not trade in flesh.”

Rogger raised an eyebrow. “Do I look a slave trader? Remember I’m a thief… specializing in certain sacred objects.”

Tylar suddenly understood, remembering what Rogger had been caught stealing in Foulsham Dell. “Repostilaries.”

Delia gasped, growing even more pale.

Tylar remembered the crystal vial she had used to douse her hand and send the daemon back inside Tylar. A repostilary bearing the blood of Meeryn.

“I cannot give it up,” Delia said, clutching the vial hidden in a pocket over her heart. “It holds the last drops of her blood.”