"Why would anyone begrudge him working in the sewers?"
"If they're in the sewers, then they must be replacing the iron grates that guard the channels coming down from the citadel. Who do you suppose ordered that job?"
"Lord General Zymanis."
"By way of whatever underlings handle the details, anyway, which would make it a particularly lucrative contract, with extra pay for the smith in charge of the repairs and his crew. She said he'd "nabbed the plums," remember?"
"That still doesn't explain why Rythel would have papers with Lord Zymanis' seal."
"No, but it does establish the beginnings of a plausible connection. The letter he had was addressed to Admiral Nyreidian. We met him at Kylith's gathering at the Mourning Night ceremony, if you recall."
"The lord who'd just been commissioned to oversee the privateers!" Alec exclaimed. "That has to do with the war, too."
"Which means we're probably right about Rythel being a noser of some sort."
They walked on in silence to the Harbor Way.
Presently Seregil looked up again and said, "If we're right, then I may need to play with this Rythel a bit, see what I can get out of him. When we get down there, I'd better stay out of sight and let you play messenger. If he is a fellow professional, then I don't want to chance him recognizing my voice later on."
At the harbor they made their way west beyond the last quays and warehouses to a stretch of rocky land that hugged the base of the cliffs. A freshly rutted wagon track led on out of sight among the twisted jack pines and hummocks. Following it for a quarter of a mile or so, Alec and Seregil found Rythel's crew at the head of a steep, malodorous gully.
From where Alec and Seregil stood, the entrance to the sewer channel was about five hundred feet up the cut. The opening was the same size and shape as an arched doorway, tall enough for a man to walk through without ducking his head. A noisome grey torrent flowed out over its threshold and on down through a stone sluiceway to the sea beyond. A foul odor hung over the rocky cleft and Alec noted that the workmen wore wet rags over their noses and mouths.
Vinegar cloths, he guessed, to protect them from the evil humours of the place.
A forge had been set up near the opening and the black smoke from it collected sullenly on the damp air. A small wagon stood nearby and half a dozen armed bluecoats were lounging against it.
"What are they doing there?" Alec asked as they looked out from behind the cover of a boulder.
"Watching for gaterunners and spies. The sewers go everywhere under the city."
"What are gaterunners?"
"Thieves, mostly, who know how to get past all the gates and grates and travel the tunnels. They know more about where those channels lead than anyone, even the Scavenger Guild. You'd better go have a look."
Leaving Seregil behind the-rock, Alec hugged his rags about himself and followed the stony track up toward the forge.
"What do you want here?" a soldier demanded, looking more bored than suspicious.
"I've got a message for one of the smiths," Alec replied. "Man named Rythel."
"Go on then, but be quick about it," the guard said, waving him on.
At the forge two apprentices were doggedly pumping the bellows, while another held an iron rod in the coals with heavy tongs. Behind them, a smith was shaping a glowing spike of iron on the anvil. Short and dark-haired, he didn't match the description Eirual had given Seregil.
Alec waited until the man paused in his hammering, then stepped up and touched his brow respectfully.
The smith eyed his rags suspiciously. "What do you want?"
"Begging your pardon, master, but I've got a message sent for Master Rythel," Alec replied with a beggar's unctuous civility.
"Tell it quick and be off with you. The guards don't like anyone hanging about."
"That I can't, sir," Alec told him plaintively, twisting the hem of his tunic in his hands. "Begging your pardon, but I was given good silver to deliver it to nobody but Rythel his self. It'd be worth me livelihood if word got around I passed on private messages to anyone as demands to know 'em."
The smith was less than sympathetic. "Bugger your livelihood. Rythel would have my hammer if I let you go wandering around in there."
This exchange appeared to be a welcome diversion for the sentries. "Aw, he looks harmless enough," one called over, taking Alec's side. "Let him wait out here, why don't you? The message is for Rythel, after all."
"Aye, and one he'd be none too happy to miss, if you take my meaning." Grinning, Alec made a lewd two-fingered sign.
"All right, then, but it's on your heads," the smith growled, finding opinion against him. "Sit on the end of that cart, you, and don't stir."
Alec's champions lost interest in him as soon as they'd had their victory. Perched on the back of the open cart, he swung his feet idly and hunted imaginary lice among his rags.
The cart was loaded with iron grates. These were simple, sturdy affairs of upright bars and crosspieces. Apparently they were made at the shop in the upper city, then carried down for final fittings here. At the forge, the smith and his helpers were putting the last touches on one, trimming the crosspieces to fit caliper measurements and fashioning hot iron from the forge into the final bars.
When they'd finished with that, heavy metal flanges were fastened to the outermost uprights, top and bottom. The lower flanges had heavy pins protruding down from them; the upper did not.
Presently several workmen came out of the tunnel.
Their faces were covered with the vinegar cloths, but one was noticeably taller than the rest, and bushy blond hair showed beneath the rim of his leather cap.
"Ordo, we'll want those rivets when we go back in," he called to the smith at the forge.
"Are they hot yet?"
"Whenever you're ready for 'em, Master Rythel. And this young fellow's been waiting for you." The smith hooked a thumb in Alec's direction, adding pointedly, "Sergeant Durnin said it was all right."
Rythel pulled off his face cloth and scrubbed a hand over the thick, well-trimmed beard beneath it. "What do you want?"
Alec jumped down and bobbed an anxious bow.
"I've a message for you, master, from a woman."
The man's scowl lessened appreciatively.
Waving for Alec to follow him, he moved away from the others.
"What woman and what message?" he asked.
"A dark-haired bawd in the Street of Lights, master. She says she prays you remember her fondly, and that you'll come back to her soon as ever you're able."
"Did she give her name?" Rythel asked, looking pleased.
"No," Alec told him with a worried frown, then, as if suddenly remembering, added, "but she's in the House of the Swans."
"I know the one," Rythel said, recognizing the name of Eirual's establishment. "Anything else?"
"That's the whole of it, just as she sent. And if may say, master, I was lucky to find you—"
"Yes, yes!" Reaching into a wallet at his belt, Rythel dropped a few coins into Alec's outstretched palm. "Tell your lady I'll see to her when I can. Now off with you."
"Maker's Mercy to you," said Alec, hurrying away. As he passed the soldiers he looked at the coins Rythel had paid. They were all coppers.
Showing them to the grinning soldiers, he spat sideways and muttered, "Stingy son of a bitch. Let him carry his own messages."
Their laughter followed him up the gully.
At the boulder Seregil fell into step beside him and Alec told him all he'd seen as they walked back along the track.
Seregil rubbed his hands together with satisfaction.
"Well, now we know what our noser looks like."