“No.” And he had tried to find out. Cautiously.
“Chances are, nobody knows anymore. Except maybe Bronte Doneto, the only survivor. Barring Lila or Vali knowing something they’ve never reported.”
“There’s nothing there.”
Heris said, “You could always ask the Patriarch himself.”
The others chuckled charitably.
The Ninth Unknown asked, “How soon till you go haring off after your impossible fantasy, Piper?”
“Excuse me?”
“I’m sure you won’t resist the blandishments of Alten Weinberg. I’m hoping you hold out awhile. So Muno can get you connected to the Construct.”
Hecht’s response was instant aversion.
Februaren revealed a lot of teeth. Those could have used more attention. “You aren’t in the Realm of Peace anymore, Piper. And it’s important.”
Delari observed, “The Realm of Peace turned its back on you.”
“You don’t have to do that. I get it. But I don’t like it. I don’t like being an exile, either. I’ll spend as much time with the Construct as I can.”
Heris remarked, “Note that he denied nothing about Alten Weinberg, nor the Empire, nor the two pullets running the farmyard there.”
Februaren said, “Oh, we noted.”
Hecht’s cheeks grew heated.
Breakfast at Anna Mozilla’s house. The Consent family visiting. No? in the kitchen with Anna. Little Consents infesting the place like they were twice their actual number, playing some game where they fled from Pella and the girls, shrieking and running.
Hecht slumped in a comfortable chair, sipped a mint tea, and enjoyed the domestic chaos. Titus occupied a chair facing him. He had said nothing since they finished eating. He sipped from a showy Clearenzan glass filled with grape juice. He, too, was savoring the moment. Finally, reluctantly, he asked about Alten Weinberg. “Are we going?”
Hecht nodded. “I don’t know when. I visited the Penital. Told them we’ll take the job if the Empress still wants us.”
“Us?”
“She takes everybody. Or nobody. Has Prosek decided?”
“He waffles. He loves the stinks and bangs and won’t get to play with them if he follows the Brotherhood to the Holy Lands.”
“I don’t want to lose him. Or Kait Rhuk. By the way. There’s a new ambassador. Bayard va Still-Patter. Graf fon Wistrcz got called home. His wife did something to offend the Empress.”
“Bayard. Not so good. He didn’t like us taking over his place.”
“All is forgiven. If he hadn’t been made to suffer through that, Katrin wouldn’t have given him this plum assignment.”
“What’s holding you here?”
Hecht made a gesture to include their surroundings. “And Principat? Delari. That old man is a slave driver.”
“Having you do what?”
“He claims it’s education. I’m not allowed to talk about it.” And did not want to. Encounters with the Construct left him feeling inadequate, even retarded. Heris said she had felt the same in the beginning. He could accept that intellectually but never before had he had difficulty mastering any skill.
“All right. We’ll go when we go. I won’t need to look for work right away. But I do worry about No? getting sick of having me underfoot.”
“I can empathize with that.” Hecht was uncomfortable. Titus no longer seemed able to conceive of life without his being part of Piper Hecht’s staff.
Consent said, “By the way, I’ve found where Krulik and Sneigon are relocating. Which isn’t anywhere near where I expected.” He took a folded sheet of paper from his sleeve, handed it over. Hecht opened it, smoothed it. On it was a painstakingly produced map of the upper Vieran Sea. A red circle lay in the wild mountains over on the Eastern Empire side. “Somewhere in there. I found it because Krulik and Sneigon are recruiting veterans to defend something. Some of my agents were approached. I had them sign up.”
“I presume you know more than this.”
“Of course. Hidden in rough country that’s mostly empty. Plague wiped out the population several hundred years ago.”
An odd and terrible time that had been. The plague hit hardest in the Eastern Empire just as the Praman Conquest reached its ferocious peak. Some believed that the vast movements of peoples at the time spread the disease. Within the Eastern Empire urban populations became so depleted that rural folk flooded in hoping to prosper. Many of them died as well. Vast tracts of country had gone back to nature. And remained wilderness even now, centuries later.
“Why just there?”
“Splendid isolation, yet a river wide and gentle enough for small barge traffic. Vast old forests to turn into charcoal. And nearby ore deposits. Not the best but still good. Especially if they use forced labor. There’s no government to interfere. Tribal leaders can be bribed or intimidated. Those wild people are why they hired soldiers. The ownership plans a huge, bloody demonstration first excuse they get. Construction has already begun. They want a huge operation that’ll make them filthy rich selling to everybody.”
“There are, indeed, fortunes to be made creating the tools for efficient organized murder. What about sulfur? For making firepowder. There aren’t any sulfur mines over there, are there?”
“That they have to import. Unless they make the firepowder somewhere else.”
“Which would make some sense.”
“I’ll keep on it. Yes. But you need to remember that we no longer have any legal standing.”
“I understand. But we’ll pretend. We’ll be our own law.”
“Also, some new intelligence sources have opened up. Because of that.”
“Oh?” Immediately curious.
“A lot of Brothen Devedians aren’t happy about what Krulik and Sneigon are doing. Ones who have seen what happens when Deves get blamed. People like refugees from Sonsa. They’re sure Krulik and Sneigon will bring down the wrath of the Chaldarean world on the Deve communities.”
“You never know.” Full of one of Anna’s finest breakfasts ever, Hecht wanted nothing more than to go back to bed.
“I know. The hammer will fall because Chaldareans will be terrified the Deves might arm themselves with fearsome weapons.”
“And they’d be right.”
“Probably. But I remind you, Deves never start the ruckus.”
“Titus! Of course they do. Just by refusing to acknowledge a few self-evident religious truths.”
“I’m now a devout convert, boss, but bullshit!”
Hecht laughed.
“I haven’t found anything useful about Ferris Renfrow or Pinkus Ghort. I don’t want to push, especially with Renfrow. I don’t want to alert him. His network is bigger, more sophisticated, and more deadly.”
“I get you, Titus. He worries me, too.”
“Thank you. With Ghort the problem is a lack of resources. I can’t send somebody to Grolsach. Assuming Ghort really is from there. The investigator wouldn’t survive.”
“Naturally. What about the catamite?”
“Not much there, either. He disappeared the day Boniface died. He may have fled to the Empire, in disguise. He might be living on the street. Somebody might have killed him. All three hypotheses have their advocates. Why are you concerned?”
“He lived with Principat? Delari. He heard things. The Principat? is worried that he might repeat them.”
For an instant Hecht wondered if Cloven Februaren might have dealt with Osa Stile. He would have to ask.
“I see.” Said in a tone suggesting that Titus knew he was not hearing the whole truth.
Heris rotated into being behind Titus’s chair. Her mouth burst open. This was a huge blunder on her part. She turned again, hastily.
Consent felt the air stir both times but Heris was gone before he looked back. “What the hell was that?”
“A ghost? Something. It was only there for half a second.”
“But…”
“If this was my place I’d make Anna move,” Hecht said. “Too many weird things happen in this neighborhood. Not to mention too much dangerous stuff, like people blowing up carts loaded with kegs of firepowder. Now what?”
Someone had begun pounding on the door.