“So we are not here merely because Queen Alisande wished you to be guarded,” Sir Orizhan said, staring into Matt’s eyes with sudden intensity.
Matt grinned back. “She had her reasons for insisting, and I had mine for accepting. What better company could I have than two men who have their own very strong and very personal reasons for wanting to catch the same man I’m after?”
The dungeon door grated open and Papa stepped into the cell. Pargas jerked upright from the moldy pile of hay on which he’d been lying. The guard who’d come with Papa took a very obvious and very menacing station by the door, spear very much in evidence. There wasn’t much light coming through the little barred window high on the wall, but the guard managed to make his spear point catch it.
Papa unfolded his camp stool and sat down five feet from the pimp. “Good morning, Pargas. Did you sleep well?”
“If you don’t count the bedbug bites and the rats scurrying by,” Pargas grunted.
“Like will to like,” Papa said grimly. “I am Dr. Mantrell, a wizard in the service of Her Majesty. I would advise you to tell me the truth, Pargas, so that I will have no reason to try to ferret it out of you.”
Pargas locked glares with Papa, then shuddered and looked away. Papa didn’t like pimps. Then, too, Pargas had no doubt been thinking what manner of ferreting a wizard could do.
“I see we understand one another,” Papa said. “Now, tell me—who cut your shoulder so badly as to make you drop one club?”
“That corrupted prince who had disguised himself as a commoner!” Pargas spat. “If he’d been honest as to what he was, I’d never dared fight him.”
“Perhaps he likes your trade no more than I do, and welcomed the excuse to punish you,” Papa said.
“Welcomed the excuse to punish anyone! Laetri told me what he did to her. He enjoyed his cruelty, that one. I’m glad I had the chance to give him a knock or two before he died.” Pargas glared at Papa in defiance.
“So you took pleasure in giving the prince what you thought he deserved?” Papa asked.
“That I did! But I didn’t kill him, if that’s what you’re thinking.”
“You must have seen who moved behind his back, though.”
“If you think I noticed much but the man who came against me, you’ve never been in a fight,” Pargas said with contempt.
“I have been in combat,” Papa said, his voice neutral, “but I was trained to perceive all that went on about me, in case some second enemy should attack from the side. If you have not, you have shown more luck than skill in your fights.”
Pargas darkened with anger and embarrassment. “I’ll fight you any day of the week, old man, and with no more weapons than these!” He held up his fists.
“Don’t tempt me,” Papa grated. “So you saw no sign of anyone who came behind the prince?”
“There was a Merovencian soldier fighting a Bretanglian,” Pargas said, “but they were busy enough with each other. The Bretanglian must have won, for he turned his back to the prince and fought there awhile, guarding the rear, until someone knocked him away.”
Papa tensed. “What kind of man did the knocking?”
“A Merovencian soldier, but he went right on by with two more behind him. If he stuck a knife into the prince’s back, he must have done it awfully fast. Besides, it was a good minute or two later that the prince screamed and snapped bolt upright, then leaned back to fall.”
“So.” Papa frowned. “A Bretanglian guarded the prince’s back until a Merovencian knocked him aside—but you saw no one behind him when he cried out.”
“None, and none after he fell,” Pargas assured him. “Me, I was fighting him one-handed the whole time, and hard put to keep him from sticking me with that rat-tail dagger of his. Whoever came at his back must have come in low and run away fast.”
“Or not been there at all?” Papa gave him a hard smile and stood up. “Well, we’ll see if anyone else saw what you claim, Pargas.”
“And won’t find any, I’ll warrant,” Pargas snarled. “I know how these things go.”
“Do you indeed,” Papa purred.
“You learn the ways of the world fast, in the gutter,” Pargas said, “and I know none of your lordly kind will take the blame for a prince-killing. You have to have a goat, someone to take the blame for it, no matter who really shoved the shiv between his ribs. You’ll pin this murder on me somehow.”
“We will not,” Papa contradicted. “Much as I hate to say it, Pargas, I’m convinced you’re guilty of no more than striking a prince with a stick.”
Pargas stared, and hope flared in his eyes.
“There’s a heavy enough punishment for that, of course,” Papa said, “but Prince Gaheris was disguised. The judge might take that into account.”
“You don’t mean I’ll go free!”
“I don’t mean that at all,” Papa said. “There still is the charge of pandering against you.”
“Oh, I’m not worried about that.” Pargas relaxed with a grin. “No man will punish a pimp too hard, or leave him in gaol too long. Judge or nobleman, respectable or chivalrous, he’ll know he might want my services someday.”
“Thank you for the tip,” Papa said as the guard opened the cell door. “I’ll see that you’re judged by the queen herself. Rest well while you can, Pargas, for I’m sure you’ll begin hard work soon enough—very hard, and for a very long time.”
Pargas’ face fell. Papa smiled and went out, listening with satisfaction as the guard closed the door behind him.
CHAPTER 6
The cell door opened, and Laetri jumped up off her bunk to push herself against the wall, trembling, face pale.
Mama stepped in, frowning. “Do not worry, child, I shall not—” Then she saw the bruises on the girl’s face and cried out. “Who has hurt you so?” She stepped close, reaching up to turn Laetri’s face so that the light from the single window showed the purpled aura around the eye, the dark blotch on the forehead, and the lavender spot on her cheek. “Surely the prince could not have done all this to you! Tell me who did! At once!”
“I dare not.” Laetri’s voice caught on a sob.
“I can guess.” Mama whirled to the door and called, “Gaoler!”
Slow steps approached, and the gaoler pushed the door open. “Yes, milady?”
“Who did this?” Mama demanded.
The man looked at Laetri’s battered face, and the shiftiness in his eyes told Mama all she needed to know. “Do not think to lie, young man! I can see well enough what you and your fellows have been doing. Tell me why!”
“She wouldn’t give.” The man refused to meet her eyes. “It’s her stock in trade, after all, and if she’s in our gaol—”
“If she’s in a cell in your dungeon, you are to guard her, not despoil her! Must I set soldiers to guard her from her gaolers? Be sure that if I do, they shall be no more gentle to you than you have been to her!” Mama raged. “Do you understand, sirrah? If there is one more bruise on this woman’s face or body, anywhere on her body, you and all your fellows will be fortunate to have your hides whole! What manner of rotten gibbering apes are you, to exploit a woman who is given into your care? What sort of mother did you have—a baboon who sold herself to any hyena who asked? I won’t even ask about your father, for any man who would treat a woman this way can’t have known what his father was, let alone who! No matter what she has done or has been, in the queen’s castle she shall be safe, or you shall find yourself before a judge and become a prisoner in your own dungeon! Unless that judge is merciful, of course, in which case you might find yourself fortunate enough to spend your years mucking out stables till you can be sent to the front rank in the next war! Do you understand me, you moral cripple?”