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“I shall be pleased to accompany you in your litter, of course, my lord,” Isadora Arnem says. “Although I have my own outside, manned by two of my family’s guards, as well as my eldest son, whose father insists he accompany me on any nocturnal business I may need to conduct in his absence.”

A telling look of disappointment passes across Lord Baster-kin’s features, but he is quick to replace it with somewhat forced enthusiasm: “Splendid! I shall be pleased to meet the scion of what I understand to be quite a large and spirited family.” Rendulic regrets the statement almost at once; for he has betrayed a long-standing interest in the clan Arnem that he had not wished the Lady Isadora to think existent. And, equally unfortunately, he need not turn to sense that Radelfer has detected the same concern in his lordship. “Your son may follow in your litter, then, while, perhaps with Radelfer walking beside for safety’s sake, you and I use the time in my own conveyance to investigate the full range of your concerns — safely surrounded by a larger number of guards.” As Lady Isadora nods gratefully, Baster-kin turns to Radelfer. “Well? You have your orders, Seneschal …”

{vii:}

When Lord Baster-kin emerges from his Kastelgerd at Isadora Arnem’s side, they pause for a moment at the top of the wide stone stairs that lead down from the building’s portico to see Dagobert — in his father’s armor and surcoat — engaging in harmless but instructive and quietly amusing swordplay with, by turns, the family’s two bulger guards, who, in their black-haired and bearded enormity, make a particularly unlikely sight, here at the terminus of the Way of the Faithful.

“That is your eldest?” Lord Baster-kin asks, regarding Dagobert with an admiring, almost wishful aspect.

“Yes,” Lady Arnem replies, surprised at how kindly his lordship seems as he watches the scene below him. “Wearing his father’s old armor, I fear, according to the pact that he made with my husband concerning my safety in the city.”

“Why ‘fear’ such a thing?” Baster-kin asks. “It shows every admirable virtue, for one of his age. Does he frequent the Stadium?”

“No, my lord,” Isadora answers uncertainly. “His father’s influence again, I fear — Dagobert would rather spend his free hours in the Fourth District, among the soldiers.”

“Count yourself lucky,” Baster-kin replies. “Too many of our noble youths forgo their duties in the army for the false thrill of playacting in the Stadium. May I meet him?” His lordship starts down the stairs, then pauses, again offering Isadora his arm.

“I — of course, my lord.” Isadora then calls out: “Dagobert! If I may interrupt your clowning about—” And, at the sound of her voice, the guards take up their positions at the litter, standing at most respectful attention when they see whom their mistress is with. Dagobert, for his part, sheathes his marauder sword, does his best to order his armor, surcoat, and hair, and then climbs the stairs as her mother and her host descend them, so that the three meet somewhere in between top and bottom; her son’s every move, Isadora observes, seems modeled on her husband’s, as if he would live up to the responsibility of wearing his father’s kit now more than ever.

“Dagobert,” Isadora says evenly, “this is Lord Baster-kin, who has asked to meet you.”

Dagobert snaps his body absolutely rigid, and then, to his mother’s profound shock, brings his right fist to his breast in sharp salute. “My lord,” the youth says, just a little too loudly to reflect true ease with either the gesture or the situation.

“I appreciate your respect, Dagobert,” Lord Baster-kin says, continuing to escort Isadora down the stairs. “But you may rest easy. I am not quite the fearsome beast that some make me out to be. You do your father’s armor justice, young man — how long until we can expect to see you actually in the ranks?”

Dagobert turns his eyes, ever so briefly, on his mother, and then faces the Lord of the Merchants’ Council again. “As soon as I am of age, my lord. My father would have me train and serve for a time, and then take a junior position on his staff.”

Isadora’s eyes widen with anger: this is another fact of which neither her husband nor her son has bothered to inform her.

“Excellent, excellent.” Baster-kin catches sight of his own, much larger and grander litter approaching, carried by four of Radelfer’s youngest household guards. “Have your men fall in behind my litter, Dagobert,” Baster-kin says. “For if there is trouble in the deeper parts of the Fifth, I would have my men face it first — I can always find more guards, or my seneschal can, while your family seems”—Baster-kin gives the bulger guards a slight smile—“quite attached to these apparently capable men …” At that, Dagobert watches his mother and the Merchant Lord step through the rich fabric that curtains the well-cushioned seating of the litter.

Within that larger and far more comfortable means of transport, his lordship does his very best to play the pleasant and concerned host, grateful for Isadora’s help in the past and now concerned with whatever threat to Broken it is that she has discovered along the southwest wall of the city. She will offer no specifics, saying that the sight of the mysterious occurrence will speak far more eloquently than any description she can give. She is also very clearly anxious to first discuss what arrangements the Grand Layzin and the Merchant Lord are making for the resupply of her husband’s force of Talons, which she insists must be carried out before he is headstrong enough to commence an attack against the Bane without all the supplies he needs. For his part, Rendulic Baster-kin offers comforting statements, one after another, assuring Lady Arnem that if the other merchants of the kingdom will not support the attack, he himself will authorize use of the central amounts of supplies that are contained in the vast array of secret storage supplies that lie beneath the city.

Isadora is genuinely mollified by all these assurances, believing, for the moment, that Rendulic Baster-kin’s boyhood romantic preoccupation with her has transformed into a deep sense of adult gratitude, something she had not expected; but Radelfer, as he walks beside the litter, is growing increasingly uneasy, a feeling that began when his master and Isadora met in the Kastelgerd; for the extent of Rendulic’s disingenuousness has gone far beyond playacting during this meeting, and smacks more of a man who believes he can use the present difficulties to some advantage. But what “advantage” that might be, Radelfer has yet to determine.

The party’s journey into the worst part of the city begins when they pass through the gateway in the stone wall that separates the Fifth District from the other, more respectable parts of Broken; and their further trip toward what is certainly the most terrible neighborhood in that already vile district begins as well as any such undertaking can be expected to, primarily because the mere sight of Lord Baster-kin’s litter — common enough in the other districts of the city, but remarkable here — followed by Isadora’s well-known conveyance, signals to even the most addled minds and depraved citizens along the Path of Shame the beginning of momentous events in the Fifth. The presence of so many armed guards, meanwhile, provides a seemingly absolute check against the inclination to mischief that is always rife among the more enterprising, if criminal, souls who lurk in the darkest recesses of the district, particularly as one moves away from its stone boundary and toward the dark shadows cast by the city walls. This inclination toward thievery and murder is one that runs as deep in such minds as does their fellow residents’ appetite for dissipation, fornication, and the production of filth, all amply revealed in the gutters and sewer grates of the Fifth’s every street. These sickening rivulets are the source of a stench that every minute grows ever more offensive, and the pieces of refuse that block those streams and prevent their serving their purpose become steadily larger and more hideous. Among these terrible sights one can find objects so sickening and foolish as to seem remarkable: sacks of vegetables and grains, rotted and worm-ridden enough that not even starving souls will touch them; enormous piles of every form of human refuse and waste, bodily and otherwise; and, most horrifying of all, the occasional cloth-bound package that bears the unmistakable, bloody shape of a human infant, either miscarried close to its time or disposed of in the simplest manner possible, and perhaps mercifully so: for it will be spared, first, the privations of the Fifth District, and later, entry (by no choice of its own) into the increasingly mysterious service of the God-King in the Inner City, where, even among the residents of the Fifth, the seemingly inexhaustible need for young boys and girls is the subject of steadily greater, if quiet, speculation …