I slapped the thief hard across the face to stop his nonsense and found a belt among the litter of clothes. I bent back a little finger to distract him from his struggles, and, as he winced, had his hands tied behind his back. “Temar, see if the goods are here.”
Dismay flickered in the thiefs face as I was securing his legs to the chair but he didn’t betray any hiding place with any instinctive look, trying to spit at me instead. I slapped him for that insolence, not with all my strength but an open hand was enough to split his chapped lip. I stepped back and laid my own sword across his shoulder, smiling with all the menace I could muster.
“Here!” Temar was on his knees, dragging a leather bag out from under a rope and plank frame supporting an infested straw mattress.
The thief couldn’t hide his consternation. I snapped my fingers in his face. “Is that everything? Have you passed anything on?”
“No.” The man was looking from me to Temar, eyes always returning to the bag.
“I think all is here.” Temar sat back on his heels, unable to hide his relief and surprise. “That was easy.”
“It had better all be there.” I pressed the flat of my blade down hard and stared unblinking at the thief. I didn’t fancy trying to track down anything already lost, not if it meant more evenings in cess pits like this, not to mention a deepening debt to Charoleia. “And now we’ve got our goods back, we want to know who put you up to this.” We could spare just a little time to see if we could kill two birds with our stone.
The thief clamped obstinate lips tight shut. I set my sword down and drew gloves out of my pockets, putting them on with exaggerated care. “You’re going to tell me, you do realise that.” He was wearing a black velvet jerkin, the soiled pile rubbed bare across the shoulder. I ripped it down to pin his elbows to his sides. The man screwed his eyes shut, waiting, tense for the first blow. I obliged him with a smack around the ear, sending him rocking sideways. He grunted and recovered himself, opening his eyes to stare directly ahead, jaw set.
There was defiance in this studied blankness. I looked at Temar who was holding tight to the leather bag and then to the trapdoor. That had been open. The scoundrel had only cried out when he realised Temar wasn’t whom he expected. So who was he expecting, and how soon?
I punched him at the base of the breastbone, a practised blow that stops the breath and causes agony out of all proportion to the damage it does. We may not beat up malefactors with the relish of some less honourable cohorts, but D’Olbriot’s men are all taught how to use our fists. He gasped, tears starting from his eyes, falling on to his grey breeched knees as he hunched over. I grabbed a handful of matted hair and pulled him upright.
He tried to spit at me again so I shook him like a terrier with a rat, slapping him fore- and backhanded. “Who put you up to this?”
He tried to twist his head out of my hand, determined defiance still nailing his mouth closed. This bastard had some hope to cling to, which meant beating the information out of him would take three times as long and we didn’t have that time to spare. Perhaps we could wait to see who was coming to take the artefacts, but only from a safe vantage point.
I let go and patted the thief gently on the cheek, taking a pace backwards. “So you’ve more backbone than Drosel.”
He opened scornful eyes. “You can forget that bluff, bought man. Drosel wouldn’t talk, and anyway, he doesn’t even know this place.”
“He said enough,” I shrugged. “How do you think we found you? Still, my congratulations; you’re holding up well for a man hip deep in horseshit.”
“Save it for someone who cares, bought man,” he sneered. “Turning friendly won’t help you.”
I laced my fingers together and stretched them thoughtfully. “How about ducking you in that a few times?” I nodded at the noisome chamber pot.
“I would not do so. He might pick out a knife with his teeth, he is so brave a man.” It wasn’t Temar’s mockery that made uncertainty fleet across the thief’s eyes. What was it?
I looked at the thief. “So, I can’t be bothered to waste my time beating it out of you, and I don’t fancy dabbling my fingers in your piss. All right, what’s it worth?”
Surprise flared in the man’s eyes. “What are you offering?”
I pretended to consider the question. “What about Drosel?”
“Don’t make me laugh.” The thief recovered a little self-possession. “Dro knew the risks. He wouldn’t lift a finger to save me if the runes had rolled the other way.”
“And if we traded him to you, you’d only have to split the gold you’re hoping to get for that little lot.” I sighed. “If his life’s of no value, what about your own? Do you want to share a ferry ride with him and argue over who pays Poldrion for the privilege?”
“My life won’t be worth shoe buckles if I talk to you. They’ll kill me, and where’s my profit then?” He wasn’t joking.
“You could flee the city,” suggested Temar, walking round to face the man, the bag secure on his hip. “Perhaps with a fat purse for your trouble?”
The thief looked nervously down at the floor when I’d have expected the offer of coin to give him pause for thought.
“The Esquire has coffers as handsome as his linen.” I gestured at Temar’s elegant lace collar. “He’d have paid a bounty for those treasures in any case.”
“Tell us who put you up to this, to whom they answer, if you may, and you can be well rewarded.” Temar offered with honest sincerity.
The thief’s tongue poked at the oozing split in his lip but fear was still tarnishing the greed in his eyes. There was something about Temar that really unnerved him, I realised. I knew something else as well. This was taking too long. I had one ear cocked for any sound below and wouldn’t have bet a Lescari Mark on the silence lasting much longer. I studied the thief’s face; he wasn’t just looking warily at Temar, his glance kept sliding to the leather bag and not because it held his spoils. “You’ll be glad to see the back of those things, whoever takes them, won’t you?”
It was drawing a bow at a venture but the thief’s sharp intake of breath and involuntary hunch of his shoulders told us both I’d hit between the joints of his harness.
“How well did you sleep, with all this under your bed?” Temar balanced a battered silver goblet on his outstretched palm, hand steady as a rock. “Did you dream? Did you feel the imprisoned crying out for release? Did you feel their confusion, their pain?”
I was impressed. Temar was striking a resonant balance between sounding scarily archaic and speaking clearly enough to be understood by latterday ears. It was just a shame this bluff was so threadbare. But as I thought that I saw a new determination light in Temar’s cold blue eyes. He reached into the leather bag, and what came next nearly made me cry out loud, never mind the thief.
“Milar far eladris, surar nen jidralis.” Temar slid into a rhythmical chant, eyes glazing. As he did so, a face coalesced above the black-streaked silver. Faint at first, like early streaks of mist lurking in hollows in the road, the image thickened like fog. It was pale as mist, a washed-out greyness to the skin, lips bloodless, unseeing eyes all but transparent. I couldn’t tell if it were man or woman, old or young, indistinct, with hair no more than a wispy suggestion.
“Shall I send you to join these shades?” Temar stopped his incantation and the shape shivered in the air. “Or shall I call them forth, to pursue you to the very borders of the Otherworld? If I do that, you can only be safe when you slit your own throat and Saedrin locks his door behind you.”
It was a good thing Temar was able to do all the talking because my throat had closed tighter than an oyster’s arse. I moistened dry lips and saw the thief staring at Temar as if the young Esquire had revealed himself as one of Poldrion’s own demons. A new stink added to the general stench in the room as the man soiled himself.