Wrath of Kings
Page 67
“Sweet talk, sorcerer. But these are desperate times. Talk won’t help make us the people doing the grinning at the other end.”
“You’ve changed.”
“I have. You won’t find this Inger nearly as nice as the one you remember. This Inger can be quite bloodthirsty. What do you need to make what I want happen?”
The sorcerer opened and closed his mouth several times. Nothing came out.
“Tell me, Babeltausque.” Her tone suggested pain on the way if he did not buckle down now.
Dane, Duke of Greyfells, had a concussion. Its effects were exacerbated by his inability to accept his situation. He was Greyfells, the Duke, senior member of a noble family that, by God, deserved, by God, to rule Itaskia and several neighboring states. Only continuous, relentless evil conspiracy by lesser men kept the Greyfells line from claiming its rights.
He was not one to note what had been done to ease his confinement. He had a cot, topped by a mattress. Fresh straw covered the muck on the floor. He was not chained. He had a stool with a bucket underneath to manage his eliminations. But all he saw was an iron wall with welded straps and rivets that made escape hopeless.
Meals came regularly, through a slot three inches high and sixteen wide. The slops bucket left via its own little door, too small to pass a man.
Reality took days to dawn. He was completely at Inger’s mercy, and her mercy would be slight at its most generous.
Those who brought food and removed his wastes would not talk. Maybe they did not understand Itaskian. Maybe they were deaf. It was beyond his capacity to understand that most people hated him. Inger’s people thought she was being too soft.
He did see that if he was not heard, if no one listened, if no one understood, he would go nowhere ever again, but while he remained alive the Greyfells fortunes would remain out in the wind.
More than ever he cursed the idiot he had been when he decided that he could steal a crown for his family.
Josiah Gales strove ferociously to pull himself together. He could not begin to guess how long he had been like this. He wanted to assess his situation but his head would not clear.
Clever bastards. They did not feed him well. Teetering at the edge of starvation, he attacked whatever food they brought. Which was drugged. Always.
No one interrogated him. No one cared what he knew. No one explained why he was a captive.
He had been removed from the equation by a means less harsh than murder. He no longer signified. He might be turned loose later, or maybe retained as a bargaining chip.
Gales saw few of his captors. They did not talk. They did not acknowledge his existence, except that they fed him.
Drugged, it took Gales a while to fathom the rules of his new life.
If he said nothing and did nothing life proceeded with no inconvenience beyond being imprisoned and drugged. It went smoothest when he just quietly contemplated the stupidity that had brought him to this.
His captors evidently bore him no malice. They just wanted him out of the way.
An old man entered the apothecary shop in Old Registry Lane. He seemed almost too frail to manage the door.
A girl of fourteen was minding the shop. She was surprised to see him. He smiled a smile full of fine white teeth, shuffled forward. His body, like his teeth, was in excellent shape. Apparent infirmity was part of his disguise. “You’re looking especially nice this morning, Haida. You make me wish I was ten years younger.”
Haida flushed, flattered, flustered, but not offended. “I’ll see if Chames is in back.”
“You don’t know?”
“Not always. He comes and goes without telling me. I’m just the help.”
The girl was more than that, though not the plaything some suspected. She was the little sister of someone who had been killed, a friend of the man called Chames Marks today.
The old man watched her swish through the hangings in a doorless doorway. He thought Haida would be more than just help if Chames would let her. There was a sparkle in her eye when she said his name.
The old man smiled, turned the sign on the street door to say the chemist was out, then latched the latch.
The wait stretched, five minutes, ten, fifteen. The old man amused himself by studying the pots and jars on the scores of shelves covering all four walls. Large glass jars contained questionable items in liquids of unusual hue. Stage dressing, those, mostly. He was interested in the small phials of imported rarities. Sometimes he paused, nodded. Once he murmured, “Well!”
The hangings in the back doorway stirred. Haida returned. Her gaze flicked round, checking for spaces where something had gone missing. “Turn the sign back. People will wonder. We’re always open during the day. Then come with me.”
The old man complied. Compliance had been his first layer of camouflage for decades.
The room beyond the doorway was larger than the one out front. It was dry and dusty. It smelled of spices and mystery. The real work of the chemist took place here.
“Wait here. Touch nothing.” Haida returned to the front. The bell on the door had announced an arrival. A male voice asked a question the old man could not make out.
Minutes passed. A man came through a narrow door that was disguised as a rack of dusty shelves. The old man held fingers to his lips, pointed behind him. The newcomer nodded, whispered pointless questions about the old man being sure he had not been followed. That did not matter, unlikely though it was. “What brings you out, then?”
“The Queen has recruited the sorcerer Babeltausque. She means to take immediate advantage.”
“Really? The Duke never bothered.”
“And he’s in a cell.”
“True enough.”
“She has assigned the sorcerer five immediate tasks. Find the missing treasury money. Find Josiah Gales. Find Michael Trebilcock. Find General Liakopulos. Find Kristen and her children.”
“Can he accomplish any of that?”
“The Queen thinks so. I trust her judgment. She’s known him a long time.”
The younger man sighed. “Complications. But it’s never easy, is it? We will cope. You’d better get back. Haida will have your order ready when you go out.” He gestured toward the front of the shop.
The old man nodded. He began to move. “The sorcerer’s most important mission will be to find the money.”
“Maybe we should let him succeed.”
“You haven’t found it, either?”
“No. Those two did a hell of a job of leaving no clues.”
The doorbell rang as Haida’s customer left.
The old man said, “I’m going now.” He had to get back to the castle. He tarried only moments acquiring a package from Haida.
The younger man began to consider how best to respond to the news.
Respond he must, before the sorcerer became a threat.
The matter of the treasury, though. Working that made sense.
Why had those two hidden the money somewhere other than where they were supposed to have?
No one challenged Wachtel when he shuffled into Castle Krief. He went straight to the Queen’s quarters. He told the maid, “Inform Her Majesty that I’ve finally gotten the medicine for Prince Fulk.”
“That’s good news. She’ll be thrilled.”
Inger appeared while Wachtel was preparing his philter. “You found blue asparagus seed?”
“I did. Everyone watch how this is done. You’ll have to do it yourself in an emergency.”
“Including the grinding?”
“Including that. The seed needs to remain whole till you have to use it. The oils evaporate.”
“How did you find the seed?”
“I went to the chemist myself.” His tone was harsh. “I’m getting a little frail for that.”
Inger was flustered. “I’m sorry. There just isn’t money…”
“Never mind. The deed is done. I got enough to keep you going for three months. And so my fortune grows as feeble as my flesh.�
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“I’m sorry, Doctor. Truly I am. You’ll be the first one rewarded when our fortunes shift.”
Wachtel’s skeptical expression told Inger all she needed to know about his faith in her promises.
“You’ll see.”
She had made a too-grand emotional investment in her new wizard.
The wizard sat with head in hands, sweating. He was overheated despite the breeze flowing through the open windows. He had made promises. Those had seemed reasonable in the heat of the moment.
Now he had to execute them.
He did not know how to start. There were no threads to pick up. Everyone knew that those who had executed the treasury raid had died in the riots. Michael Trebilcock had fallen off the edge of the world and was presumed dead, too.
But, wait! Finding Gales would be a coup! Gales had left some threads. The night of his disappearance was well-documented.
That would be the scab to pick, if only to prove that he was on the job. Whatever he stirred up would lead to something else.
It seemed reasonable to think that those who had taken Gales might be associated with the treasury raiders. And all those people had been associated with Michael Trebilcock.
It could all be connected.
Gales it was, balls to the wall.
Babeltausque grinned, drenched in cool relief. “Toby, I need you.” He had been assigned one servant, a boy of twelve, totally reliable according to Inger. Babeltausque was not prepared to bet his life on the boy, whether or not he was a descendant of the apolitical Dr. Wachtel.
“Sir?”
“You know Mr. Wolf?”
“Nathan Wolf, sir? The new Colonel?”
“Yes. Go tell him I need to see him as soon as possible.”
Would Wolf respond? He might fear a restoration of that curse.
Toby was waiting for something more.
“Go, boy! Tell him it’s important.”
“Yes sir.” Toby went, fast.
Babeltausque brooded about having the boy underfoot. But Inger would not like it if he ran Toby off. And Toby’s family would be offended.
Better to be careful than to make enemies needlessly.
Toby returned with stunning quickness. “Mr. Wolf will be here in a few minutes, sir.”
“You found him that fast?”
“I ran into him on my way to the guardroom to ask where to look for him.”
“All right. Prepare whatever refreshments we can manage. After you’ve done that you’re free till suppertime.”
“Thank you, sir!”
Toby did love his free time.
Wolf arrived as Toby set out weak tea and a few overage biscuits. The soldier was uneasy.
The wizard said, “Forget the past. I have. Thanks for coming so quickly. Speed may be essential. Go on now, Toby. Have fun.”
The boy bowed himself out.
Nervously, Wolf asked, “What’s going on?”
“I want to pick your brain about Gales’s disappearance.”
“I’ll do my best. I did my best. I’m sure he was killed right away.”
“I expect you’re right. Unfortunately. Evidently he was a great buttress for Her Majesty.”
Wolf leered slightly.
Later, Babeltausque asked, “Anything else questionable happen around this Twisted Wrench?”
“Nothing obvious. But everybody is careful around my people. And now you’re wondering how they know which men are mine.”
“I am.”
“Only men I trust visit the place anymore.”
The Twisted Wrench had fallen on hard times.
“Mr. Wolf, why don’t you and I visit this place?”
“That could be dangerous.”
“Yes. It was for Colonel Gales. A visit could stir up all kinds of excitement. We’ll do it tonight. We’ll take two men to watch our backs. Don’t tell them we’re up to something.”
“They wouldn’t need to be told.”
No doubt. Wolf was not a companionable sort even with the curse off. And nobody went drinking with the court wizard. “Which men frequent the place regularly?”
“I put it off limits after Gales disappeared. Only my agents go there. They scare off the regulars. It’ll stay off limits till Gales turns up.”
“That’s good.” Easier to grind away at the purses of those who depended on the tavern for a living. “That will have them thinking about how to get the old clientele back.”
“Tonight for sure?”
“Yes. The Queen is starved for results.”
“I’ll be in the forecourt come sundown.” Wolf departed looking thoughtful.
Babeltausque had not felt this excited in years.
Young Bragi said it for everyone when he observed, “This camp is the most boringest place in the world.”
Dahl Haas, seated beside Kristen, holding her right hand, said, “Look at that. The boy is healthy enough to complain about still being alive.”
Bragi was too young to understand death in any personal sense.
Kristen worried. Even the adults had begun to share the boy’s disdain for danger from Vorgreberg. They were wishful thinking, confident that Inger’s regime would collapse soon. It might have done so already. It took ages for news to get here from that far away.
The others thought Inger’s triumph over her cousin only made her own fall more certain.
Dahl and Sherilee remained committed to the plan, with the latter not so quietly beginning to waver.
Kristen knew she needed only to cling to her strategy. Inger would build her own funeral pyre. The Estates had abandoned her completely, now. No Nordmen remained in Vorgreberg. It was every man for himself with them now. Nor did even a cadre of most of her army units remain. Not that pro-Bragi regiments had weathered recent months any better.
Kristen was convinced that soon Kavelin’s people would beg the grandson of their greatest king to ascend the throne of the blessed Kriefs.
Dahl told her, “Your Bragi makes me uncomfortable, love. He’s not ready.”
“I know, Dahl. I promise, it will be a long regency. You’ll get to show him how to be a man.”
Dahl was the kind of man Kristen wanted her son to become.
The shockwave of the news about Magden Norath slammed through the smugglers’ pass, astounding the Unbeliever, the Faithful, and the Royalists of Hammad al Nakir alike.
Kristen collected her refugees. “The news about Norath is huge. But does it really mean anything to us?”
Dahl said, “He was in the wickedness with Greyfells.”
“Also out of the picture, now.”
The others had nothing to say. The children’s attitudes made it clear that they did not care. Politics meant little to them.
Sherilee was indifferent, too. She was interested in nothing but the lover who waxed ever more fantastical in her imagination.
Kristen scowled at her. The dim blonde was making the elder Bragi over into a god, raising her dirty old man a notch higher every day. Even the kids thought Auntie Sherilee was a loony.
Nothing came of Kristen’s gathering. The consensus, though, was that they were too isolated to understand the full impact of Norath’s death.
Dahl Haas had the last word. “We’ll go on sitting tight and stewing till we hear from Aral.”
Kristen scowled. She had hoped Dahl would be more optimistic.
She did not enjoy their situation more than any of the others. This camp was the last way station before you stepped off the edge of the world.
She did understand the need to sit still.
The man was Louis Strass this time. He was forty-three years old and a veteran of numerous wars. He had begun service as a longbow archer two days before his sixteenth birthday. Today he was a master of the arbalest as well as the long, short, and saddle bows. He could teach the manufacture and operations of bow-based ballistae for use as light artillery.
He was a master. He was a survivor. Twenty-seven years had devoured and turned to sh
it all illusions of honor or right and wrong that had blinded him as a recruit. He was his world. He was his universe. Nothing else was real. Nothing else had any enduring value.
He had serious doubts about himself.
He entered a camp in the Tamerice Kapenrungs afoot, leading two mules, pursuing the illusion that he could win a new life by executing one simple mission.
He was too cynical to sell himself that for long.
Nothing good could come of this. There was no guarantee that asshole Greyfells would come across with the bounty.
So why go on? Because he did not know what else to do? Because he was no longer just the hunter, he was the hunt as well?
He had been out of touch for months, searching. Now, another sketchy mountain camp. He might learn something here but did not plan to hold his breath. He had come up with nothing at half a dozen others.
He arrived early on a day when the weather was fine and traffic was substantial. He was not welcomed but he was accepted. No one cared who he was. He had money. He bought drink and a meal, then a bath. Some thought him overly chatty but did not find his queries obvious or offensive. Some people just stored it up while they were out there alone.
The smuggling season was in full swing. Caravans were moving through the pass. Those who lived off the men in motion were active, too, operating taverns and brothels in tents.
The traveler found what he wanted among the parasites. But first he discovered that the world had tipped over while he was out of touch.
The death of Magden Norath inspired awe but was of no personal import. The capture of the Duke of Greyfells was critical, though. That bastard was now the habitué of Inger’s dungeon. He would pay no debts contracted before disaster swallowed him.
What to do about the changed situation? It was an iron-bound certainty that Inger would welcome the results that Greyfells had wanted, but…
Do it on spec?
It was a conundrum. He had faced few hard choices in a lifetime spent as a life taker. There was no in-between in a choice where he would give death or withhold it.
Ah! Of course. Offer a sample. Kill the mother of the pretender, then visit Vorgreberg. Direct travel would not take long. Greyfells could be exhumed to provide a reference.
He had a course. Now he had to pursue it or abort it.