The Alabaster Staff Read online

Page 9


  She started to make her way back to Wing’s Reach. There were advantages to making her move soon, she reflected. For one, the city guard would still be tied up primarily with ejecting the refugees from the city and therefore be less available to pursue a thief, were they to spot her. The snow was, of course, a second factor, and the chance that Wing’s Reach might lock up for the night was a third.

  But most of all, and reason enough unto itself, it got the tasteless act done with. She wasn’t sure whether she’d deal with post-theft guilt better than she dealt with pre-theft trepidation, but she’d had enough dread for one day and was willing to try guilt, if only for variety.

  She approached Wing’s Reach from the rear, diverting through the alley to drag a bale of hay from the stables across the street to rest against one wall, just beneath a pair of windows, one window on the second floor and one on the third. She pulled her dagger from its hiding place beneath the bag and tied its scabbard to the back of her left forearm with the scraps left over from her cut bootlaces. That done, she pulled a ball of twine from her bag, then concealed her bag against the wall under the hay.

  With great reluctance, she untied her rapier and scabbard. She placed them in a large urn half full of rain. The thin ice covering cracked as she shoved the wooden scabbard through. She hated to treat her scabbard like that, but it would either soak in the ice for only a very short time or else she wouldn’t have need of it again.

  She moved around to the front doors, which were as old-fashioned as the building was aged. Inertia alone held them closed, and the only way to latch them was with a large, heavy timber. She paused, breathing deeply and rapidly until she was on the verge of hyperventilating. Aside from being a part of her disguise, the slight fuzz it gave her brain helped quash her fears and reluctance.

  She burst in the front door without knocking. As expected, she entered into a large foyer with a nicely tiled floor and smooth, white walls covered with traditional, stylized Untheric murals. To Kehrsyn’s left, a single lamp hung from a chain dangling from the rafter. Two guards sat at a small table beneath it, wrapped in their cloaks and playing at a game of sava. Kehrsyn’s sudden and loud appearance startled them. One tipped over the table—sava pieces, coins, wine, and all—as he burst to his feet and jumped back. The other displayed more presence of mind but less grace as he seized his khopesh, tripped over his cloak, and fell to his knees.

  “What do you think you’re doing?” bellowed the guard on the floor, while the other tried to cover for his surprise by grabbing his weapon as well.

  Kehrsyn labored with her lungs, noticing that, even inside the foyer, she could see the vapors of her breath in the air.

  “Copper …” she panted, “copper for a message, sir?”

  “Message for whom?” the guard asked, getting back to his feet.

  “Anyone, sir,” Kehrsyn panted, “but time is passing.”

  The two guards looked at each other.

  “I’ll get Ahegi,” said one, and the other nodded.

  Kehrsyn paced around the room, trying to regain her breath. At one end she staggered slightly, putting out one hand to steady herself and deftly unlatching the simple clasp that held the shutters closed. Hands on hips, she then moved across to the other corner of the room, cast open the shutters very deliberately, leaned out, and took a few deep breaths of the cold outside air.

  “Close that up!” the guard grumbled. “It’s cold enough already sitting in here. We don’t need snow on top of it.”

  “Sorry,” mumbled Kehrsyn, still breathing deeply.

  She closed the shutters and pretended to latch them back shut. She heard footsteps returning to the entry hall, so she walked back over to the guards’ table and pulled her hair out of her face.

  The second guard escorted a tall, powerful, harsh-looking man. Though he was strongly built, his physique had suffered badly for age and privilege. His head was shaved, and two concentric blue circles adorned his forehead, a traditional Untheric mannerism that signified that he was an educated nobleman versed in magic. The presence of a third ring would indicate that the wearer was a priest, but since the death of Gilgeam, the third ring was almost never seen. Gilgeamite priests had abandoned its use to avoid vengeance, and priests of other religions thought it prudent to follow the example.

  The second guard pointed brusquely to Kehrsyn and said, “That is she, Lord Ahegi.”

  The nobleman approached. Seeing his face, Kehrsyn had a flash of nausea, so she dropped her eyes to protect her expression from betraying her discomfort.

  “You wished to see me?” he asked in a thin voice that sounded like it had been scoured by the sands for a hundred years.

  “I wished to see someone, sir,” she said. “Copper for a message?”

  “The message first,” Ahegi said.

  “Sir, a new ship is just about to dock, sir. They’re piloting it in with longboats and lanterns. They say there might be food, sir, and who knows what all else. Thought you might like to know, maybe greet it at the dock.”

  Ahegi pushed out his lower lip, nodded, pulled out a copper, and tossed it to Kehrsyn.

  “Thank you, sir,” she said and turned to leave.

  “Wait,” said Ahegi, and Kehrsyn was surprised at the commanding power his reedy voice had. She froze in her tracks, her back crawling. “Which dock is this ship using?”

  Kehrsyn turned, glanced once at Ahegi, and looked back down at her feet.

  “That’ll be another copper,” she said. “Sir.…”

  She heard Ahegi inhale sharply, and in her peripheral vision she saw him rise up in anger and raise a hand to strike. She flinched away, and he stopped, his raised arm quivering.

  “Very well,” he said through gritted teeth.

  He tossed another copper. It landed on the floor, by the door.

  “They said they’d take it to the Long Wharf, sir,” Kehrsyn lied. “It’s a large ship, you see, but maybe you can buy out the whole shipment before anyone else shows up, right?”

  “Begone,” he said.

  Kehrsyn was only too happy to obey. She wanted to be away from his abraded voice.

  Knowing I’ll be stealing from him, she thought, certainly makes my next task more palatable.

  His hooded cloak furled around him to ward off the chill, Demok moved through the streets of Messemprar. Ahegi’s bodyguard led the way, scanning the streets for danger, though few people were even out, let alone lurking around in such freezing weather. Ahegi followed, along with a smattering of aides, including one who carried a locked strongbox loaded with pieces of gold and platinum, some tradeweight pearls, and, hidden beneath a false bottom, a silver necklace studded with diamonds that looked more valuable than it actually was. Ahegi was fond of cheating greedy merchant captains.

  Demok was one of three whose duty was to guard the bearer of the strongbox. He smiled in the dark. Receiving sensitive assignments like this proved that those of Wing’s Reach had not yet discerned his true allegiance.

  The thin layer of snow crunched underfoot as the group made its way to the docks. Freed from the impact of thousands of feet, the day’s slushy remains were hardening into piles of ice at the sides of the street, beneath a pristine dusting of white.

  Demok scowled. The Long Wharf was the easternmost dock, the farthest from Wing’s Reach. It stood squarely in the mouth of the River of Metals, washed alternately by seawater and fresh water in the ever-shifting tide. Off-loading the cargo on a slippery, icy wharf would be a hazardous task. Doing so at night would be foolhardy. Even sanding the dock might not avail, with the constant snowfall.

  Demok trotted forward until he was even with Ahegi’s bodyguard. He scanned the street ahead with his keen, experienced eye. They were moving by the most direct route to the docks, down the grand, wide Avenue of the Gods. A short while ago, some messenger had run from the docks to Wing’s Reach, bringing news. A person running at full speed would leave tracks in the snow, perhaps occasionally even wide, scudding marks as sh
e lost balance on the cold, wet flagstones. Yet there were no such tracks.

  If enough time had passed, they might have been snowed over. He called for the group to halt. They did, though Ahegi and the others were noticeably perturbed. Demok was, after all, delaying their chance at getting first crack at a new shipment of food.

  Demok checked the avenue from one side to the other. He saw nothing, aside from a plodding pair of tracks belonging to a man with a limp and his poorly shod mule. Based on the snowfall in the footprints, they had passed maybe half an hour before. There was no sign of a fast-moving messenger, and even had that messenger taken another route, why would there be only one messenger, and why would said messenger head to Wing’s Reach?

  Demok waved the group on, then turned back. He’d be most interested to see what sort of tracks had been laid in front of their door. He didn’t think he’d like what he’d find.

  Hiding in the shadows in a nearby alley, Kehrsyn watched the group of hopeful merchants leave Wing’s Reach. Ahegi loomed half a head taller than the others. Once more, Kehrsyn’s heart trembled at Ahegi’s appearance. She tried to write it off to his authoritarian demeanor. She’d had a lot of bad experiences with those in power throughout her life, and Ahegi comported himself like another budding tyrant with his imposing size, chiseled bald head, and scowl.

  Once the group had turned the corner and left her view, Kehrsyn wriggled out of her slit skirt. She would need all the flexibility her leggings would allow. She didn’t want to leave the skirt lying around, so instead she put it around her neck like a cowl. She stole back across the street, pulled out her length of twine, and tied one end to one of the shutters near the guards’ table. Moving across the front door toward the far corner of the building, she trailed the twine behind her.

  She paused in frustration. The twine was a bit short. It didn’t come nearly as close to the other window as she’d hoped. She sighed, exhaling slowly, building her resolve. Nothing for it but to try. The longer she tarried, the more likely her ruse might be discovered. She set the twine down, trotted to her target window, and pried it open with her fingers, just enough to ease her work. She moved back to the twine, then pulled off her boots and tucked them into her sash. The cold, wet snow leaked through her socks, but she bore the discomfort; she didn’t want to risk having the hard soles of her boots make noises where her woolen-clad feet wouldn’t.

  She gave a tug on the twine. The shutter didn’t budge. Since the twine was almost exactly in line with its hinge, the shutter was very resistant to being moved. She had to tug hard enough to overcome its inertia but not so hard that it would bang open unnaturally. She held her arm out to her side and tugged again. Nothing. She sneered with annoyance, looked both ways to ensure the street remained empty, then took a few steps out into the street and whipped the twine to the side, sending a wave along its length.

  Success! The shutter creaked open. Kehrsyn slid back to the walls of the building, tugged the shutter just a little wider, then dropped the string and scooted over to the other window on the opposite side of the front room. She pried the shutter open just a bit—the shutter that hinged away from the guards, so they would not see a telltale gap—and listened.

  “Gilgeam’s gizzard, it’s a cold night,” one of the guards groused. “Pony up. It’s my roll.”

  “Hey, no wonder it’s so crapping cold in here,” the other said. “That stupid idiot girl left the window unlatched. Go grab that, would you?”

  “Fine, just keep your hands where I can see them.”

  “What, you don’t trust me?”

  The other snorted.

  Knowing their attention was on each other and the open window, Kehrsyn pried the shutter fully open and pulled herself up. She carefully let herself down inside, crouching in the shadows in the far corner of the foyer, and closed the shutter without latching it.

  She watched as the guard came back from the window, sat down, and resumed the game with his compatriot. Once they were engrossed in the game again, she moved quietly over to the stairwell at the corner of the foyer, keeping low and quiet, letting her cloak conceal her lithe limbs.

  The wooden spiraling stairs offered little cover, but fortunately they were not lit, either. If worse came to worst, Kehrsyn knew she could climb over the railing for evasion or escape. She wrung out her socks beneath the stairs, then ascended, carefully walking on her toes along the inner edge of the spiral, for it was less likely to creak. She also knew that most people walked toward the outside, and therefore would be less likely to notice (or worse yet, slip on) the small stains of water her damp socks left behind.

  She knew from the map that hallways circled the second and third floors, bisected in the center like a squared-off figure eight. The outer rooms were generally sleeping quarters, while the storerooms sat in the center. The stairwell came up at one corner of the hallway, and the room she wanted to reach was on the second floor, down the long hall and around the far side.

  When she reached the second floor, she peered out of the stairwell and down the hallway. She winced in frustration. A guard waited at the center of the longer hall, at its intersection with the cross-connector. He leaned against the wall staring in her direction. An oil-lamp sconce lit the immediate area. Though his stance said he was not alert, she knew she could not sneak up on him. Presumably a second guard stood watch beneath a second lamp across the building, where the two could see each other. That ensured that any thieves would have to surprise and kill both simultaneously to be free to walk the halls.

  Kehrsyn crept out of the stairwell, slithering low like a mongoose until she was safe in the short hall. She stalked silently to the other end to peer at the other guard. He paced back and forth, slapping his thigh with one hand and trailing the other along the wall. He only took a few disinterested paces in each direction, but Kehrsyn figured that would be enough.

  She waited until he turned his back on her, then she glided quickly forward as far as she dared, to one of the doors. She lay down on the floor, tight against the wall, positioning herself just before the guard turned back. The skin on her burned arm protested being stretched and pressed, but Kehrsyn just gritted her teeth. She bowed her head so that her dark hair would conceal her face, trusting her cloak to hide her body.

  She counted the guard’s steps as he walked back up the hall, then heard the telltale grind of his feet as he turned.

  As he started back down the hall, Kehrsyn rose and scooted forward, walking low, but taking large steps timed to land with the guard’s heavy tread. She stopped at the last door before the intersection, the last door safe from the view of the guard opposite. She knew the room was most likely someone’s quarters. No light came from beneath the door. It was early enough that she doubted anyone would be in. If they were awake, they’d likely be gathered around the fire in the main hall. She tried the handle, and found that it was unlocked. She gently opened the door, scooted in, and quietly closed the door behind her.

  She paused, listening for any sound within the room. It was quiet.

  She stood, pressed her ear to the door, and waited until the guard had approached, turned, then headed away once more.

  Kehrsyn could make out the outlines of windows, so she crossed the room on her knees, hands out, legs moving in short, gentle steps. After finding her way across the black interior to one of the windows, she unlatched it by touch and peered out. The ornamental carvings made a ledge of sorts—not one she’d use if she had a choice, for the carvings were irregular and covered with snow—but suitable enough to her task.

  “Well,” she muttered, “at least the snow will help hide me from people on the street.”

  Slipping outside, she balanced on the balls of her feet on the carved head of an ox. Stabilizing herself by gripping the windowsill, she reached out with her other hand to look for a handhold. None were to be found.

  “I must be crazy,” she murmured as she advanced along the wall, her hold on the windowsill getting less secure as she moved.


  As she feared, the well crafted stone exterior offered no further handholds.

  She had to release her hold on the window when her reaching hand was still well shy of the next window, which looked a mile distant. Breathing shallowly, spread-eagled against the cold stone wall and carefully brushing snow away with her stocking-clad feet, she inched her way forward. She thanked the gods that she had decent leg and foot strength, even if her arm strength was lacking. A childhood spent running from adults continued to serve her well.

  Her hand reached the weatherworn edge of the next window, and she grabbed on. She couldn’t enter that window, for the room opened into the halls’ intersection, right next to the lamp and in full view of both guards. Instead, she gritted her teeth and continued moving on the protruding carvings to the next window, once more committing her safety to her balance and the strength of her feet. She wondered if Gilgeam’s head was among those she stepped on. The very thought filled her with a sort of vengeful glee. The god-king had caused her a lot of pain, first by his presence, and since, with the war and all, by his absence.

  At the second window, she took a moment to regain her breath and let her heart calm itself. No light bled through the shutter slats, so she pulled her dagger and worked it between the shutters, lifting the latch inside. When she felt it give way, she muttered a quick, small prayer of thanks to whichever god was looking after her that the latch was of the same make as the others in the building. She listened for noises and heard none. With a quiet sigh of profound relief, she pulled herself safely inside the room. Since her socks had picked up more snow seepage, she rung them out through the window into the alley below.

  She left the shutter open, just in case she had to make a quick departure, and crossed over to the door. It was just slightly ajar, and she could see it clearly by the crack of lamplight that wedged its way into the room. Standing well back, she peered out through the gap. The guard passed, and Kehrsyn stepped closer. She heard him slapping his thigh and whistling, heard him pivot, and heard him approach again. Just as she saw him pass the door, she teased it open, slipped out, and pulled it most of the way closed in one fluid motion, then dashed for the far corner of the hallway, again pacing her steps to match the guard’s.