DargonZine | Volume 13, Number 7 |
oharvardenul watched the man walk through the doors into the
taproom of the Fighting Unicorns, a tavern on the edges of the unsavory
Fifth Quarter of Magnus. The tall, thin, dark-haired man walked
purposefully through the sparsely-tabled room directly toward Vard's
seat. There were only two other occupied tables in the room, but Vard
wasn't surprised that the man had detected him so quickly; they had
arranged to meet in one of the privacy booths that lined the back wall
of the taproom, and the only one of those occupied was the one he was
in.
Vard paid close attention to the way Kana, the man he intended to
hire, walked. He noted the sureness of the man's steps, the way his body
was balanced. Vard also noticed the very small things, like the way
Kana's attention included the other two tables, the natural way the man
managed to keep his face in as much shadow as possible despite the two
large chandeliers that kept the windowless room quite bright. Vard
nodded briefly to himself. He had picked a promising prospect.
Competent and nondescript had been the only recommendations
available for Kana, and Vard had been as thorough as possible. As
frustrating as it was not to be able to learn more, Vard knew that if he
had been able to uncover more detailed information about the thief he
wouldn't have been able to hire him; he would have been in gaol.
As Kana sat down across from Vard, the mage noted the fine cut of
the man's tunic and cloak, and the quality of the jewelry he wore. He
wouldn't have taken the man for a thief upon seeing him in the street,
but Vard was certainly aware of the benefits of wearing disguises. At
present, he was displaying the illusion of a thin blond man with long
hair and a full yellow beard. He seemed to be wearing brown robes and
closed-toe sandals. Under the brown-robed illusion were three other
illusory people; this kind of public meeting made him even more cautious
about his anonymity.
"I understand you are looking for a pack horse," said Kana, with a
business-like air.
Vard replied to the agreed-upon phrase with, "That I am, for a
journey to Beinison. You must be Kana, the horse trader I have heard
about."
As Kana nodded, a server appeared at their table. Vard asked for an
ale, while Kana ordered a bottle of the inn's best wine. Vard, knowing
he would be paying the bill, lifted an eyebrow at the cheekiness of the
thief but decided to allow the impertinence. The man's confidence was
another good indication that he had chosen the right person for his
task.
It had been six months since Vard had found the diary of Tarhela,
skaldric of the Fretheod Empire. The diary had revealed the existence of
a book called the Tome of the Yrmenweald. That tome chronicled the
history of the magical staves which had been the secret of that ancient
empire's phenomenal success. It detailed the powers the staves granted
to those who had wielded them -- scrying vast distances and predicting
the weather, among others -- but it also explained the steps that had
been required to create them. The latter information was why Vard had
immediately decided to find that tome.
It had taken him two months to determine that the tome still
existed. Three more months had passed before he had succeeded in tracing
it to the College of Bards. The final month had been occupied with
locating exactly where within the college it resided and procuring the
keys that would be required to enter that specific vault.
It galled Vard to have to rely on someone else to carry out the
final steps of the acquisition of the tome. He knew that he could have
accomplished the theft himself if only the Bardic College was not so
well protected both inside and out from magic. Some of the best mages in
the kingdom had spent a great deal of effort and energy to ensure that
the knowledge and other treasures within the college were protected from
others of their kind. The fruit of some of these efforts, Vard knew, was
the college's Crystal of Oathes. One of the crystal's many functions was
to negate any magic within the college created by anyone not recognized
by it, which rendered all of Vard's abilities useless. Fortunately, it
was far more difficult to protect against a non-magical thief,
especially one with the talents that Kana claimed to have.
The drinks arrived, and after an appreciative sip, Kana said,
"About this pack horse?"
Vard smiled blandly and reached up to draw the privacy curtain
across the mouth of their booth. As he did so, he silently and swiftly
cast a minor spell to deaden sound, so that they would not be overheard.
Then, slipping along the bench seat to the back of the booth, and
motioning Kana to follow, he produced a small satchel and set it on the
table.
Keeping his voice low, he said, "I would like to hire you to steal
a book from the vaults of the College of Bards here in Magnus."
Kana's eyes widened, and he asked, "Why? What kind of book?"
"Would the contents of the book affect your performance of the
theft? Then you do not need to know." Vard lifted two items from the
satchel: a small bag that clinked dully when he set it down, and a
tightly rolled scroll. "In this bag are the keys you will need to open
the vault and the trunk that the book rests in. This scroll provides all
of the details you will need: where the vault is, how to use the keys,
which chest the book is in, and how to find the book within that chest."
Vard knew that Kana could read, since some of their communication had
been written. The instructions he needed to convey were very complex,
and he had decided to write everything down rather than dictate them to
the thief and count on Kana's memory. Nevertheless, the move made him
nervous.
Kana opened the scroll and glanced over the instructions. Reaching
the end of the document, he grinned and said, "This is what will be on
the cover of the book? It looks like two rats ... ah ..." He looked up
at Vard, suddenly embarrassed, and continued, "Well, copulating. Almost.
Is that what the book is about?" He seemed to have recovered from his
embarrassment, and leered suggestively at his prospective employer.
Vard wondered whether Kana was trying to provoke him, or making an
overture of friendship. He chose to ignore the thief's tone and instead
replied, "No that's not what it is about. Those are the formal runes of
an ancient civilization, and they translate to 'The Tome of the
Yrmenweald'."
Kana was silent as he looked at the image Vard had provided of the
writing on the cover of the book, tracing the flowing lines with a
finger, mouthing the syllables of the title and trying to fit them to
the runes. He gave a shrug, started rolling the scroll up, and said,
"Pardon my asking, but if you know so much about where this book is, and
even have the keys to get it, why don't you retrieve it yourself?"
Vard had anticipated the question, and had an answer ready. "That's
simple, my boy. Would you ask a mason to build you a wooden table? Would
you ask a blacksmith to sew you a new set of clothes? I am not a thief.
I am simply engaging the services of the correct tradesman for the job."
Kana's eyes narrowed when Vard mentioned "thief" but he didn't
object to the use of the word. He was silent again, seemingly thinking,
and finally said, "This will not be a simple undertaking. You may think
that the difficult part has already been accomplished, with your details
and your keys. But I will still need to enter the college unnoticed, and
then get away again. How much do you offer for my services?"
Vard pulled out a third item from the satchel, and it clinked much
more brightly than the key-bag had when he set it down. "This in
advance, and another just like it when I have the correct book in my
hands. Agreed?"
Kana boldly dragged the new bag towards himself, opened it, and
looked inside. Vard noticed the widening of Kana's eyes, even though the
thief tried to hide his surprise. Kana reached into the bag and, after a
glance at the closed privacy curtains, drew out one of the gold Crowns
that filled the bag. He hefted it in his palm, then tried to bend it,
unsuccessfully. After scratching at the surface briefly, Kana looked up
and said, "I accept. Is there anything more that I need to know? How
soon do you expect this to be done?"
Vard, amused by the thief's attempts to verify that the coin was
real, said, "The scroll is thorough and complete, but only temporary. It
will burn up in approximately three bells, so you shall need to recopy,
or perhaps memorize, its contents." The scroll represented the biggest
risk Vard was taking. Money was money, with many, many owners, and the
keys had also passed through enough hands to muddle any possible trace
to him. The scroll, however, could be traced, given a powerful enough
magician with the right knowledge. Vard wasn't sure that he could have
tracked the faint traces that his servant, Qrun, would have left in the
ink and on the scroll as he penned it from Vard's words, but he wanted
to leave nothing to chance. The document was spelled to destroy itself,
leaving no traces.
Vard continued answering the thief's questions. "The college has no
plans to move the book. I do understand that your task will be
difficult, so I am allowing you to set your own pace. Do not delay
overlong, however; I intend to receive a service for the money you have
so far been paid."
Kana still seemed somewhat stunned by the amount of Crowns in the
bag. He finally said, "Ah, how will I get in touch with you again, when
I have the book? I don't even know your name."
"And you do not need to know it. Use the means by which we
initially contacted each other; they will suffice.
"If you have no further questions, then I suggest you get busy. And
you can take the wine; I won't even deduct its price from your fee."
Vard pushed the satchel toward Kana, and the thief placed his
things into it, including the wine bottle. He watched Kana slide to the
other end of the booth and open the privacy curtain. The thief walked
out of the taproom alertly, his composure having returned. Vard knew
that he had hired the right thief for the job. Soon enough, he would
have the "Tome of the Yrmenweald" in his hands.
Four days later, Ka'lochra'en was wandering through the
Syloris Market,
mulling over his tentative plan for infiltrating the College of
Bards. He walked slowly, at a pace befitting the role he usually played
as he walked the streets of Magnus: Baron Kanning, one of the
apartment-barons that populated the royal court, owed fealty by none,
owing fealty directly to the king, living on a royal stipend and any
other business ventures he cared to undertake. Ka'en, who was known by
many other names, one among them being Kana, posed as Kanning very well.
The cut of his clothes, the jewelry, his bearing, his cultured accent:
everything about him spoke of high nobility, which only demonstrated his
accomplished acting.
Ka'lochra'en was no more a noble of the Baranurian court than he
was a master magician. As a young man, he had ventured from his native
Kimmeron looking for the adventure that his land-owning family couldn't
provide. He had found adventure in Baranur once his money had run out;
turning to thievery to survive, he had discovered an aptitude within
himself for the occupation. He had used his new skills to propel himself
out of the ranks of the trail-side bandit and alleyway cutthroat,
becoming something of a specialist in his field. After fifteen years of
very hard, very delicate work, he had achieved just the right amount of
fame: enough to enable him to get assignments like the one he had
received from the man in brown robes, yet not enough to be subject to
the constant scrutiny of the law. He liked to think that the complex set
of identities he maintained helped in that regard.
Ka'en had studied the scroll his employer had given him and copied
over the relevant parts before the parchment had destroyed itself, first
smoking, then crawling with little snakes of glowing red fire that left
only ash in their wake. The information had been thorough and detailed,
but had only concerned breaching the particular vault and chest wherein
the book lay. It was important information -- information without which
he could not have even begun his assignment -- but there were still a
great many particulars that would have to be covered before he could put
his employer's information to use, such as the fundamental item of
gaining entry to the Bardic College in the first place.
As Ka'en wandered through the Syloris, pretending to survey the
merchandise for sale, his mind was more profitably occupied with
fleshing out his only viable idea so far for accomplishing that. He had
decided to become one of the servants, either getting himself hired or
substituting himself for one of the staff. He knew that servants were
usually unnoticed by those who employed them, and a new face would be of
no consequence if even remarked. Then, once the inhabitants of the
college were asleep, he would slip into the cellars and accomplish his
mission.
His trip to the Syloris had a purpose other than being seen as
Baron Kanning. In one corner of the market, against the walls of the old
plaza, was a wooden stall occupied by an old man who seemed to sell
rocks. Most who saw the stall with its shelves of oddly-shaped stones
simply thought the old man was losing his wits, and humored him. The
rest understood that the old man and his nephew were not dealing in
rocks. Information was the merchandise being vended there. Ka'en's
actual destination was that stall. He needed information on the serving
staff of the Bardic College, and Deemis was the one to get it for him.
Ka'en had no real interest in anything in the market but his
destination, but as intent as he was on his plans he was still aware of
his surroundings. There were all sorts of dangers in the crowds of the
market, and he had no intention of falling prey to an amateur
pick-pocket or worse.
As he scanned the crowds, he noticed an object on one of the tables
of merchandise. His attention was riveted by the strange sculpture: a
half-circle of stone with a jagged edge, as if it was only part of a
larger whole, the flat top covered with interlaced lines of gold, silver
and glass, and three stylized creatures -- two birds and a cat -- around
the edge. He approached the table that the stone fragment rested on and
absently noted that there was a gypsy standing behind it. But his focus
was on the stone. There was something about it: something compelling,
something important ...
He reached out and touched the stone, running a finger across the
interlaced bands, tracing the outlines of the creatures. There was a
humming in his mind that lasted only a moment or so. When it was gone,
so was his interest in the stone fragment. He looked up at the gypsy,
somewhat bemused at finding himself standing here and not at the
information stall. With a curt nod to the proprietor, Ka'en turned and
resumed his previous journey.
He reached the old man's stall, and picked up one of the more
interesting-looking stones. He ran his fingers across one of the rock's
flat surfaces, tracing out the shape of a stylized falcon without
realizing it. He acknowledged the nods of greeting by Deemis and his
nephew; both men knew who he pretended to be and both knew who he really
was.
He said softly, "I need a rank pendant for a bard. Do you know of
one to be had?"
Deemis replied, equally softly, "No, but I'll put the word around.
What would one be worth, should one be found?"
"Five Cues," replied Ka'en, using the slang for Crowns. Five Crowns
was a great deal of money, but a bardic rank pendant was a valuable
property, and the man in brown had given him a great many Crowns.
"Straight," said Deemis. "Check back in, say, three days."
"Thank you," Ka'en said. He set down the rock, turned and walked
away through the Syloris, mulling over his plan to impersonate a bard as
a way to infiltrate the College of Bards.
Je'lanthra'en passed through the Syloris Market on her way to an
inn on the south side of the city. The tall, fair-haired bard strode
like nobility through the noise and bustle of the market, leading her
horse. In most cases the crowds made way for her as if she actually was
noble, or perhaps even royal; such was the respect normally accorded a
bard. Je'en had grown used to that kind of treatment, and took it as a
matter of course. She had spent more than fifteen years working herself
up to the rank of Eighth-Stave Bard, and she enjoyed the perquisites
that came with her position and rank.
Je'en was from a small country to the south called Kimmeron, which
few people in Baranur had ever heard of and fewer had ever traveled to.
She had left at a young age to seek her fortunes as a bard, with a dream
of actually studying at the great College of Bards in the far off,
fabled city of Magnus. She had reached Magnus, had been accepted into
the college due to her musical talent, and had done well for herself
ever since.
She didn't usually reside in Magnus, preferring to travel
throughout Baranur and even into the surrounding countries, though she
was seldom able to journey as far as Kimmeron. She had timed her travels
to bring her back to Magnus for a meeting of her stave-circle. It was a
chance to participate in the workings of the college directly, in that
the meeting usually included trials for stave advancement both into the
eighth, and out of it. She tried to miss as few as possible.
The actual meeting would begin in a few days, and Je'en was looking
forward to it. Until then she was keeping herself busy by visiting some
of the many inns in the city. In fact she had spent the last six nights
in a row out touring the inns, and had intended to stay in this night.
But two of her fellow-stavers had only just arrived and had insisted on
taking her out. The recommended rendezvous, the Braying Ass, was a
gathering place for musicians of all calibers. She was looking forward
to spending some time with her friends, but she was also looking forward
to the evening's entertainment, of which she intended to be a part.
As she passed the selling table of a gypsy, a curiously-carved
stone caught her eye. She paused to look at the half-circle of stone
that looked as if it was broken off from its other half. She reached out
and traced her finger along the gold band as it interlaced with two
other bands across the surface of the carving, over and under the silver
and glass strands. She noted that the two different animals -- two
identically-shaped birds facing each other, and one cat -- on the
surface each had one kind of band issuing from its center. The birds
seemed to host the glass bands, and the cat the silver band. She
wondered what kind of animal the gold bands issued from on the lost
portion of the carving.
A song drew her attention away from the carving as a troupe of
traveling entertainers began their act at the junction of several paths
close by the gypsy's table. Je'en listened briefly to the crowd-catching
ditty, smiling to herself as she recognized the intent of the bright
cadences of the music and the broad rhyme-scheme. When the players had
drawn the attention of enough of the passers-by in the market, they
began their play. Je'en nodded to them, and continued on her own way to
the Braying Ass. The gypsy and his carved stone drifted slowly from her
memory, until all she remembered of her passage through the Syloris was
the amusing ditty.
The applause was nearly deafening, filling the tavern room of the
Braying Ass with noise. Je'en joined in, cheering loudly and pounding
her fist on the table as her friend Ginlo briefly acknowledged the
accolades before walking off of the stage. Ginlo was grinning from ear
to ear as she strode calmly to her chair next to Je'en and sat down
gracefully. The applause continued even as the next performer took the
stage. Je'en leaned over and gave Ginlo a brief hug, congratulating her
as best as she could over the noise. Hansek, the other of Je'en's two
friends who had invited her out, then did the same, giving his lover
Ginlo a hearty hug and a deep kiss.
Je'en watched her friends Ginlo and Hansek indulgently; she had
introduced them to each other. Both were middle-aged, at least ten years
older than she was. Ginlo was dark haired, with brown eyes and a thin
face, while Hansek was blond, blue-eyed, and rounder in the face than
his lover. Ginlo played a set of minor-pipes, Hansek played a harp, and
when they sang together, their harmonies were perfect.
Hansek had been an eighth-stave journeyman bard for more than five
years, and showed no signs of wanting to move on. Ginlo had just
achieved her eighth-stave pendant within the past year, and everyone
knew from the struggle she had had that she wasn't going any higher
either. Je'en, on the other hand, had plans to be a Master Bard someday.
She knew she wasn't ready to take the ninth-stave tests just yet, but
she had set her sights on being ready for next year's stave-circle
meeting.
The lovers separated, smiling satisfied, happy smiles at each
other. The audience quieted down finally, and the next performer began.
He introduced himself as Bernil, and began strumming the strings of his
large-bodied lute. He started singing a familiar, favorite song, and
Je'en noticed immediately that his voice was fine enough and steady. As
he continued though, she began to notice a few other things: his playing
was proficient but not inspired, and there wasn't much heart behind the
words he sang. Despite those flaws, Je'en thought that Bernil might have
the makings of a bard and she wondered what had kept him out of the
college.
Bernil's song ended, and the audience again filled the room with
the sounds of their approval. Bernil basked in the approbation, bowing
again and again. The applause was beginning to sound forced when the
lutanist finally exited the stage.
No one was waiting to take his place, since the entertainment
steward had scheduled a brief rest. Conversations started up as the
Braying Ass' waiters began circulating among the tables. The pause had
been scheduled at a natural breaking point in the evening: it was
approximately the fourth bell of the evening, when the casual revelers
picked up and returned home, leaving the dedicated partiers to carry on
late into the night. All over the tavern room, patrons were standing,
saying their farewells, and heading out the door.
Ginlo leaned over to Je'en and said, "Hans and me need to be going,
Je'en. We were on the road early; we need our rest. You coming too?"
It was the perfect time to leave, and Je'en hadn't even intended to
go out that evening in the first place. She was about to say "Yes," but
as she blinked, there was a glimmer of gold interlacing with silver and
glass behind her eyelids. She paused for a moment like that, eyes
closed, trying to remember why that glimmer seemed familiar. When she
opened her eyes, Ginlo was saying, "Well, if you're sure. Great evening,
straight? Thanks for coming out with us. See you tomorrow!" Ginlo hugged
her, and then Hansek dragged her to her feet and hugged her, supplying
his own thanks and good wishes, and they were gone.
Je'en sat back down, slightly bemused. When had she decided to
stay? A waiter came by, and Je'en ordered another ale. The entertainment
steward came by, and Je'en put her name down for another set. She
decided she'd leave at the next rest break. That would be soon enough.
That rest break came and went, and Je'en still sat in the tavern
room of the Braying Ass enjoying the entertainment. Another rest break
passed, and another and another, but she still didn't leave. Each time
she promised herself to take to her saddle and head to her bed that
interlacing glimmer appeared behind her eyes, and the moment passed her
by.
She participated as well. She sang, she played her harp Soft Winds,
she joined in with several other musicians a few times during the
evening to improvise on favorite melodies and extemporize on famous
songs. She acknowledged, but didn't accept, many offers of ale, and she
politely rebuffed many offers of company. She was having more than
enough fun on her own.
Finally, the innkeep cheerfully drove everyone out of his tavern
room, either to the rooms upstairs or to their own homes. Je'en found
herself upon her horse, contemplating the long path ahead of her. She
faced crossing half the city to reach her lodgings in the college before
she could slip into her bed. She was exhausted by the excitement of the
evening, and was not looking forward to her long, lonely journey.
As she rode through the nearly deserted streets of Magnus, she
found herself contemplating a change of direction that would
substantially shorten her journey. The safest route she could possibly
take back to the college would force her to circle around the Fifth
Quarter, the slums of the city. Dangerous even in daylight, they were
deadly at night. There were, however, three "tunnels" through that
quarter where three of the city's major circular avenues lay across its
territory. These particular streets -- wide, well-maintained, well-lit,
and irregularly patrolled -- were paths of relative safety through the
quarter during the day and, perhaps, early evening. Midway between the
dark of the night and the first daylight bell, however, there was no
safety at all anywhere within the Fifth Quarter.
Je'en's first thought upon recalling these "tunnels" was that she
would take one and shorten her journey, and caution be hanged. She was a
bard, after all; who would attack her? Her green cloak, the
silver-embossed harp case on her back, the harp on yellow on green of
her horse's trappings, were all the armor she needed.
Then good sense tried to change her mind. Alone in the middle of
the Fifth Quarter, even one of the legendary heroes of the Shadow Wars
would have been at peril of their life. King Haralan himself wouldn't
dare venture along Principine Avenue in the utter depths of blackest
night. Why should she feel herself exempt from the dangers of everyday
life in the city of Magnus?
With another flash of interwoven gold, silver, and glass, her
bardic fearlessness reasserted itself. She was a bard, and a bard went
where she needed, when she needed. Her rank and status would protect her
from random violence. What else did she need to fear?
Decided, she turned her horse's head toward Principine Avenue and
the shortest way home.
Bellen was a rogue, and had no need to be anything else. He didn't
play dress up and pretend to be nobility. He didn't dream of owning
merchant fleets, or rental properties, or even of leading others like
himself. He picked pockets. He broke into shops. He snatched-and-ran. He
attacked unwise travelers for both profit and fun.
Bellen was the first to hear of the offer of five Crowns for a
bardic rank pendant because he was just around the corner when the offer
was made. Bellen knew that Kane -- the name he knew Ka'en by -- was a
thief, but a different kind of thief than he was. There was only one
reason Kane would want a rank pendant: he wanted to pretend to be a
singer, a bard. That was what Kane did, pretend. Bellen wondered what
Kane needed to be a singer for, but he was more interested in the five
Cues.
As he walked away from Deemis' information-stall, Bellen came
across a gypsy selling some things. He noticed a strange sculpture on
the table briefly: it looked like a half-circle of stone with interwoven
metal and some animals on top. And then he noticed a little girl, almost
a toddler, about to cut the purse-strings of the wrong noble. She held a
huge knife with some skill, but what she had in dexterity she lacked in
common sense. Bellen was a bad man, but he didn't like to see such a
promising life of crime cut short so swiftly.
As he raced over to save her from her own folly, he was also
thinking that it had been some time since he and his friends had set
upon an unwary traveler. Perhaps they would find one that night.
Bells didn't ring to count time in the Fifth Quarter, but Bellen
still knew it was very late. He was tired to his bones, and it was so
late that even the chance of mayhem could hardly keep him awake.
Skar sat across from him in the alley on the edge of Principine
Avenue, well within the Fifth Quarter. Skar was their leader. The rest
of Skar's boys were deeper in the alley: Deggr, Han, Morl and Charet,
all tough men of the street who'd never done a day's honest work.
Bellen was nervous. He'd given Skar the idea to ambush a traveler
and somehow convinced him to do it right away, but it looked like they
weren't going to get to put Skar's plan into action. They had been
waiting so long that none of them were being quiet any more. They all
sat ass-flat on the ground, fidgeting, looking bored and mean. Han and
Morl were whispering to each other, and Skar hadn't shushed them in a
while. Bellen knew he'd catch it from them all for steering them into
spending such a dull night unless something happened, and soon. Skar
kept looking at Bellen, and every time Bellen just kept reassuring his
leader that they should wait just a little longer.
Skar was rising, ignoring Bellen's hissed "Wait!", when the sound
of hoofbeats echoed by. Skar's quick sideways glance, full of questions,
made a shiver run down Bellen's back. Had he known? If so, how?
All six men rose to their feet, then crouched in readiness. Deggr,
the quickest of them all, took a position in front of Skar and Bellen,
ready to do his part.
When the rider came into view, however, everyone sighed in
disappointment. It was clear that the horseman was a bard. Every piece
of tack on the horse had the distinctive yellow-haloed harp on green
mark. No one but a singer would wear a cloak of that style and shade of
green. Even his utter confidence as he rode slowly down the street
pointed up the obvious.
Bellen saw, and somehow wasn't surprised. Skar saw, and began to
signal Deggr that the ambush was canceled. Bellen hurriedly whispered,
"No, wait! 'S just one guy, singer or no. We c'n take 'im! Six ta one,
and he don't even got a weapon out. Let's do it, Skar. Think about the
braggin' we could do!"
Skar looked that look at him again, and Bellen knew there'd be
questions later. But the singer was moving, and the decision had to be
made. Skar made it. "We go," he said.
The horse and rider reached the alley and Deggr leapt, knocking the
rider clean off his horse. Morl grabbed the reins of the horse fast and
secured it as the rest rushed from the alley, swords out and ready.
Bellen saw the rider somehow land on Deggr, then recover very quickly.
In the same way he had somehow known that there would be someone coming
eventually, Bellen was not shocked when the rider threw back his cloak
to draw his sword and revealed that he was actually a woman.
They closed around the singer, and the melee began. Soon, Deggr
regained his feet and joined in. The fight was fast, but not as
one-sided as Bellen expected. Blades flashed and rang together, and
first Han fell bloody to the ground, and then Charet joined him. The
singer got her share: a bloody scratch to her face, a deep stab to her
thigh and finally, Bellen's own blade found its way under her right
bracer, cutting deep into her wrist. She dropped her blade and sank to
the ground, weak from blood loss and pain.
Skar's boys looted the horse, but found almost nothing in the
saddlebags. They naturally turned to their victim, and took her cloak
and her harp. Deggr picked up her sword, and Bellen removed her jewelry:
one ring, an ear dangle, and the rank pendant.
Skar was still unhappy; the frown on his face was clear. Bellen
caught the gleam in his leader's eye when he stood over their victim and
said, "Pretty. A little more money from the slavers, to make up for the
trouble we've had wit' you."
Bellen shook his head. That wasn't right somehow, not slavers. Then
his own eyes gleamed with an idea. He said, "She'll take too much time,
be too much trouble, Skar! I know someone'll give us five Cues for this
'ere neck-chain -- 'e needs it for a job 'e's got: 'personatin' a
singer, it is. Five Crowns' more'n we'd get fer her and all the rest o'
her stuff, plus she killed Han, and probably Charet, too. Let's kill
'er, Skar! Real slow like, too."
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