He knew. He shivered. "I don't. I don't know anything about it.-Listen, listen,you want names-I can give you names; I can find out for you, only you let me outof here-"

Moruth leaned forward, arms on ragged knees, grinned and looked appallingly leanand hungry-

"I think we've got one what'll talk, doesn't we?"

* * *

Haught flinched in his concealment beneath the bridge. Screams reached him, notfright, but a crescendo of them, that was pain; and they kept on for a time.Then silence. He hugged himself and shivered. They began again, different thistime, lacking distinction.

He bolted, having had enough, finding no more assurance even in the dark; andthe thunder cracked and the wind skirled, blowing debris along the shore.

Of a sudden something rose up in his way, a human form in the ubiquitous rags ofDownwind, but with an incongruous long blade shining pure as silver in the murk.Haught shied and dodged, ex-dancer, leapt an unexpected bit of debris and dartedinto the alley that offered itself, alley after alley, desperate, hearingsomeone whistle behind him, a signal of some kind; and then someone blocked thealley ahead.

He zigged and dodged, feinted and lost: the cloak caught, and the fasteningheld; he hit the wall and the ground, and a hand closed at his throat.

* * *

"Escaped slave," Moria said, crouching by the man they had knocked down. She hadher knife out, aimed for the ribs; but the throat was easier and quieter, andMradhon was in the way. "Kill him. We can't afford the noise."

"Something started him," Mradhon said. The slave babbled a language not Rankan,not Ilsigi, nothing she knew, sobbing for air. "Shut up," Mradhon said, shakinghim and letting hishand from the man's throat. Mradhon said something then, thesame way, and the slave stopped struggling and edged up against the wall. Hetalked, an urgent hiss in the gloom, and Mradhon kept the knife at his throat.

"What's that?" Moria asked, clenching her own hilt in a sweating fist. "What'sthat babble?"

"Keep still," Mradhon said, reached with his fist and the hilt of his knife andtouched the slave gently on the side of the cheek. "Come show us, seh? Come showus the place. Fast."

"What place?" Moria demanded, shoving Mradhon's arm.

Mradhon ignored her, hauling the slave to his feet. She got up too, knife aimed,but not meaning to use it. The slave had straightened up like a human being, ifa frightened one, and moved free of Mradhon's grip, travelling with lithe speed.Mradhon followed and she did, as far as the opening of the alley.

"River," the slave said, delaying there. "By the bridge."

"Move," Mradhon said.

The slave rolled his head aside, staring back at them, muttered something.

"Seh," Mradhon repeated. "Move it, man." Mradhon set an empty hand on hisshoulder. The slave gave a gasp for air like a diver going under and headed downthe next alley, stopping again when they reached a turning.

"Lost," the slave said, seeming to panic. "I can't remember; and there were menmen with swords-and the screams-It was the house by the bridge, that one-"

"Get moving," Moria hissed frantically and jabbed him with the blade. The slaveflinched, but Mradhon stayed her hand with a grip that almost broke her wrist.

"He's likely still alive," Mradhon said. "You want my help, woman, you keep thatknife out of my way; and his."

She nodded, wild with rage and the delay. "Then quit stopping."

"Haught," Mradhon said. "Stay with us."

They went, running now, with no pauses, down the twisting ways even she did notknow; but it was Mradhon's territory: they passed through a shanty alleyway soclose they had to turn their shoulders and came out upon sight of the bridge.

It was quiet, excepting the wind, the dry, muttering thunder. A lightning flashthrew the pilings of the bridge and the house by the pier into an unnaturalblink of day, exposed a bridge vacant of traffic.

"There," said the slave, "there, that was the place-"

"Better stay back here," Mradhon said.

"It's quiet," Moria said. Her voice shook despite herself. "Man, hurry up." Shepushed at him and got shoved in turn. He caught a fistful of her shirt andjerked at her.

"Don't shove. Get your mind working, woman, cool down, or I'm off this."

"I'll get round by the windows," she said, shivering. "I'll find out. But if yourun out on me-"

"I'll be working up the other side. Haught and I. If it's even odds we takethem. If it isn't we pull off, hear, and refigure."

She nodded and caught her breath, trotted off with a looseness of her knees shehad not felt since her first job; felt as vulnerable as then, everything gonewrong. She sorted her mind into order, pretending it was not Mor-am in there, inthat long quiet, where screams had been before.

She took a back alley, disturbing only an urchin-girl from her rest, going roundthe long way, where boards might gape and afford sight or sound, but none did.She kept going, focussed now, lost in the moment-by-moment calculations, andfound the windows she hoped for, shuttered, but there was a crack.

She listened, and something went twisted inside. It was a quiet voice, thatdescribed streets with deadly accuracy, a strained voice that told no lies.

... Mor-am's. Giving away all they had.

And more than three of them in there.

"There's another house," her brother volunteered all too eagerly, "by the westside. There's a way from there out into a burned house....We used that in theold days...."

Shut up, she wished him, having difficulty holding her breath.

Something moved behind her. She whirled, knife thrusting, and got the man in thebelly, leapt, and saw others.

"Ai!" she yelled, slashing wild, a howl that was the last shred of honor: It'sall up, it's done- She tried to run.

There were still more, arrived from out of nowhere, a sweep of men and knives inthe dark, rushing the house and alley from the riverside. She stabbed andkilled; the urchin-girl shrieked and ran into shadows as beggars scattered andguardsmen shouted orders.

Fire streaked Moria's side. She slashed and stumbled back; and back as woodcracked and the house erupted with shouting and with knives, and the back wayopened, pouring out bodies.

She fell. Someone stepped on her back as she lay there, and she braced androlled against the shanty wall as the battle tended the other way. She crawledfor the alley, scrambling to her feet as she reached the comer of the shanty.

Someone grabbed her from the back and dragged her aside; the slave Haught pinnedher knifehand under his arm and a hand muffled her as they hit the dark leantotogether, a knot of three.

"Keep low," Mradhon hissed in her ear as tumult passed their hiding-hole. A mandied not far from them in the first pattering of rain. She lay still, feelingthe pain in her side when she breathed, feeling for the rest as if she had beenclubbed.

Mor-am?

Fire glared, a quick flaring up of orange light in the direction of the shanty.

She struggled then. The two of them held her.

"You can't help him," Mradhon said, his arms locked round her.

"She's hurt," said Haught. "She's bleeding."

They tended her, the two of them. She hardly cared.

* * *

"It's him," the Stepson said, looking disdainfully at the human wreck theydeposited on the road across the bridge. Rain washed the wounds, dark threads ofblood trailing in a wash of water over the skin. The guard toed the informer inthe side, elicited a little independent movement of the arm, lit in lightningflashes. "Oh, treat him tenderly," the Stepson said. "Very tenderly. He'svaluable. Get a blanket round him."


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