Chapter 14
“Where the hells is he?”
“Wuh?” Gallina mumbled groggily.
Viv grabbed the edge of the gnome’s cot and shook. That woke her up fast. “He’s gone.”
“Wh—who?”
“Who do you think?”
Gallina ran to the bars, peering into the hall. “Nobody at the desk neither!”
It was still dark out, a predawn indigo just visible through the windows.
The door of the cell opposite remained shut tight, but Viv couldn’t believe she would have slept through the commotion of releasing him.
No matter how exhausted she was, the throb in her thigh hadn’t let her sink too deeply into unconsciousness.
“Hey!” shouted Gallina in the direction of the watch desk. “Who let him out?”
There was no response.
Viv lurched to her feet and stumped over to join Gallina at the cell door. The gnome stared up at her wide-eyed. “Think he killed the guard?”
“And we didn’t hear it?” Viv shook her head grimly. “I dunno. Don’t smell blood either.”
“Then they gotta have just … let him out?” Gallina screwed up her face and hollered through the bars again. “Hey!”
Viv’s voice was considerably louder. “Anybody up there? Warden!”
They bellowed until they were both going hoarse, and then Viv held up a hand to forestall Gallina, cocking her head to listen.
A breathy groan issued from out of sight, followed by the scuffle and slap of someone struggling to their feet.
The dwarven nightwatchman staggered into view, holding himself upright against the wall. He stumbled into the hallway, glancing between the cells and gawping at the empty one.
“Oh, shit,” he rasped. “Where’d he go?”
“You better find Iridia,” said Viv flatly.
“Who was he?” asked Iridia, her voice dangerously toneless.
“I guess you should have asked him yesterday,” replied Viv, every word dripping with disgust.
Gallina shot her a warning look.
“He wasn’t forthcoming,” replied the tapenti, though she was clearly loath to explain. “A hungry night in the cell usually rectifies that. In my experience, patience and time solve most problems.”
“Except this one,” said Viv, slamming a hand against the cell door and rattling it on its hinges. She felt hot all over, and a fierce urge to try her strength against the bars.
The dwarf nightwatchman sat on the floor, breathing slowly and evenly and looking very green.
Iridia had already directed a few sharp words his way, and Viv didn’t know if his current state owed more to that or whatever had knocked him senseless in the night.
He hadn’t seen anything, though, and couldn’t remember much before his unconsciousness.
He complained about an all-over headache, but the tapenti wasn’t much interested in his excuses.
Iridia considered the bars, and then Viv. She did not appear concerned.
“Let’s start at the beginning, shall we? If you help me make sense of this, then maybe I’ll take a less dim view of your continued presence in my city, given the trouble you have clearly invited.”
Viv barely kept her frustrated oaths behind her teeth as she paced in her cage. She glared at Iridia, and then with an effort of will, unclenched her hands and swallowed her curses.
She sighed and settled back on the cot. Kicking her leg out, she tried to find something to do with her hands that didn’t put pressure on it and didn’t crush anything else. “I was at Thistleburr—”
“The bookshop?” interrupted the Gatewarden incredulously.
“Yes. The bookshop.”
Iridia blinked slowly at that, and then gestured for her to continue.
“Anyway, he was messing around in there, and then Potroast—”
“Pot—?”
“He’s a gryphet. Fern’s gryphet. Anyway, he comes tearing out of the back, absolutely losing his little mind, and leaps at the guy.
Who just … casually slaps him aside.” Viv replicated the motion.
“And yeah, that’s not great. Who hits little animals?
I’d toss him out on his ass for that alone, but—”
When Viv didn’t continue, Iridia prompted her. “But?”
Viv sighed. “I don’t know how to say this so you’ll care or pay attention. Look, I smelled him, and he smelled like …” She returned the tapenti’s fierce gaze. “You know who Varine the Pale is? You’ve heard of her?”
Iridia pursed her lips, and her gaze became more considering. “The necromancer?”
“That’s who we were after, before I ended up here.”
“Oh, shit, really?” asked Gallina. Her eyes were round. “Rackam is hunting Varine? The White Lady Varine?”
The Gatewarden hissed at the gnome’s interruption and returned her attention to Viv. “What are you getting at?”
“You ever been around a wight?”
The tapenti shook her head.
“Well, I have. Lots, at this point. They smell like death. You’d figure that part, right? But there’s something else, like … frozen blood. The way your nose goes all dry in winter and you can taste copper when you breathe. If you get right up on them, they smell just like that.”
Viv gestured at the empty cell. “That’s the way he smelled.”
“He was no wight. He definitely had a pulse.”
“Yeah, I know. But I know that smell, and I knew something about him was wrong. All the way through me, I knew it. And if he has anything to do with Varine … ? Well, I was going to find out if that was true, one way or another.”
“That’s why the city has Gatewardens.”
Viv snorted. “Didn’t see any close at hand, or I would’ve flagged one down.” She patted her leg. “And I wasn’t going to run inside the fortress walls to find one, was I?”
“It didn’t stop you from leaping into the fray.”
Viv tossed her hands up. “And if I’d had my sword, maybe things would’ve gone different.
What do you want from me? He slipped out of your cell, knocked out your guard, and it didn’t seem to cost him a lot of trouble.
He’s a threat. If not to us, then to somebody else.
You leave a snake in your tent, you’re asking to get bit. ”
“Pretty shitty analogy,” hissed Gallina as Iridia’s expression darkened.
“How did he get out?” asked the tapenti, with a precision that bespoke a temper held in check.
“How the hells should I know? We were asleep!” Viv couldn’t help raising her voice. “Neither of us saw a gods-damned thing, but now he’s out there, and we’re in here, and I figure he has his stuff back to boot, yeah?”
“He does,” grunted the dwarf, massaging the back of his skull. “That satchel, the magestone, the daggers …”
“He didn’t swipe mine, did he?” asked Gallina anxiously.
The dwarf shook his head, and she breathed a sigh of relief.
“You’re both still alive. So is Luca here,” Iridia observed bitterly. “If our nameless visitor could escape, then he could’ve killed you in your sleep. Whoever he was, vengeance wasn’t on his mind.”
“Maybe we’re not as easy to kill as you think, and maybe he figured that too,” said Gallina, obviously feeling left out of the conversation. “And there’s two of us! Still in here, by the way. With him gone, what are you even holdin’ us for?”
“I don’t have to come up with a new reason,” said Iridia. “The first was perfectly sufficient.” But Viv could tell that something was shifting inside her.
“You wanted us to help you make sense of it,” said Viv, in as reasonable a tone as she could. With her leg screaming at her, it was harder than it should’ve been. “You know what we know. So? What’s the verdict?”
“I’ll tell you when I decide,” replied the Gatewarden. She spun on her heel to stalk out of sight.
Iridia let them stew another hour, but Viv thought that was just some bullshit show of dominance.
It was Luca who released them, still looking pale and unsteady.
He returned their things and passed on a muttered warning to stay out of trouble, but Viv thought he looked relieved to see the back of them.
Gallina stroked the hilts of her daggers fondly as they left the building and stepped into the morning light.
The scents of damp, smoky morning cookfires and boiling oats and bacon threaded through the air.
The gnome’s stomach made loud, longing noises of protest.
They were otherwise silent leaving the walled enclosure of Murk, but each kept a watchful eye out. Predictably, there was no sign of the nighttime escapee. Viv would’ve been amazed if there were, but it didn’t stop her from looking.
The Gatewardens were looking, too. Iridia clearly hadn’t taken the man’s disappearance lightly, and they saw women and men with lanterns on their belts at nearly every corner.
They all had a watchful, distrustful look about them, hands on hilts as often as not.
Viv had supposed the well-garrisoned fortress was a precaution against an unlikely sea invasion.
Now, the bored Gatewardens finally had something pressing to demand their attention.
Several even patrolled the sandy thoroughfare leading down from Murk’s massive stone gateway, although what they expected to find there, Viv couldn’t imagine.
A pair of schooners rolled at the dock in the morning mist, and waves roared in hard and loud. The sun gleamed on the sea, promising real heat later in the day.
She supposed the man in gray might be on one of those boats, but somehow, she doubted it.
With the aid of her staff, Viv limped her way up the slope toward The Perch. Gallina matched her pace, and Viv decided she didn’t mind that much.
“Think he’s gonna kill us in our beds, then?”
“Not where I plan to die,” Viv replied with a grunt. Although the fact that he’d disappeared from right under her nose disturbed her more than she cared to admit. She was going to sleep with her saber close at hand, that was damned certain.
“That’s where you’re spendin’ all your time?” Gallina asked as they passed Thistleburr Booksellers.
Viv snorted. “Planning to haunt that, too?” She saw the darkening look on Gallina’s face. “Joking. Yeah, I guess I like it. Especially now that there’s a chair. A comfortable chair.”
“Comfortable, huh?”
“Can’t fit your boots on the table though.”
Gallina stifled a chuckle. “I mean, I got things to do.”
“Uh huh.”
They were quiet for a while longer.
“You never did hear those chapters, though,” Viv mused aloud.
“Hm. Guess we did have a deal.”
“Yeah.”
“Suppose if I ever need to fall asleep again, I’ll call in the rest of it. Maybe in that comfortable chair.”
Viv didn’t dignify that with a reply. But she was still smiling as they mounted the steps of The Perch and headed gratefully toward collapse in their own beds.