Chapter 23: Another Rainy Outing

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The two men had retreated into Ruddy’s since so few walked the streets due to rain. They sat at a corner table adjacent to the door, stiff-backed, out-of-place, and gruffly annoyed any customer who shuffled too near. The crowd numbers matched the Eaves, which meant several individuals backed into their table area and paid the price in verbal abuse.

Sherridan braved the bar while Lapis squeezed her and Eithne into a space against the opposite wall, away from the brashest drinkers. The other woman observed everything with curious delight, a reaction she would anticipate from a tourist but not a native Jilvaynan. She smiled brightly and accepted the drink that Sherridan gave her and sniffed at it before carefully taking a small sip. One cheek curled up as she winced.

“Ruddy’s doesn’t have for the best brews,” he apologized. “If you want, I can take you to a better place later, one that doesn’t water their beer and add sour to every mixed drink.”

“I’d like that,” she admitted. “I’d like something a bit more memorable for my first time in Jiy. I thought Coriy was huge! But Jiy is so much bigger.”

“Where are you from?” Lapis asked. She judged, by her accent, that she hailed from a rural settlement.

“Kewrik,” she admitted. “It’s a small farming community in the southern hills. There isn’t much there besides grain and a couple of orchards.”

Lapis sipped the drink; for Ruddy’s, the taste was downright divine. Compared to any other bar, it was undrinkable swill. “Sounds like the south.”

“I haven’t traveled south,” Sherridan admitted. “Only to communities in the north and east. The plains are littered with farms and small towns.”

The rest of his words drowned under a few louder individuals who said something about trouble in the Kells, but the majority of the custom ignored them—except for the two men, who took an unwarranted interest in the talk. That bothered Lapis, and from Sherridan’s expression, he disliked it as well.

“Maybe I should stay,” Sherridan said. “It looks like they may have more of a local interest in things.”

Lapis nodded as Eithne looked startled. “You wouldn’t mind?” she asked. “I’m not up on Jiy happenings. I’ve spent the last year nosing about rural communities and seeing if their new Headpeople are working out. It’s not the most exciting of experiences.”

“Oh, come now. Watching cows mate and grass grow can be rewarding.” Lapis grinned, reminded of Patch. She did not mind the country, but he was a city boy through and through, and every venture into the fresh air irritated him into a constant barrage of dark complaints. He stopped voicing them when she, annoyed in return, had snapped at him about it, but he continued to snarl inwardly, glaring at any poor blade of grass or animal visible along the roadways.

Sherridan laughed. “Patch usually puts a few more explicit words in that description.”

“His fondness of the country equals his fondness of the throne.” She handed him her half-drank beverage. “Have the rest,” she said, magnanimous. “I need to return to the Eaves. How many did Faelan bring?”

“He brought everyone who works this type of job that he trusts,” Eithne whispered. “There aren’t that many of us, truthfully. You need to know—those at the Eaves right now, the Blue Council isn’t expecting them. We’re not officially here, but protecting Midir is far more important than our original intent, so Faelan’s using us.” She pointed at her. “Faelan trusts you explicitly. He told us that. That’s why Adelind is so upset. She’s tried everything to get into his good graces, but nothing works.”

“Nothing will,” Lapis told her. “He knew Adelind from before his family died. She was an ass then, she’s an ass now. Why is she with you?”

“Ehren,” Eithne replied. “They’re together, though I think it’s more on her side than his.” She cocked her head. “You know them.”

“I used to. Anyway, stay safe. I don’t want to see anyone else’s life upended unexpectedly.”

Sherridan gripped her arm in sympathy before she moved away. She had expected him and Brander to seethe about her revelations, but they both swallowed the shocking news and continued on. Sherridan’s initial frustration had not stomped on their mutual respect, and she hoped she proved worthy of the trust. Of course, through her and Patch, they now had a place within Faelan’s inner circle, something she doubted either would casually throw away. They had too much vested in the rebellion for that.

She still did not understand the lack of distrust, of hate, that accompanied her revelations. She anticipated it from Faelan, Varr, Midir, but they only seemed relieved and overjoyed that she survived the terrible slaughter. They seemed to want to renew their relationship with her. Why? Tearlach’s initial gut-punch of shock did not ride with him, either. Why? She expected Ciaran’s nonchalant acceptance because he and his mother knew, from the beginning, about her escape. But the others?

Her hair raised on the back of her neck, as the two suspicious men rose and followed her out the door.

She slipped to the side and turned, ready to trigger her blades, but they ignored her. While the dark and rain had driven most people into shelter, a woman on the brink of middle age and two escorts hurried down the way. She wore a typical wealthy-merchant coat of a softly shimmery, pale pink, the buttons to the right side and sparkling, and a wide-brimmed matching hat with a fake jewel design in the front. They froze as the one nearest Lapis pulled a bulbous, red tech thing that reminded her of the Alchemist’s weapon. Were they actually Hoyt’s men?

She whipped around and slashed, ripping through cloth and flesh, exposing bone. He howled and dropped the weapon, clutching at his gushing wound. His partner did not react before Sherridan nailed his head, his metal knuckles glinting in the dim light. He toppled as a couple more guttershanks ran out Ruddy’s door; hired help, and they held their knives as poorly as those Hoyt employed at the Tree Streets Guardhouse. If he wished to take on syndicates like the Minq, he needed to upgrade to undershanks rather than rely on easily bought but incompetent street thugs.

Eithne tripped the backup; they flailed, fell, and floundered on top of one another before rolling excitedly around, trying to gain their feet. Lapis snaked her blade under one’s chin, and they all stopped, frozen, their eyes twitching. They would run, given a moment.

“Did they hire you?” she asked coldly as she nodded at the two felled Dentherions.

“Need the bits,” one whimpered as a thin trickle of blood made its way down the neck of her target.

“Them’s hirin’, said it weren’t tough, just needed bodies,” another trembled. “Just t’night, here at Ruddy’s.”

“So you’re backup?”

Her target whined.

“They work for Hoyt?”

“No no no, jest Dentherions! Nuthin’ t’ do wit’ the Kells ‘n that mess!”

“Git.”

They fled, as fearful as the shanks that supported Nevid. Other customers within the bar emerged, to see the commotion, like good little curious Grey Streets residents. The wounded Dentherion howled something at them; they noted the dropped tech and stopped, fear striking fast and deep. Lapis cleared her throat.

“Whoever wants to ‘keep can keep the pot,” she told them. Only a couple stepped forward, interested; the rest retreated, stepping on each other’s heels, casting the tech terrified looks. It lay in the mud, splattered, useless, a truly horrifying sight.

“Thanks, Lady,” one said, toeing the weapon. Nothing happened; he sucked up a breath and used the ratty edges of his jacket to grab the item. “We’ll take ‘m on in.”

“Make sure they give you at least a silver for the tech.”

Another grinned. “Aye, Lady.”

Sherridan intercepted the three Dentherion targets before they moved much beyond the incident, and she and Eithne hustled to keep up.

“He has a stake?” the rebel asked.

“He has tech, so it won’t matter,” Lapis told her. “All they have to do is show the guards what he possessed. To get free, he and his partner will have to worm their way around some riled people who will automatically think they’re involved with what’s going on over in the Kells.”

The stranger bowed slightly to Sherridan, her black-gloved hands clenched, her desperation coating her. “Thank you for your concern, but really—”

Sherridan did not move. Her escorts, one man, one woman, tensed, though they did not reach for weapons. Good. Lapis did not look forward to harming another that night, but she would, if they pulled one.

“This isn’t a night to be out,” she began in a pleasant, sympathetic tone, as the unmistakable ting of a bell reached them. It came from the direction the three wished to go.

“Shit!” one of the shanks shouted. “Mama’s comin’! Let’s go, louts!” They quickly snagged their stakes’ feet, intent on dragging the two men to the nearest guardhouse. The injured one howled as they tugged him across the worn, broken road, but his struggles ended with a boot to the head.

The woman and her escorts frowned, confused, as Lapis sighed. “That’s the guard bell signaling Mama Poison’s up and about,” she told them. They blankly regarded her. “Mama Poison’s one of the carrion lizards that live in the Pit. She likes to take walks when the enclosure floods, and it’s rained a lot lately. It’s best to stay out of her way until she decides to wander on back.”

“A lizard?” one asked, skeptical.

“You can wait around and see for yourself,” Sherridan said congenially. “She’s larger than a farm wagon and faster than you think.”

The woman stared, aghast. “Larger than a farm wagon?”

“She’s old, big, and while not temperamental, if you fall on her bad side, she’ll take you out quickly.” Lapis jerked her chin after the shanks and their prize. “Do you think they’d flee before a small and insignificant lizard? If you want, the Eaves is a good place to hole up. You can hide in the crowd.”

“I thank you, but—” She trailed off, and her escorts gasped.

Lapis glanced over her shoulder as the large animal lumbered their way through the rainy mist, swaying side to side, filling the center of the road. She barely distinguished the bellringer jangling their bell, far behind the enormous beast.

“He did bleed a lot,” Sherridan admitted. Lapis nodded; it would not surprise her, for a carrion lizard to follow the scent of blood. She smiled warmly at the woman and headed the opposite direction, intent on taking a side alley, Eithne practically walked on her heels. She almost chuckled when the three strangers hastened their step and followed.

“What is that?” the woman asked, her voice trembling.

“Mama Poison.” Lapis attempted to make her voice as calm as possible. “Like I said, she’s a carrion lizard. There are several in the Pit, and they’re large, strong, and we basically let them do what they want when they walk around town. Mama’s usually the one who leaves, though. She’s quite amiable, if you don’t anger her. She typically ignores us as she wanders about, but every so often, some stupid shank will decide to tangle with her. Her claws are deadly, and then she eats you.”

The stranger looked to puke.

Eithne did not look much better.

“I . . . have a question.” One of the escorts hissed, and the stranger hissed back. “Are you chasers?”

Lapis nodded. “Out on a stake that’s taken an odd turn,” she said. “Why?”

“Someone called you Lady.”

“I’m Lady Lanth,” she said carefully. Any identity she wished to hide from the rebels had already washed away with the tide of ill-luck, but she did not know what the stranger wanted to do with the knowledge. Did she work for Hoyt?

The woman nodded abruptly and dug her hand into her coat pocket; Lapis tensed, but she only retrieved a crumpled piece of paper. She took it, unfolded it, and stared at an old but obvious portrait of Faelan and Midir. It was a Dentherion-style image, taken with their special cameras, not painted or sketched, like a Jilvaynan one. “I’m looking for these men,” she said.

Both Sherridan and Eithne peeked over her shoulder, and Lapis gave them credit for not reacting to the unexpected question. She slowed, halted, turned on her heel, and held up her index finger. All others stopped with her.

“I want a truthful answer,” she told the woman, keeping a pleasant tone. “And maybe I can help. Why are you looking for them?”

The two escorts might have throttled her in another situation, but their warning glares did not stop her. She swallowed hard, then licked her lips and regarded the picture. “I’m here for a special meeting with them, but, well, the Kells—”

Lapis’s mind whirled. Had Midir set up a pre-meeting? Did Faelan know? Was that why Sir Adrastos went to the Kells? He played more of a role in the rebellion than Lapis thought. “And who is your mutual contact? Not Hoyt, I hope.”

She relaxed slightly. “No. Everyone at the bridge whispered about him, but I don’t know who that is. Our contact is named Carnival.”

Istak was Carnival to those outside the Wolf Collaborate. Shit.

“Well, you’re in luck,” Lapis said. She held up the paper. “Because I do know where to find the men in this pic. That mess at the Kells isn’t the disaster I thought. We can discuss payment at the Eaves. Sherridan, would you mind getting a table?”

It made her nervous to ask; he, after all, held a position of power within the rebellion while she was ‘Patch’s woman’. He slipped away without a word, continuing to play the part, while Eithne stood and smiled, a tinge of greed giving her the feel of a chaser. A good act. The escorts looked anything but happy, though the woman accepted her words without comment; something about her identity as Lady Lanth triggered it. She led them the few blocks to the Eaves, which stood, brightly lit in the downpour, an unintentional beacon. The noise from the packed house filtered into the dark, and she hoped it and the bodies who produced it concealed this unexpected meeting.

A woman leaned against the wall near the back door; she thought she remembered her from Coriy but could not clearly recall. She and Eithne greeted one another warmly, which meant she was a rebel, and someone Faelan trusted. The three strangers stepped nervously into the interior, though their surprise at the dimly lit, small entry nearly made her laugh. Neassa waited with Tearlach near the door to the tavern proper, doing her best to ignore them while intently studying them.

“Welcome back,” Tearlach said.

“Did Sherridan tell you Mama’s up and about?”

“He did,” Neassa said. “It’s been years since I had to worry about avoiding Mama.”

“She’s just a few streets away. Hopefully she stays there.” Lapis moved past.

The area to the side of the reading corner was clear but for two short tables shoved together. Midir sat in the middle sipping from a glass, Faelan and Mairin standing on either side. Unchipped plates with finger foods that did not look hastily prepared and a flower-painted ceramic teakettle with gold-washed cups made a nice if sparse presentation.

The street rats were just as rowdy as normal. The customers were just as chatty as normal. Why did the night feel like anything but?

The three did not hide their astonishment. Midir raised an eyebrow, then smiled calmly and motioned to the chairs awaiting sitters. “Tonight has proven quite the exceptional outing,” he told them congenially. “Please, join me.”

The woman recovered and nodded spastically before plopping down into the middle chair and shoving her hands into her lap. “I . . . I’m happy to meet you.”

“I’m Midir.” He waited for a reply. She looked at her escorts, who refused to sit, and swallowed.

“I’m Imaralis.”

Faelan and Mairin relaxed slightly. She confirmed her identity, though Lapis still wondered if she were a true potential ally or a plant. She glanced about for Sherridan; he stood with Ciaran at the bar, unobtrusive but alert. Eithne stayed in the entry, so perhaps she needed to return to the roof. Her regular reading circle rats and Dachs had disappeared; Dani manned the bar, bantering with the customers as eloquently and loudly as her boss.

The barkeep had offered the use of his place, and it looked like the rebels would need it. If Lyet helped, a quick clean would spruce up the living quarters enough for an important, impromptu discourse. She pondered Dach’s past role within the rebellion because neither her brother nor Midir would casually accept the help from a previously employed ‘keeper, even if they had been a rebel.

Faelan noted her, nodded, but did not indicate he needed her. She wandered over to the rats, uncertain what, exactly, to do. She did not particularly want to help clean whatever mess Dachs left his apartment in, but her anxiety made reading an uncomfortable endeavor.

“Lady!” Jesi waved her arm excitedly. She halted at the table and the girl leaned over far enough her torso lay on it. “They all went up to help Dachs clean up,” she informed her. “They said you accidentally found another important person and saved them from Mama!”

“It’s been an odd night,” she agreed.

Nerik skiddled up, his normal hesitancy about her absent. “She was at the Lells a couple of days ago,” he whispered, indicating the stranger with his finger. She bent down, and he pressed his lips against her ear. “She told some of the ‘keeps that she was here for meetin’s. She was lookin’ for a ride to Blossom, ‘cause she’s stayin’ there.”

Interesting. The Blossom district sat outside the city proper, a place that many, many underground rings and syndicates called home. The fabulous undermarket was there, the legit merchants occupying a large warehouse above ground while the ones selling illegal merchandise inhabited the tunnels below. It made sense, for a nervous Dentherion contact to hide where few asked questions.

“Did she say anything else?”

“Somethin’ about schoolin’ in Dentheria. Is she a tourist?”

“I don’t think that’s her primary reason for being here.” She lowered her voice. “Would you mind telling my brother what you just told me?”

“No, that’s fine.” He grinned. “You both know Patch!”

“Yeah,” she said, returning his grin. “I’m glad you got to meet him.”

“Lady, I never woulda thought, you knew him,” he admitted. “I never woulda thought anyone I knew would know him. I never woulda thought, people like him wouldn’t mind meetin’ people like me.”

“Of course he didn’t mind. He wants to help you guys as much as he can. Sometimes that isn’t possible, but when it is, if you ask, he will help.”

Nerik happily trotted over to Faelan to impart his information. His change astounded her. She doubted he would act familiar with many other adults, but the association with Patch meant something dear to him. She needed to ask the older rats about it.

The other urchins eyed her expectantly as Rik hailed her. “Lady, I must admit, I’m shocked!”

“Shocked?”

“I thought your partner would be an easy-going and considerate man, someone as careful as you concerning stakes. You mentioned a couple of times, you trained with him, so it seemed to me you would have shared similar traits.”

“Patch is very thorough,” she said. “He has to be, to succeed in the stakes he chases. He researches his targets and once he decides to give chase, he worries them into a jail cell.”

“You go on a lot of stakes with him.”

“Not the most dangerous ones, but yes.”

“And you’ve been partners for eight years?” another customer, a regular called Shoose, shook her head. “There're rumors about him all over the Grey Streets, but you’ve never been part of them.”

“No. But the reason we hid the relationship isn’t viable anymore, so . . .” She shrugged.

“Danaea’s gonna be pissed!”

Danaea?

“She’s always braggin’ that they have a passionate love affair,” the woman told her. “I always thought she lied about it to convince the guard not to cheat her on payouts. Seein’ him with you? I’m certain of it.”

Her heart twinged. Danaea was one of the most successful hunters in Jiy; she seduced her stakes and took them out when they were not in much of a position to save themselves. Just because Patch never mentioned her did not mean he had not met her, though he would have said something if they had worked together.

Phialla and Brone practically ran through the front door, avoiding the customers—barely—and staggered to a stop before her, panting. They carried scented candles, and Dachs must have sent them to the night market to retrieve some. Phialla swallowed and Brone’s seriousness alerted her.

“Lady, there’re men about,” Brone whispered. “They’re trying to pay the rats at the market to tell them where you are. They’re not guttershanks, though.”

“They’re not from Jiy,” Phialla murmured. “They said you were friends in Coriy and wanted to get back in touch. They sounded like Meris from the Lells, so maybe they’re from the south.”

Meris was a southern farmgirl who thought the big city held her dreams. A Jilvaynan accent like hers, combined with the remarks about Coriy, meant Blue Council members instead of Hoyt’s guttershanks, and Lapis did not know whether to feel grateful or terrified.

“Alright.” She smiled at them, hoping to alleviate some of their worry. “Take those things up to Dachs.”

“They were talking to Lars and his group,” Brone told her. “He doesn’t like you, Lady.”

No, he did not. He failed as a reading rat due to his own negligence and blamed her for his lack of interest. His jealousy over Rin’s success did not help. He and his small gang caused damage for fun, and he targeted the readers out of spite. The younger, the better, because they could not fight back effectively. Rin, easy-going and amiable with other urchins, beat him bloody on a couple of occasions; the last involved Lyet, and Lars would not forget the humiliation and the pain.

“Thank you for warning me.”

They eyed her doubtfully but left for the third floor. Lapis looked at Faelan; he raised an eyebrow and she meandered over to lean against the wall next to him.

“What’s up?”

“Brone and Phialla said that some men are trying to pay streetrats for info on me. They were speaking to a group who isn’t too fond of me or the reading circle, so they have probably found out where I live. They were telling people they were from Coriy and Phialla said they had southern Jilvaynan accents, which means they’re from Perben rather than Hoyt.”

“Dammit,” he hissed. “They can’t know Midir is here.”

“There’s a stake I’ve been working off and on for a while now, for the Box Guardhouse. They just want info on who the target deals with. He’s active at night, so I watch his place then. He has quite the menagerie of people who visit, and he never seems to be alone. I can wait for them outside, and maybe lead them there and have them sit and observe me work for a few hours. Or maybe Mama will wander by, and they can have a more exciting night. It’ll give you enough time to get Midir and the contact up to Dach’s apartment.”

“You need someone with you.”

“Midir and this meeting are far more important than me,” she reminded him. “You need everyone here for protection.” She pulled her hood over her face. “I’ll be across the street from the Moth Apartments, on a roof with a large boxy tarp.”

“Lapis—”

She waved her hand. “Don’t wait up.”

She understood Faelan’s concern, but the stake research would prove boring. It always did. More importantly, watching the people filter in and out of a nondescript, cracked wooden door would give her time to herself, to think, to feel, to break and recollect herself without interference.


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