It came down to waiting nowonly waitingwondering over and over again where Old Man was, why they waited at all
Duran sat on his stool and listened to the work going on next door. Since morning, people had been over at Zeldezia's shop, removing the burned and scorched manure and flour, and washing down the wall withthe gods knewno shortage of water.
He stayed to his shop, kept the door crackedindecisive between the pretense of being open for business and the fear of his neighbors.
Mother Garan was the only visitor, desperate, on the edge of one of her headaches.
He gave her the whole pot of willow-tea, he held her gnarled hands and impressed on her as gravely as he could the danger of too much use.
He scared her, perhaps. She looked as if he had.
He wanted not to charge her, wanted to give her some money to go to an uptown doctorbut he knew her pride; and he feared she might spread that story.
Zeldezia had spent little time in her shop. Duran had seen her wandering up and down the street, whispering to various people, and throwing hateful looks in the direction of his door. Gods alone knew what she was telling everyone, what charges she was making.
He could not believe that Zeldezia had any enemies who would take the time and the risk to set a fire.
Could it have been someone after him, confusing his shop with Zeldezia's? He shuddered at the thought. Whoever had been the target
If it had a bit more time to burn, it might have caught the second story on fire, and then gods help everyone up and down the block.
Now, seated on his stool, waiting as the day drifted on to afternoonwaiting, and not knowinghe simply hoped.
Tonighthe and Dog would take a walk. Lock the door to delay anyone finding him gone
And just walk away.
"Have you seen the priest today?" Wellhyrn asked, swirling the wine around in his glass, his legs stretched comfortably before him. It was Ladirno's apartment. It was mid-afternoon.
"No. And neither have you, I suppose."
Wellhyrn shook his head. There was a curious expression on the younger man's face this afternoon, a look of smug, predatory satisfaction. Ladirno had heard the news from Old Town already, and it took no great wit to add things up.
"I know what you did last night," Ladirno said.
A look of surprise widened Wellhyrn's eyes.
"Whatdo you mean?"
"There was a fire at the seamstress's shop. A very suspicious fire."
"Bad luck, I suppose."
"Luck had nothing to do with it. You're very smart, Hyrnbut not smart enough, not smart enough to cover your tracksnot smart enough to know me. I'm not as stupid as you think I am."
"I never thought you stupid," Wellhyrn protested.
"You made mistakes. You said yesterday you were going to make Duran suffer. As happensyou've pushed a situation already about to move. But let me tell you, friend, there's someone knows how that fire started. Your reputation is in those hands. That's a fool, Wellhyrn. And I'm not a fool. I won't stand for it."
For a long moment, Wellhyrn stared at Ladirno. He blinked twice and then smiled. "You did that with remarkably few clues, Ladir. I'm amazed."
"You aren't upset. You aren't even upset."
Wellhyrn lifted a velvet shoulder. Gold chain glinted in the light.
"Fool," Ladirno said. "You're brilliant, Hyrn, in your work, but leave politics alone. In that you are most definitely a fool."
"Ladir, Ladir." Wellhyrn's voice warmed to a companionable tone. There was just the slightest hint of patronization in it. "I turn your statement around . . . do you think me that stupid? The fellow I hired is a lackwit"
"Wonderful."
"I made sure he left town," Wellhyrn said, lifting an eyebrow. "I had someone follow him this morning. It'll be taken care of"
"And where does it stop, Wellhyrn?"
"It stops. It will stop." The assurance was gone from Wellhyrn's face. His lips made a thin line.
"You listen to me. We may fool people out of money now and again, the Duke being no exception, but by the gods! We haven't robbed them of it. And we don't murder."
"Getting soft, aren't you?" Wellhyrn sneered.
Ladirno got up, walked up to Wellhyrn, reached out, and grasped Wellhyrn by the front of his tunic. "You listen to me," he hissed. "I made you at court. I took you on as my apprentice. And I can just as easily dump you right back where you came from. Of the two of us, you tell me who the Duke respects most!"
Wellhyrn reached up and removed Ladirno's hand from his tunic. His face was white.
"You keep that in mind, boy," Ladirno said, standing over him. "And don't try to get back at me in any way. By now, I know your tricks. And, if you try to take revenge, I'll go to the Duke with what I know. You might be surprised just how much that is."
A hint of genuine fear crossed Wellhyrn's face.
"You listen to me, and listen well. The Duke won't stand for your kind of goings-on. You may think you can deny it, but I caution you again. Do you want to face up to the Duke's wizards? They can get the truth out of you."
Wellhyrn shook his head slightly.
"We can go far, you and I," Ladirno said, letting warmth re-enter his voice. "But you need to learn to control your ambition. You're a damned fine alchemist. You could be one of the best. Don't ruin your chances by overstepping yourself. Or by underestimating others. Do you understand me?'
For a moment, Wellhyrn held Ladirno's gaze. Then he seemed to shake himself from his fear: his smile came back. "Ah, well. There won't be needonce Duran's gone. Will there?"
Vadami looked at the crowd which had gathered before him. A sidelong glance at Zeldezia sent a cold chill down his spine: the woman seemed utterly changed since they had met last. Her face was stony, her eyes narrowed, and when she spoke, there was a terrible violence in her voice.
He supposed it was to be expected, having lived through the attempted burning of her shop last night.
That was what things had gotten tothe Sabirn knew there was movement against themand they struck.
And they all had cause for fear.
He had tried to calm Zeldezia, he had attempted to keep her on the path of Hladyr's willkeep her from the sin of hate in what she did
"Do you understand what we're to do?" he asked of the gathered men and women. No one answered, but he saw several nods. "And you understand that we do the will of Hladyr. What we do we do for his sakefor the sake of souls' salvationdrive away the sin of hate, drive out the demons"
"Who else but the Sabirn would do something like that to me?" Zeldezia cried above his voice. "Who else but Duran, who shelters 'em?"
"Tut ain't going to like this," one man warned. "He's a friend o' Duran's."
"Aye," added another. "Him an' Duran sit together all the time at the 'Cat.' He won't go for this."
"What Tutadar thinks isn't important now," Vadami said quickly, before other members of the crowd could agree with the speaker. "What's important is saving this neighborhood! Fire and flood! And Hladyr only knows what next?"
"The Duke," a woman shouted, "he let Duran off when 'e 'ad 'im"
"Duran witched 'im!" someone shouted.
"Demon worshippers!"
"Maybe if we asked 'im to leave," another man said, "he'd"
"No. We don't want him coming back. And he would, once the furor dies down." Vadami drew himself up. "Forget all the good things Duran did for you in the past. He's not the same man anymore. He hired a Sabirn to work for him. He even had that same Sabirn live with him! What does that tell you?"
Suddenly, Zeldezia stepped forward. "Father Vadami ain't tellin' you all! I seenI seen them Sabirn look at Duran like he's some kind of a lord of theirs. I seen that old man hangin' 'round his shop. I seen Duran talkin' to any Sabirn he can lay a hand on. He's a wizard! Ain't nobody can tell me otherwise."
"Zeldezia"
"I heard that damned Sab boy playin' his flute! Music gave me the creeps! It was demon music, on my soul it was! I seen him look at me, that kid, with nothin' in his eyes but darkness."
The crowd murmured louder now. Vadami felt sweat break out.
"Kill that Sab-lover!" Zeldezia cried. "Ain't no pityhe never showed me no pity. I asked him to save his soul by givin' up seein' the Sabirn, an' look what 'e did to me!"
The crowd stirred now; their voices had grown deeper, had grown ugly.
"Ever since that Sabirn kid showed up, we ain't had nothin' but evil weather!" Her voice went shrill as she turned to the crowd. "You lost business? Your customers been stayin' away! It ain't your fault you been goin' hungry. Duran's done this to you, an' you know it! I say, let's go after him an' give 'im back some of what he's given us!"
"I hear you!" a few men called back. "Let's get that bastard!" others growled. "Burn 'im out!"
"Wait!" Vadami took a step toward the crowd and lifted both hands over his head. "Stop! Think what you're going to do! Don't start anything the Duke's Guard will have to deal with!"
"Duke won't care if we get ourselves a demon worshipper!" Zeldezia shouted. "'Less he's witched, too!"
"Get 'em all!" someone cried.
The crowd surged forward, their faces distorted with anger, following Zeldezia who had started off toward Duran's neighborhood.
"No! Stop!" Vadami was pushed aside. Sweat ran freely down his face now. Gods! It was getting away from himtotally out of his hands. He gulped down a huge breath, and sprinted off after the crowd. Maybe . . . Oh, Hladyr make it so . . . he could keep them from undirected violence
Gods above and below! What had he done?
Duran stepped outside, turned, and locked the door behind him. Dog sat waiting close by, panting in the sultry heat. The storm still had not broken, but thunder muttered ominously in the distance.
The street was strangely deserted for this time of day. The men had stopped work at Zeldezia's shop, and he saw life at only a few of the neighboring buildings.
He shrugged. It would make it easier if he could leave without seeing any of his neighbors. He pocketed the key, aware of the uselessness of the act, took up his staff he had leaned against the wall, and started off down the street.
He had written Tut a short note, explaining he was leaving and why . . . that he did not hold anything against Tut or Ithar: they had been the truest friends, in good times as well as bad.
He reached the corner, paused, and turned around. His eyes misted slightly, and he blinked. That was your shop, he thought, your home. And now it's nobody's. You're done here, Duran, through. Leave it in the hands of the gods.
He sighed and started off down the street that ran perpendicular to his, headed east. He had a good half hour of walking before he reached the east side of town where Kekoja and Old Man would be waiting for him.
He quickened his pace, Dog running along ahead, anxious now, only for it to be over. . . .
The Great Hall was nearly empty at this hourDuke Hajun himself had come from his dinner-table. He stared at the young guardsman who stood panting before him, having spilled out his news
A mobgods. . . .
Loose in Old Town?
"No idea what stirred them up?" he asked, and the Captain of the Guard, who had brought the boy
"Sabirn, Your Grace."
"Damn.Where are they headed?"
"South, Your Grace. Toward the harbor." The Captain licked his lips. "It's a small mob, Your Grace, and we"
"I don't give a damn if it is a small mob! Get your butt moving! I want a squadron dispatched! Get it stopped!"
"Aye, Your Grace."
"Reasonable force! You hear me?"
The Captain saluted, the young officer saluted, and ran from the hall.
Hajun found himself shaking. A small mob? There was no such thing.
Duran kept to the center of the street, avoiding the standing pools of water, and quickened his pace to a fast walk. He did not want to be caught by darkness outside his own neighborhood. Strange streets always made him nervous, a good indication of how limited his world had grown.
He had not traveled this far east in a long time, but the streets and the buildings looked much like those in his own neighborhood. Dog seemed to think the walk to be a holiday of sorts. He frisked and danced down the street, his tail wagging, every once in a while barking for the sheer joy of it.
Duran calculated he had been walking close to a third of an hour now. The clouds had grown thicker and thunder rumbled incessantly. He noted people had begun to light lamps in their homes and shops, though they kept their doors and windows open in the heat.
He looked ahead and saw a slight figure waiting by the edge of a house, a shadow in the early twilight. His heart raced. A thief? He thought of his moneybelt, and tightened the grip on his staff.
Dog, however, had recognized the figure, and ran ahead, tail wagging. The person reached down and patted Dog's head, then straightened.
Kekoja!
Duran quickened his pace again. Why was Kekoja here, instead of waiting at the edge of town?
"Can you run far?" Kekoja asked with no preamble.
Duran blinked. "Why?"
"Because there's a mob after you, Sor Duran, an' it's an angry mob, an' I don't want to stay around an' see what happens."
A bolt of fear struck through Duran's heart. A mob? Who had raised it? After what had happened last night, he knew the answer even as he asked himself the question. "Let's go!" he said, and set out after Kekoja at a slow run.
Why, why, why? he asked himself in time to his running footsteps. Why couldn't they just let me go?
His breath came harder now, and he felt the sweat run down his sides. Dammit! He was getting too old for an all-out run like this. His heart beat raggedly. Maybe he would die of heart failure and save the mob its trouble.
He concentrated on Kekoja running before him, on the long thin legs pumping tirelessly up and down. There was more strength in that wiry body than many people could guess. Just stay with him, he urged himself. Don't fall too far behind!
The moneybelt felt like it weighed as much as a heavy stone, and bumped up and down on his waist. He was burning hot, and wished he could stop long enough to remove his cloak. Several passersby turned in amazement to watch the race, and a strange one it must have appeared to them: a large yellow dog far out in the lead, a dark-haired boy loping along, and a middle-aged man bringing up the rear. If Duran had not been running for his life, he would have found it amusing.
He heard a muted roar off to his left and chanced a hasty glance in that direction. His heart lurched. Coming down the street he and Kekoja were passing was the mob.
"Here they come!" he called out, his breath growing shorter. "I think . . . they've . . . seen us! Run! I'll make it . . . fast as I can!"
"Not far," Kekoja shouted back over his shoulder. "Three more blocks."
Three more blocks. Gods! He would die before then. He reached down inside himself to gather needed strength. You're Ancar, he told himself. An Ancar doesn't tire in a race. An Ancar will die on his feet rather than give up! Keep going! Make your ancestors proud!
He stumbled once, caught himself, and ran on. Dog had sensed his master's panic, and stretched out a dead run, ready to turn and fight if need be. Kekoja began to pull away, and Duran knew he would be left behind.
"Keep going!" Kekoja called over his shoulder. "I'll get the others ready!"
The others? Duran dimly wondered how many "others" there might be. As many as made up the mob? He doubted that.
As he very much doubted his ability to run those three blocks more.
Vadami had caught up to the head of the mob before they had gone very far, but that was all he had been able to accomplish. He had tried reasoning with them, but the men and women who stalked along after Zeldezia were beyond reasoning now.
He and Zeldezia had called the men and women together in a neighborhood far to the east of Duran's, so no casual observer could guess what was going on. They had started off to the west, traveling a route that would bring them into Duran's neighborhood several streets to the north. Along the way, they had added a few more people to the mob, and Vadami estimated their numbers were now forty-five strong.
He did not understand how he had gotten into this position. He kept thinking of going off to the side and returning to the Temple. No one was listening to him. Everything was
"There he is!"
The mob roared. Vadami could barely make out a distant figure several blocks south, down the street headed east.
"After him!" shouted the burly fellow who had been so vocal earlier. "Don't let him get away!"
"Wait," Vadami yelled in a very unpriestlike voice. "Listen to me!"
Thunder rumbled overhead and lightning lit the sky. People began to run, waving sticks, pausing to gather up loose cobbles.
Then Vadami heard another noise over the thunder, the noise of hooves. Several other people had heard the sound, too, and they broke stride as they ran to glance around.
Suddenly, the street that crossed directly in front of them was filled with horses, and on those horses sat the green-cloaked Guard of the Duke himself.
"Halt!" their commander bellowed over the thunder. "Stop where you are, in the name of His Grace, the Duke!"
The mob halted and began to mill around, some men and women looked frightened, while others seemed increasingly defiant.
"Down with the Sabirn!"
Zeldezia's screech split the heavy silence. She darted off to one side, somehow escaped the arms of a guard who leaned halfway off his horse to catch her, and pelted down the street.
Her action spurred the mob into unthinking motion. Several men charged at the guardsmen, brandishing rocks they had picked up in their hands.
"Swords out!" The Guard commander roared.
Even over the yelling and the rumble of thunder, Vadami heard the rasp of steel on steel as the guardsmen drew their weapons.
The mob howled.
"Death to the Sabirn!" someone yelled.
The commander brought his hand down. "Engage!"
Vadami closed his eyes at the sound of the first scream. Confusion reigned: horses neighed, people cursed and screeched. A body pitched into Vadami, a horse went downVadami started to run, heart pounding in his chest, in the direction Zeldezia had taken, fear giving him a speed he had not known he possessed. His legs ached, and he wondered how Zeldezia could keep up the pace: others didmen passed him, with sticks in hand
Hladyr . . . Shining One! Help me to stop this!
Only the thunder answered him, thunder and the sound of Zeldezia's exhortations.
A large wagon stood in the center of the road. There were no buildings around Duran now, only the ancient arch of the river-gate, the harbor, and the fort built there to protect it. He ranhearing the shouts closer and closer behind himthe pelting of stonesDog loping, panting, beside him
"Duran!"
Kekoja was with the wagon! The sight of the boy frantically beckoning him on gave Duran new energy: he ran, his ears ringing, and small black specks beginning to dot his vision. Behind him, he heard the shrill voice of a woman crying out for death to all unbelievers
Zeldezia. He would have recognized that crow's voice anywhere.
He stumbled, staggered, caught himself painfully, and kept running
"Duran! Hurry!"
Kekoja's voice. A stone hit to his lefthe threw himself into final effort toward that wagonran and ran until he lost his vision, lost his footing entirely.
Strong hands lifted him up. He hung in their grip, limp.
"Get him into the wagon," another voice said. Old Man. Old Man had made it to safety, too.
"They're on us!" Kekoja cried.
"Aye, I see them."
Duran was half-dragged, half-carried over the side of the wagontried to help himself as men lifted him up and then unceremoniously dumped him down on his basketshis -baskets!
Dog landed in the middle of him
Stones hailed about them, the shouts grewDuran looked down the street, and his chest tightened: men running at the wagon, armed with knives and large stones. In the forefront ran Zeldezia, her dark hair come loose from its ribbons, streaming out behind her like a storm cloud.
And Vadami.
Duran closed his eyes. He had never particularly liked the priest, but he had not thought Vadami one to stoop to mob violence.
"Ready?" Old Man called.
"Aye," someone answered.
Three Sabirn men stood at the side of the wagon, long metal tubes held in their hands.
Old Man stood facing the mob, not moving, not saying a thing. Duran wanted to yell, to curse, to do anything but lie in a shivering heap in the wagon, waiting for the mob to take him.
"Now!" Old Man said.
Duran had been in situations of danger before, and knew that time could do one of two things: it could speed up so he had taken action before he knew it, or it could slow down so that each moment felt like an hour.
The thunder cracked close at hand: all of Dandro's hells seemed to explode from the tubessmoke, and fire, and screams from the crowd. Smoke cleared on the windthere were people on the groundthe crowd running in terror
The men scrambled aboard, Kekoja and Old Man, too. The wagon jerked into motion, wheels rumbling on the cobbles, and Duran held on to Dog, held on to him for dear life.
He had finally seen true wizardry, he thought: he had seen it with his own eyes.