Shear straightened, and touched her splintered bokken to her brow. He answered the salute and noticed how sweat gleamed on her bare arms, chin, and neck, although her breaths also appeared completely even.
She tucked the bokken up under an arm, and said, ‘Perhaps next time you’ll really try.’ Then she walked away.
He stood for a time in the quiet of the meadow, surrounded by the trampled flat grasses, the stars gleaming overhead, and he allowed himself one deep breath. The night air chilled his back where his shirt clung to him.
Feeling a faint wind brushing through nearby branches, he cocked his head, thinking, and it occurred to him that, indeed, it
* * *
Lee – whose given name was Leeopo Mulliner, though she’d die before ever revealing
It had been a sweet arrangement. These stupid sailors went off risking drowning in an accident (something she’d never put herself in the way of) or death in a raid (something else she saw no percentage in), only to bring loot back to Malaz that they exchanged for coin (of which Geffen got his cut) in order to spend it in Geffen’s taverns, brothels, and flop-houses until they found themselves destitute once more and eyeing the sea for yet another raid, whereupon the whole milking operation began again.
A lucrative system for him and for her. Until
It wasn’t damned fair, that’s what it was.
So now she was standing on the public pier with Gef, waiting for some major player killer from the mainland. A knifer all Gef’s contacts swore by. A hireling whose price would damn well nearly clean them out.
Again, it wasn’t damned fair. But they’d driven them to it. Left them no choice. Whatever would come, it was
She shifted her weight from foot to foot, unhappy with the errand, and rubbed her right silver earring. These were the one extravagance she allowed herself: Falari silver crafted into the shape of birds – hummingbirds, in point of fact.
She noted Geffen eyeing her fidgeting, and he gave her a scowl of his own impatience. ‘Look,’ he said. ‘This guy’s top talent. Worked all over – even Genabackis. You heard a’ Genabackis?’
‘No.’
‘Well. Word is he’s also an Adept of Dark. Rashan. So you watch your attitude. Okay?’
She looked away, rolling her eyes to the sky.
The tramp two-master nudged the pier. Hands threw lines, and a gangway was wrangled into place. Passengers began disembarking. Lee crossed her arms and let out a long breath. It wasn’t a large crowd this eve, workers and petty merchants mostly. Carrying their bundles and bags, they parted round Gef and her until it seemed that no one was left.
She cast a questioning look to Gef and when she glanced back there he was right before them, making her start slightly, despite her scepticism. Small and skinny he was, almost painfully so; short midnight-black hair standing in all directions; and wearing the typical black trousers and black cotton shirt that were so clichéd they almost made her laugh – until she caught his expression and the sneer in her throat turned to a swallow.
Unnerving, his eyes. Like a reptile’s, watchful yet somehow dead. And a knowing smile, predatory, that seemed to take great pleasure from the shiver that his gaze scraped up her spine. She cleared her throat.
‘Let’s go,’ he said, motioning up the pier.
Geffen looked him up and down, his own scepticism obvious. ‘This is all you got?’
The lad raised a bag he carried in one hand. It was slim, not even long enough to carry a sword. ‘This is all I need.’
Geffen invited him onward. Lee walked alongside.
‘Kinda young to have acquired such a reputation,’ Gef said.
‘Are you reconsidering?’ the lad asked, and his unnerving smile widened as he asked. ‘Because it would upset me to have come all this way for nothing.’
‘No, no. Just … wondering.’
‘Let’s say I earned it.’
‘Sure, sure.’
‘Where?’ Lee asked.
The lazy-lidded eyes shifted to her, looked her up and down with an undisguised contempt that made her clench her fists. ‘Elsewhere.’
‘No kidding. Where elsewhere?’
The smile grew, pulling back from tiny, sharp, white teeth. ‘The Falaran peninsula most recently. I tracked down a fellow there who claimed a very important kill that wasn’t his.’
‘What kill?’
‘A king.’
‘So you killed him because he lied about the kill?’
‘No, I killed him because he lied about who he was.’