“Yeah.” Grab the advantage, run with it. “I know all about it. That’s why they sent me. See, Terip—I used to kill lizards for a living. One time in Demlarashan, I helped take down a whole fucking dragon, me and just one other guy. So I got no problem putting away your pet dwenda if he gets in my way. Now, you tell me—what’s so fucking special about Sherin Herlirig Mernas that you’ve got to try to kill me when I ask after her?”
“Who?”
“You heard.”
“I don’t know that name.”
“No?” Ringil produced the dragon knife and held it up in front of Hale’s good eye. He breathed deep. “You remember well enough that she’s barren, that she comes from marsh dweller stock, but you don’t know her name? That’s lizardshit. Now
And something seemed to break in Hale. Maybe the talk of sorcery, maybe Janesh’s murder, or maybe he just wasn’t as tough as he used to be. He flinched back from the tip of the fang.
“Don’t . . . wait, listen to me. I can’t—”
Ringil tapped his eyelid with the knife. “Yeah, you can.”
“I don’t fucking
“About a month.”
“A
Ringil slammed his palm against Hale’s forehead for purchase, dragged the dragon knife tip down the man’s cheek, and tore the skin open to the bone. Blood spritzed everywhere. Hale shrieked and flailed. Ringil let him go, as if he were hot to the touch. He felt his own face twitch, felt a deep pounding start somewhere in his chest. The moment was an unbroken Yhelteth horse, bucking under him, taking him away, body and soul. With shaking hands, he fumbled in his pocket, found the charcoal sketch of Sherin and rolled it open in both hands, still holding the dragon knife at the top edge of the parchment like some ornate scroll end. He tried to get his breathing back.
“You
Hale cupped a hand at his wounded cheek, staring.
“It’s not her.”
Ringil seized him by the throat. The sketch of Sherin fluttered away. “You fucking piece of shit, that’s it—”
“No, no.” Babbling, working weakly at Ringil’s grip with both hands, voice gone almost sleepy with terror. “Don’t, don’t—it’s not her.”
“
“It’s not . . . I didn’t think you . . . not one girl—it’s
Something portcullis-heavy seemed to clank down behind Ringil’s eyes. Abruptly the rage drained out of him and he felt the shiver of an apprehension he couldn’t name in its place. He let go of Hale’s throat.
“He? You’re talking about the dwenda?”
Hale nodded brokenly, still trying to edge away from Ringil along the curve of the wall. Ringil took a handful of silk robe and dragged him back. He leaned close.
“Talk to me.” Voice trembling from the sudden collapse of the fury. Blood singing in the depths of his hearing like the sea. “You want to live, you talk to me. You tell me about this dwenda.”
“They’ll kill me if I do.”
“And I will kill you if you don’t, right here and now. Make a choice, Terip. The dwenda. What’s he doing here?”
“I don’t know.” The slave trader made a peculiarly morose gesture. “He talks to the cabal, not me. Word came down. Any marsh cunt, anything looks like it might have the blood, make sure the warlocks check it out. If it can’t breed, you set it aside. Count it as a tithe.”
“Right. And anyone comes asking after a woman like that, you show them the joyous longshank girls. Right?”
Hale stared downward, would not meet Ringil’s eye. The silence stretched. Blood dripped off the slaver’s face and into his soiled silk lap.
Eril came over and crouched at Ringil’s side. “We’re done here,” he murmured. “No one breathing left. You want me to do him, too?”
Ringil shook his head. “Get me that mace over there. We need a messenger. I don’t want to leave Findrich and the rest in any doubt about what happened here.” He raised his voice. “You hear that, Terip?”