tâbe a Queen?â demanded the rather drunken tart sitting at the table next to Alberichâs. âLarking about, doinâ whatever ye please, gettinâ waited on âand anâ footââ
Not from Haven, thought Alberich to himself. Though you have the accent, it isnât quite good enough, my girl. And you arenât nearly as drunk as you seem. Whatâs your game, and who put you up to it, I wonder.
Now perhaps, at any other time, perhaps in another year or so, she might have gotten away with such an ill-considered remark. But not now. Not when barely six months had passed, and Selenay had been making herself very popular with little gestures like the âQueenâs Bread.â People down here had a lot of trouble keeping their children fed, and one guaranteed free meal a day, at the trifling cost of lessons in rudimentary literacy and numeracy, was a small price to pay. A youngling down here couldnât earn the price of that breakfast himself in the course of a morning. It was good economics to send your younglings to a temple until noon, then put âem to work.
â âere now!â a man just near enough to have overheard the speech stood up, glaring at her. âOur Selenay ainât like that, ye owd drab, anâ if you was a man, Iâdâa thrashed ye fer that!â
The woman shrank back, and well she should have. He was big and broad, and looked as if he knew very well how to handle that cudgel at his belt. âNo offense meant, Iâm very sure,â she said, hastily. âI didnâ mean Queen Selenay! I just meant, a Queen, in a genâral sort of way.â
The man glared at her. He was as drunk as the whore pretended to be, and he was at the very least going to say his peace. â Our Selenay ainât no layabout!â he insisted. âWhy, I seen âer, I even talked to âer, coupleâa nights afore the last battle. Come right to our fires, she did, âavinâ a word with our officers, seeinâ we âad good treatment!â
âOh, yeah, anâ she talked tâ you, did she, ye old liar!â jeered someone elseâ
Ill-advisedly.
The drunk rounded on the skeptic with a roar, and grabbed the manâs shirt in one hamlike fist. Only the intervention of the âpeacekeeperâ that the proprietor of the Broken Arms had seen fit to hire prevented mayhem from breaking out. But there was the start of a fight, and under cover of it, the woman slipped out.
Alberich followed.
She wasnât at all difficult to follow, the silly wench. She paid absolutely no attention to what was behind her. The man she accosted just outside, the alleyway next to the tavern was a little more careful, but not enough to spot Alberich. He was a darker shadow in the alleyâpeople always thought that wearing black would make them blend in with shadows, but it didnât; it made them into man-shaped black blotches in an almost black place. Alberich was wearing several shades of very, very dark brown and gray. Each leg was a slightly different color. So was each arm. And his tunic was blotched. There was nothing about him that was man-shaped, when he stood in shadow.
âIâm not doinâ that no more!â the woman shrilled at her contact, just as Alberich eased within listening range. âYou go do your own dirty work from now on!â
There was a murmur, too low for Alberich to make out the words.
âI didnâ get but a word out,â she said sullenly, âanâ up jumps this drunk bear and nearly thrashes me!â
More murmuring, and the clink of coins. The woman departed, muttering.
Alberich followed the man.
There had been a lot of money exchanged there for such simple servicesâa lot for this part of town, at any rate. Alberich hoped that his new quarry would try another quarter, one where such a payment would be the norm rather than the exception. And lo! As if his