The Sapphire Rose
Page 103‘Why don’t we start out with the truth? If I don’t like that, then you can make something up.’
Stragen flashed him a quick grin. ‘All right,’ he agreed. ‘Up in Thalesia, I’m a counterfeit aristocrat. Down here, I’m the real thing – or very close to it. I associate with kings and queens, the nobility and the higher clergy on a more or less equal footing.’ He raised one hand. ‘I’m not deluding myself, my friend, so don’t become concerned about my sanity. I know what I am – a bastard thief – and I know that my proximity to the gentry down here is only temporary and that it’s based entirely on my usefulness. I’m tolerated, not really accepted. My ego, however, is sizeable.’
‘I noticed that,’ Sparhawk said with a gentle smile.
‘Be nice, Sparhawk. Anyway, I’ll accept this temporary and superficial equality – if only for the chance of some civilized conversation. Whores and thieves aren’t really very stimulating companions, you understand, and about all they can really offer in the way of conversation is shop talk. Have you ever heard a group of whores sitting around talking shop?’
‘I can’t say that I have.’
Stragen shuddered. ‘Absolutely awful. You learn things about men – and women – that you really don’t want to know.’
‘This won’t last. You know that, don’t you, Stragen? The time will come when things will return to normal, and people will start closing their doors to you again.’
‘You’re probably right, but it’s fun to pretend for a little while. And when it’s all over, I’ll have that much more reason to despise you stinking aristocrats.’ Stragen paused. ‘I do sort of like you though, Sparhawk – for the time being, at least.’
‘I’ve never understood why people would want to boil a perfectly good ham,’ Sir Bevier noted with some distaste.
‘Lamorks over-salt their hams when they cure them,’ Kalten explained. ‘You have to boil a Lamork ham for quite a while before it’s edible. They’re a strange people. They try to make everything an act of courage – even eating.’
‘Shall we go for a walk, Sparhawk?’ Kurik suggested to his lord after they had eaten.
‘I think I’ve had just about enough exercise for one day.’
‘You did want to know which way Martel went, didn’t you?’
‘That’s true, isn’t it? All right, Kurik. Let’s go nose around a bit.’
When they reached the street, Sparhawk looked around. ‘This is likely to take us half the night,’ he said.
‘We just start asking people in the street?’
Kurik sighed. ‘Use your head, Sparhawk. When people are on a journey, they usually start out first thing in the morning – about the same time that other people are going to work. A lot of workmen drink their breakfasts and so the taverns are usually open. When a tavern keeper’s waiting for the first customer of the day, he watches the street fairly closely. Believe me, Sparhawk, if Martel left Kadach in the last three days, at least half a dozen tavern keepers saw him.’
‘You’re an extraordinarily clever fellow, Kurik.’
‘Somebody in this party has to be, My Lord. As a group, knights don’t spend a great deal of their time thinking.’
‘Your class prejudices are showing, Kurik.’
‘We all have these little flaws, I guess.’
The streets of Kadach were very nearly deserted, and the few citizens abroad hurried along with their cloaks whipping around their ankles in the stiff wind. The torches set in the walls at intersections flared and streamed as the wind tore at them, casting wavering shadows that danced on the cobblestones of the streets.
‘About that, yes,’ Kurik told him. ‘Our friend said he’d meet us here, but we got delayed, and it looks as if he went on without us.’
‘Kin ye describe him agin?’
‘Fairly large man. He might have been wearing armour, but I couldn’t swear to that. If his head was uncovered, you’d have noticed him. He’s got white hair.’
‘Can’t seem t’ recollect nobody like that. Might could be he went out one t’ other gates.’
‘That’s possible, I suppose, but we’re fairly sure he was going east. Maybe he left town before you opened for business.’
‘Now that’s hardly likely. I opens ‘at door there when the watch opens the gate. Some of the fellers as works here in town lives on farms out yonder, an’ I usually gets some fairly brisk trade of a mornin’. Would yer friend a-bin travellin’ alone?’