Broad caught his wrist before he could right himself and twisted it up, forced his head down onto the chopping block. Marsh screamed as his elbow popped apart, knife dropping in the dirt, but only till Broad lifted one boot and smashed his face into the scarred wood with all his weight, bone crunching one, two, three times.
Able half-stood from the wagon’s seat, eyes starting, fumbling with the string of his bow. Most men need time to act. Broad had the opposite problem. He was always loaded. Always.
Able had no time to draw the string as Broad strode to the wagon. No time to reach for a bolt, even.
He managed to swing the bow but Broad brushed it away with his forearm, caught Able by the front of his jacket. He gave a little hoot as Broad jerked him into the air and rammed him head first into the old gatepost, blood speckling the side of the wagon. He flopped down with one arm wedged through that creaky wheel, smashed skull bent all the way backwards.
Broad hopped up onto the seat while Seldom stared, reins still in his limp hands.
‘Gunnar—’ He tried to get up but Broad shoved him back down with his knee.
Wasn’t sure how many times he hit him, fist up and fist down, fist up and fist down, but when he stopped, Seldom’s face was just a mess of glistening red.
Broad blinked down at him, a bit out of breath. Wind blew up cold on his sweaty forehead.
Broad blinked over at Liddy. She was staring, hand clapped over her mouth.
Broad blinked at his fists. Took a painful effort to uncurl the red fingers, and he started to realise what had happened.
He sat down beside Seldom’s corpse on the wagon’s seat, all weak and shaky. Spots on his vision. Blood, he realised, on his lenses. He fumbled them off, turned the world to a smear.
Liddy didn’t say anything. Neither did he.
What was there to say?
A Sea of Business
‘Welcome, one and all, to this thirteenth biannual meeting of Adua’s Solar Society!’
Honrig Curnsbick, the great machinist, resplendent in a waistcoat embroidered with golden leaves, threw up his broad hands. The applause was the most enthusiastic this theatre could have heard since Iosiv Lestek gave his final performance on its stage.
‘With thanks to our distinguished patrons – the Lady Ardee, and her daughter Lady Savine dan Glokta!’ Curnsbick gestured towards Savine’s box and she smiled over her fan as though her delicate feelings could hardly stand the attention. There were whoops, and calls of, ‘Hear, hear.’ From members who particularly wanted her money, she imagined.
‘We never
‘Only yesterday, here in Adua, Dietam dan Kort completed a bridge made entirely of iron – of
‘And now to business! The business of
Savine rose to leave while Arinhorm was on his way to the lectern. The truth was she had never been very interested in the inventions. Her obsession was how they could be turned into money. And that particular alchemy was practised in the foyer.
A considerable crowd had already gathered beneath the three great chandeliers, buzzing with excited chatter, seething with prospects and proposals. Knots of soberly dressed gentlemen broke and re-formed, drawn into dizzying swirls and eddies, ladies’ dresses bright dots of colour bobbing on the flood. Here and there, one could even spot the fabulous robes of some relic of the old merchant guilds. Savine’s practised eye picked out those with money or connections, those without sucked spinning after them like rowing boats in the wake of great ships, desperate for patronage, involvement, investment.