Cowl's answer to that was to burst forth with even greater fevered, ardent laughter — exulting, darkly triumphant — the mirth of a man gone truly mad. Lurin buried his face once more in Shurll's chest. Eventually, the peals choked off, fell to silence. When Lurin looked back the grounds were empty.
His gaze caught the one called Topper staring directly at them. Lurin's breath caught and he froze. The eyes burned in the night as he'd heard some jewels do. Then the man bowed, an arm across his stomach, the other held out. Stepping back he disappeared into darkness.
Eventually, Lurin found he could breathe again. He peered up at Shurll, whispered: ‘What happened?’
And she, looking off into the night, her gaze so distant, stroking his head, murmured repeatedly, ‘Nothing. It's all right. Nothing happened. It was nothing.’
In the morning Talia demanded he recite it all again — from the mad ride through the Abyss, to the battle, and Laseen's funeral cortege to Cawn — even the dull journey by coastal merchantman to Unta.
‘And the Imperial Funeral?’ she asked.
Rillish laughed, sitting up. ‘Gods no. We aren't invited to that.’
‘But you're a member of the official Wickan delegation to the Throne!’
Rillish leaned back, tucked a rolled blanket behind his back. ‘Believe me — I am no more welcome in Unta than the Wickans themselves. We are there on sufferance only.’
‘And this Mallick creature is to really succeed Laseen?’
‘By unanimous acclaim of the Assembly and all regional governors, Fists and all.’
She shook her head, her brows crimping. ‘And I've never even heard of the man.’
‘You should get out more, sergeant.’
She made a face. He pushed the sheets off her belly, eased his head on to her stomach. ‘Huh. Funny… You don't look pregnant.’
‘Not
‘Humph… If you say so.’ He gently pressed a hand there on her belly.
Proprietor, merchant, innkeeper and ex-Imperial sailor, Aron Hul knew a dangerous man when he saw one and this newcomer sent all his nerves jangling the moment he dismounted from his well-fed and well-shod horse that bore new, well-oiled tack. Aron noted the man's soft leather boots, the studded leather wrappings at his legs, his fitted armour of boiled cuirass, vambraces, the twin ivory-handled sabres worn high under his arms, and his rich travelling cloak. But what fixed his attention was the extraordinary scar running across the man's face from left temple, notching the bridge of his flattened nose, to mar his right cheek. The man stood for a time in front of his trading establishment, stared south to the Idryn flowing so brown and wide on its way to the Bay of Cawn, and the Nap Sea. Then he turned and entered the trading post.
Aron quickly set out his most expensive wine and spirits. The man sat at one of his two tables. ‘Yes, sir?’ Aron asked from behind his counter.
‘A drink.’
‘I have Talian winter wine, spirits of juniper berry from Bloor.’
‘The Talian.’
‘Excellent, sir.’ He brought out a glass and the bottle. The man pressed a gold Imperial to the gouged slats of the table. Aron almost tipped the bottle. An Imperial Sun — didn't see too many of those these days. ‘You don't have anything smaller, do you, sir? We're just a small river station, you know.’
The man leaned back, smiled in a way that Aron knew was meant to reassure him. ‘I know. It's yours for the bottle and a little information.’
Aron allowed his brows to rise as if in dubious surprise. ‘Really, sir? Information, you say? Out here? What could we possibly know out here?’
He gestured vaguely to the river. ‘Oh, travel. Shipments and cargo. People coming and going. That sort of thing.’
Aron's nerves now reached a screaming pitch; he kept his good-natured smile. ‘Really, sir? Such as?’
‘I'm looking for someone who may have come through here about a month ago. During the troubles. A young woman. She would have been travelling alone. You'd remember her if you saw her, if you know what I mean,’ and he winked.
Aron walked back to his counter. ‘A woman, you say…’ He shook his head. ‘What did she look like?’
‘Slim, dark hair. A pretty face. As I said, a woman men notice. Hear anything like that? She may have hired a boat to take her upriver.’