The Mask of Mirrors M. Carrick; (classic novels to read txt) đ
- Author: M. Carrick;
Book online «The Mask of Mirrors M. Carrick; (classic novels to read txt) đ». Author M. Carrick;
Ren fell silent as they skulked along the berm, stinking mud sucking at their boots with every step. Another week and the flood would cover it, the river licking at the edges of the Island and seeping into the streets and houses of Lacewater.
Though maybe not this year. Fulvetâs office had work gangs going all along the canals there, piling up bags of sand to keep the water out. Almost like Eret Quientis gave a shit what happened west of the Sunrise Bridge.
Bags of sand didnât do much good down here at the riverâs edge, but at low tide it was safe enough to riskâeven with the shadow of the Aerie looming over them. âWe couldnât go in through the Dawngate hole? Smells better, and we enât right on the Vigilâs doorstep.â
âI came out into Quientisâs dream near here,â Ren said, distracted. âSedge⊠after the nightmare, when you came to the house, you said all night youâd looked for Vargo. Where was he?â
Sedge frowned. âWhy all the questions about Vargo?â he asked. Not Vargoâs business. Not his reputation. Questions about the man himself.
They werenât the only ones on the shore. Barefoot kids were rooting through the mud for anything of value dropped from above or swept downstream. Ren waited until theyâd passed the kids and were nearly at the dripping mouth of one of the tunnels before she turned to face Sedge.
âI would say âmock me not,â but you will anyway. IâŠâ She grimaced, then spat the words out in a hurry. âI need to figure out if he could be the Rook.â
Back when they were Fingers, theyâd played a game, Tell the Lie, in which one kid would tell a story, and the others tried to guess which part wasnât true. Ren had been the best. Even so, Sedge had sometimes been able to tellânot because he knew when she was lying, but because he knew when she was telling the unvarnished truth.
âYouâre fucking serious.â
Then the laughter dragged him down. He laughed until he was bent over. He laughed until it felt like his ribs were stabbing his lungs. He tried to climb out, caught sight of her increasingly annoyed frown, and fell back in.
âIâm no street fool, pulling this from my ear,â she said when she got tired of waiting. âI know itâs unlikely. Butââ
Sedge managed to mute his guffaws to wheezing as she laid out her reasons. They werenât bad; if sheâd been talking about anybody other than Vargo, he would have thought she was onto something. ButâVargo.
When he pointed that out, Ren said, âYou yourself told me he recently has changed. Perhaps this is why. And it might explain why he was so determined to be the one who helped me⊠because he knows my secret and wanted to protect it.â
This was Renâs real talent. She made implausible things sound completely reasonable, to the point where you started looking for other details to support it. Vargo had been cagey about what happened in AĆŸeraisâs Dream. And heâd come in there prepared, with that oh-so-innocent question about astrology and a fake birth date ready to hand.
Sedge squeezed his eyes shut and shook his head. The Rook was a hero, standing against the cuffs. The Rook had been Sedgeâs hero, when he was a kid. How could he make her understand? âVargo controls half this island and most of the Lower Bank. He donât need to be the Rook.â
And yet⊠Renâs arguments wormed their way into Sedgeâs mind. Like the Night of Hells. Vargo had slipped Varuniâs guard when he went off with Fadrin Acrenix. Sure, thereâd been something with the Novrus cuff afterward, but that didnât cover more than a few bells at most. Where had Vargo been for the rest of the night?
âMask take it, Ren.â Sedge kicked a broken pot half buried in the silt. âWhyâd you have to go muddling my thoughts?â
She made an exasperated noise. âI hoped you could unmuddle mine. I realize it seems unlikely, but we know the Rook has been around for centuries. It cannot all this time have been one person; even the Tyrant aged. But maybe what passes on is more than a hood and a nameâmaybe itâs some kind of spirit or ghost.â
Heâd seen Vraszenians call up their dead ancestors with a dance, and Fienola had said part of Renâs soul was lost in AĆŸeraisâs Dream. Anything was possible. Andâ
A chill chased across Sedgeâs skin, one that had nothing to do with the river wind. âVargo talks to himself sometimes. Not just mutteringâhalf a conversation, like.â
Ren went very still. âDoes he.â
Sedge could see the questions coming, piling up in Renâs mind like a flood behind a dam. But to his surprise, she dismissed them with a slice of her hand. âI want to ask you what he says⊠but you are sworn to Vargo. Iâll stop.â
That put a rock in the pit of Sedgeâs stomach. âI⊠yeah. About that.â
Ren grimaced. âAlready you have told me more than you should. Iâm sorryââ
âNo, it enât that. Itââ Sedge wrestled with himself. This wasnât a violation of the knot bond⊠not exactly. And that was the whole problem.
She was his sister. Sheâd betrayed Ondrakja for him.
âVargo enât sworn to us.â
Ren lurched on the uncertain footing of the shore. âWhat?â
âHe enât sworn. Not to anybody. All the knots he controls are, but not him.â Sedge tugged back his sleeve enough to show the blue silk charm on its braided cord around his wrist, the emblem of his membership in the Fog Spiders. He wasnât required to wear it openly, but Sedgeâs kind of work didnât call for subtlety. âWay most people assume it worksâeven in his knotsâwe tie in with his lieutenants, and they tie in with him. Except that enât true.â
Because while the vows for knots varied from gang to gang, they tended to have a few things in common. Like doing favors for your knot-mates, no questions asked and no debts owedâand
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