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;
âGiuna took her for coffee. And either an apology or a scoldingâIâm not sure which. Possibly both.â His lips twitched in a battle between smile and frown. âI wish I could figure out if Sibiliatâs just toying with her.â
âWhat would you do if she was?â Sibiliat might have cast herself as Renataâs rival, but she was the Acrenix heir. If her affection was real, and went as far as marriage, it would go a long way to recovering the Traementis fortunesâwithout the threat posed by House Indestor.
Leatoâs head dipped, but she doubted he was studying the bustling skiff market below. âI wish I could do something, but itâs Giunaâs choice.â His golden hair half veiled his eyes as he glanced up at Renata. âIsnât it?â
His look begged for permission to interfere in Giunaâs courtshipsâan interference Renata was half tempted to indulge in herself. But she couldnât afford to attract more of Sibiliatâs attention, much less her ire.
Smoke from the skiff market, unctuous with the aroma of roasting fat, rose to tickle her nose. Her stomach answered with an audible gurgle, and she clasped hands over it in embarrassment. âMy apologies. I ate very little before our outing.â Only some porridge that was more water than rice, but she could hardly admit that to Leato. âMy stomach is inconveniently delicate before fifth sun.â
Laughing off his previous mood as though it had never been, Leato took her arm and led her down the nearest river stair. âGood thing itâs almost seventh sun now. Enough of Seterin culture; let me introduce you to something uniquely NadeĆŸran.â
He supported her hand for balance as she made the small hop from stair landing to skiff, then kept his hold as they meandered along the gently rolling lanes of the impromptu flotilla, past knotted thread charms and pots of curly-headed mums, their bright blooms almost blinding in the gloom of the day. She waited while he haggled over a pair of roasted devil crabs with a Vraszenian man so dark he must have hailed from PraĆŸmy, in the southernmost reaches of Vraszan.
Accepting her skewer, Renata pretended to watch Leato for how to eat it, only breaking the reed in half to crack the crabâs shell after he demonstrated. They had to remove their gloves to pick out the steaming meat. Renata unaccountably felt her face warming at baring her hands to him, at seeing Leatoâs bare hands in turn. His skin was soft, pale bisque, his short nails buffed to a polish. âIâve certainly never seen anything like this,â she said, forcing her gaze away and ignoring a flutter in her stomach that had nothing to do with hunger. âBut what makes it uniquely NadeĆŸran?â
âItâs a Charterhouse thing. You need a license to operate a shop on the Old Island or the Upper Bank, and most of those licenses go to people with Liganti ancestry. But a shop is defined as âa commercial establishment with a fixed premise,â so that doesnât cover wandering sellers, orââ He waved his skewer at the weave of skiffs and boats, and the crowd of common NadeĆŸrans picking through the river tradersâ wares. âI assume youâve seen Staveswater, out past the Turtle Lagoon?â
Sheâd seen it every day of her childhood, from Lacewaterâs shore. The jumble of stilt-houses and houseboats was the largest Vraszenian-dominated enclave outside Seven Knots, and entirely controlled by the Stretsko gangs. Ren doubted even Vargo could get a foothold there.
âThat collection of shacks? I saw it when my ship sailed in, but I assumed it was the remains of a flooded islet. You mean to say that people live there?â
Grimacing at the implied condemnation, Leato said, âIt used to be bigger when I was a boyâspanned both sides of the lagoon. But Mettore throws the inhabitants in jail for any reason he can find, then gets Fulvet to tear the structures down as uninhabited. And the people there give him lots of reasons.â
She turned away, pretending interest in the tradersâ wares before her true feelings escaped her grasp. The pretense became truth as she fingered cloth thick with colorful embroidery, hammered copper jewelry from the southern ToÄu Mountains, intricately carved flutes made of bored and fire-hardened reeds. Leato plied her with more food, most of it on sticks, but also steamed buns filled with sweet custard and a soup she had to drink quickly to keep it from leaking out of its oiled paper cup. The tang of lemongrass and pepper stayed on her lips long after the cup was tossed into the river.
The traders and skiffers were all Vraszenian, panel coats and braided hair, but most of the shoppers wandering the floating walkways had the stamp of NadeĆŸrans born; even those clearly of mixed ancestry wore skirted coats and beaded surcoats, their hair loose or bound with ribbons. Renata and Leato stood out as the only nobility in the crowd, earning them some stares, but also the eager attention of every trader they passed. Cuffs not only meant money; they meant gullibility. Which was why Renataâs hand instinctively moved to protect her surcoat pocket when a scowling youth with crimson Stretsko beads clacking in his braids shoved past her.
But he hadnât been going for her pocket, and Renataâs defensive shift dislodged the stack of broadsheets tucked under his arm. They scattered across the skiffway, several of them blowing into the water.
âIâm sorry,â she said, hot with shame. âI thoughtââ Despising herself a little for her reflexive suspicion, she stooped to help the young man gather the papers, but straightened again at the hatred in his glare.
âYouâre not wanted here, chalk-face. Take your bloodstained coin and go.â Crumpling the stack of papers to his chest, he lost himself in the crowd.
Renata glanced down at the sheet clutched in her hand. It was tightly printed text, the ink so feathered on the cheap rag paper that it was difficult to read. But with the context of the boyâs words and braids,
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