The Mask of Mirrors M. Carrick; (classic novels to read txt) š
- Author: M. Carrick;
Book online Ā«The Mask of Mirrors M. Carrick; (classic novels to read txt) šĀ». Author M. Carrick;
She hadnāt found Idusza, but at least she got entertainment out of listening to Iduszaās mother rant about the slip-knot whoād pestered her about her daughter. Serrado should have worn a wig. A traditional family like the Polojny didnāt think much of a man who cut his braids off.
But Renata Viraudax didnāt speak even five words of Vraszenian, and her business here had nothing to do with them. āIām Master Vargoās advocate in the Cinquerat,ā she told the guards at the gate. āI need to speak with him.ā
She expected to be taken to an office, but instead the stable girl they flagged down led Renata through a winding maze of stock from half a dozen lands. Bales of wool and cured sheepskin from Ganllech, a row of pungent casks stamped with the crimson markings of the DubrakalÄy, bags of salt from Nchere.
āMaster Vargo has trading charters with so many places?ā Renata asked. Vargo had led her to believe he didnāt administer any charters yet. Certainly not enough to explain the variety of goods in his warehouse.
The girl shook her head. āWe just hold the goods for the kretse and the delta gentry. Keep it from getting nicked or burned before itās sold. Oi, Master Vargo! Cuff come to see you.ā
Vargo was in the middle of a rapid exchange with a spare, angular person in a panel coat and the braids of a kurec leader. One of the lihoÅ”e, then: born a woman, but taking on a male identity so he could lead his people. Only sons were allowed to be kurec leaders, and if there were noneāor if all the available ones were incompetentāthen a daughter would become a son instead.
His rapid Vraszenian was so shot through with road cant that Ren had difficulty following it. Vargo answered in kind, a little more slowly, and only broke long enough to nod at Renata. Most of his attention was on the lihosz and the bolt of rose-patterned black lace half unrolled between them.
Either Vargo was already winning or he put Renataās presence above profit, conceding whatever theyād been arguing about. The lihosz spat into his hand and held it out for shaking. Vargoāglovelessādid the same, then gestured for a group of waiting haulers to follow the Vraszenian.
He approached Renata, grimacing and pulling out a kerchief to clean his hand. āMy apologies, alta. If Iād known you were coming, I would have greeted you properly.ā
His knuckles werenāt as marred as Sedgeās, but Renata caught sight of multiple scars before he tugged his glove back on. āI apologize for troubling you here, Master Vargo. Though now that Iāve seen this place, I understand the complaints Iāve been hearing from Caeruletās office about āoff-book guards.āā She wondered how many of the people protecting the warehouses against thieves were thieves themselvesājust on Vargoās payroll.
āIād be more sympathetic to His Mercyās complaints if he werenāt the main reason my clients need guards,ā Vargo muttered. āWe live in a topsy-turvy world, Alta Renata, where the criminals are honest, and itās the upright folk you have to be wary of.ā
Trying to convince me you can be trusted? Sedge didnāt spill Vargoās secrets, but he talked about the man readily enough. It left her no more certain what to think of him than sheād been before.
Vargo said, āIām afraid youāve caught me at a busy time. I have a caravan from Sefante and a ship from Ganllech, and no manager to deal with them. Care to talk while we walk?ā
āOf course. And please donāt take it the wrong way when I say Iām glad to hear youāve had your share of problems with Eret Indestor. Iāve been trying to assist Era Traementis by arranging for some mercenaries to guard one of her trading charters, but heās made that nearly impossible. As for your own charterā¦ you would think cleansing the river has nothing to do with military matters, and yet heās taking the strangest interest in it.ā She kept her words mild, but saturated them with bitterness.
Leading a winding path through stacked hardwood, Vargo said, āWhat sort of interest? Is Mettore aware of my involvement, or is this merely an extension of his siege against House Traementis?ā
āYes to both. Sadly, my attempt to help Altan Mezzan save face against the Rook sank under the weight of his petulance, so it hasnāt done much to win me favor there. I tried to get a meeting with Eret Indestor, to see if I could strike some kind of bargain, but I appear to be utterly beneath his notice.ā
āCount yourself lucky.ā A runner came by with several cramped ledger sheets. Vargo skimmed them with a finger before nodding and sending the boy off again. After a moment of staring into space, lips moving silently, he shook himself and turned back to Renata. āKeep clear of Indestor. Youāre capable enough, but Mettore Indestor isnāt the sort of enemy youāre equipped to deal with. Iāll take care of itāgive him something else to occupy his attention.ā
Renata could imagine what he meantāshe was learning the sort of man Vargo wasābut he had no idea what sort of woman she was. āI can hardly keep clear of him when Iām representing the Traementis in the Charterhouse. And I canāt be a very effective advocate when Iām fighting half-blind.ā
Theyād passed into a tilted forest of silks and lace, the outermost bolts leaning drunkenly against the inner layers. Dust hung heavy in the air, mixing with camphor and cedar, and Vargoās particular clove scent. He pulled Renata into a gap between the stacks, rendering them invisible unless someone passed directly alongside them.
āThis is how the Cinquerat operates,ā he said, his voice quiet but hard. āThey make the rules, but they donāt play by them. Indestorās just
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