The Mask of Mirrors M. Carrick; (classic novels to read txt) đ
- Author: M. Carrick;
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Cercel coughed to hide a smile. âYouâre out of uniform, Serrado.â
Grey yanked his shirt on, fumbling to close it. âYes, Commander. Apologies. People usually knock.â
âDo I hear a reprimand?â Cercel drawled, hipping up onto his desk so she could squeeze the door closed.
âNo, Commander.â He shoved his feet into his boots.
âI thought not.â She leaned against the closed door, frown deepening as he set himself to rights. âYou look like hell, Serrado. Are you sleeping?â
The anger heâd been swallowing flared. âNot recently, no,â he snapped, yanking on a strap that refused to buckle.
Silence fell. She didnât dress him down for mouthing off to a senior officer; she just let the pause remind him whose side she was on.
Grey straightened and gripped the back of his chair, wishing he could slump into it. But Cercel was standing, which meant he stood. âMy apologies. Another child turned up, unable to sleep. I spent the night at her side.â He didnât mention that if FiÄa didnât sleep, she was likely to die. Cercel knew about the boy in Suncross.
âThen this may help,â she said quietly. âBalriat arrested an old woman todayânot the one youâre looking for. Brought her in for giving short weight. But he was laughing with Agnarsin about how ugly she is, and said, âSheâs even uglier than that Gammer Lindworm hag Poltevis arrested back in Fellun.ââ
The only thing that stopped Grey from barging out to speak to Poltevis right then was that Cercel was blocking the door. Wait. Poltevis. He slumped. âDidnât she take a knife in the Dockwall riots this summer?â
Cercel nodded. âBut the arrest record should still be downstairs.â
âThank you, Commander,â Grey said, meaning it. âIs there anything else?â
She didnât budge. âYou need to sleep, Serrado. If you run yourself into the ground, you wonât do those kids any good. And donât tell me youâre fine; anyone with eyes can see you arenât.â Her voice hardened, but not with anger. With sympathy. âI know youâre still hunting the Rook.â
âHeâs on the top of the Vigilâs list ofââ
âDonât give me that. First it was the Stadnem Anduske; now itâs the Rook. You want someone to answer for your brotherâs deathâand I understand that. But if the last two centuries are anything to go by, the Rook will still be here a month from now. Those kids might not be.â She glanced pointedly at the bedroll in the corner. âYou need to use that occasionally. Would it help if I got you a bigger office? One at least as long as you are tall?â
The joke was a weak one, but it helped mute the sick fury that welled up every time he thought about Kolyaâs death. âCommander, if you can get me something larger than a channel raft, I promise to sleep at least four hours a night.â
âIâll hold you to that, Serrado.â
They parted ways at the stairwell, Cercel heading to the loft where the commanders and more senior captains had their offices, Grey descending into the half basement of the Aerie, where they kept the prisoners and the records locked up. Only captains and above were allowed access thereâa preventative against blackmail.
The records archive was a long, low-ceilinged room sandwiched by a numinat above to provide light without threat of fire, and a numinat below to keep the room cool and dry. For all his many sins, Mettore Indestor followed in the footsteps of his predecessors when it came to good record-keeping. Great ledgers set out on tables by the door provided a brief catalog of arrests sorted by crime, and the shelves behind held the files themselves.
âItâd be nice to know what Poltevis brought the old woman in for,â Grey muttered.
Cercel had said Fellun. He found the right shelves and began flipping through the records, scanning for the name âGammer Lindwormâ and silently cursing his fellow hawks for their terrible handwriting.
He didnât have to search for long. Not because he found itâbut because he didnât.
A page had been torn out of one of the arrest ledgers. If the person responsible had used a knife to cut it cleanly, Grey might have paged right past without noticing, but a trailing shred remained at the bottom, with a scrawl saying held in the Dockw. Which on its own was no evidence at all⊠except that heâd already run across other pages recording arrests by Poltevis, and the handwriting was the same angled scrawl.
âDjek.â His curse echoed off the low ceiling. Grey worried the remaining scrap between thumb and forefinger, bare because in his rush to follow up on Cercelâs information heâd forgotten his gloves. The back of his finger brushed the uneven surface of the following page.
Hardly daring to hope, he splayed his hand across it, feeling the faint ridges and bumps of writing that couldnât be seen even when raised to the light. There was no mistaking it; the pressure of a pencil on the thin paper had left a faint imprint.
He fetched a stick of charcoal from the shelf of supplies. Rubbing it carefully over the ridges revealed ghostly traces of the writingâincomplete and tangled with the next pageâs notes, but enough to confirm his suspicions. Although the line for the perpetratorâs real name was blank, under aliases it said amme and indw. Sheâd been brought in for assaulting a young NadeĆŸran woman⊠but try though he might, Grey couldnât make out the victimâs name.
Maybe the victim was the reason someone had torn the page out. Someone of at least captain rank, to have access to this room.
With a brief apology to any future hawk searching for information on one Arvok Drazky, arrested for climbing the Rotunda naked, Grey pulled out a thumb knife and cleanly cut the page from the ledger. Then he stuffed it into his pocket and left, with new energy in his step.
Isla PriĆĄta, Westbridge: Apilun 33
When Renâs mother died, Ren lost almost everything. Not that they had much by that point, not after two
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