A Burning Sea Theodore Brun (ebook reader that looks like a book .txt) đ
- Author: Theodore Brun
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Usually Alethea could be found seated outside a certain wine shop on a little lane known as Bakersâ Alley. Sure enough, there she was, propped in her little box, wrapped up for midwinter even though the air was milder now. A cracked cup sat beside her, half-filled with cheap wine.
Gerutha called out to her.
âWell now â what have we here?â the beggar woman cried. âDidnât I say to myself this morning, âToday will be a blessed day! You mark it, my girl â something fine will turn up.â And see, here you are!â Gerutha clasped her filthy, mottled hand. Aletheaâs knuckles were cold as a barrow stone. âAnd look now, His Holiness, Father Domnicus! A double pleasure.â
âBless you, sister,â Domnicus said warmly.
âNo miracle for me today, have you, Father?â
âGod willing. In any case, I remember you in my prayers every night.â
âIs that so? Seems youâre out of favour with the Almighty then, Father â since today I woke up with no legs, same as every day.â She cackled long and hard at that. âAnyhows, I ainât complaining. Old Red Nose in there has spared me a cup or two of charity so Iâve some fire in the grate, eh?â She and the wineshop keeper, a man called Cornelius, had an understanding. He gave her the dregs of abandoned wine-jugs in return for her noting the face of any man entering his shop, in case there was trouble. âUsual piss, naturally.â
âYou look well,â Gerutha lied. In truth, she looked wretched; the infection that was eating away the flesh across her face was livid and purple. âHere.â She passed Alethea two small loaves of bread out of their basket.
âOh, God bless you for your kindness, girl. Now then â whatâs been keeping you from visiting your dear old friend?â
âFar too much to tell.â Which was true. And she didnât want to worry the old crone about Lilla.
âYouâre still keeping company with this firebrand, eh? You watch out, girl. Heâll bounce you into the Kingdom of God soon as look at you.â
Domnicus smiled. âOh, sooner than that if I could. Thereâs room enough for all of us in Godâs house. Even you. . . Especially you. Our Lord said that the last shall be the first.â
âWell, he can keep my place for now, Father,â she sniffed. âIâm happy right where I am.â The beggar woman raised her broken cup and took a slurp, then leaned forward in her box with a conspiratorial glint in her glassy eye. âInteresting times round here, I tell you. I suppose you heard about that poor lampros fellow?â Gerutha started at mention of the fire-maker. She had hardly been able to think of anything else. âA horrible business, that. Mother of God, the state he was in when they found him. . .â
âThey still havenât caught the man who did it.â
âThatâs because they ainât looking for a man. They say it was a woman. Some say it was that grand lady used to come here with you.â
âWhoever says that is a liar,â said Gerutha sharply.
âOh, I know it!â Alethea cried. She beckoned her two visitors closer with a long, gnarled fingernail, so close Gerutha could smell her rotting teeth. âBecause I saw him.â
âWho?â
âThe man that did it. Yes,â she nodded slowly. âThey found the poor fellowâs corpse not two streets from this spot. Did you know that?â
âWhat do you mean you saw the man that did it? How would you know it was him?â asked Domnicus.
âI was right there. Just there, look!â She pointed to a murky corner along the street where Gerutha could make out a small heap of dirty rags. Evidently Aletheaâs bed. âI couldnât sleep that night, I remember. It was that cold. And then I hear footsteps coming up from that end. Slap-slap â and Iâm thinking, âHey there, someoneâs in a hurry.â I look up and he stops right there on that corner.â She pointed to the entrance of another alleyway twenty paces or so past the wine shop. âThatâs when I saw his face. No woman. No! A moonbeam settles right on his face and he glanced upwards for a second and I saw his eyes. Dark as the Devilâs, they were. And his jaw â sharp as a knife. That face â oh, it chilled me to the bone. Iâd never forget it.â
Gerutha exchanged an uncertain glance with Domnicus. âYouâre sure it was the same night.â
âWhat do you think? I ainât no simpleton.â
âThere was another man found guilty of treason,â said Domnicus. âHe was steward to Lord Arbasdos, the curopalates. He had a long beard dyed redââ
âNo, no, no! No beard, I tell you. You listen to old Alethea. Here â you want proof?â She suddenly turned her attention to her filthy robes huddled about the stumps of her legs, and soon produced from their fragrant depths a curved dagger, some six inches long. It was in poor condition and stained black all over. âHe dropped it.â
âThe man?â
âThe killer, you mean! He tossed it right there in the gutter.â She pointed at the revolting stream of effluent oozing down the side of the lane. âI saw him do it, and fished it out after heâd gone.â
âLet me see.â Alethea passed it up. Gerutha breathed a sigh of relief when she realized she had never seen it before in her life. For an awful moment, she had feared she would recognize it as one of Lillaâs possessions.
âWhy didnât you tell someone,â asked Domnicus, âif you saw all this?â
âWho says I didnât try, hey? For a start, it ainât so easy to get around, you know. But I still found a nightwatchman and told him what Iâd seen. And what do you think? The son of a slut told me to crawl back into whatever hole Iâd crawled out of. Well
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