THIRTY-ONE

They came in like the tide, only difference was they didn’t look like they’d be going back out any time soon. Thousands streamed into the Town, a seething mass of pitiful men, women and children, carrying what little they had with them in carts and on the backs of livestock.

Nobul and the rest of the Greencoats had watched them from Saviour’s Bridge, moving like a mass of slurry into the makeshift homes they would be forced to occupy for as long as it took King Cael to stick it to the Khurtas. He’d wondered at the time whether it was wise to let them in unsupervised, with no one to tell them where to go or which hovel they should settle in, but Kilgar had thought it made sense.

‘If they’re gonna kill each other,’ he’d said, staring down with that one eye, ‘no use us getting in the way.’

Nobul could kind of see where he was coming from. Then again, if there had been someone down there, an authority figure or two, filtering the crowds to the quietest areas, surely it would have made things easier. Might even have saved some lives.

As it was, the refugees had been left to their own devices. The way into the Old City was left open and in they flooded. Of course it had been carnage. Everyone wanted the best plots closest to the Storway so they could flush their shit straight into the sea. As was always the way, it was the strongest, roughest and meanest who got to keep them.

The Greencoats had done a sweep through in the days afterwards when everything had calmed down. They’d found thirteen bodies, two of them children from the same family, their mother raped and butchered.

Nobul had wanted to get angry at that, wanted to vent his ire and go hunting for the culprits — but what was the use? There were far too many candidates and no one brave enough to point him at the right ones.

It was not long after that they started getting reports of people going missing.

At first it had been in ones and twos, then the first family had disappeared and the Greencoats had been forced to take notice.

No one seemed to have a clue. It was like they’d been spirited away by the Lord of Crows himself. There were no signs of a struggle, no screams, it was almost as if they’d upped sticks and run — just taken themselves off to Arlor knew where.

The Greencoats had to look like they were doing something, though, if only to avert a panic. It wouldn’t do for hysteria to grip the Town; several thousand refugees going wild and taking the law into their own hands. Thirteen murders in one night was bad enough. The last thing they wanted was a massacre.

The Greencoats had to spread themselves thin, so it was patrols of two. Each pair would pick a street and randomly kick in doors, search houses, make arrests — though that rarely happened, as they simply didn’t have room in the city gaols. That way everyone could see they were acting on the reports, doing something to help, squeezing out the criminal element.

In reality, Nobul knew it was a waste of time. There were too many criminals to count, and even the normal folk — the farmers and traders and craftsmen — were turning to thieving and mugging and cheating just to feed themselves and their families.

So it was with a heavy sense of reluctance Nobul walked into the Town with Denny at his side. The lad had shown he wasn’t much in a fight, but he’d certainly proved himself loyal, and there wasn’t another in Amber Watch whom Nobul would rather have had watching his back. Besides, over the past few days of kicking in doors the worst they’d had was an irate mother screaming at them to bring an apothecary for her sick baby. They’d done their best to calm her down but without success. In the end they’d both backed off and left her. Nobul had felt a touch guilty, but she wasn’t the only woman with a sick child, and the Daughters of Arlor were doing their best to tend the sick and starving. What could the Greencoats do anyway?

‘What do you think it is then?’ Denny asked as they made their way down a dilapidated street.

‘What do I think what is?’ Nobul replied, trying his best not to step in the crap that littered their path. It seemed the only thing that had changed on these streets before they’d cleared them out was that most of the dog shit was now replaced by that of humans.

‘Where these missing people are going.’

Nobul shrugged his big shoulders. ‘Fucked if I know. One thing I’m sure of is that turning over these hovels ain’t gonna help us find the answer.’

‘I agree with that, all right,’ Denny said. He’d been extremely vocal over the past few days, offering his opinion on why they should be looking for real criminals and not phantoms in the night. It had done him no good, and Kilgar had merely reminded him of the virtues of obeying orders without question, since it would save him a fat lip. That had finally shut Denny up.

‘Want to know what I think?’

‘Not really,’ said Nobul, feeling no guilt at Denny’s immediate look of disappointment. As much as Denny made him smile sometimes, there was a time and a place for his madcap theories.

They moved further down the street, and Denny turned to Nobul with a look of resignation on his face. ‘What about this one?’ He pointed to a door he’d picked at random.

‘It’s as good as any,’ Nobul replied. ‘You first.’

‘Why me? It’s always me. Right, we’re tossing for it.’ Denny fished for a coin.

‘Tails,’ Nobul said, as Denny sent the coin spinning through the air. He caught it, slapped it on the back of his hand, then sneaked a peek.

‘Balls,’ he said.

Nobul allowed himself a smile.

Denny braced his hands to either side of the door and kicked out. There was a splintering of wood, but it didn’t give all the way. A second kick and the door burst inwards. Denny rushed inside, Nobul at his back, weapon drawn.

‘No one move, in the name of King Cael,’ shouted Denny.

Nobul could see there was only one man in the hovel. His lean features looked fearful and he glanced towards a short knife on his table, but clearly thought better of reaching for it.

The place reeked, a stale mouldering stench, and Nobul wondered how this man had managed to manifest such a stink in the short time he’d been here. He gave the room a cursory glance. Nothing seemed untoward, but the man glanced around desperately, like a cornered animal.

‘Name?’ demanded Denny.

‘P- Pardo,’ the man replied. ‘Ivaar Pardo of Briar Lock.’

‘Dreldun, eh? Long walk from the north.’

‘Where else was I supposed to go?’

Denny nodded his agreement. ‘Just you is it, Ivaar?’

‘Yes. No family to speak of.’

No family, or none to speak of?

‘Do you know why we’re here, Ivaar?’ Nobul had to admit that, though Denny was shit in a fight, he could certainly sound authoritative when he wanted to.

‘Er … I guess it’s because of the missing folk?’

‘The missing folk, that’s right, Ivaar. What do you know about it?’

Ivaar glanced at Nobul, then back at Denny, like he was a hare trying to work out which hound was going to rip his throat out first. ‘I don’t know nothing. Honest I don’t.’

Denny let that one hang there. Sometimes it was best to say nothing, and let them stew in it. On occasion they’d wonder what you knew, wonder if you knew something they weren’t telling, and then tell you anyway. Ivaar didn’t say a word.

Finally, Denny nodded. ‘Fair enough. If we turned this place over, Ivaar, would we find anything we shouldn’t?’

‘No, sir. Nothing here.’

‘Good. I hate wasting my time, Ivaar.’ Nobul could tell Denny was almost done, but though he didn’t like spending much time in these hovels, something was niggling at him. Maybe it was that smell, or the guilty look Ivaar had put on as soon as he realised who they were.

‘Wait a minute,’ he said, as Denny turned to leave. He walked to a chest in the corner over which two flies buzzed incessantly. ‘What’s in here?’ he said, flipping the lid open with his foot.

‘It’s mine!’ Ivaar cried, as Nobul revealed what lay in the chest.

It was full of food. Some of it rotting, most of it well past ripe, but food nonetheless. Bread, hard sausage, dried meats, a bag of spuds more eyes than potato, apples more shrivelled than an old man’s ball sack, and a pig’s head with eyes still intact.

‘It’s mine,’ Ivaar cried again, moving towards the chest, but Denny pushed him back.

‘How long you had this lot?’ he asked, wrinkling his nose at the sudden stench that pervaded the tiny room.

‘Got nothing to do with you! It’s all mine!’

‘It’s all fucking rotten. You could have fed three families on this.’

‘It’s mine.’

Denny backhanded Ivaar across the face. He staggered back, tears welling in his eyes. Nobul saw Ivaar eye the knife that sat on his table again, so he stared, holding him with that gaze of cold, dead steel, and gradually the man relented, even taking a step away.

‘So what we gonna do now?’ asked Denny, scrunching his nose up as he looked in the chest.

‘Not much we can do,’ Nobul replied. ‘We can’t start handing it out — it’ll just make people sick.’

Denny turned back to Ivaar. ‘People are starving and you’ve let this all go rotten. I’ve half a mind to make you eat the lot, right here and now.’

Ivaar looked fearful, a tear breaking over his eyelid and running down his cheek.

‘Won’t do any good now,’ said Nobul. ‘Come on, I’ve had enough of this stink.’

He walked out into the open air, Denny close behind.

‘We should have given him a beating,’ Denny said as they walked back towards the city.

Nobul just shook his head. ‘What for? Teach him a lesson? Poor bloke’s got enough to contend with. We might all have before long.’

‘What’s that supposed to mean?’

‘It means we might have several thousand angry fucking Khurtas knocking on our door in a few weeks. And what are we doing about it?’

‘Nah, the king’s taking them on at Kelbur Fenn. Should be any day now — could even be today. Once he’s given them a kicking things’ll get back to normal.’

‘Don’t be too sure about that. Doesn’t matter how many knights and archers and foot you’ve got, something can always turn a battle against you.’

Nobul could see Denny wanted to argue, but they both knew who had the most experience of war.

‘This is pointless,’ said Denny after they’d made their way along the street for a while. ‘Let’s go back to the barracks. I could murder a drink.’

On any other day, Nobul would have told him ‘no’. On any other day he would have carried out his duty, not for fear of what Kilgar might do, but because that was what kept him busy, kept his mind occupied. Today, though, it all just felt like shit, this place and its stink and the piteous faces of everyone living here. If you could call it living.

He nodded, and Denny smiled. Obviously he hadn’t been expecting Nobul to agree.

‘So where do you think they are? The missing refugees?’ Denny asked as they made their way back over Saviour’s Bridge. Nobul had to admire his persistence.

‘Don’t know,’ he replied. ‘But I’m pretty sure kicking in slum doorways ain’t gonna find us the culprits.’

‘Where would you start then?’

‘Where d’you think? If the Guild doesn’t know what’s going on then nobody does. It’s them needs their doors kicking in.’

‘Good luck with that,’ Denny grinned. ‘But make sure you let me know the day you decide to take on those mad bastards, and I’ll make sure I’m on a different watch.’

The boy had a point. The Guild had eyes and ears everywhere, and they greased plenty of palms in the Greencoats. It was a dangerous line of inquiry, and would most likely get whichever nosy bastard decided to investigate a quick knife between the shoulder blades.

They walked on, and Nobul could tell Denny was just dying for him to ask.

‘Go on then, what’s your theory?’

Denny’s grin widened. ‘Funny you should ask. You know these murders?’ Who didn’t? ‘It’s all linked. The murders we’ve seen, those poor mutilated fuckers all over the city — they’re just the start. Practice, if you will. Whatever mad bastard is doing that is the one what spirited off the refugees.’

Nobul raised an eyebrow. ‘And how have they managed that?’

‘They’re a caster, ain’t they? It’s all magick.’ Denny wiggled his fingers in front of him as though conjuring something out of thin air. Nobul knew full well Denny could barely manage to conjure piss from his cock without help, so magick would have been more than a tall order.

‘Right,’ said Nobul, managing a smile. He’d smiled a few times recently, and mostly it had been at things Denny said.

‘You mark me. When it all comes out in the wash, you’ll see those two things are linked. I’m telling you.’

The barracks were almost in sight, when Denny spied two Greencoats ahead, leaning idly against a rough wooden shack.

‘There’s Platt and Firby,’ he said, lifting his hand up to wave, but they hadn’t seen him before two figures emerged from the passing crowd and grasped the Greencoats’ attention.

Something about the pair gave Nobul pause. He couldn’t say what it was, just a feeling in his gut, but it was enough to make him stop Denny before he could call out, pulling him to one side of the street to watch.

One of the newcomers was a man, lean, just over average height, with a mop of brown hair. The way he held himself Nobul could tell he displayed confidence. Whether that meant he was a fighter or a bluffer was impossible to tell, but either way he carried a sword at his side. He smiled at the two Greencoats, chatting with an easy familiarity, and it was clear he liked to talk. Even from this distance, though, Nobul could see a mass of bruises on his face. Clearly someone hadn’t liked what he had to say recently.

The second was a woman, tall, statuesque even. She held her head down, as though trying to blend in, but with her cropped blonde hair and striking features that wasn’t easy. Despite her attempts to look insignificant, it was obvious she was thickly muscled about the shoulders, slim in the waist — a warrior’s frame.

Something was odd about the pair of them, and Nobul knew it.

‘Friends of yours?’ he asked Denny, keeping his eyes on the four of them. The handsome one with the bruised face made a joke and the Greencoats laughed, but not the woman.

‘Platt and Firby? Yeah, known ’em for ages. Firby’s being tipped for serjeant before long. Why, what’s up?’

Nobul didn’t answer. Something most definitely was up, and if he waited long enough … there — a purse passed from the dandy’s hand to one of the Greencoats while they were all still laughing.

‘See that?’ Nobul said, almost ready to walk over there and ask what the fuck they were up to.

‘See what?’ said Denny.

‘Bribe money.’

‘What the fuck do you care? Lots of the fellas do it.’

Nobul was suddenly angry. Lots of fellas did do it, but that didn’t make it right. The Greencoats being so easy to buy off was why the Guild was rife in this city — because they were allowed to be. That was why he’d been forced to pay protection money for years — because there was no one he could turn to. That’s why there were people going missing — because the Greencoats were too scared or their palms too well greased to investigate who was really involved. That’s why his boy had died …

No, that wasn’t why his boy had died, was it? His boy had died because Nobul was a cold, hard, bullying bastard.

‘Yeah. Lots of fellas do it,’ Nobul said, feeling his anger die.

He watched as they finished their conversation, and the man bid his goodbyes to the two Greencoats. He and his woman disappeared into the crowd, and for a minute Nobul considered following them. He took a step forward, but there was a sudden wail, a cry that rose over the hubbub of the street.

Denny turned. ‘What the fu-’

He was cut off by another cry, this time from somewhere else.

Like it was infectious, like a plague carried on the wind, the cries went from mouth to mouth and a panic gripped the streets. A woman ran past clutching her child’s hand. A man pushed his cart full of oysters, spilling his load and not caring a jot. Some old man dropped to his knees sobbing his eyes out.

Nobul moved forward into the crowd, demanding to know what was wrong, but people were just pushing past, gripped by fear. Finally he grabbed a passer-by, a woman of middling years with tears in her eyes.

‘What’s going on?’ he demanded.

She looked up at him as though in a daze. ‘We’ve lost,’ she gasped. ‘The Khurtas have beat them.’

Nobul stared at her in disbelief, then, feeling her squirming in his grip, he let her go.

Then he heard it — a mournful cry rising over the blather and noise.

‘The king is dead!’ someone cried. ‘They’ve murdered King Cael!’

Nobul looked at Denny.

Neither of them knew what to say.

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