XLIV

CERRYL RUBBED HIS eyes, then picked up the chamber pot and trudged out through the courtyard and through the gate to the sewer catch, still in his tattered nightshirt and half-wondering why he bothered.

Because some white mage probably tracks all the sewer dumps. He frowned, then lifted the lid and held his breath as he dumped out the odoriferous contents into the even more concentrated and noxious wastes that flowed through what seemed to be a large tunnel of fired and glazed brick. How many kays of such tunnels ran beneath Fairhaven. . and why? So that the city smelled a little better?

When the chamber pot was empty, he lowered the dump lid and retreated to the courtyard pump, where he rinsed the battered crockery chamber pot. Then he returned to the sewer dump. Once was enough, especially since he wasn’t looking forward to bathing in chill water, not that he had dared to do otherwise for the last eight-day. Not after the visit from the pair of mages, and not with Tellis looking sideways at him and grumping at everything he did, as if he’d suddenly been declared a thief-or worse.

“Cerryl. .”

He looked up. Pattera was flattened against the whitened bricks of the alleyway-gray in the dawn-less than a dozen cubits from the sewer dump and the back gate.

“Don’t say anything,” she whispered. “They say that the mages are coming for you-that you’re a. . renegade. That’s what they say.”

“Who says?” Cerryl hissed back, turning.

“They do.”

“Who?”

“Just. . I have to go. You have to get away before they come. Just go. . please.”

She turned, and Cerryl watched blankly as Pattera scurried back down the alley, the shawl over her nightdress flapping as her bare feet padded on the stones.

A renegade? Him? For heating some water? They couldn’t have known about his reading Colors of White. Besides, the book really hadn’t said anything, not anything that wasn’t common sense, except for the history part. He’d read the same things in the histories that Tellis had given him, and those weren’t forbidden. Tellis didn’t dare to have anything like that around.

With a last look down the now-empty alley, he lifted the chamber pot and reentered the courtyard, closing the gate. He glanced down the alley again from the gate. The way was empty, without a sign that Pattera had ever even been there.

His bare feet carried him back to his room. Why had she come to warn him, and how had she known? Did the weavers’ guild know? Or had her father overheard something?

Cerryl moistened his lips and opened his door.

When he had replaced the chamber pot in the corner of his room, he returned to the pump again, this time with his wash-water bucket. The cold water spilled across his hands as he filled the bucket.

Cold water? For how long? For the rest of his life? Or until someone showed up to claim he was a renegade?

He walked slowly back into his room.

Should he run?

He shook his head. Running would only tell them he had done wrong-and they’d kill him like his father and the fugitive at Dylert’s.

They might anyway, but he hadn’t done anything thatwrong, of that he was convinced. But. . did they care?

Should he get rid of the books and his father’s amulet? No. . if they came for him, those wouldn’t matter, one way or another, and he wasn’t going to give up what little he had of his father out of fear.

Still. . he shuddered as he dipped the washrag into the bucket of too-chill water. For all his hopes, for all his dreams, he had nowhere to run and no way to escape.

The cold water on his face helped. . for a moment.

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