his troubles wouldn’t begin until and unless he successfully hunted Kakzim down.
The western gate was still closed when they arrived, but it had swung open by the time Pavek had fed everyone a breakfast of fresh bread and hot sausage. Between them, Zvain and Ruari could eat their way through a gold coin every day. The stash Pavek had brought from Quraite was shrinking at an alarming rate. Grimly, he calculated they’d be bit-less in six or seven days. Even more grimly, he calculated that, one way or another, by then money would be the least of his worries. He bought more food for later in the day and struck a path for the crowded gate.
The regulators and inspectors on morning gate duty were busy taking bribes and confiscating whatever caught their fancy. They didn’t notice four plainly dressed Urikites going the other way. If they had, Pavek’s gouged medallion would have cleared their path, but by not using it, there was less chance of some enterprising regulator sending a messenger back to the palace. Before he left the residence, Pavek had written their plan on parchment and secured it with his porphyry seal. He told Initri to give the parchment to anyone who came looking for them. Until she did, no one else knew where they were going or what they planned to do.
Getting into Codesh several hours later was easier than Pavek dared hope. Registrators handled the affairs of the weekly influx of market folk, but guarding the Codesh gate was a serious matter, entrusted to civil bureau templars on loan from the city, none of whom stayed very long. Through sheer luck, Pavek knew the man in charge, an eighth rank instigator named Nunk, and Nunk recognized him.
“I’ll be a gith’s thumb fool,” Nunk grinned, baring the two rows of rotten broken teeth that spoiled his chances with the ladies, as Pavek’s twisted scar spoiled his. “The rumors must be true.” He held out his hand.
“What rumors?” Pavek asked, taking Nunk’s hand as if it bad been offered in friendship rather than in hope of a bribe. Although, in fairness to Nunk, if five bureau ranks weren’t layered between regulators and instigators, they might have been as friendly as templars got with one another. Neither one of them had ever been tied to the numerous corrupt cadres that dominated the civil bureau’s lower ranks. They both kept to themselves, which, given the hidden structure of the bureau, meant their paths had crossed before. The biggest obstacle between them would always be rank. It ran the other way now, with far more than five levels separating an instigator from Hamanu’s favorites. Pavek couldn’t blame Nunk for currying a bit of favor when he had a chance.
“Rumors that you’re the one who brought down a high bureau interrogator. Rumors that you’re the one who made Laq disappear. Rumors that you’ve got yourself a medallion made of beaten gold.”
Pavek stopped pumping the instigator’s hand and fished out his regulators’ ceramic with the gouged reverse. “Rumors lie.”
“Right,” Nunk replied with a fading smile. He led the way to the small, dusty room that served as his command chamber. He closed the door before asking: “What brings you and yours to this cesspit, Great One? Remember, I helped you before.”
Pavek didn’t remember any help, just another templar prudently deciding to mind his own business at a moment when Pavek impulsively decided to get involved. Still, he’d have no trouble putting in a good word or two on Nunk’s behalf, if the opportunity arose, as it probably would. “I remember,” he agreed, and Nunk’s jagged grin returned, full strength. “I want to go inside and look around, maybe ask a few questions.”
“Why not ask me first? You’ll know where your gold’s going.”
“No gold, not yet. Got things to finish first.”
“Laq?”
“Seen any around?”
“Not since the deadheart disappeared and everyone connected to him went to the obsidian pits. Lord, you should have seen it—the Lion Himself marching through the quarter calling out the names. I’ll tell you something: the city’s cleaner than it’s been since my grandfather got whelped. Rumor is we’ll be at war with Nibenay this time next year, and the lion always cleans house before a war, but this time it’s different. The scum he sent to the pits wasn’t just Escrissar’s cadre. He cast a wide net and the ones that got away left Urik.”
“Not all of them. I’m looking for a halfling, Escrissar’s slave—”
Nunk’s eyebrows rose. It was common knowledge