The Rise and Fall of a Dragonking - By Lynn Abbey Page 0,4
shop, and a treacherous one. The least mistake planting his crutch among the cobblestones would throw him off his unsteady feet. He was careful, wriggling the crutch a bit each time he set it down before entrusting it with his weight and balance.
When he was sure of it, he’d grip the shaft in both hands and then—holding his breath, always holding his breath for that risky moment—hop his good leg forward. Then he’d drag his crippled leg, his aching, useless leg, afterward.
His shoulder hurt worse than the leg by the time he could see the baker’s stoop ahead of him. The beggar-king to whom he paid his dues said he should forego the crutch, said he’d live longer and earn more if he dragged himself along with his arms. And it might come to that. Some days the sun was noon-high before the numbness in his arm subsided from his morning journey. He had pride, though. He’d stand and walk as best he could until he had no choice, and then, maybe, he’d simply choose to die.
But not today.
“Hey, cripple-boy! Slow down, cripple-boy.”
A handful of gravel came with the greeting. He shook it off and planted his crutch in the next likely spot. He couldn’t slow down, not without stopping entirely; didn’t dare twist around to count his tormentors. Bullies, he knew from long experience, seldom went alone.
“Hey, cripple-boy! I’m talkin’ to you, cripple-boy!”
“Cripple-boy—what’s the difference between you an’ a snake?”
There were three of them, he had that knowledge before a meaty hand clamped across the back of his neck and shook him hard.
“Snakes don’t die till sundown, cripple-boy, but you’re gonna die now.”
He hit the cobblestones with his crutch in his hands, for all the good it would do him. He didn’t recognize them, certainly hadn’t ever done them any harm. That wouldn’t matter. They were predators; he was prey. It was as simple as that, and as quick. There was an alley behind him, and though a whole man would undoubtedly say that its shadows and debris would work to a predator’s advantage, not his, he dragged himself toward it, still clinging to his crutch.
The trio behind were whole men and able to see advantage in the alley. The nearest wrested the crutch away while the other two seized the beggar by the hair and belt and threw him bodily into the alley’s deep shadows.
* * *
Nouri couldn’t have said what drew him out of his shop’s oven-filled courtyard and put him at the counter at just that moment. Perhaps he’d had a reason and forgotten it. Dawn was the end of his day. His customers were workmen, laborers who bought their bread first thing in the morning, ate what they needed, and took the crusts home to feed their families when their work was done. Perhaps, though, it was the Lion’s whim: an urge of fortune best blamed on Urik’s mighty king. Either way, or something else entirely, Nouri was behind the counter, staring out the open door, when the adolescent thugs seized the beggar.
His beggar.
Father had always said a beggar was good for business—a polite and clean beggar with an obvious but not hideous deformity. The crippled boy was all that, and more: His wits weren’t afflicted. He kept an eye on the street, an open ear for passing conversation, for thieves and thugs and, on occasion, profit.
If the boy had ever asked, Nouri would have given him a nighttime place beneath the counter. But the boy was proud, in his way; he wouldn’t take charity, not above his place on the stoop or a few broken crusts of bread.
Nouri was always a bit relieved when he heard the boy thump and settle on the stoop. Urik was a dangerous place for anyone who didn’t have a door to lock himself behind. In his heart, Nouri had known that the morning would come when the beggar wouldn’t appear. But he hadn’t imagined the boy would come to his end not fifty paces from his shop’s stoop.
The tools of Nouri’s trade hung on the wall behind him. Not least among them was the wedge-shaped mallet he used to beat down the risen dough between kneadings; it could be used for beating down other things… murderous young thugs who thought a crippled boy was fair game.
Nouri’s wife, Maya, and his three journeymen were in courtyard unloading the oven. Maya would have stopped him if she’d seen him with the mallet in his hand, heading out the door. And