Hart s Hope Page 0,39
the buildings were holding up the walls, keeping them from falling outward to crush Orem where he stood and looked.
"Ho, boy!"
Orem was startled, for he had thought he was alone. "Ho, what are you doing here?"
"I'm looking for Piss Gate," Orem said. "I'm here for the first time. Have they closed the gate, then?"
The guards glanced at each other, then smiled. There was derision in their mirth, and Orem felt uncomfortable.
"Not Piss Gate, that's sure, you can tell Piss Gate by the stink of thieves and farmers who come down the river hoping to get rich in the city." The guards approached him, and now Orem saw that there were more than a dozen of them; they had been concealed in shadows or, he suspected, inside the shells of the buildings that were not totally boarded up.
"I'm not hoping to get rich," Orem said, trying to sound frightened and succeeding better than he had expected.
"Where you from, boy?"
"A farm. My father's farm. Upriver, near Banningside."
Now the guards were more alert, and Orem noticed that hands were on hilts and fingers had closed around ax-hafts. "An illegal person is near Banningside," said a guard.
"Illegal person?" The King, of course. And for a terrible moment Orem feared they would suppose him a spy. Spies, he knew, were skinned alive and forced to eat their own hearts. Should he pretend that he didn't know Palicrovol had been in the area? No, they'd never believe it. It was impossible not to know when that vast army came foraging in a countryside. "All I know is the sergeants were out pressing soldiers. I didn't want to go in the army."
The guard who seemed to be in command looked him up and down pointedly, then laughed. "If you were in danger of pressing then the rebels must be more desperate than anyone thought."
At the laughter, Orem tried a smile, hoping to join in the camaraderie. His mirth offended them. The commander did not take him by the shirt; he took him painfully by the skin at his waist, a crushing grip that brought an unwilling cry from Orem. "Do you know how close you are to death?"
"No, sir."
A guard had opened Orem's bag. In it was only his flask, still full of his father's spring water, and the last bit of bread that now was like rock. His coppers were in a better place.
"A rich one, that's plain," said the guard as he tossed the bag back to Orem.
Orem dared to ask a question. "Why is this gate closed?" he asked. "You're better off if you never learn the answer to that question."
"I say question him," said another.
The white-haired guard spoke even more softly. "I say eat shit. The spies all know their way into the city, and it isn't the Hole in midafternoon."
The commander pushed Orem from him, hurting his side again even as he released him. "Get away from here, boy, and don't come back. If you want Piss Gate, follow the north wall and stay close to the wall always."
"Or go home," said the white-haired guard. "There's nothing in Inwit for you. Don't you know this city devours children and flays strong men alive?"
Orem smiled uncomprehendingly and backed away from them. "Thank you, sirs. Good day to you. I'll never come here again."
"Your name, boy!" called the commander. "And don't lie!"
"Orem ap Avonap!"
The white-haired guard laughed aloud. "What a name! Only a farmer would think of that!"
The other guards nudged each other and laughed also. But they watched him out of sight all the same, and he suspected that one was following him much of his way north.
It made Orem angry that they laughed at him, but what made him angriest was that he had earned their laughter. A fool, that's what he had been, and it had not been a pose, no, not half.
The Beggars' Way of Death in Life
The farther north he got, the less dead the place appeared; a child played in the street, and then a beggar sprawled in sleep, and at last litter began appearing at the sides of the road and the sewer down the middle of the street began to be fetid with decomposing filth. Beggarstown was alive again, now that he was away from the Hole, and the faces that had seemed frightening to him before were a welcome sight now. Orem began to see, not their strangeness, not their darkness and filth, but their weakness and grief. They wore elegant clothes, most of them,