wish had flown straight to the ear of Vkandis, that was precisely what his quarry did.
It wasnât a wealthy part of town; working class was more like it, but working class that got work regularly, of the sort that came with weekly pay packets and a little something extra on the holidays. A place, in short, where there were City Guards and constables on patrol regularly.
A place where Alberich could manage to do something to get them both arrested.
Which, as soon as a constable hove into view, Alberich did.
He nipped back around the corner so as to be able to intercept his quarry coming, apparently, from the opposite direction. It wasnât hard; he knew this part of Haven better than the back of his hand. There were few yards with high fences and even fewer with dangerous dogs tied up in them. Once he came back around, he saw that the constable was strolling along at a leisurely pace that would take him past his quarry before Alberich reached the man. Good. He didnât want the constable to actually see what was going on between him and the stranger, only hear it and make some inferences that, as it happened would be entirely unwarranted.
:Youâre enjoying this,: Kantor accused.
:Hush. Iâm busy.:
The fact was, he was enjoying this. It was the first hint of trouble, real trouble, his sort of trouble, that heâd had in moons.
As he approached the man, he stared at himâeasy enough to do, since there were streetlamps here. Then he contorted his face into an expression of rage and roared.
âYou! You bastard! Thought you could ruin my sister and run away, did you?â
And then he flung himself at the startled man.
As he had expected, the man was not startled for long, and he was armed. So what the surprised constable saw when he turned was a man with a knife attacking an unarmed man. Since he couldnât know which of the two of them the accusation had come from, he assumedâas any good constable wouldâthat the man with the knife was the attacker, not the defender.
That Alberich was in no danger from a mere knife was something he couldnât know. So, to his immense credit, he waded in himself, wielding his truncheon and blowing a whistle for dear life to summon help. He was aiming most of his blows for the head of the knife wielder, and Alberich helpfully positioned the target so that, by the time the help arrived, his quarry was out cold and he was able to protest feebly that he didnât know what the madman was talking about, heâd just jumped for him with a knife, screaming about a sister. . . .
âWe have to stop meeting like this, Herald,â said Captain Lekar of the City Guard, with a feeble attempt at humor. âPeople are going to start talking.â
âI fervently hope not,â Alberich replied, rubbing his wrists where the conscientious constables had tied themâbeing too wise ever to take one potential miscreantâs word over anotherâs. He warmed his hands on his cup of tea, but did not drink from it. The herbal teas consumed by the night shift of the City Guard were not drinkable, even by the standards of a former Karsite Sunsguard. âIf talk they do, my personae will in danger be.â
âYes, well, I wish youâd find some other way of catching your lads without getting the both of you thrown in jail,â the Captain replied wearily.
Since this was only the third time that Alberich had used that particular desperation ploy, he held his peace. âKeep him safe,â was all he said. âSpeak with him under Truth Spell I wish to, when he awakens.â
The Captain did not ask why. The Captain did not want to know why. The Captain was an old friend of Herald Dethor, Alberichâs mentor in this business, and he knew very well that he did not want to know why. And Alberich knew that he knew, and both were content with the situation.
Now, if this had been Karse âhe reflected soberly, as he left the