“Hurrah,” I said to the empty street. Even Three-leg was gone, engaged in feline errands all his own.
I changed my clothes and made what preparations I could. I wrote out a few letters, including a will. One was addressed to Mama. One to Gertriss. One to Evis. The longest was Darla’s.
Then I gathered my various implements and stood inside my open door.
That’s all I’ll leave behind if I die tonight, I thought. One middling fancy desk and a pair of beat-up chairs. Half a crown of clothes in my closet. Three bottles of beer in my icebox. One half-burnt door. One Three-leg Cat, expert at producing foul odors.
Hell of a legacy.
I shut my door, locked it, and tried to shake the feeling that I was putting my back to Cambrit for the very last time.
I had my borrowed Avalante cab meet me in front of the Velvet. Immune to Curfew and the law, the Velvet was teeming with carriages and cabs, even after Curfew. Another fancy black carriage idling at the curb wasn’t going to attract any attention.
Randal, still lost in his too-large coat, snapped to attention when he saw me ambling his way. I was afraid he was going to start Sirring me in public, but he bit his tongue and sat silent while I clambered inside.
I’d laid things out for him earlier. He waited until my door slammed shut and then we were off, another black carriage lost in the night.
Randal took a circuitous route southward, keeping to sleepy little backstreets when possible. He seemed to be having so much fun I didn’t have the heart to tell him we weren’t being followed.
I hadn’t really expected that we would be. Lethway knew where I’d be, at midnight. The kidnappers knew it too, courtesy of his letter. Pratt I’d told myself.
No need to chase the rabbit when he’s hell-bent to hop right into the nice hot oven.
I’d formulated and rejected half a dozen plans concerning the meeting with at the Timbers. Bring in twenty or more armed soldiers?
Too noisy. The kidnappers would bolt. Lives would probably be lost in the fracas. While my stunt with the Army earlier in the day had paid off, there’d been little risk of bloodshed. Tonight, bloodshed was inevitable.
Sneak in back, employing my Army-honed stealthy wiles to slither snakelike through the trash, thus entering the fray unawares?
Too many eyes expecting just that. If the sorcerer was anything like the ones I’d known in the War, each nook and every cranny within sight of the Timbers was now filled with magical traps and sundry arcane gotchas.
No, a sneaking slither worked once, but it wasn’t going to work again.
Stealth was out. Brute force too.
That left me with only one option, and all the weight of all the hardware strapped to my belt or secreted in my pockets wasn’t nearly as reassuring as I hoped it would be.
On the seat beside me sat a doctor’s black leather instrument bag and the black stovepipe hat favored by the local sawbones. I opened up the doctor’s bag and found it filled with vials of dark liquids, tiny sealed bowls of various powders, and of course, the sharp, glittering implements of the healing trade.
I tried on the hat. It fit, but was too tall for the confines of the carriage, so back on the seat it went.
I grabbed a couple of vials at random and studied the tiny labels affixed to each.
Tincture, Drd hwthrn
, read one.
Infusion, garlic&wort
, read the other.
I put them both in my coat pocket and snapped the case shut.
Randal’s random route kept us moving for nearly two hours. I counted out distant peals of bells, and when I could delay the inevitable no longer I knocked twice on the roof. Randal turned us toward the Timbers, and whatever festivities the Angel of Fate had contrived.
The carriage rolled away.
The street was dark and empty. Above, stars probably shone and twinkled, but the buildings rose up like canyons and only a fool would have raised his eyes heavenward when so many perils lurked below.
I straightened my physician’s hat and marched across the street, my skin prickling at the sensation of being watched from the dark. Knowing the watching eyes were attached to hands holding crossbows made the prickling feelings worse.
The empty street offered no cover. If a bolt or an arrow were loosed, I’d not know it until I felt it sink in my chest.
Five steps, six steps, eight steps, ten.
They’d think I was crazy, stomping up to their front door like that.
Twelve paces. Fourteen. Almost to the curb.
I was counting on someone in charge being either cautious or curious.
I made it across the street.
I made it to the weathered door.
I knocked.
“I am Doctor Hammonds,” I shouted. “The Colonel sent me. It was all explained in the letter.”
Silence. Not the scrape of a careless boot, not the ghost of an errant whisper.
I remembered every dealing with every doctor I’d ever had the displeasure to meet.
“I will not stand here all night,” I shouted. “You know my business. I have no interest in yours. Admit me, or I leave. Now.”
The door inched back, just enough to reveal an eye—and a bit below that, the razor-sharp head of a crossbow bolt.
“Can you treat your own fatal wounds, Doctor?”
I snorted.
“If I’m not seen, upright and alive by the Colonel, there will be no exchange,” I said. “You did read the letter? I am here to check his son’s physical condition. If Carris Lethway has been permanently disabled…”
“We have received no letter.”
I sighed.
“I have a copy in my coat pocket. I warned the Colonel against using addicts as messengers. May I produce it without being maimed?”
“You may.”
I reached carefully into my pocket. The letter was there, signed by Lethway, or at least by a scribble that looked much the same.
I poked it through the door.
“Don’t move.”
“I have no intention of leaving,” I said, though the door closed in my face.
I waited.
The letter was a good one. I think I captured the Colonel’s brusque air of old-world superiority quite well. It told the kidnappers a Doctor Hammond was being sent ahead to ascertain Carris’s condition, and that if the good Doctor wasn’t seen idling in the street in front of the Timbers when the Colonel’s carriage arrived there would be no exchange at all.
Weedheads make poor couriers. I imagined the kidnappers lost a missive or two themselves when their messengers fell into sewers or climbed to the nearest rooftop, thinking they could fly.
It was plausible enough to be believed.
And unlikely enough to get me killed.
The door opened again, this time, all the way.
“You do anything but poke at the kid, and we’ll gut you where you stand. Is that clear?”
“Perfectly.”
“Take his sword.”
I let them wrench Toadsticker from his scabbard. They didn’t look any further.
They didn’t need to.
When the street door closed, a grim-looking worthy decked out in pre-war chain mail lifted a rag off a magelamp. The room was suddenly bright as dusk and full of armed, hard-faced men.
I’d figured a dozen. I counted nineteen. And I heard voices coming from somewhere in the shadows beyond the room.
Angels, I’d walked into a villain’s nest.
“He don’t look like no doctor to me,” offered a stranger.
“I have served the Colonel for four years now,” I snapped. “And owned my own practice for ten before that.”
“Well, you’re gonna be retiring tonight,” muttered another. Laughter sounded from all nearby.
I half-turned to face the man who’d let me in, guessing he was, if not in charge, at least more than halfway up the ladder. If he was at the top, his name was Japeth Stricken. But somehow, I doubted Stricken would be the one opening any streetside doors in the dark.
“Where is Carris Lethway?”
“Check his bag, then take him down. Kill him if he blinks funny.”
My bag was snatched away. The contents were dumped onto a table, rifled through and finally dumped back in the back, except for a pair of the larger scalpels.
Victor’s deadly gift was among the implements they handled. It received no more scrutiny than did the vials of mugwort or the rolls of bandages.
The bag was thrown at my chest. I caught it and glared.
Ungentle hands pushed me from behind. The ring of men parted, but did not look away. I was led out of the circle of light, shoved down a dirty hallway that smelled of piss and pushed through a door that was solid and new.
Hands shoved. I went flying ass-over-chin down a short flight of stairs. I lost my bag and my hat went flying and when I finally stopped rolling I lay face down on a cold stone floor with something warm and wet oozing slowly across my chest.
The cellar was lit by a table filled with candles. Two men stood by it, smirking. One wore the robes of a wand-waver. The other was dressed in an outlandish leather suit.
Tied to chair on the other side of the table was a slumped man with a bag over his head.
I picked myself up, felt at the wetness on my chest. My hand came away smelling of garlic, and I remembered the vials I had stowed in my pocket.
“I could have been killed,” I said. I found my hat, which was a bit flattened, and pushed it back into shape before affixing it once again to my head.
“Don’t worry,” said the man in the garish leather. “You will be soon enough.”
I picked up my bag and stood. “Is that Carris Lethway?”
“What’s left of him.” He eyed me warily. “Your name is Summers?”
“I am Doctor Hammonds.” I all but spit in his eye. “You have been informed of the reason for my visit?”
The sorcerer laughed. He was a small man. A hood hid most of his face. He kept his hands hidden as well.
“Tend to your patient, Doctor,” he said softly. “We wouldn’t him to expire before the appointed hour.”
I could either walk by them to reach Carris, or choose the other side of the table. I decided Doctor Hammonds feared neither man nor sorcerer and brushed past them both, muttering to myself as I walked.
I knelt beside Carris, put my hand beneath his right wrist and felt for a pulse.
His skin was warm. His heart was beating. His left hand was wrapped in a bloody, filthy rag. I pulled a corner of the rag away and found the stump of a recently removed forefinger.
I grunted, moved my hand across his chest, feeling for broken ribs the same way I’d seen our field surgeons do.
“This hood,” I snapped. “I’m going to remove it.”
I gritted my teeth, grabbed the bottom of it, and yanked.
Carris screamed. Fresh blood poured from the wound where his right ear had been.
I turned and glared at leather pants and his sorcerer companion.
“This is infected.”
Neither responded with so much as a shrug. I didn’t like the way leather pants, who I was sure was Japeth Stricken, was staring at me. His expression was that of a man who has just seen a face he knows and is trying to match it with a name he cannot quite remember.
I opened the bag. The sorcerer’s hands never moved.
I reached inside it, grabbed a vial at random, and gave its label a cursory glance.
Extract of o.ander
, it said. Good as any, I thought.
I opened it, poured some on a clean white cloth, and held it close to Lethway’s missing ear.
“This is going to hurt,” I said.
He met my eyes. I wasn’t sure how much he was hearing or if he understood any of it. Blood was trickling from both corners of his mouth and his nose was obviously broken and his face was one solid bruise.
I dabbed the cloth on the wound.
He spat blood but didn’t cry out.
“Surprised,” he managed to croak out, after a few tries. “Surprised. The old man. Paid for a doctor.”
“Your mother is footing the bill.” I was only playing the role of a doctor, but the more I saw of the kid, the less I liked. His color was bad. I could feel the heat of a fever rising off his skin.
“Your fiancée sends her regards,” I added as I dabbed.
Damned if he didn’t try to smile.
“That will suffice,” said the sorcerer. “As you can see, Doctor, the young man is both alive and largely intact. Time for you to go.”
“He is barely alive and missing an ear and at least one finger.” I turned and gave the sorcerer a good hard doctor’s glare. “And he has a fever, which could easily kill him within the hour unless I am allowed to continue my treatment.”
I’d seen one thing I recognized in my borrowed doctor’s bag. Cincee. A good-sized jar of it, in white powder form. Introduced just two years into the War, I’d seen it stop infections and fevers dead in their tracks. Two spoonfuls dissolved in a cupful of water, that’s all it took to make the difference between life and death.
But I never got the chance to mix it. Leather pants had been gone from Rannit for a good long time, and as far as I know we’d never met. But something in his dark mind clicked.
“You’re no damned doctor,” he said. His sword made a quiet hissing sound as he drew it from its scabbard. “You’re the finder.”
“Ridiculous.”
Upstairs, shouts rang out. I heard the pop-pop-pop of crossbow bolts embedding themselves in timbers, and more shouts, and I wondered whether Lethway or Pratt had decided to start the party a few minutes ahead of midnight.
Stricken cussed and pointed his sword at me. “Keep him alive until I’m done,” he said to the wand-waver.
Then he whirled and charged up the stairs.
The sorcerer lifted his arms and let his sleeves fall down to reveal his hands. Neither was empty. His right held a short plain wand, and in his left was a jawless skull. The skull was human, but too small to be from an adult. A dim green light shone from its childish eye sockets, and I caught a snatch of a high, airy whisper issuing from it.
The wand-waved glared. He didn’t threaten. He didn’t feel that he needed to.
Above, thunder sounded, accompanied by lights so bright they shone through the joining of the floor boards. Bolts continued to strike. I heard steel on steel, as men—dozens of them, from the sound of it—hacked at each other with swords and axes.