IX
There was a low groan, then another. After a time, Kharl realized that he was the one groaning. He closed his mouth, and the sound stopped. Around him was darkness. Underneath him was something hardvery hard, slimy, and damp. His head was pounding. He levered one hand under him, then the other. His hand slipped, and he tried again. It took him more tries than he could count to get into a sitting position.
He put his hand to the back of his head, gently, wincing as his fingers touched the huge lump there. As he lowered his hand, in the dimness that was like night, he could barely make out the dark substance on his fingertips blood.
His eyes took in the area around him. He was in a small, stonewalled chamber with a heavy door that had but the smallest peephole, through which a faint glow of light seeped, so little that he could not tell whether it was day or night.
What you in here for?
Kharl turned his head quickly, and more pain lanced through his skull. The words came from a figure sitting propped against the outside stone wall.
They say I killed someone. I didnt.
Thats what everyone says. The shadowy figure cackled. None of us did nothin, we didnt, and some of us didnt.
Kharl started to respond, but then winced as pain stabbed through his skull.
Dont matter what you did. Justicers going to say you did, less he finds someone else who did. That doesnt happen much.
Kharl eased himself across the damp and slimy stone floor to the other side of the cell, leaning back gingerly, careful not to bang his head against the rough wall stones.
You dont look like an assassin or a docker, offered the other man.
Im a cooper. Kharl took a deeper breath and wished he had not. The air was rank with the odors of unwashed bodies, filth, and worse.
Cooper, huh. You a good cooper?
I thought so.
Whyd you kill someone, risk losing all that?
I didnt, Kharl said tiredly. My neighbors shop caught on fire. I was fighting the fire, and someone cut the throat of one of those black-staffers in my shop.
Ha! Theyll hang you quick as they can. Lord West, he dont want to tell the black demons that the murderer got away. Dont want them shelling Brysta. No, ser. That he dont. Hang anyone he can to stop that.
Kharl could see the truth in what the other had said. But what could he do? They dont let anyone see you here?
You jesting? Wont see anyone till you go before the justicer. Thatd be Reynol, cause he hangs everyone, and thats what theyll want. Four sentencesthats all they got. Flogging, time in the quarries, cut off a hand or foot or both, or hang you. You, theyll hang. Dont matter you did it or not.
Youre cheerful. Kharl swallowed.
Yep. Cheerful Kaj, thats what they call me.
What about you? Why are you here?
Me? I called that pigswill Egen a bawdson.
For that, youre in here?
Lucky to be alive. Egens Lord Wests youngest, captain in the Watch. Likes girls, young girls. Didnt know he was watchin said he wasnt man enough to handle a real woman. Whole tavern laughed. Didnt say nothing. When I came out later, his men were waitin and here I am.
Kharl had the sinking feeling that Egen and the young swell whod attacked Sanyle and Jenevra were the same man. There were too many coincidences far too many.
He could feel himself beginning to sweat, and with the nausea he was feeling intermittently, he wondered if he could hold his guts in.
Egen real pissprick and his daddy just looks the other way
That didnt surprise Kharl.
Recluce 12 - Wellspring of Chaos
X
A day passed, and then another. Kharl thought it might have been three days since the fire, and since someone had killed Jenevra. That was if hed only been knocked out for less than a day. He walked back and forth, if taking three small steps between walls could be called walking. He stopped and coughed, then walked some more.
That wont do any good, observed Kaj from the corner of the cell the opposite outside corner from the slop bucket. I know, Kharl replied, but I cant just sit here.
Might as well. Not goin anywhere. Except dancin on air.
If its so important to hang me, Kharl said, why hasnt anyone done anything?
You in a hurry to get strung up? asked Kaj.
No.
Then dont ask for it.
But, Id think
Simple. They brought you in on sixday. Justicers and lords like long end-days. Lord West is gettin old. Needs the days off to keep his sons at bay. Todays oneday, I figure. Takes a day for the scriveners to write up things formal like. Maybe longer. They dont hurry once youre locked away. They wont come for you till tomorrow, earliest.
What about you?
Leave me here for another eightday. Drag me out and flog me, if Im lucky Egens still a pissprick.
Why doesnt Lord West rein him in?
Cause hes a smart pissprick. Never gets caught. Always brings you in law-like. Me, drunk too much. Claimed I was soused and disorderly. Was lucky. Hed been really put out, and hed a planted a ladys brooch or somethin on me. Thats what he did to Fliser. Twice. Second time, they hung him.
Lord West knows that?
Knows some of it. Doesnt care, Id say. Older son, Osten, hes more like his father. Rotten, but not all the way through like Egen. What they say anyway
Kharl wanted to shake his head. Hed always suspected those sorts of things happened, but when hed suggested it to Charee, shed have nothing to do with his suggestions. For her, all that mattered was that the streets were orderly, no matter how Lord West and his justicers got the job done.
Not so bad as Gorl, though
Kharl was certain that he didnt want to hear about Gorl, but there was no way to stop the garrulous Kaj, and he supposed, no reason to. All Kharl could do was to walk a few steps and fret, or sit and stew. He tried not to breathe deeply as he walked back across the cell.
Recluce 12 - Wellspring of Chaos
XI
Despite Kajs predictions, the gaolers did not come for Kharl until threeday, slightly before midmorning. They took a bucket and splashed water over his hands and face and let him dry both with a small rough towel. Then they bound his hands before him and marched him up the narrow stone staircase. He climbed three flights of steps with centers hollowed by years of wear before they reached a door that led out into the courtyard of the Justicers Hall. The sky was gray, threatening rain, but the stone pavement was dry. Kharl glanced at the gallows scaffold at the north end of the courtyard, and below it, the flogging frames.
How had it all come to pass? All hed done was try to help two women and a neighbor, and he was going to be hanged for a killing he hadnt done?
The unseasonably cool wind carried a sour odor to and around Kharl, a smell similar to rotting fish, even as he kept looking at the scaffold.
Youll be seeing that soon enough, fellow. One of the gaolers armsmen said, yanking Kharl to start him across the courtyard toward the narrow door at the back of the Hall.
Kharl stumbled, then caught his balance, walking deliberately. The armsmen did not try to hurry him. When they reached the outer door, one stepped ahead and opened it. Inside, they guided Kharl along a narrow corridor that ended at another door, which the same armsman opened, and which led into a foyer. On the left side of the foyer was a single set of double doors, through which the three proceeded.
The chamber in which Kharl found himself was large, but not so large as the outside of the Justicers Hall would have suggested. The width was about thirty cubits, the length fifty, and the ceiling height was roughly ten. At the end of the chamber were two daises, one behind the other, each holding a podium desk of age-darkened white oak that had turned a deep brownish gold. At the seat behind the lower dais sat a round-faced, blocky, and gray-haired man with a square-cut gray beard who wore a blue velvet gown, trimmed in black.