Blood of the Underworld(94)
“I just want to feel safe,” she said. “Is that so terrible of me?”
“Of course not,” John said. “I’ll send for my footmen. They’ll stay until all of this business in Veldaren settles down.”
In response, Melody kissed him across the mouth.
“Thank you,” she said, then kissed him again. “Thank you.”
Her hands were at his belt, tugging. John reached down and grabbed one of her breasts.
Nathaniel ran, scared and confused and wanting to see no more.
Thren watched as the men and women gathered about the entrance to the alley, all thin and meager looking. They surrounded the hooded figure, who kept looking for guards as he took in silver and gave out his crimleaf. As if guards would come to the southern district. They were too busy in the north and west, protecting the trade and homes of the wealthy. No guards, Thren knew. No control. The Suns had come into the lawless anarchy of the slums, and it was time they paid for it.
He kept his walk lumbering, as if he was just another overworked member of the city, barely staving off his hunger each day. He’d discarded his guild colors, instead wrapping a thin coat about him. It was dark brown, stained, and had many holes, but it hid the swords strapped at his waist, which was all that mattered.
There were three men still buying when Thren joined them, lurking at their backs.
“Shit man, wasn’t it just one silver?” argued the closest. His eyes were bloodshot, and lice crawled in his hair.
“It’s two now,” said the Sun thief. “Don’t act all pissed off, either. You know you still can’t get it cheaper elsewhere, not by a mile.”
“I wouldn’t buy from him,” Thren said, stepping closer.
“Piss off, and mind your own,” the thief said, glaring. “My leaf’s good, and my prices fair.”
“That’s not why,” Thren said, taking another step. “It’s just not wise to buy from a dead man.”
He leapt forward, shortsword drawn. It rammed into the man’s stomach. A twist and a yank sent his innards spilling out across the ground. Two of the three men fled, while the third made a desperate lunge for the falling bag of crimleaf. A single well-placed kick knocked the man out, sprawling him beside the corpse. Cleaning his blade, Thren then sheathed it and knelt down to grab the bag.
“Save your coin for food,” he said to the unconscious man, spitting on his chest.
Leaf pocketed, he ran back into the alley, hooked a right, and then emerged into heavier traffic, where he allowed himself to slow. One by one he’d been taking out the Sun pushers, always on the lookout for the ones who strayed too far from the rest, or were too foolish to have others with them for protection. It was slow work, but he’d killed five so far. In a few more days, he’d have another five.
And by then, another fifty Suns might have moved in from the west. He shook his head. It was a losing battle, perhaps, but he’d still fight it until he knew of a way to really hurt Grayson. Out of instinct, he traveled toward his old territory, now claimed by three separate guilds. Not that he was surprised. With the city turning wilder by the hour, such a vacancy would never last long. A thought hit him, an image of other guilds using his former base as their own, and it stirred an anger in his chest. Heading that way, he found the old tavern, now shuttered and closed down after Victor’s raid. The upper levels were ruined by the fire, but what of the underground portion?
It was a risk doing so in daylight, but he went ahead anyway. What did caution matter, now that his guild was disbanded? He opened the door to the stairs downward and found everything dark. Sighing with relief, he stepped further in, grabbing a lantern hanging from the side. He checked it for oil, found a little, and then nodded. In a gap in the wall he pulled out some flint, and after a few sparks had the lantern lit. Holding it aloft, he stepped down into his former headquarters.
Everything was in disarray. Tables were overturned, chairs broken. Guards had torn it apart in their search. The small slanted windows near the ceiling were covered with cloth, and one by one Thren yanked them off, letting in more light. At first he was confused as to why the guards would have done so, and then he saw the lone upright table in the center.
“No,” he whispered, feeling his fury rise. “Damn it, how dare you do this now?”
One of his former members lay on the table, arms and legs spread wide. An arrow protruded from his chest. Carrying the lantern over, he felt stones turn in his gut as the light glinted off silver coins in the man’s eyes. Alan, Thren realized. His name was Alan. After the raid, all of the captured Spider guildmembers had been questioned and brought before judges. Those who turned on others had been spared and sent away. Alan had been one of them.