“Do not trouble your heart, young miss,” said Cimozjen. He bowed his head. “I am sworn by oaths to Dol Dorn, the Puissant and Powerful. The Sovereign Host rewards my faith and humble service with a few blessings to share with others, and for that I am grateful.”
“An acolyte of Dol Dorn, eh?” said the woman, as if she fully understood the deeper secrets that implied. “Still, I am surprised that you could defeat a member of the Iron Band. They’re said to be the best warriors we’ve ever fielded. Outside of the Order of Rekkenmark, of course.”
“You’re sure you’re well enough now?” asked Cimozjen, trying to change the subject. “You’re not injured elsewhere?”
The young woman pulled her hood back over her head and started to rise. “What I mean to say is, well, over the years I’ve seen their sigil armband in a place of honor on several family mantles, and the tales they told … well, I suppose maybe those stories were exaggerated. But I hope not overmuch.”
Cimozjen smiled as he, too, stood. “Rest assured, young miss, he was not a fellow of the Iron Band.”
Confusion clouded her brow. “But he showed me the armband. There’s nothing else quite like them.”
“Whatever he may-pardon me, young miss, would you repeat that?”
“He showed me the armband.”
Cimozjen held up one finger and marshaled his thoughts. “I must beg you to forgive me my poor manners, if you please, young miss,” he said.
He turned to the dwarf, who lay on his back, rocking back and forth with both hands over his nose. The unfortunate thief groaned more or less constantly, the sound muffled by his callused palms.
Cimozjen stalked over, kneeled down, and felt along the dwarf’s left arm, then along the other. Just above his right elbow he felt a metal ring. Gripping the dwarf’s ragged cuff in both hands, he roughly tore the shirt to expose the armband. It glinted slightly.
“Ass!” yelled Cimozjen. He punched the dwarf solidly in the stomach. “It’s worn on the left arm!”
He grabbed the dwarf’s scalp and yanked, raising him to a sitting position. The dwarf whimpered behind his hands, keeping his eyes squeezed shut. Cimozjen reached one hand beneath the rear of his tunic and drew a long, heavy dagger. The keen blade sang as he freed it from the scabbard.
The dwarf’s eyes popped open.
Cimozjen held up his blade and turned it side to side. “Remove that band from your wrist, or I’ll pull it off the stump of your shoulder,” he hissed.
The dwarf pulled his hands away from his ruined face and, fumbling, took the armband off. He tried to offer it to Cimozjen, but his hands, bloody and trembling, let it drop to the damp ground.
Keeping tight hold of the thief’s hair, Cimozjen picked up the armband using the blade of his dagger. He inspected it closely in what little light remained. He turned back to the dwarf. The pain he felt twisting his neck added gravity to his stare.
He smiled mirthlessly. “Perhaps you’d care to show me where you found this?” he said. His cold tone carried the dire consequences of the dwarf’s alternative.
“H-happy to,” stammered the dwarf through his hands.
“Good.” He used his blade to open the flap of his haversack. He let the armband slide off the dagger and into safekeeping, then spun his weapon expertly. “Otherwise, to find out, I would have to resort to measures that I find … distasteful. And if you were to cause me to break my vows like that-”
“You don’t need to be getting into explanations now, if’n that’s fine by you.” The thief rummaged one hand around inside his cloak and found a rag, which he put to his nose.
“I am glad that we agree on this,” said Cimozjen. He stood, his injuries protesting every motion. “Let’s bid the good woman a fair evening, shall we?”
“Of course,” the dwarf said, his tone rather nasal. “Good night, woman.”
Cimozjen twisted his hair and whispered something in his ear.
“I, uh, I’m sorry for, uh, what I did, you know,” said the dwarf in a voice pitched rather higher.
The woman stamped her foot. “I should give you a good whacking for what you did,” she said. She picked up the dwarf’s spiked club and began unwrapping it.
“Here now, there’ll be none of that, miss,” said Cimozjen.
“Oh, no,” said the woman. “Just words. Though I thought you might want your coat back, brave man.”
“Of course. My thanks,” said Cimozjen as he took the proffered garment. “Please forgive our abrupt departure,” he added, touching his dagger to his brow, “but we’ve some business to attend to immediately. May you find your basket and goods, and make it home safely. I shall pray for you.” Cimozjen looked back at the dwarf. “Well?”
“Hm? Oh, uh, King’s Bay. The, uh, piers. At the west end of the Low District.”
“We’re off, then,” said Cimozjen with feigned joviality. He recovered his staff, holding it in his hand with his dagger, and the two left the young woman behind.
“If you don’t mind my asking,” said the dwarf as they walked along, “where in the woods did you pull that dagger from?”
“This? My father-Sovereigns keep his soul-gave it to me when I was thirteen. I always carry it.”
“Don’t take this as a complaint, because it’s not, I mean I’d just as soon not have got myself stabbed dead back there, but why didn’t you pull it out in, um, you know …”
“Why did I not knife you?” Cimozjen clucked his tongue. “I’ve taken enough lives in my nigh-on fifty years that I prefer to work things out peaceably when I can. I feel no need to notch my reputation with further bloodshed. I stopped your crime. We both lived. That’s a fine enough outcome for me, and hopefully one to please the Sovereigns, as well.”
The two walked through the darkened streets for some time before the dwarf finally broke the silence.
“Begging your pardon, and not that I want to be contrary, but you don’t really need to keep hold of the hair on my head any more. Truly you don’t.”
“Yes, I’m afraid I do,” said Cimozjen wearily.
“And why would that be?”
“Just in case I need to yank your head back and slit your throat.”
“I thought you said you didn’t need any more bloodshed.”
“I’m willing to make an exception tonight.”
The dwarf tried to think of a reply, but failed. Then, several blocks later, he said, “If you think you might see such an exception coming upon us, I’d be very grateful if you’d be sure and let me know beforehand, right?”
The two walked the cobbled streets. The cold had turned bitter after sunset, and those few others still in the streets were only too happy to ignore the pair. Cimozjen, his ruined longcoat draped over his shoulders, marked the paces with the clacking of his metal-shod staff, his dagger held concealed against the wood, just in case. His other hand seemed to rest easily on the dwarf’s shoulder, but was tightly wound into his hair. Just in case.
The dwarf led Cimozjen through the Community Ward to King’s Bay, an elongated backwater carved ages ago from the banks of the Karrn River. It was one of the few operable portages along that stretch of the river. For dozens of miles in each direction steep bluffs prevented any craft larger than a canoe from making a decent landing.
King’s Bay was also cold and very, very deep, which gave cause for some to wonder whether or not it had been formed by a sinkhole that went all the way down to Khyber. Superstitious sailors would make an offering to the Devourer every year that the whole of the port would not drop into the abyss, at least not while they were sailing on it.
The piers that reached into the bay were by and large the same-aged, weatherworn planks strung between pilings made of heavy Karrnathi pine trunks. A few piers were new, rebuilt or in the process thereof with the arrival of peace, and one, the King’s Pier, was a veritable causeway made of stone that reached farther into the dark waters than any other.