“I know how you like the lamb.” Cerryl grinned, but his grin faded. “Do you ever eat in the Halls?”
“Not often.”
“I don’t see how you can eat in the city every night,” Cerryl pointed out. “I can’t.”
“But you can,” Faltar countered. “We get a gold every eight-day. That’s ten silvers-or a hundred coppers. Most meals-except at Furenk’s-cost five coppers or less. So you still have more than six silvers left over every eight-day, even if you ate away from the Halls every night.” The blonde mage smiled. “I’m not saying every night. Just tonight. Besides, what’s coin for?”
Books, clothing, silk smallclothes to keep him warm on guard duty-Cerryl could think of quite a few things. Even a warm woolen blanket for the cold nights. Or a present for Leyladin. Still, he’d been careful, and he had nearly ten golds in his private strongbox. Faltar was right. Paying for a dinner out of the Halls now and again couldn’t hurt. Leyladin was off on a trip to Hydolar-Duke Berofar was ailing and had requested a healer from Fairhaven. “Tonight-that sounds good.”
“Let’s try The Golden Ram. It’s not far, and I’m starving.”
“So am I.” Cerryl stood and stretched, then followed Faltar out of the Tower and past the guards and the messenger in red. Outside, the wind was gusting, almost warm, as they turned right leaving the front Hall and walked south along the Avenue past the White Tower.
“Spring is here,” Faltar said pleasantly.
“Let us hope it remains this time.”
The Golden Ram was less than a half-kay from the Wizards’ Square. How many times had Cerryl walked past the inn on his way to and from his sewer cleaning duties? He probably couldn’t have counted them. They stepped past the green signboard with the image of the golden ram and in through the left side of the double doors.
“Two of you?” asked the man in the faded blue vest standing by a small counter.
“Two, Veron,” Faltar confirmed.
“The corner table.” Veron gestured.
“I take it you come here often.” Cerryl glanced around the long room as Faltar wended his way through the crowded room. In the other corner Cerryl caught sight of Eliasar and Kinowin, but neither acknowledged the younger mages, as they were apparently caught up in their own conversation. The public room contained all sorts of people, from young traders to lancer officers and even several couples.
“Ah…feels good to sit down.” Faltar stretched circumspectly.
The serving girl, also wearing a blue vest, appeared at Faltar’s elbow. “What’ll you gents be having?”
“What’s good?” asked the blonde mage, looking at her, then at Cerryl.
“It all is, ser. I’d try the cutlets. They run three. A touch chewy, but tasty. Either the good ale or a red wine. Fresh barrel.”
“I’ll have the cutlets, with the good ale,” Faltar said.
“The cutlets, but I’ll try the red wine.” Cerryl felt too hungry and tired to ask about other possibilities, but he’d drunk so much ale lately, or so it seemed, that he thought he’d try the wine.
“Two cutlets-they come with the roasted potatoes and bread-and an ale and a red. That be it?”
Both mages nodded, and the server bustled off.
“I didn’t know you drank wine. Or is that the healer’s influence?”
Cerryl found himself flushing.
“Oh…she’ll change you yet.”
“She probably already has,” conceded Cerryl. “I don’t see her much, what with her healing stuff and my gate duty.”
Thump! Thump! Two mugs appeared on the table. “That’ll be four, gents.”
Cerryl fished out two coppers, as did Faltar. Both vanished, and so did the server.
“Gate duty is boring,” said Faltar. “Sometimes you see odd things, though. This afternoon, I saw some Blacks-three of them. I think they were the ones that get exiled from Recluce.”
“You let them in and didn’t tell anyone?”
“Even I’m not that stupid.” Faltar took a healthy swallow of the ale. “They were leaving, but I still told Kinowin when I got off duty. They didn’t do anything wrong.”
“What did he say?”
“He thanked me and sent an apprentice to tell Jeslek. What’s her name, the new redhead?”
“Kiella? Oh…that’s what she was doing.”
“And I thought you slept through it all.”
“I wasn’t that sleepy.”
“I could have roasted you with chaos, and you wouldn’t have known it.” Faltar grinned. “Anyway, two of them were blades, and one was a healer, it looked like.”
“I imagine you looked very closely.”
“It’s not what you’re thinking. One of the blades was a woman. Redheaded and good-looking from what I could tell, but she was big, taller than you, and had that look, like Eliasar does when he’s slapping you around in weapons training. One was like Kinowin, big and blonde, except he was even bigger. The healer was smaller, a young fellow, redheaded, almost shy.”
“Here’s the cutlets. That’s another six.” The serving woman in the blue vest set two heavy brown platters on the table, then glanced from Faltar to Cerryl.
Cerryl dug out another four coppers. Faltar did the same.
“And I’d be thanking you both.” She slipped the coppers into her wallet and gave a broad smile, pausing for a moment before nodding and slipping away.
Cerryl frowned, then took a bite of the cutlet, chewing hard because it was tough, if tasty. He had his own ideas about the travelers from Recluce, but Kinowin had told him not to guess outside the Halls.
“What do you think?” asked Faltar.
“I just don’t know. They make some of their Blacks, the ones that don’t fit in, travel through Candar. That’s what Myral told me once.”
“That’s the Blacks for you. You don’t fit in, and they throw you out. I guess you can do that if you live on an island.”
“Every place has rules,” Cerryl pointed out, using his own dagger to cut the meat and then spear a chunk of the roasted potato. “That’s why we have the city patrol.”
“One of the mages who had been helping Eliasar when I became a student went with the Patrol. Klyat. He’d been an arms mage with the lancers.”
“What does he do?”
Faltar shrugged. “I don’t know. I haven’t talked to him in a while, and he wouldn’t say when I was a student. Keep the peace, I guess.”
Cerryl nodded but wondered. He’d seldom seen the patrols, for all the talk about them when he’d been an apprentice.
“Recluce has always been trouble, from the time of Creslin on.” Faltar chewed for a moment. “Now they’re even shipping stuff from Austra and Nordla, and some of it’s cheaper than what we can grow and make in Candar. Derka and Myral were always insisting we’re going to have trouble with Recluce. Then these Blacks show up. Of course, it could be coincidence. These things happen.” Faltar swallowed the last of his ale and lifted the mug.
“More?” asked the serving woman, drawn to the raised mug as a moth to light. “That’ll be two.”
Faltar fumbled out two coppers.
“Maybe…or it could be an order-chaos conflict.”
“You just found out about those, and now everything’s an order-chaos conflict.” Faltar laughed. “It could be trade.”
“What does trade have to do with three wandering Blacks from Recluce?” Cerryl sipped the red wine, not nearly so clear or so good as that he’d had at Leyladin’s house, trying to make it last.
“They could be spies. They’d been at the Traders’ Square, looking for work as blades, supposedly.”
“How did you find that out?”
Faltar raised his eyebrows. “I have my ways.”
“I don’t see that of young wanderers-they were young, weren’t they?”
“The healer didn’t look as old as you.”
“That young?” Cerryl grinned. “Not ancient like you?”
Thump! The second ale slopped on the table. “Here you be.” The server was leaving before she finished her words.
“Good ale.” Faltar took another swallow. “I’m glad you recognize the wisdom of your elders.”