"The House of Setios is more to the-"
"Turn fucking left," Samlor whispered in a voice like stones rubbing.
"Do not be a hindrance, lest you be cursed," said Tjainufi on the Napatan's shoulder. The manikin bowed toward Samlor, but the caravan master was too angry to approve of anything.
Mostly he was angry at himself, because he'd killed often enough during his life to know that he really didn't like killing. Especially not kids, even punk kids who'd have dished his skull in with weighted chains and raped Star until they sold her to a brothel for the price of a skin of wine. .
Sanctuary might be incrementally better off without that particular trio, but Samlor hil Samt wasn't Justice, wasn't responsible to his god for the cleansing of this hellhole.
If he really wanted to avoid killing strangers, he should have kept out of Sanctuary, and he surely should have avoided the Vulgar Unicorn, even though it had looked like the best place to learn what he needed to know. There were many cities where merchant guild offices would supply information to a stranger. In a few there were even licensed municipal guides. But this place. .
"All I wanted was a guide to the house of Setios," the caravan master said.
"Khamwas will take us there, Uncle," said Star. Her voice was falsely bright to suggest that she didn't remember having disobeyed Samlor a moment before. She tucked her hand into that of the Napatan scholar.
The exchange frightened Samlor, because he hadn't meant to speak aloud.
"First," the caravan master said to his companions now that they could walk abreast, "we're going to get out of the Maze. Then we'll worry about a safe route to where we want to be."
Khamwas murmured assent. Star, glad to be included, patted her uncle's arm.
Samlor should have explained sooner instead of snarling orders and expecting to be obeyed because-because, in unvarnished truth, he was a dangerous man in a foul mood, and the long knife in his hand had killed at least once this evening. Maybe he did belong in Sanctuary.
Or dead.
"What would you do without me, hey, kid?" the caravan master said cheerfully to his niece. His left hand tousled her hair beneath the hood. "Hope the legacy Setios's keeping for you's worth the effort."
Hell, Samlor didn't want to die. And the rest, well-he'd worry about innocent bystanders, but he wouldn't lose sleep over punks who'd known the rules of the game they lost.
"Ah, legacy?" asked Khamwas, caught between an unwillingness to intrude and a near necessity of knowing what was going on.
"My mommie left me something," said Star, falling into the sing-song by which children remember information whose import is still beyond their grasp. Samlor let her prattle on. Light through warped shutters up the street had blanked and brightened as it would if someone moved in front of it.
"She's dead, my mommie," the child continued, "but she gave somebody a message to give to Uncle Samlor when I'm seven which I am, so now we have to find Setios who has my mommie's present."
Samlor stepped in front of his companions and stopped, crying to the darkness, "Try it, fucker, and see what it buys you!"
He didn't know how many there were or whether there might be somebody behind him. He'd back away if he had to-and had the chance-praying that Khamwas would be alert enough to warn of trouble in that direction.
The Napatan whispered something. An ill-timed question, Samlor thought, but the words weren't meant for him or for anyone human. Khamwas' staff glowed as it had when the caravan master first saw the man; then the glow detached itself from the wood and began to grow into a manlike figure that staggered down the street in front of them.
The figure didn't really walk, didn't move at all in the normal sense. At the intervals of a heartbeat, the shape displaced forward, limbs at changed angles as if it had stepped from one point to another, though it had not visibly crossed the intervening space. Beyond the figure hung its afterimages, fading slowly from the transparent orange of the original through stages of a violet that was itself almost an absence of light.
As it advanced, the figure made an angry hissing like that of a firebrand flung into a puddle.
Two men crouched in a doorway three yards away. One of them wore a cavalryman's back-and-breast armor; both had helmets of military weight and pattern. Between that protection and the swords ready in their hands, Samlor would have been a dead man had he tried to stop their rush-and he couldn't flee without abandoning Star.
The muggers' eyes burned like those of beasts trapped by the light of a hunter's lantern.
The shape's arm reached-was-toward them. One man
screamed and both bolted down the street in a clash of falling equipment. The glowing figure stopped and disappeared as slowly as a lampwick cooling to blackness.
"Heqt be praised," muttered Samlor hil Samt. His left hand had fumbled for the silver medallion hanging from his neck. He could not feel the embossed features of the toad-faced goddess beneath the fabric of his tunics, but the unintended homage had been answered by a feeling of cool stability.
Stability was worth a lot just now to Samlor.
Star was chattering to Khamwas, her words those of a young child but her intent clearly that of an artist who wants to learn a new technique. It was pitch dark in the street when the last of the lurching figures disappeared.
A thing like a minnow of lambent red fluttered from Star's hand.
"Not now," the caravan master snarled, terrified by the implications of what Star had done.
The tiny fish gave a half turn in the air and collapsed inward to a point of light and nothingness. Star looked cautiously toward her uncle.
"Let's get on," said Samlor quietly, gesturing up the darkened street.
"The strength of an army is its leader," squeaked Tjainufi from Khamwas' shoulder.
Seeing the heavily-armed men flee in panic explained- or might explain-how the Napatan had strolled into the heart of the Maze alive. It still seemed incredible that anyone would be naive enough to leave the caravan encampment and walk in the straightest possible line toward the house he wanted to visit. Khamwas' god-or a demon-might point him unerringly toward Setios' house, but the knowledge would do him little good if he were dead and stripped in a gutter.
Still, Khamwas might have done just that. He was. . if not incredible, then a very strange man.
And the Napatan scholar was not nearly as strange as Samlor's niece.
The Maze had administrative boundaries which were of no more real significance than property lines on a swamp.
Samlor did not relax until he heard cracked voices up the street ahead of them. Two scavengers were pushing a handcart over the cobbles, pausing occasionally to scrabble for booty in the muck. They were singing, each of them a separate song, and from their voices the caravan master presumed they were either senile or very drunk.
But they were alive. If nobody had slit their throats for pleasure or the groat's worth of garbage they had scavenged, then Samlor had led his party out of the zone of most immediate danger.
Not that the caravan master was about to put away the long dagger he carried free in his right hand.
At the corner of a three-story building, locked and shuttered like a banker's strongbox, Samlor paused and said, "All right, Khamwas. Now you can point us toward Setios' house."
"Uncle, I want something to drink," said Star. "I didn't like the milk in that place."
"To the right, I think," said Khamwas, gesturing with his staff. The manikin had seated itself crosslegged on the Napatan's shoulder. The little figure was lounging with a hand leaned against Khamwas' neck as if it were the bole of a huge tree.
More than the level of risk had changed when Samlor's party got free of the Maze. The pavements were wider and somewhat more straight, and a number of door alcoves were illuminated by lamps in niches-closed against pilfering by screens of iron or pierced stone. The lights were intended to drive undesirables away from the building fronts, but they speeded travel without need for the drifting foxfire which Samlor's companions could provide.