Rhapsody studied his face as he drank from the waterskin for a moment, then rummaged in her pack for her tinderbox. She struck the flint and steel until it sparked, then lighted a short wick, which she held up before her eyes as she looked him over.
“You don’t look well. Are you all right?”
Achmed wiped the water from his lips. “Yes. Are you ready?”
“Yes. I’ve got some anise oil; it should soothe those angry hinges.”
He capped the skin and returned it to his pack. “There are ropes you can use to tie up the apprentices—if that’s what they are. Get the spawn first. He’s the one on the cot to the left of the alcove in the back, the one with the black hair. I’ll take care of the other two—the blond brat and the one with no hair.” Rhapsody nodded. “And Rhapsody—if he causes you a moment’s danger, kill him, or I will. That was the bargain. Is it still understood?”
“Yes.”
Achmed studied her face for signs of distress, but saw none. It made him breathe easier than the moment before. Ever since the death of Jo she had seemed more reserved, more pragmatic, as if the role of the Iliachenva’ar, the bearer of the ancient sword of starfire, was beginning to weigh less heavily on her. Still, there was something behind her eyes he could not fathom, almost as if something was missing. He pulled up his hood and unslung his cwellan.
He was still feeling weak from the vision, possibly even from the arrhythmia, but he had to get through this, had to finish it, for all their sakes.
At the slight nod of his head, Rhapsody pulled up the hood of her cape and followed him into the dark foundry.
The door into the back section opened without a whisper of sound. Rhapsody had oiled the hinges and whispered the name of silence in a soft roundelay as Achmed lifted the latch and eased the heavy wooden panel into the chamber.
The fires of the kilns roared in greeting, shining off Rhapsody’s face. The leaping flames cast sheets of bright light around the room for a moment, illuminating its contents.
Racks of tiles and sacks of grout stood against the walls. There were shelves of supplies and foodstuffs in the far corner, forming a labyrinth of shadows in the room. A deep alcove was recessed in the wall at the back, behind the cots of the three apprentices.
Rhapsody held up the length of cloth Achmed had given her to use as a gag, signaling her readiness, and received a nod in return.
Like quicksilver Achmed glided through the flickering shadows to the cots of the two apprentices who slept to the right of the alcove. A coil of rope lay near the beds; he whisked it from the floor, slashed it into pieces and tossed one to Rhapsody, then turned to the task of binding the sleeping boys.
He bent over the first, a tall, thin lad with wiry blond hair, and pressed a finger against the artery in his neck. As the boy’s eyes flew open and he opened his mouth in a gasp for breath Achmed wedged the gag in, pushing it roughly but not enough to cause choking. Before the apprentice could exhale his hands were tied behind his back.
“Don’t move,” Achmed murmured to the other apprentice, a bald boy whose eyes had opened at the sound from across the room. He was concentrating on finishing his task, but could tell from the noise behind him that the demon-spawn was giving Rhapsody some difficulty.
“Ow! Hold still, you brat—augh! You bit me!” Achmed whirled in time to see Rhapsody, struggling with the ropes as the boy on the cot scratched at her, pull back and deliver the haymaker blow that Grunthor had been the admiring victim of once before. She used it with similar effect now; the dark-haired apprentice fell back onto the cot with an uuumph! as a sickening crack rent the air. The boy Achmed was binding cringed.
Rhapsody was rubbing the side of her hand. “If you want to keep your teeth, don’t try that again,” she said through clenched jaws.
Achmed took her hand, pulled off the glove and examined it in the inconstant light. “Did he draw blood?” he asked in Bolgish.
“No, but I believe I did.” They glanced back at the apprentice on the cot, sneering through a bleeding mouth.
“Don’t spill that—I need it,” Achmed said, still in the tongue of the Bolg. Rhapsody smiled as she put her glove back on.
The bleeding apprentice struggled to rise, and as he did, Rhapsody belted him again, then sat down on him as she finished tying the ropes.
“Hog-tie—like this,” Achmed called as he bound the blond apprentice’s hands and feet together behind him.
Rhapsody winced. “Is that really necessary? It looks painful.”
“Yes. I’ve seen all three of them glance at that bell more than once. Undoubtedly it would summon reinforcements.”
“What’s in the alcove?” Rhapsody asked as she finished binding the demon’s child, struggling to ignore the deadly look in his piercing black eyes.
Achmed put his finger against the throat of the other apprentice, who was trembling like a leaf in a high wind.
“What’s in the alcove?” he asked in the Orlandan tongue.
The bald boy struggled to speak, but nothing came out. He swallowed and tried again.
“The tunnel,” he whispered.
“Tunnel to where?”
“I—I don’t know.” The boy went white at the expression on Achmed’s face.
“I think he’s telling the truth,” Rhapsody interjected hastily, seeing that the pressure on the boy’s neck artery had been increased. “The tones in his voice suggest that he is. Here, let me finish tying him and you can look into it.”
Achmed rose in disgust as Rhapsody bent down in front of the bald apprentice. He walked slowly into the dark alcove, empty except for an enormous disk of contoured metal that was propped up against one of the walls, and looked down the hole in the floor.
It appeared to be a tiled shaft, like a that of a well, as deep as two men and narrow, perhaps as wide around as his outstretched arm-span. At the bottom was a dark hole in the southern wall, from which a small intermittent stream flowed. Broken pallets and buckets littered the wet floor. He could see little else in the reflected fires of the open kilns.
-
Rhapsody bound the apprentice’s hands as gently as she could. “What’s your name?”
“Omet.”
“Who would come if you rang the bell, Omet?” she asked. The boy’s expression went slack as he examined her face; then he blinked. “The journeymen. They live in the next wing.”
She nodded. “Why is there a tunnel in your workroom?”
“It’s where the slave boys dig.”
“Slave boys?”
Her question went unanswered as Achmed dropped woozily to the floor.
7
“What happened? Are you all right?”
Achmed reached up and shoved Rhapsody aside impatiently, clearing his line of sight to the child of the Rakshas. The dark-haired apprentice was still hog-tied, glaring furiously, struggling in his bonds.
“Don’t turn away from him, even for an instant,” he snarled.
Rhapsody looped the rope length in her hand, then snapped it suddenly with a whiplike action. It struck the struggling apprentice on the bare leg and elicited a muted howl of anger. The apprentice’s body jerked under the snap of the rope, then lay still.
“What happened?” she whispered again.
“The other heartbeat is down there.”
“In the well?”
“No, deeper within.” Achmed mopped his brow, his face gray in the reflected light of the kiln fires. “This vertical shaft, the well, is just an entranceway. There is a long horizontal tunnel at the bottom—tiled, more than half a league long, a catacomb of some sort. Heads northwest.” He had loosed his sight, and it sped along in the dark, confined space, the vision making him feel claustrophobic, but not as much as the sight of what he had seen at the end of the tunnel.
“Lie still,” Rhapsody ordered the demon-spawn. The child struggled within his bonds, hissing and making gargled threats. She ignored him and walked to the edge of the well. “Why the secrecy? What are they doing?”