Orso scoffed. “You’re either ignorant or a liar. So. It’s Sancia, is it?”
“Yeah.”
“Never heard of you. Are you a canal operator?” asked Orso. “What house do you work for?”
“None.”
“An independent, eh?” He poured another glass of bubble rum and tossed it back quickly. “I never did much canal work on other houses, but I understood the independents didn’t last long. About as reusable as a wooden knife. So. You must be good, if you’re still breathing. Who was it? Who hired you to steal from me?”
“She said she doesn’t know,” said Gregor.
“Can’t she speak for herself?” said Orso.
Gregor glanced at Orso, then Sancia. “Let’s find out. Sancia — do you know what was in the box?”
At that, Orso froze. He glanced at Berenice, then stared resolutely at the floor.
“Go on,” said Gregor.
“I already told you,” said Sancia. “My client said not to open the box.”
“That is not an answer,” said Gregor.
“It’s what they said.”
“I don’t doubt that.” He turned back to Orso. “I doubt if you find that odd either, Hypatus. Because these criminals knew, just as you did, that its contents were Occidental — weren’t they?”
Even though he was covered in blood, Sancia could see Orso going pale. “What…What do you mean, Captain?” he asked.
“I will dispense with all pretenses,” said Gregor, sighing. “I’ve neither the time nor the energy for them.” He sat in a chair opposite Orso. “You broke my mother’s ban on the purchase of Occidental items. You tried to buy something valuable. This item was stored at my waterfront, for it could not be stored at the Dandolo campo. While it was there, young Sancia here was hired to steal it. Her partner, Sark, dutifully passed it along to their client — and was murdered for his troubles. And since then, this person has tried to kill anyone who’s had the remotest of interactions with that item — Sancia, you, Berenice, and me. And I suspect that such efforts will not end tonight — because the item must be incredibly important. As Occidental tools generally are. After all, they say Crasedes built his own god out of metals and stones — and a tool that could do that would be beyond value. Yes?”
Orso started rocking back and forth.
“What was in the box, Orso?” asked Gregor. “You need to tell me. It appears our lives depend on it.”
Orso rubbed his mouth, then suddenly turned to Sancia and spat, “Where is it now? What did you do with it, damn you?”
“No,” said Gregor. “First tell me what could be so valuable that it drove someone to try to kill us all tonight.”
Orso grumbled for a moment. Then he said, “It was…It was a key.”
Sancia did her utmost not to emote, but her heart was suddenly thrumming. Or maybe she should emote, she thought. She tried her best to look confused.
Gregor raised an eyebrow. “A key?”
“Yes. A key. Just a key. A golden key.”
“And did this key do anything?” asked Gregor.
“No one knew for certain. Grave robbers tend to lack the proper testing experience, you see. They found it in some giant, musty, collapsed fortress in Vialto. It was one of several Occidental tools they and the pirates and all the rest discovered.”
“You’d already tried to purchase one such tool, hadn’t you?” asked Gregor.
“Yes,” said Orso through gritted teeth. “I assume your mother told you about that. It was something like a lexicon. A big, ancient box. We paid dearly for it, and it vanished between Vialto and here.”
“How dear is dearly?” asked Gregor.
“A lot.”
Gregor rolled his eyes and looked at Berenice.
“Sixty thousand duvots,” said Berenice quietly.
Sancia coughed. “Holy shit.”
“Yes,” said Orso. “Hence Ofelia Dandolo’s frustration. But the key…It was worth trying again. There are all kinds of stories about the hierophants using scrived tools to navigate the barriers of reality — barriers we ourselves barely understand!”
“So you just wanted to make more powerful tools,” said Gregor.
“No,” said Orso. “Not just. Listen — when we inscribe an item with sigillums, we alter its reality, as anyone knows. But if you wipe the sigillums away or move beyond a lexicon, then those alterations vanish. The Occidentals not only developed tools that didn’t need lexicons — when the Occidentals altered reality, it was permanent.”
“Permanent?” said Sancia.
“Yes. So, say you have a scrived hierophantic tool that, oh, can make a stream burble up from the ground. Sure, you’d need sigillums to make the tool — but if you use the tool on the ground, then that water is there forever. It will have edited reality in a direct, instantaneous, and everlasting fashion. Supposedly the wand of Crasedes could unthread reality and tie it all back together again, if the stories are to be believed.”
“Whoa,” said Sancia quietly.
“Whoa is right,” said Orso.
“How is that possible?” asked Gregor.
“That’s one of the giant goddamn mysteries I was trying to solve!” said Orso. “There are some theories. A few hierophantic texts call the basic sigils we use the lingai terrora—the language of the earth, of creation. But the Occidental sigils were the lingai divina—the language of God.”
“Meaning?” said Sancia.
“Meaning our sigils are the language of reality, of trees and grass and, hell, I don’t know, fish. But Occidental sigils are the language God used to fashion that reality. So — use God’s coded commands, and reality is your plaything. Still, just a theory. The key would have helped me figure out how true all that was.”
<Clef,> said Sancia. <Are you hearing this?> But Clef remained silent, stuffed down the side of her boot. She wondered if his efforts had broken him, just as her own had almost broken her tonight.
“But the key was stolen as well…” said Gregor.
“Well, originally I thought the damned thing had gotten burned to bits in the waterfront fire.” He scowled at Sancia. “But the fire was you as well?”
Sancia shrugged. “Shit got out of hand.”
“I’ll say,” said Orso. “But what happened next? What did you do with it?”
Sancia then reiterated the story she’d told Gregor — bringing it to the fishery, Sark’s death, the fight, the escape.
“So you gave it over,” said Orso.
“I did,” she said.
“And your Sark said he suspected founder lineage behind this.”
“It’s what he said.”
Orso looked at Gregor.
“I might be founder lineage,” said Gregor, “but I think we can count me out, yes?”
“That’s not what I was looking at you for, idiot!” snapped Orso. “Do you believe her or not?”
Gregor thought about it. “No,” he said. “I don’t. Not entirely. I think there’s something she’s not telling us.”
Shit, thought Sancia.
“Have you searched her?” said Orso.
Sancia’s heart leapt in her chest. Shit!
“I’ve not had the time,” said Gregor. “Nor am I, ah, willing to submit a woman to my touch without her conse—”
Orso rolled his eyes. “Oh, for the love of God…Berenice! Would you please search Miss Sancia here for us?”
Berenice hesitated. “Uh. Really, sir?”