A weird aroma caught my nose and drew me halfway down a narrow passage. I found myself at a
cookshop where the long-nosed birdman behind the counter was flipping a mass of something in a frying pan.
"Fresh food!" he informed me.
I peered at the mixture. It looked like gravel mixed with green sand. "Is it animal, vegetable, or mineral?"
"Better not to ask, young sir," the birdman said. "But it is delicious! Try some! Take a chance! Your stomach will thank you. Only a copper coin." I reached for my belt pouch.
"Don't pay more than half a copper," a soft voice at my shoulder said.
I spun around. Matt stood beside me. Her cats wound around our feet.
"Hi, there," I said, smiling.
Her warm, tanned cheeks turned rosy.
"Good afternoon. My-Nah is a good cook, but he tends to overcharge tourists. Don't you?" she asked the birdman.
He bowed. "Pretty ladies like you make me forget all about profit," he said.
"Were you going to have lunch here?" I asked, glancing around. "Why don't you join me?"
"Well, I. . . " She hesitated. "Yes, thank you."
"Two bowls," I said. "And wine?"
"Fruit juice, thank you, sir. I must go back to work this afternoon."
I handed the birdman a copper coin and visited the booth next to his for freshly-squeezed juices. By the time I returned, Matt was sitting bolt upright upon one of the shabby wooden stools at one of the communal tables sheltered by a pink fabric canopy in the passage. She had placed a portion of her food on a solid gold plate under her chair for the cats.
I took a couple of gingerly spoonfuls of My-Nah's food while Matt watched.
"How is it?" she asked.
"I've had worse," I said, trying to sound cheerful. It tasted like some of the nondescript bowls of food I'd bought from street vendors in the Bazaar. Nothing special, but not fatal to the diner, either.
She laughed. "It is nourishing. Beyond that I do not ask. It is either that or bring my own lunch. I am too busy when I leave for work in the morning."
An awkward silence fell. I thought back hastily to the dating lessons that Bunny, Tananda, and the others tried to hammer into me. Not that this was a date, per se, but she was a pretty girl, and I found myself unexpectedly tongue-tied trying to make conversation. "Ask her about herself," Bunny had suggested. "Show an interest."
"Do you like working for Diksen?" I stammered out. It was the first thing I could think of.
Matt didn't seem to find the question offensive. "He is not a bad boss. He pays well and he is not unreasonable in his requirements." She took a bite of her own food, then looked up at me shyly. "I am
sorry that he treated you so poorly. He likes his privacy. He was not happy about having his former employee set up business so close to his, in every way!"
"Yeah, we were a little surprised to find out just how close," I said, with a grim thought for Samwise.
"It is not your fault," Matt assured me. "Are you recovered from your misadventure? You are not harmed in any way?" She studied me solicitously. "You have a bruise on your temple!"
"I'm fine," I said. I basked in her sympathy. It felt nice to have a pretty girl paying attention to me. "I just wish we could have solved the problem. Aahz is my best friend. I'm really worried about him. He's got a lot at stake, and your boss's curse is making it impossible for him to do the job he was hired to do."
Matt didn't reply. She hastily picked up her juice and took a sip.
I realized once again that I'd been the one to kill the conversation. My problems were not her concern. I ate some of my food and tried to think of a pleasant subject.
"So, what do you like . . . ?" I began.
"And how do you find Aegis . . . ?" she said at the same time.
We both laughed.
At the next table, a couple of girls were talking over a bowl of My-Nah's who-knew-what? One of them had a long narrow head with oval ears and long, flexible lips. Her golden-furred face rose on a long neck spotted with huge brown oval blotches. The other had a bird face with a short hooked beak. They were talking excitedly in low tones, but perfectly audible to us. I smiled to myself. Ghords seemed to live to gossip—or glyph, which amounted to the same thing.
"... But do you believe it?" the first one asked the other, her voice suddenly audible over the racket in the street. "In the supply closet! That is just asking to be found, isn't it?"
"Well, you know what they say about them. She said he was absolutely wild .. . !"
"How fabulous!" the first one giggled.
"I know."
They dropped off again into inaudibility, but it had been enough. My cheeks burned. I wanted to climb under the table. I knew who they were talking about and, to my horror, so did Matt. She smiled and shook her head.
"That is typical gossip, I am afraid," Matt said, not without sympathy. "Even I have been getting messages from friends about what is happening on the construction site."
I cringed. "And do you pass them along to your boss?" I asked.
She looked shocked. "No! Why would you ask such a thing? Messages are private. Oh, it is only your friend's bad luck that he chose her. Tauret is such a big mouth. Almost any other woman in that office would have been more discreet."
I didn't intend to tell Aahz how far word of his close encounter had gone. It could have been a function of the curse that caused him to choose the one girl who kissed and told. Or simple bad luck. There was no way to know for sure. It would be cruel to rub it in.
"Mer-ow!" one of the cats said, coming out from beneath Matt's stool.
She stood up and smiled at me. I scrambled to my feet. "I am sorry," she said. "I must go back. Thank you for our lunch. And thank you so much for arranging my ride home the other night."
"My pleasure," I said honestly. "It's our fault you were late getting away."
"You are kind. I wish you good fortune. If there is ever anything I can do for you, please ask me."
"Unless you know how to unlock the curse," I said, wryly, "I don't know what there is."
"I cannot go against my employer," Matt said, immediately tense.
"I wouldn't ask you to," I assured her. "Thanks for the offer, though. It was really nice having lunch with you."
Matt looked surprised, as if it had not occurred to her. "Yes, it was. Goodbye now." She and the cats disappeared into the crowd.
Whistling, I made my way to my rendezvous point with my Camel.
Chapter 25
"What am I? A mind-reader?"
Beltasar met me at the pier. The Scarab held out a sheaf of miniature documents. "Sign these."
"What are they?" I asked.
"Work orders," she said, buzzing in a circle around my head. "There are eight blocks to be moved, and no paperwork has been filed. I cannot locate Samwise. I cannot find your friend, who ordered that nothing be signed except by him or by Samwise in his presence. But you are his partner, so will you initial them so we can get going? We are burning daylight!"
I looked them over quickly. Glyphs were still difficult for me to make out, but each of these was almost alike, except for the name of the owner of each stone, and the coordinates of the location to which it was going. I took the pencil from the hovering Scarab and dashed off my name on each one.