‘I know.’
‘Fine then.’ He couldn’t look at the thief-taker. So fallen from what he’d been. An idol almost. Everything he’d aspired to be once, long ago as a foolish boy. And still the closest thing he’d ever had to a father. ‘Right then. Let’s go kill your king.’
‘Regent,’ murmured Syannis. ‘Not my king.’
They walked on down the road from the castle and into the town. The night-time streets were quiet and the market square was almost empty. A couple of soldiers lounged against a wall, pointedly ignoring a man taking a piss against someone’s door. Syannis led the way past them, along a narrow street between small houses jammed up together along the side of the river, until the road became a track and the houses became huts, and then the track narrowed even more to a path, steep and uneven, and the huts came to an end. Before long they were clambering between rocks, while the river hissed and splashed beside them. They took a moment to clean the worst of the muck off their hands and clothes. A half-moon was rising.
‘Doesn’t anyone ever keep watch down here?’ muttered Berren.
‘Tethis doesn’t have walls. No reason to watch the river. Well, none except the one that only Talon and Hain and I know about.’ Ahead of them, a hooting call broke the quiet. Syannis stopped. ‘That’s Hain.’
Berren thought it sounded like a night bird, but since he’d been born and raised in a city, he supposed he didn’t know too much about birds. Apart from seagulls, he thought sourly. Syannis set off again. Long grass and brambles tore at Berren’s boots as he followed. The second time they stopped, Berren looked up. The top of the slope was maybe a dozen men standing on each others’ shoulders above him, steep enough that a man would need his wits and both his hands free to climb it. He could just about make out the low castle wall that overlooked the gorge. The river was below them now, rushing and hissing. Its foam glinted in the moonlight. Another bird call hooted out, and this time they were close. Syannis eased his way between two tall thorn bushes and Berren followed. Behind the bushes was a hollow. It was so dark that Berren didn’t see Hain until the thief-taker’s squire spoke.
‘All here,’ breathed Hain.
‘You found it then?’
‘I could find it with my eyes closed.’
‘Lamp?’
Hain reached down and lifted something. A dim light lit the floor of the hollow. Berren could see their boots. He could see that the hollow turned into a small hole in the side of the gorge. Large enough to crawl through. A cave.
‘Muffle it!’ hissed Syannis, and the light went out.
‘Everything’s inside.’
‘Berren, follow me. Hands and knees into the cave. Hain, you take the rear.’ In the darkness Berren barely saw Syannis drop to a crawl. He did as he was told and followed into the hillside. He couldn’t see a thing, but then after a yard or two he felt space grow around him. Master Sy’s hand fumbled at his shoulder and pulled him up, and then Hain was in as well. He unshuttered the lantern, and Berren could see the cave. It wasn’t a big one, but large enough for half a dozen men to hide inside. At the far end was another tunnel, vanishing into darkness, old and rough hewn, and barring the tunnel was an iron grille. From the looks of it, it had rusted fast years ago.
His feet touched something. He looked down. On the floor were their swords and their armour, everything they’d left outside the city in the morning.
‘You must be joking,’ he said.
Syannis jingled a set of keys. ‘Don’t get dressed, lad, not yet. Just pick up your stuff and carry it.’
‘You’re not going to get through that!’ Berren picked up his sword. He waited, watching.
The thief-taker jingled his keys again. ‘It’s been a dozen years and more since I was last inside these walls,’ he murmured. ‘Let’s hope the locks are still the same as they were and that they haven’t rusted as solid as they appear.’ He put a key in the lock. It turned easily and the grille opened without a sound. ‘Oh, look! Fancy that!’
‘But that doesn’t look like it’s been used for years!’ Berren squinted at the gate as he passed through. The rust was ancient. The lock should have welded itself solid by now. His head snapped up, peering into the darkness of the tunnel ahead. ‘If they still use it, why isn’t it guarded?’
‘They don’t,’ hissed Syannis. ‘They don’t know it’s there.’
‘Well someone must-’
‘Me, you dolt! Me and Hain! What do you think I’ve been doing for the last two months? While you and Talon were living the lives of princes in Kalda, I was here, squatting in flophouses, camping in the woods, digging holes for my own shit and eating bark! Turning those lancers so they were taking my coin instead of Meridian’s. And while I was at that, Hain was here, hours and hours, night after night, picking at that lock, working it loose again for the day we’d need it. And no, Meridian really doesn’t know it’s here. You’ll see why in a moment.’
They rounded a corner and the tunnel opened into another cave, larger than the first. The light from Hain’s lantern gleamed off a wide pool of water.
‘It’s a sump,’ said Syannis. He pointed across the pool. ‘Swim down under the water there, you’ll find a tunnel. It’s narrow. Like the way in. It’s not long though. Just a yard and then you’ll come up into another pool. That’s where the Pit is. We used to drain the tunnels every few months to keep the water down. It was our secret way out. By the time Meridian took the castle, it must have flooded again.’
‘What’s the Pit?’
‘There are many more caves in these cliffs. When you get out of the pool, there’s another tunnel. Wide enough that you can put your sword on before you go through it, and I suggest you do. It’s steep and goes up about twice the height of a man. The Pit? People get thrown in it. People Meridian doesn’t like. If he’s got anyone in there, there’s a chance he’ll have a guard standing watch as well. I’ll go first and wait for you on the other side. Take your time. Take this and follow it when you’re ready. I’ll give a tug when I’m through.’
Syannis handed the end of a rope to Hain and waded out into the pool, carrying his sword and his armour. As the water got deeper, he splashed and spluttered and then took a deep breath and vanished, simply sinking beneath the surface.
‘You next, dark-skin,’ growled Hain.
He pushed the rope into Berren’s hand. Berren took it, but stopped for a moment. A tunnel under the water? ‘Why me? Why not you?’
‘Because I don’t trust you not to run.’
The rope jerked. Berren took a deep breath and stepped into the pool. Cursed water was freezing, but at least it would wash the last of the shit off him. With one hand on the rope and the other clutching his sword and his leathers, he dived in.
21
The underwater tunnel wasn’t as narrow as he’d feared, and before he was halfway though, Berren felt a hand on his shirt, pulling him on. Hain came quickly after. It took them a minute to light the lantern again, even though it had been wrapped in oilskin; when he did, Syannis shone it at a cleft in the cave.
‘Up there.’ He shuttered the lantern and squinted, then put it down. ‘See,’ he whispered. ‘See how you can still see the cleft? Barely, but it’s there. That means there’s a torch lit beside the Pit.’ He crept closer. ‘Berren, you behind me. Hain take the rear. Keep back.’
The crack in the cave wall was wide enough, as Syannis had said, but the slope and the darkness and the thought that there might be an armed man standing not more than a dozen yards away made the climb agonisingly slow. At the top Syannis put a finger to his lips and gestured to Berren to ease closer. The cleft opened into a third cave. The walls were smooth, worn over time by water; the floor was flat, but most of it was a hole ringed by a low wall. The Pit. From where he stood, Berren couldn’t see how deep it was. There was a pulley and some ropes, presumably for winching people out once they’d starved to death or whatever happened to them in there.