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On the other side of the cave was an arch. Two torches burned in sconces, one on either side. Beyond it, Berren could see two men with their backs to him.

Syannis began to ease his way around one side of the pit. He glanced at Berren, gestured to him to go the other way and then drew a finger across his throat. Berren looked down inside as he crept around the wall. The Pit was at least as deep as it was wide, but there wasn’t anyone in it — at least, there wasn’t anyone moving. The smell was terrible.

They reached the archway together. The thief-taker raised three fingers. On the count of three. Berren looked behind him. Hain had stayed back, lurking at the top of the cleft.

One finger. One. The thief-taker’s eyes shifted from the guard to Berren. Buried in the gloom of the past was a man Berren had known as Jeklar the Throat, a friend of Master Hatchet. Jeklar had been called Jeklar the Throat for a reason, and he’d been happy to show anyone who’d listen exactly how you killed a man like this. Berren hadn’t thought about Jeklar for at least a decade, but now the throat-cutter came back.

Two. He didn’t have a knife though. He had a sword. Clumsy weapon for this sort of work. Too long. Syannis had a proper throat-cutter’s knife, of course.

Three. He’d never done it before. Didn’t know how. Didn’t know if he even could. Kill a stranger, just like that? From behind? Without any warning?

He must have made a noise. The guard started at the last moment and stepped back straight into him. Without thinking too much about it, Berren clamped his free hand around the man’s face and mouth. He dropped his sword, pulled the soldier’s own dagger out of its scabbard and held it to the man’s throat.

‘Be quiet!’ he whispered.

‘What are you doing?’ hissed Syannis. His own man was slumping back. A wild fountain of blood sprayed across the roof of the arch and begin dripping to the floor. Syannis caught the body as it fell to muffle any sound. What was he doing? He didn’t know. He was sweating and shaking and this was suddenly a lot harder than he’d thought it would be. Killing someone like this. . He couldn’t just. . Sun and Moon, but it just wasn’t that easy!

The guard flailed, pushing himself into Berren. He cried out, the sound muffled by Berren’s hand, and pushed them both back further. They fell together. Berren closed his eyes and tried to twist his body. The two of them hit the ground at once, knocking the breath out of Berren’s lungs. Then Syannis was there, driving his own knife into the back of the man’s neck. The guard gurgled, reached out a hand and then lay still. Berren felt blood, still warm, running over his arms and his face like a river. He pushed the body away.

‘Holy sun!’ Syannis stared at him with eyes like saucers. ‘What was that? What were you thinking?’

‘That I’ve never cut a man’s throat before!’ hissed Berren savagely. ‘And that maybe I didn’t have to. Couldn’t you have found a way to let them live?’

‘Don’t be absurd!’

Berren picked up the guard’s helmet and jammed it on his head. ‘I’ll stay here on guard then.’ He crouched down inside the arch out of sight, shaking. For a second he thought he was going to be sick.

One after the other, Syannis hoisted the dead men onto his shoulder and heaved them into the pit. Then he beckoned Hain closer and gave him the guard’s helmet off Berren’s head. ‘Stay here for an hour,’ he said. ‘Make sure there’s no alarm. Keep the exit clear. After that, we’re either caught or we’ve escaped another way. At the top of the gorge by the river there are six horses. Wait for us there. If we get there first, we’ll not wait for you but we’ll leave one horse behind. Follow us. We’ll be heading north for Forgenver, and at speed.’

Hain looked aghast. Berren just nodded. This was the way it had always been, back in the old days. The two of them. It felt natural and his head wasn’t thinking straight just now; it was still too full of the man whose blood was all over him, wondering who he was. Just another soldier like Tarn or any of the others.

Hain was beside himself. ‘Sire!’

Syannis growled. ‘He does this much better than you, Hain. He’s a dark-skin thief, but that’s what this needs.’ He pulled Berren to his feet and slipped through the arch into a stone passage which turned and led up some steps and stopped at a door. They tiptoed in, feeling their way between barrels and crates and sacks filled with apples and other things — in the dark, Berren couldn’t tell what.

‘It’s here somewhere,’ muttered the thief-taker. They reached a wall and Syannis stopped. ‘Door.’ A line of golden torchlight lit up the floor. Syannis lifted a latch. ‘You will have to kill, Berren. I hope you realise that.’

‘If it comes to fighting then I will. But I can’t just murder a man. That’s not what I am.’

‘Bugger,’ said a voice from the other side. Wood scraped on stone, the sound of a chair being pushed back. ‘That’s three in a row.’

Syannis opened the door a crack. ‘Then wait here!’ he hissed. Torchlight filled the space beyond. The air was thick with smoke.

Another voice muttered something, then Syannis threw open the door and leaped out of the gloom, sword flashing. Three soldiers sat around a table. Over the reek of torch smoke, Berren could smell wine. There were dice, coins. .

And blood. The thief-taker’s short sword sliced through the first man’s neck and stabbed the second straight through his gaping mouth. By the time Berren reached the table, Syannis had done for the third too, opening his throat from ear to ear in a single slash. ‘I told you to stay where you were!’

‘And I didn’t.’

Syannis nodded at Berren’s sword. ‘I hear you’ve finally learned how to use that.’

‘You call me a dark-skin thief again, you’ll learn a lot more.’

‘That was for Hain, not for you.’ Syannis dragged the bodies back into the cellar, then ran to a heavy locked door and took out his keys again.

‘Now what?’

Syannis opened the door and stepped inside. Dozens of crossbows lined the walls and boxes full of bolts were stacked on the floor. An armoury. ‘Not the sort of weapon you want people running around with most of the time.’ He bared his teeth. ‘Did Talon teach you to use one of these at last?’

‘I taught myself.’

‘Good.’ The thief-taker closed the door and locked them inside. ‘Take one and sabotage the rest.’ While Berren cut nicks into the crossbow strings, Syannis set about clearing the back wall of the armoury. When he was done, he pressed his ear against it and began tapping the panelling. Then he stopped, pulled a hand axe from his belt and swung at it. Berren cringed. In the confined space of the armoury, the blow sounded like a clap of thunder.

A thought came to him: he was alone with the man who’d killed Tasahre. Alone where no one would see. He finished with the crossbows and took the last one for himself, cocking it softly while Syannis hacked at the wall. Then he held a bolt in his other hand and looked at it. Looked at it, and at the thief-taker.

No. Couldn’t do that. Even though a part of him wanted to.

‘My grandfather’s grandfather built this armoury,’ Syannis said as he tore at the thin veneer of wood, pulling it away. ‘No one alive knows this door exists except me and Talon. And now you.’ He finished and held up a candle so that Berren could see. Behind the wood was another wall, made of stone, and in the wall a door. Everything was covered in ancient cobwebs. The door had no lock, but it was heavy and the hinges were rusted almost solid. It took the two of them together to pull it ajar. Beyond was yet more wood.