Joe Haldeman - Blood Brothers.pdf

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BLOOD BROTHERS
BLOOD BROTHERS
Smiling, bowing as the guests leave. A good luncheon, much reassuring talk from the
gentry assembled: the economy of Sanctuary is basically sound. Thank you, my new cook ...
he's from Twand, isn't he a marvel? The host appears to be rather more in need of a new
diet than a new cook, though the heavy brocades he affects may make him look stouter than
he actually is. Good leave . . . certainly, tomorrow. Tell your aunt I'm thinking of her.
You will stay, of course, Amar. One departing guest raises an eyebrow slightly, our host
a boylover? We do have business.
Enoir, you may release the servants until dawn. Give yourself a free evening as well. We
will be dining in the city.
And thank you for the excellent service. Here.
He laughs. Don't thank me . Just don't spend it all on one woman. As the servantmaster
leaves, our host's bluff expression fades to one of absolute neutrality. He listens to the
servant master's progress down the stone steps, overhears him dismissing the servants.
Turns and gestures to the pile of cushions by the huge fireplace. The smell of winter's ashes
masked by incense fumes.
I have a good wine, Amar. Be seated while I fetch it.
Were you comfortable with our guests?
Merchants, indeed. But one does learn from other classes, don't you agree?
He returns with two goblets of wine so purple it is almost black. He sets both goblets in
front of Amar: choose. Even closest friends follow this ritual in Sanctuary, where poisoning
is art, sport, profession. Yes, it was the color that intrigued me. Good fortune.
No, it's from a grove in the mountains, east of Syr. Kalos or something; I could never get
my tongue around their barbaric . . . yes. A good dessert wine. Would you care for a pipe?
Enoir returns, jingling his bell as he walks up the steps.
That will be all for today, thank you... .
No, I don't want the hounds fed. Better sport Iisday if they're famished. We can live with
their whimpering.
The heavy front door creaks shut behind the servantmaster. You don't? You would not be
the only noble in attendance. Let your beard grow a day or two, borrow some rag from a
servant... .
Well, there are two schools of thinking. Hungry dogs are weaker but fight with
desperation. And if your dogs aren't fed for a week, there's a week they can't be poisoned by
the other teams.
Oh, it does happen—I think it happened to me once. Not a killing poison, just one that
makes them listless, uncompetitive. Perhaps a spell. Poison's cheaper.
He drinks deeply, then sets the goblet carefully on the floor. He crosses the room and
mounts a step and peers through a slot window cut in the deep wall.
I'm sure we're alone now. Drink up; I'll fetch the krrf. He is gone for less than a minute
and returns with a heavy brick wrapped in soft leather.
Caronne's finest, pure black, unadulterated. He unfolds the package: ebony block
embossed all over its surface with a foreign seal. Try some?
He nods. "A wise vintner who avoids his wares." You have the gold?
He weighs the bag in his hand. This is not enough. Not by half.
He listens and hands back the gold. Be reasonable. If you feel you can't trust my assay,
take a small amount back to Ranke; have anyone test it. Then bring me the price we
established.
The other man suddenly stands and claws at his falchion, but it barely clears its sheath,
then clatters on the marble floor. He falls to his hands and knees, trembling, stutters a few
words, and collapses.
No, not a spell, though nearly as swift, don't you think? That's the virtue of coadjuvant
poisons. The first ingredient you had along with everyone else in the sauce for the
sweetmeats. Everyone but me. The second part was in the wine, part of its sweetness.
He runs his thumbnail along the block, collecting a pinch of krrf, which he rubs between
thumb and forefinger and then sniffs. You really should try it. Makes you feel young and
brave. But then you are young and brave, aren't you.
He carefully wraps the krrf up and retrieves the gold. Excuse me. I have to go change. At
the door he hesitates. The poison is not fatal; it only leaves you paralyzed for a while.
Surgeons use it.
The man stares at the floor for a long time. He is conscious of drooling and other loss of
control.
When the host returns, he is barely recognizable. Instead of the gaudy robe, he wears a
patched and stained houppelande with a rope for a belt. The pomaded white mane is gone;
his bald scalp is creased with a webbed old scar from a swordstroke. His left thumb is
missing from the second joint. He smiles and shows almost as much gap as tooth.
I am going to treat you kindly. There are some who would pay well to use your helpless
body, and they would kill you afterwards.
He undresses the limp man, clucking, and again compliments himself for his charity and
the man for his well-kept youth. He lifts the grate in the fireplace and drops the garment
down the shaft that serves for disposal of ashes.
In another part of town, I'm known as One-Thumb; here, I cover the stump with a
taxidermist's imitation. Convincing, isn't it? He lifts the man easily and carries him through
the main door. No fault of yours, of course, but you're distantly related to the magistrate
who had my thumb off. The barking of the dogs grows louder as they descend the stairs.
Here we are. He pushes open the door to the kennels. The barking quiets to pleading
whines. Ten fighting hounds, each in an individual run, up against its feeding trough,
slavering politely, yawning gray sharp fangs.
We have to feed them separately, of course. So they don't hurt each other.
At the far end of the room is a wooden slab at waist-level, with channels cut in its surface
leading to hanging buckets. On the wall above it, a rack with knives, cleavers, and a saw.
He deposits the mute staring man on the slab and selects a heavy cleaver.
I'm sorry, Amu. I have to start with the feet. Otherwise it's a terrible mess.
There are philosophers who argue that there is no such thing as evil qua evil; that,
discounting spells (which of course relieve an individual of responsibility), when a man
commits an evil deed he is the victim himself, the slave of his progeniture and nurturing.
Such philosophers might profit by studying Sanctuary.
Sanctuary is a seaport, and its name goes back to a time when it provided the only armed
haven along an important caravan route. But the long war ended, the caravans abandoned
that route for a shorter one, and Sanctuary declined in status—but not in population, because
for every honest person who left to pursue a normal life elsewhere, a rogue drifted in to
pursue his normal life.
Now, Sanctuary is still appropriately named, but as a haven for the lawless. Most of them,
and the worst of them, are concentrated in that section of town known as the Maze, a
labyrinth of streets and nameless alleys and no churches. There is communion, though, of a
rough kind, and much of it goes on in a tavern named the Vulgar Unicorn, which features a
sign in the shape of that animal improbably engaging itself, and is owned by the man who
usually tends bar on the late shift, an ugly sort of fellow by the name of One-Thumb.
One-Thumb finished feeding the dogs, hosed the place down, and left his estate by way
of a long tunnel that led from his private rooms to the basement of the Lily Garden, a
respectable whore-house a few blocks from the Maze.
He climbed the long steps up from the basement and was greeted by a huge eunuch with a
heavy glaive balanced insolently over his shoulder.
"Early today, One-Thumb."
"Sometimes I like to check on the help at the Unicorn." "Surprise inspection?"
"Something like that. Is your mistress in?"
"Sleeping. You want a wench?"
"No, just business."
The eunuch inclined his head. "That's business."
"Tell her I have what she asked for, and more, if she can afford it. When she's free. If I'm
not at the Unicorn, I'll leave word as to where we can meet."
"I know what it is," the eunuch said in a singsong voice. "Instant maidenhead." One-
Thumb hefted the leather-wrapped brick. " One pinch, properly inserted, turns you into a girl
again. " The eunuch rolled his eyes. "An improvement over the old method."
One-Thumb laughed along with him. "I could spare a pinch or so, if you'd care for it."
"Oh . . . not on duty." He leaned the sword against the wall and found a square of
parchment in his money belt. "I could save it for my off time, though." One-Thumb gave
him a pinch. He stared at it before folding it up. "Black . . . Garonne?"
"The best."
"You have that much of it." He didn't reach toward his weapon. One-Thumb's free hand
rested on the pommel of his rapier. " For sale, twenty grimales. "
"A man with no scruples would kill you for it."
Gap-toothed smile. "I'm doubly safe with you, then."
The eunuch nodded and tucked away the krrf, then retrieved the broadsword. "Safe with
anyone not a stranger." Everyone in the Maze knew of the curse that One-Thumb
expensively maintained to protect his life: if he were killed, his murderer would never die,
but live forever in helpless agony:
Burn as the stars burn;
Burn on after they die.
Never to the peace of ashes,
Out of sight and succor
From men or gods or ghost:
To the ends of time, burn.
One-Thumb himself suspected that the spell would be effective only for as long as the
sorcerer who cast it lived, but that was immaterial. The reputation of the sorcerer, Mizraith,
as well as the severity of the spell, kept blades in sheaths and poison out of his food.
"I'll pass the message on. Many thanks."
"Better mix it with snuff, you know. Very strong." One-Thumb parted a velvet curtain
and passed through the foyer, exchanging greetings with some of the women who lounged
there in soft veils (the cut and color of the veils advertised price and, in some cases, curious
specialties), and stepped out into the waning light of end of day.
The afternoon had been an interesting array of sensations for a man whose nose was as
refined as it was large. First the banquet, with all its aromatic Twand delicacies, then the
good rare wine with a delicate tang of half-poison, then the astringent krrf sting, the rich
charnel smell of butchery, the musty sweat of the tunnel's rock walls, perfume and incense
in the foyer, and now the familiar stink of the street. As he walked through the gate into the
city proper, he could tell the wind was westering; the earthy smell from the animal pens had
a slight advantage over the tanners' vats of rotting urine. He even sorted out the delicate
cucumber fragrance of freshly butchered fish, like a whisper in a jabbering crowd; not many
snouts had such powers of discrimination. As ever, he enjoyed the first few minutes within
the city walls, before the reek stunned even his nose to dullness.
Most of the stalls in the Farmers' Market were shuttered now, but he was able to trade
two coppers for a fresh melon, which he peeled as he walked into the bazaar, the krrf
inconspicuous under his arm.
He haggled for a while with a coppersmith, new to the bazaar, for a brace of lamps to
replace the ones that had been stolen from the Unicorn last night. He would send one of his
urchins around to pick them up. He watched the acrobats for a while, then went to the
various wine merchants for bids on the next week's ordinaries. He ordered a hundredweight
of salt meat, sliced into snacks, to be delivered that night, and checked the guild hall of the
mercenaries to find a hall guard more sober than the one who had allowed the lamps to be
stolen. Then he went down to the Wideway and had an early dinner of raw fish and crab
fritters. Fortified, he entered the Maze.
As the eunuch had said, One-Thumb had nothing to fear from the regular denizens of the
Maze. Desperadoes who would disembowel children for sport (a sport sadly declining since
the introduction of a foolproof herbal abortifacient) tipped their hats respectfully or stayed
out of his way. Still, he was careful. There were always strangers, often hot to prove
themselves or desperate for the price of bread or wine; and although One-Thumb was a
formidable opponent with or without his rapier, he knew he looked rather like an
overweight merchant whose ugliness interfered with his trade.
He also knew evil well, from the inside, which is why he dressed shabbily and displayed
no outward sign of wealth. Not to prevent violence, since he knew the poor were more often
victims than the rich, but to restrict the class of his possible opponents to those who would
kill for coppers. They generally lacked skill.
On the way to the Unicorn, on Serpentine, a man with the conspicuously casual air of a
beginner pickpocket fell in behind him. One-Thumb knew that the alley was coming up and
would be in deep shadow, and it had a hiding-niche a few paces inside. He turned into the
alley and, drawing the dagger from his boot, slipped into the niche and set the krrf between
his feet.
The man did follow, proof enough, and when his steps faltered at the darkness, One-
Thumb spun out of the niche behind him, clamped a strong hand over his mouth and nose,
and methodically slammed the stiletto into his back, time and again, aiming for kidneys.
When the man's knees buckled, One-Thumb let him down slowly, slitting his throat for
silence. He took the money belt and a bag of coin from the still-twitching body, cleaned and
replaced his dagger, picked up the krrf, and resumed his stroll down the Serpentine. There
were a few bright spatters of blood on his houppelande, but no one on that street would be
troubled by it. Sometimes guardsmen came through, but not to harass the good citizens or
criticize their quaint customs.
Two in one day, he thought; it had been a year or more since the last time that happened.
He felt vaguely good about it, though neither man had been much of a challenge. The
cutpurse was a clumsy amateur and the young noble from Ranke a trusting fool (whose
assassination had been commissioned by one of his father's ministers).
He came up the street south of the Vulgar Unicorn's entrance and let himself in the back
door. He glanced at the inventory in the storeroom, noted that it must have been a slow day,
and went through to his office. He locked up the krrf in a strongbox and then poured himself
a small glass of lemony aperitif and sat down at the one-way mirror that allowed him to
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