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Luck in the Shadows

Luck in the Shadows

Titel: Luck in the Shadows Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Lynn Flewelling
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his face, Alec moved among the dozen or so bodies laid out for inspection. The air was uncomfortably damp, and a fetid stench rose from the glistening drainage channels cut into the floor.
    "Here's a familiar face," Micum remarked from across the room. "Not one of ours, though."
    Seregil came over for a look. "Gormus the Beggar. Poor old bastard—he must have been ninety. His daughter begs over by Tyburn Circle most days. I'll send word to her."
    Again, they found no sign of Teukros or the others. Returning gratefully to the fresh night air, they rode down the echoing Harbor Way to the maze of wharves and tenements that clung to the eastern curve of the harbor.
    Leading the way into the poorest section, Seregil reined in at a sagging warehouse. It was the largest of the city charnel houses and the stench of the place hit them before they opened the door.
    "Sakor's Flame!" Micum croaked, clapping a vinegar rag over his nose.
    Alec hastily did the same. None of the evening's activities had prepared him for this place; even Seregil looked a bit queasy.
    More than fifty bodies were laid out on the stained wooden floor, some fresh, some with the flesh already slumping from the bones. The cresset lamps set around the room to consume the evil humours burned with a foul, bluish light.
    A hunched little woman wearing the grey tabard of the Scavenger Guild limped up to them with a basket of wilted nosegays.
    "Posies for you gentlemen? Makes the bitter search so much sweeter!"
    Seregil tossed a few coins into her basket.
    "Good evening, old mother. Perhaps you can make our search a shorter one. I'm looking for three people who'd have come to you within the past day. A young, dark-haired servant girl; a manservant of middling years, also dark; and a young nobleman with a blond mustache."
    "You may be in luck, sir," the old woman cackled, hobbling off toward a corner of the room. "I've got the fresh ones over here. Is this your girl?"
    Callia lay naked between a drowned fisherman and a young tough whose throat had been cut. Her eyes were open, and she looked vaguely worried.
    "That's her, all right," said Seregil.
    "Now that's a damned shame," Micum sighed, holding up the hem of his cloak as he squatted down beside the girl. "She can't be more than twenty. Do you see her wrists?"
    Seregil fingered the brown bruises circling the pale wrists. "She was bound, and gagged, too. See here, how the corners of her mouth are raw?"
    Shivering with nausea, Alec forced himself to watch the examination. The past few hours rolled over him like an oppressive nightmare, leaving him sickened to the core.
    The front of the body was unmarked except for the bruises. When they rolled her over, however, they found a single small wound between her ribs just to the left of the spine.
    "A professional job," Seregil muttered.
    "Through the great vessel and straight up into the heart. At least it was quick. Where was she found, old mother?"
    "Poor lamb! They pulled her from under the docks, end of Eel Street," the Scavenger woman replied. "I took her for a doxy. Is there family to collect her?"
    Seregil laid the body gently back into place and stood up. "I'll look into it. See that she's kept a day or two longer, won't you?"
    Outside again, all three sucked in lungfuls of the tar-scented air, but the stink of vinegar on their hands and faces seemed to keep the stench of death about them.
    "I want to jump into the sea with all my clothes on!" said Alec, casting a longing look toward the glimmering of water visible at the end of the street.
    "Me, too, if we wouldn't come out of that water dirtier than we are now," said Seregil. "A good hot tub will put us right."
    "That's your answer to just about everything," Micum observed wryly. "In this case, however, I have to agree."
    "At least we know for certain that we're on the right track," Alec said hopefully. "I wonder where Teukros and Marsin will turn up?"
    "If they ever do," answered Seregil. "For all we know, it could have been them who did away with the girl, in which case they could be halfway to anywhere by now. Then again, they could both be floating dead in the sewers. Between this and Barien's sudden death, though, I think it's safe to assume that we've got more enemies out there somewhere and, whoever they are, they've got the wind up their tails now. Teukros spilled something to someone!"

34 Phoria's Confession
    Two days had passed since the Viceregent's suicide. At noon Barien's body was to be

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