- Home
- Graham Diamond
The Thief of Kalimar; Captain Sinbad; Cinnabar Page 6
The Thief of Kalimar; Captain Sinbad; Cinnabar Read online
Page 6
But where was she to look? There were ten thousand alleys and ten thousand roofs. Shadows to cloak each and every one. In which of a hundred hiding places might he be found? Or was it too late already? Perhaps by now the unsuspecting thief was bound and gagged, lying helpless somewhere in the labyrinth of dungeons within the palace walls.
It was with desperation that she fled her room and hurried into the bright daylight of the street. Giving neither thought nor care to her own safety she raced in the direction of the Demon’s Horn. Only there might someone be able to say where her lover had gone after he left her in the middle of night. Only there might there be someone she could trust.
Oro the hunchback ducked swiftly into the doorway when he saw her leave. His twisted features hidden by his hood, he leaned back and chuckled, rubbing his hands in a slow, deliberate motion.
Ah, yes. Today would be a day never to forget. The Inquisitors would pay him handsomely for his lies. And now, with the thief as good as dead, both the mysterious scimitar and the dancing girl would soon be his. All that he had ever desired was about to be gained in a single stroke. The thief of thieves would be a thorn in his side no more.
5
It was the longest day of her life. Hour after hour she had searched, high and low, in and out of every alley and every byway both familiar and unfamiliar. But all her efforts had been futile. Bravely she had climbed to the roofs, investigated the winding, endless narrow alleys that weaved in and out among streets ancient and crumbling where only urchins and packs of wild dogs could be found. Panting from fatigue and hunger, her body glistening in perspiration, she went relentlessly on, vowing never to give up until he was found and warned of the dangers that lurked from every direction.
Now, though, as the shadows of day deepened, Mariana began to despair. Up to the present, her search had been relatively easy, seeking her lover in places he was known to frequent. The night could only serve to complicate matters, adding personal risk and peril to her search. Not only must she avoid the patrols, who seemingly had preceded her every step of the way, but now also the robbers and cutthroats, men who would not hesitate to deal with a woman as harshly and callously as with any other mark caught in the web of their private territory.
But this danger made no difference. Upheld by sincere love, she would never regret her actions, rash and dangerous as they were.
Nightfall spread across Kalimar, bringing calm and quiet. Mariana listened as the last of the priests sang evening prayer from the distant minarets and considered which avenue she should try next. Candlelight from the windows above illuminated the streets, which slowly began to swell with life as the Jandari prepared for another evening. The odor of sweetmeats and sour sauces permeated the air. The glow of cooking fires from stalls and hearths brightened the byways and sent shadows dancing above her head. Mariana put a hand to her brow and tried to compile a list of all the places she had searched, and those she had yet to seek. But there were so very many, and her task seemed to become more and more impossible. Yet there was a measure of comfort with her despair. For if Ramagar could keep so well hidden from her, then he may have managed to elude the cohort of soldiers who shared her eagerness to find him.
At last she made up her mind and changing directions decided to follow the old gutted street that ran parallel to the Avenue of Pigs. The crumbling hovels, mere shells of what they had been during the Jandari’s moments of glory, towered above her at either side. Once upon a time they had housed the finest families in all of Kalimar, centuries ago, before the desert winds had swept across the land and turned her fertile plains into dry and barren wastes. Every kingdom and every empire has its day, and Kalimar was no exception. But now its glories were past, faded into recorded memory. A thousand years of splendor were lost upon the rotting brick and dusty streets of a once proud city. Its founders and heroes were dust scattered to the winds; the vultures remained to feed off what was left. And the street people of the Jandari were only mirror images of the ugly world around them.
But gentle Mariana was unaware of all these things as she passed the ancient relics. She could think only of her lover, and her urgent need to save him.
A strange silence followed her as she made her way among the piles of stone and garbage. Alone and frightened, she ran as quickly as she could, anxious to reach the wharves and her lover’s secret hiding places among the abandoned warehouses.
As she crossed the narrowing road, avoiding the path of a pack of lean scavenger rats that poked their heads up among the refuse, she stopped short with a gasp. Lying in the middle of the road was a man — a sad, pathetic figure, writhing and moaning upon the ground. At first she wondered if this was a ruse and the man was actually a cutthroat of some sort, playing this role while waiting for his mark.
Backstepping slowly, her hand reached to the pocket of her cloak and she clutched tightly at the scimitar. The razor-sharp blade felt as cold as ice. She was ready to use it if the need arose, and not in the least bit reluctant.
The writhing man caught sight of her and stuck out his arm, fingers groping in the air as if to grab her. Mariana sidestepped him and drew the blade, ready to plunge. Then, as her arm rose and the blade glittered in the starlight, she froze.
A pair of small tortured eyes peered sharply at her; tormented, sad eyes, bloodied and bruised.
“Az’i!” she cursed, the whispered word rolling off her tongue.
The man on the ground cleared his throat and tried to speak. A rasping, labored and pained. “Mariana …”
“Vlashi! Sweet paradise! Is that you? What’s happened? Who did this?”
The pickpocket tried to lift himself and Mariana kneeled down beside him, using her handkerchief to wipe away some of the drying smears of blood.
Vlashi struggled to his knees, holding onto the girl’s arm for balance. “Ramagar,” he rasped, “where’s … Ramagar?” Mariana’s eyes began to flood and she felt the terror rising inside her again as it had all day.
“I — don’t know,” she replied. “I can’t find him anywhere.”
“Must find him,” Vlashi grunted. “Must find him and warn him. Danger, terrible danger …”
Feeling pity for the injured man, she tried to soothe and assure him. “Shh, Vlashi. Leave it to me. You must rest, find some shelter, and tend your injuries.”
His hand grasped her shoulder and she winced, feeling his fingernails dig through the cloth into her flesh. “You don’t understand, Mariana. There is … no time. Ramagar must be found and warned — before it’s too late.”
The girl drew back, her eyes now narrowing and searching his. Vlashi, unable to meet her gaze, hung his head on his chest and put his hands to his eyes. And to the dancing girl’s surprise, he began to sob.
Mariana took hold of his shoulders and forced him to look at her. “Tell me what’s happened, Vlashi,” she said calmly. “I can’t help any of us if I don’t understand what you’re trying to tell me.”
Tears rolled down the pickpocket’s cheeks, mixing with the grime and dirt. His normally tanned face was white and his eyes hollow and vacant. He took a deep breath and drew his courage. “Forgive me, Mariana,” he implored. “I didn’t mean to do it. But I had no choice, no choice at all. I would have been killed if I didn’t tell everything …”
Mariana shuddered, fearful of what he was going to say. “Who, Vlashi? Who forced you? The soldiers?”
Vlashi clutched at his aching ribs and moaned while the girl waited in exasperation. Then he shook his head, forcing the words to come, aware that now he must admit the truth — no matter what the cost. And he told her how the beggar found him and beat him, forcing him to tell that Ramagar was now the owner of the precious scimitar. Mariana listened in shock.
It was hard for her to accept what she had heard, hard for her to accept the pickpocket’s treachery. The laws that governed the Jandari were simple; when a man betrayed a friend, when a thief betrayed another thief, he himself would be forever marked, disgraced, and scorn
ed, with no hope of ever redeeming himself in the eyes of his peers. Vlashi knew this as well as the dancing girl. He knew Ramagar had the right to kill him for his deed, and half expected the girl to commit the act in his place.
Mariana stood over him, trembling. She wanted to hate the little weasel of a man for what he had done, but all she could feel was pity.
Vlashi reached out and tugged at her sleeve, his eyes red and watery. “This beggar will stop at nothing to regain his prize,” he sniveled. “He will kill Ramagar to get it back. Kill him without a second thought. Find him first, Mariana, I beg you. And tell … tell Ramagar that I’m sorry …”
Her eyes flashed with burning rage. Right there and then she would have struck him, plunged the bejeweled blade into his heart. But her own heart was too gentle, and she saw in Vlashi now only the pathetic man that he was. His blood on her hands would prove nothing, settle nothing. Leaving him to live with his conscience was a far greater punishment.
Her mind was swimming deliriously. Matters had become even worse than she had realized. For now there was a double threat against the thief; not only were the inquisitors searching for him for a crime he did not commit, but this strange and mysterious beggar as well. A man cunning enough to walk brazenly among the shadows and not be seen, crazed in his desire to reclaim his blade, and willing to pay any price to ensure he got it back. And Ramagar was aware of none of it.
Leaving the pickpocket to bemoan his fate, she spun and raced for the closest byway. The night wind rushed by her, cold against her sweat-drenched clothes. Mariana ran as fast as she could, panting, taking breath only in short, quick spurts, and far too fearful to pause for even a second lest in that brief moment her lover might be found.
The lanterns of the wharves shone dim and yellow in the evening pall. The moon, crescent and low, had turned hazy behind a thin film of fog that rolled slowly across the water. She could dimly hear laughter from the distant Street of Thieves, where the night crowd of visitors and merrymakers would be at its height.
A ship’s horn sounded lonely and forlorn in the night. The sound echoed in her ears, mingled with the subdued shouts of the captain cajoling his crew as they slipped closer into berth. From across the estuary a thousand lights glittered from the palace. It rose high at the top of the largest hill, overlooking the sprawl of Kalimar, and she could make out the tiny forms of sentries patrolling the long walls. Curved swords dangled from their sides and the colorful plumes in their helmets rustled in the breeze.
She skirted the rows of warehouses still in use, avoiding the watchful eyes of guards marching back and forth along the piers and docks. Across the footbridge she dashed, coming at last to the old port. Filled with decayed and weatherbeaten wooden structures, it had been unused since the time of the last fires which had almost destroyed half of the city.
Pulling her cloak more tightly about her, she wandered down the broadest of the deserted streets and kept a careful lookout for signs of being followed. Often Ramagar had spoken of his hiding places in these warehouses. Places shown to him by his tutor and friend, the Jackal. A wanted man’s dream; a virtual labyrinth of dark cellars and lofts so multiple and so complex that a man using all his wiles might be able to hide for a lifetime without ever being found out. And it was here, Mariana knew, that Ramagar would have come if he had fled the Jandari. At least that was her prayer, for after here there would be no other place for her to turn.
Crisscrossing back and forth to avoid unwanted eyes, she at last reached the long stone wall that surrounded the massive array of storehouses known as the old compound. The familiar black doorway loomed ahead and she nervously bit her lip as she entered.
The passageway was totally black; not the slimmest beam of starlight passed between the cracks in the rotting beams. Her shoes disturbed a thin layer of dust as she walked cautiously in the center, careful to keep away from the walls, where water rats and mice nestled in clusters among the holes in the comers. Somewhere beyond this passage Ramagar might be found. Somewhere high in the highest loft, above the alley and courtyard.
Silently she ventured, her hand held out before her, feeling her way in the dank, dismal gloom. The only sound was that of her own breath. And then, suddenly, she could see glimpses of sky ahead. She walked faster now, until at last she was out in the open and at the edge of the alley. A chilly wind was blowing down from the river; she could almost taste the salt in the air carried west from the inland sea.
Stepping over the stones, she inched her way close to the low fence where it wound in a semicircle toward the enclosed courtyard. A large gray cat hissed from its perch on an empty windowsill. Mariana tensed, caught sight of the cat, and smiled with relief. The cat straddled the sill, tail lifted, and followed her until she turned the comer.
Then, as the hiding place came into view, she turned around one more time, her sweeping glance taking in the fence and the black wall of the compound as well as the alley and the courtyard and the gaping black exit of the passageway. And she knew she was alone. Completely alone, with no chance she had been followed. For that much, at least, she was more than thankful.
Cupping her hand to her mouth, she tilted her head up toward the looming lofts that obliterated half her view of the sky. The signal was brief; a low cuya bird whistle, no more than a soft drone that blended perfectly with the sounds of night.
But, save for the wind that rustled between the aged wooden beams, there was nothing to hear at all.
She wet her lips and tried again, praying that he was close and that this long search would at last end for her. She strained her ears to listen for his answer, but still none came.
Mariana sank her head and tried to stop the tears from flowing. Once more she would have to begin anew. She would have to return to the Jandari and comb the maze of alleys yet again. Only this time it might truly be too late, what with the news Vlashi had given. Suddenly she turned to go, her hopes crushed. For some reason she had been so sure that she would find him here. So positive of it. It was hard to admit she had been wrong.
There was a soft shuffle from somewhere atop the corrugated roof. And then a voice, low, but strong. “Mariana! Mariana! Up here!”
She whirled, dress flaring, her heart thumping in her chest. Squinting, she peered up to the top, standing on her toes to see. And there he was, Ramagar, her lover, the thief of thieves, nestling perfectly among the lumbering shadows.
Her face lit up with happiness. Straightening her shoulders, throwing back her head so that her hair swirled behind, she sighed. “Ramagar, thank the heavens I’ve found you at last.”
He hushed her and bounded down to a lower roof, his weight making only the softest of noises. Then down a pipe he slid, landing on the ground with the agility of a cat, grinning at her like a misbehaved child and taking her in his arms.
“How did you ever find me?” he asked.
She smiled sheepishly. “It wasn’t easy. I’ve been searching all day.”
He frowned briefly, then the grin returned. Taking her by the hand, he led her inside the warehouse and down a small flight of wooden steps to the cellar. There, she looked on in wonder. A small oil lamp lit a tiny room, complete with straw for a bed, blankets, a shelf well stocked with jars of preserves, salted meats, and a bottle of sweet wine.
Ramagar laughed. “Let’s say this is my home away from home,” he teased. “At least it’s warm, and safe.”
She looked at him sharply. “Then you know?”
“A thief makes it his business to know everything. The moment I entered the street last night I realized that something was the matter. So I hid, and then, when I saw the soldiers come to your room, I put two and two together.”
“You saw them?” she gasped. “You were there, hiding?”
He nodded. “On your roof.”
Her temper began to rise. “Then why didn’t you let me know? I’ve been driving myself crazy trying to find you and warn you. And now you tell me you’ve known all along!” He bent to kiss her a
nd she pulled away.
“Ah, Mariana, I couldn’t tell you. Not then. Don’t you see? The soldiers would have been watching everywhere, and had they seen me slip into your room …” He let his words trail off slowly. “No, all I could do was plan my escape from the Jandari as best I could, and keep you far from any harm. Besides,” here he smiled again with a twinkle in his eye, “I knew you’d find me sooner or later.”
Mariana realized that this was reasonable enough. Better a cautious lover than a dead one.
Ramagar sat back against the straw and put a bent piece of twig between his teeth. At his side rested a half-full cup of wine and he stared disconsolately into the still, dark brew. “Why are they after me, girl?” he asked. “What have I been accused of that Inquisitors would break down your door?”
“Then you really don’t know?”
The smile turned wan. “I didn’t stick around to ask.”
Mariana flew to his side, kneeling beside him and holding his hand between both of her own. There were tears falling down her soft, unblemished cheeks. “They say a noble was murdered in the Jandari yesterday,” she said slowly, her voice little more than a whisper. She closed her eyes and felt her lashes press against the wetness. “And the soldiers say that you … you …”
Ramagar stared at her in dawning understanding. ‘They accuse me of the crime?”
She nodded slowly, painfully, putting her head to his chest, burying her face so that he couldn’t see her while she cried. The thief ran his hand through her long black hair and whispered her name softly. “Do you … believe them?” he asked.
She lifted her head and gazed at him sharply. “Of course I don’t! It’s all a lie — a cruel and terrible lie. And I told them as much!”