Den of Thieves. David Chandler
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Chapter Eighty-Four
“A fool, perhaps, but—”
Chapter Eighty-Five
Drops of acid hit Croy’s arm and seared right through…
Chapter Eighty-Six
Malden kept his eyes shut until he was sure the…
Chapter Eighty-Seven
“Glorious! When it is finally born, there will be no…
Chapter Eighty-Eight
Bikker was sweating. He wiped his brow with the back…
Chapter Eighty-Nine
The demon howled in agony, and Malden had to hang…
Chapter Ninety
Croy gritted his teeth.
Chapter Ninety-One
Malden hurried down the long corridor at the back of…
Chapter Ninety-Ttwo
A minute earlier, outside:
Chapter Ninety-Three
“Croy! Croy!” Malden called, racing around the side of the…
Chapter Ninety-Four
Malden rolled on the ground, his body coming to pieces…
Chapter Ninety-Five
Witchly light filled the sky over the common, and the…
Chapter Ninety-Six
“Lay easy,” Cythera said. She held Croy’s hand tight. His…
Chapter Ninety-Seven
Market Square was thick with crowds, people of every station…
Chapter Ninety-Eight
Earlier—just at dawn—Gurrh the ogre had brought the leaden coffer…
Chapter Ninety-Nine
Coruth, her own arm fully healed now, muttered to herself…
Chapter One Hundred
Cutbill made a single notation in his ledger, then crossed…
A Thief In the Night
In a place of stone walls, attended by his acolytes
Chapter One
A thin crescent of moon lit up the rooftops of
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Other Books By David Chandler
Copyright
About the Publisher
Map
PROLOGUE
Nearly one hundred thousand people lived in the Free City of Ness, stuffed like rats in a sack too small to contain them all. The city was less than a mile across and filled every cranny of the hill encircled by its high defensive wall. At midnight, seen from a hill two miles to the north, it was the only light in the nighttime landscape, a bright ember smoldering in the midst of dark fields that rolled to the horizon. It looked, frankly, like all it needed was one good gust of wind to stir it up into a great whoosh of flame.
Bikker grinned to see it, though he knew it was only a trick of perspective. He was a giant of a man with a wild, coarse beard and a magic sword on his belt. He did not know how the other two members of the cabal felt, but for himself, he’d love to watch the Free City of Ness burn.
The lights he saw came from a thousand windows and the forges of a hundred workshops and manufactories. The city supplied the kingdom of Skrae with all the iron and steel it needed, most of the leather goods, and an endless river of spoons and buckles, as well as lanterns and combs made of horn. The guilds worked through the night, every night, filling the endless demand. Streamers of smoke rose from every chimney, rising like boiling columns of darkness that obliterated the stars, while half the windows in the city were illuminated by burning candles as an army of scribes, clerks, and accounters scratched at their ledger books.
On the near side of the river, gambling houses blazed with light, while whores marched up and down long avenues carrying lanterns to attract passersby. Half the city, it seemed, was still awake. “D’you suppose any of ’em know what’s coming?” Bikker asked.
“For the sake of our scheme, I pray they do not,” his employer said. Bikker had never seen the man. Even now the mastermind of the cabal was ensconced in a darkened carriage pulled by two white horses that pawed at the turf. The horses bore no brands or marks, and the driver wore no livery. The coach might have belonged to any number of fine houses—all its insignia had been removed.
A slender white hand emerged from a window of the coach, holding a purse of gold by its strings. Bikker took the payment—the latest of many such—and shoved it inside his chain mail shirt. “For your sake, I advise sealed lips.”
“Don’t worry, I can be discreet when I choose,” Bikker said with a laugh. “Though what a juicy tale I could tell! In a month the city will be torn in half, and the streets will be lined with the dead. How many lights do you think will show then? And no one will ever know what part I played in it all.”
“No, they will not,” the third member of the cabal said. Bikker turned to face Hazoth, whose visage was covered in a thick veil of black crepe. As much as Bikker disliked this business of unseen associates, he supposed he was glad for that veil. It was not good to look on the naked face of a sorcerer. “If you cannot maintain silence, I can enforce it on you. Don’t forget your place. Your part in this is minimal.”
Bikker shrugged. He knew that perfectly well. He’d been hired to perform a variety of small services, but mostly because he was probably the only person in the city who could stop these two, if he so chose. When he’d agreed to meet with them—and then agreed to their tentative, secretive offer—they’d been comically grateful. His reputation preceded him, and they didn’t dare offend his vanity. But they never truly let him forget that he was their lackey. “I do what I’m told … when I’m paid. Gold has a way of stifling the tongue. I know better than to ask of him,” Bikker said, jutting one thumb toward the occupant of the coach, “but what are you getting out of this, wizard? What could he pay you that you can’t just magic up on your own?”
“I’ve agreed to turn a blind eye to Hazoth’s … experiments,” the coach’s occupant said, “once I rule the city. Does that trouble you?”
There