Ghost Lock
sunlight.
    Caina’s knowledge that the Alchemists transmuted
their foes into crystalline statues to forever adorn the walls of
the College rather ruined its beauty.
    Cronmer stomped away, shouting commands to his
performers. Captain Qalim, a tall man of Anshani birth, spoke to
his first mate, who bawled curses and threats as the ship turned
toward Istarinmul’s western harbor. Tiri lingered for a moment,
gazing at Caina.
    “What is it?” said Caina. “Do you think to recruit
me, too?”
    Tiri shook her head. “No. It is just…have you ever
been to Istarinmul before?”
    “I have not,” said Caina.
    “Then be careful,” said Tiri. “You are an able-bodied
young man, but Istarinmul is a dangerous place for the unwary. If
you offend the Alchemists or the emirs, they will kill you. You are
Caerish, yes?” Caina nodded. “An emir or an Alchemist can kill a
foreigner, and the hakims and the wazirs – ah, the magistrates,
they are called in the Empire – would not blink an eye. And do not
go alone into strange neighborhoods. The Collectors of the Slavers’
Brotherhood are everywhere, and they often kidnap foreigners and
forge the papers of servitude. If you are not careful, you might
end up in the mines or pulling oars upon one of the Padishah’s
galleys. And the Teskilati, the secret police, have eyes and ears
everywhere. If they think you are a spy for the Emperor, they will
make you disappear.”
    Caina felt a twinge of annoyance, but pushed it
aside. Tiri was only trying to warn her. And Istarinmul was a very
dangerous place.
    “I will take care,” said Caina. “The Collegium has
rented a room for me, and I have no intention of going out after
dark or alone anywhere. The sooner I am gone from Istarinmul, the
better.” That was a lie, but there was no need to burden Tiri with
the truth.
    “May the Living Flame watch over you,” said Tiri. She
hesitated. “And those you have lost.”
    The pain rolled through Caina, hot and sharp.
    “Thank you,” she said, and Tiri joined her
husband.
    Caina watched as the ship moved closer to the quays
in the crowded harbor. The districts near the docks and the seawall
did not look nearly as opulent as the neighborhoods near the Golden
Palace and the College. The western harbor smelled as harbors did
the world over, of salt and rotting fish and exotic cargo. Yet the
harbor of Istarinmul had an extra odor, the vile smell of men lying
in their own filth for days on end.
    The smell of the slave ships.
    An Istarish war galley guarded the harbor’s entrance.
Banks of oars jutted into the water, and armed Istarish soldiers in
their spiked helms and chain mail stood ready with crossbows. A
strange metal device jutted from the ship’s flank, a steel spout
wrought in the shape of a snarling lion, connected to an apparatus
of pumps and tubes.
    A spigot for Hellfire.
    Caina had read of the strange elixir the Alchemists
of Istarinmul brewed in secret, the potion that once set ablaze
could not be quenched by water. The Master Alchemist Callatas had
devised the formula centuries past, and one ship equipped with a
Hellfire spigot could turn an entire fleet into an inferno. The
Kyracians had tried to conquer Istarinmul once, centuries ago, and
the Alchemists had turned their fleet to ashes. Istarinmul stood
between the Empire and Anshan, yet Hellfire insured that the
Padishah’s capital had never fallen its stronger neighbors.
    And fed the rumors that the Master Alchemists ruled
Istarinmul in truth, with the Padishah as their puppet.
    But the galleys remained motionless, and Captain
Qalim’s ship docked at a stone quay.
    Caina went to her cabin, retrieved her heavy pack,
and set foot in Istarinmul for the first time.
    The docks were chaos, but ordered chaos. Rows upon
rows of stone quays lined the harbor, lined with ships loading and
unloading goods. Everywhere Caina saw carts rumbling back and
forth, saw heaped crates and barrels. Men in gray tunics labored to
move barrels and

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