beinâ flash grown men and not no spratsâthat half those high-bred females up on the Palatine is givinâ suck to on the side? A catachrest, isnât that it?â
With a showmanâs flourish, the seller reached beneath the stained red cloth that draped his table and produced a small wire cage containing an orange-and-white catachrest. Silk was no judge of these animals, but to him it appeared hardly more than a kitten.
The seller leaned forward, and his voice dropped to a hoarse whisper. âStolen, Patera. Stolen, or I couldnât possibly sell it, even to you, forâ.â He licked his lips, his restless gaze taking in Silkâs faded black robe and lingering on his face. âFor just six little cards. It talks. It walks on its hind legs sometimes, too, and it picks up things to eat with its little paws. Itâs exactly like a real child. Youâll see.â
Looking into the animalâs melting blue eyes (the long, nycterent pupils were rapidly narrowing in the sunlight) Silk could almost believe him.
The seller tested the point of a long-bladed knife with his finger. âYou recollect this, donât you, Tick? Then you better talk when I tell you to, and not try to get away, neither, when I let you out.â
Silk shook his head.
If he had seen the motion, the seller ignored it. âSay shop. Talk for the revârend augur, Tick. Say shop! â He prodded the unhappy little catachrest with the point of his knife. â Shop! Say it!â
âNever mind,â Silk told the seller wearily. âIâm not going to buy him.â
âItâd make you a fine sacrifice, Pateraâthe finest you could have, inside of the law. What was it I told you? Seven cards, was that it? Tell you what. Iâll make it six, but only for today. Just six cards, because Iâve heard good things about you and hope to do more business with you in the future.â
Silk shook his head again.
âTold you Tick was boilinâ, didnât I? I knew it, and believe me I put crimp on the lad that did it, or I wouldnât have got Tick here half so cheap. Talked about rollinâ him over to Hoppy and all that.â
âIt doesnât matter,â Silk said.
âSo now Iâm goinâ to let you steal him off me. Five cards, Patera. You canâtalk, you little faker, say somethinââyou can go through the whole market, if you like, and if you can find a nice catachrest like this any cheaper, bring me there and Iâll match the price. Five cards, weâll say. You wonât be able to touch one half this good for five cards. I promise you that, and Iâm a man of my word. Ask anybody.â
âNo, my son.â
âI need the money bad, Patera. I guess I shouldnât say that, but I do. A man has to have some money to buy animals so heâs got somethinâ to sell, see?â His voice fell again, so low this time that it was scarcely audible. âI put mine into a few cold âuns. You take my meaninâ, Patera? Only they warmed up anâ went bad on me âfore I could move âem. So hereâs what I sayâfive cards, with one of âem chalked. Howâs that? Four down, see, right now. And a card next time I see you, which I will on Molpsday after this cominâ Scylsday, Patera, I hope.â
âNo,â Silk repeated.
âWord,â the little catachrest said distinctly. âShoe word, who add pan.â
âDonât you call me a bad man.â Sliding the slender blade between the wires, the seller prodded the catachrestâs minute pink nose with the point of his knife. âThe revârend augurâs not interested in seeinâ any cully bird, you flea-bit little pap-sucker.â He glanced up hopefully at Silk. âAre you, Patera? It is a talkinâ bird at that. Naturally it doesnât look exactly like a child. Itâs a good talker, thoughâa valuable