penetrating eyes. She couldnât have been more than eighteen or nineteen. âI understand that some differences of opinion need to be settled with steel,â said Jean, butting in, appearing to recognize that Locke was still a bit too tipsy for his own good. âBut standing before a crossbow bolt seems foolish. Blades strike me as a more honest test of skill.â
âRapiers are tedious; all that back and forth, and rarely a killing strike right away,â said the young woman. âBolts are fast, clean, and merciful. You can hack at someone all night with a rapier and fail to kill them.â
âI am quite compelled to agree with you,â muttered Locke.
The woman raised an eyebrow but said nothing; a moment later she was gone, vanishing into the dispersing crowd.
The contented murmur of the nightâthe laughter and chatter of the small clusters of men and women making time beneath the starsâhad died briefly while the duel took place, but now it rose up once again. The woman in the silver dress beat her fists against the grass, sobbing, while the crowd around the fallen duelist seemed to sag in unison. The boltâs work was clearly done.
âFast, clean, and merciful,â said Locke softly. âIdiots.â
Jean sighed. âNeither of us has any right to offer that sort of observation, since âgods-damned idiotsâ is likely to be inscribed on our grave-markers.â
âIâve had reasons for doing what Iâve done, and so did you.â
âIâm sure those duelists felt the same way.â
âLetâs get the hell out of here,â said Locke. âLetâs walk off the fumes in my head and get back to the inn. Gods, I feel old and sour. I see things like this and I wonder if I was that bloody stupid when I was that boyâs age.â
âYou were worse,â said Jean. âUntil quite recently. Probably still are.â
5
LOCKEâS MELANCHOLY slowly evaporated, along with more of his alcoholic haze, as they made their way down and across the Golden Steps, north by northeast to the Great Gallery. The Eldren craftsmen (Craftswomen? Crafts-
things
?) responsible for Tal Verrar had covered the entire district with an open-sided Elderglass roof that sloped downward from its peak atop the sixth tier and plunged into the sea at the western islandâs base, leaving at least thirty feet of space beneath it at all points in between. Strange twisted glass columns rose up at irregular intervals, looking like leafless climbing vines carved from ice. The glass ceiling of the Gallery was easily a thousand yards from end to end the long way.
Beyond the Great Gallery, on the lower layers of the island, was the Portable Quarterâopen-faced tiers on which the miserably destitute were allowed to set up squattersâ huts and whatever shelters they could construct from castoff materials. The trouble was that any forceful wind from the north, especially in the rainy winter, would completely rearrange the place.
Perversely, the district above and immediately southeast of the Portable Quarter, the Savrola, was a pricey expatriateâs enclave, full of foreigners with money to waste. All the best inns were there, including the one Locke and Jean were currently using for their well-heeled alternate identities. The Savrola was sealed off from the Portable Quarter by high stone walls, and heavily patrolled by Verrari constables and private mercenaries.
By day, the Great Gallery was the marketplace of Tal Verrar. A thousand merchants set up their stalls beneath it every morning, and there was room for five thousand more, should the city ever grow so vast. Visitors rooming in the Savrola who didnât travel by boat were forced, by cunning coincidence, to walk across the full breadth of the market to travel to or from the Golden Steps.
An east wind was up, blowing out from the mainland, across the glass islands and into the Gallery. Locke