Night of Masks and Knives: Book 2 – Chapter 21
Night of Masks and Knives (The Broken Kingdoms Book 4)
If I thought loading the boat was difficult, disembarking was worse.
I tripped in the waves. The grip of the tide tossed me about. Currents crashed me forward, and I swallowed sand. Waves pulled me back out, and I swallowed salty water. I was certain the pull would drown me in another breath, but Vali and Tova hooked their hands under my arms and tossed me ashore, laughing mercilessly.
Kase handed a hunched man four copper pieces for tethering the longship to a post in the surf. The old beggar did nothing of note, more watched the Kryv do the heavy lifting while he puffed a clay pipe, his head lost in a brume of brown smoke.
I followed into the seaside cityâif it could be called a city. Inside the coast gates was a rumpled, globular-shaped town, with a miserly row of shops along the muddy roads. One gabled inn leaned to the east, its neighboring alehouse leaned to the west. Tenements with cracked windows, and hovels sunk in puddles. Porches sagged, and some homes were raised on stilts. Most buildings were draped in tattered banners of blue and gold for the Wild Hunt, and filthy ribbons were strewn about the roads.
SkÃtkast architecture took all the leftovers of the regions, stacked them next to one another, and called it order.
The populace seemed an even mangier sort: cheeries with clients, herb farmers, washed up traders, and a few who chatted with lampposts.
Folk painted their faces in frightening ways. As wicked nyks or fae, using clay to mold points on their ears. Laughter slurred with raised drinking horns as folk stumbled about, clinging to the last of the revelry.
The Nightrender turned the guild down a narrow alleyway. I dug my fingernails into Raumâs arm without thinking when we stopped at a house with a pointed roof and rosy siding.
Kase rapped on an arched door. âDagny,â he said slowly, kindly. Sounded odd. âWeâve come for a visit.â
A young woman with shimmering powder on her cheeks answered. âOh, good youâre here.â The woman grabbed his arm. âCome on, get inside.â
Ratty chairs and an unmade straw mattress littered the room. A vanity with chipping blue paint stood against one wall, a rack of lacy dresses near it, and a hundred licentious noises moaned through the paper-thin walls.
The cheer girlâDagnyâpaced around until the last Kryv settled inside. âIâve got a bad feeling.â
âWhat else is new?â Tova asked with a laugh.
Dagny fiddled with the lace on her dress. âI know I ask this every time, but youâve all really planned this out, right?â
Kase pulled back a dusty curtain over a window facing the main road. âYou know the answer, Dag. You spoke with the Falkyns, right?â
Iâd never heard the name Falkyn before. They mustâve been another guild of some sort.
âTheyâll be waiting.â Dagny couldnât be much older than me, but the burden of a hard life lived in her gray eyes. âWeâd better get started.â
I wrung my hands together and stepped out from behind Raum.
âThis lovey has a bite, Dag,â Raum said.
âGood. You need a good bite in SkÃtkast.â Dagny tilted her head and smiled. âCome here then.â
Kase spun his curved knife around his fingers again. I never saw him flick the blade into his grip, but I had no doubt he kept at least three blades always accessible. He remained quiet; his eyes on me as Dagny pulled out a musky chair.
I could do this Dagny dusted white powder over my cheeks while the Kryv muttered to each other across the room.
âThis powder marks you as fresh,â she said, although I didnât ask.
âYou said you had a bad feeling,â I whispered, once the Guild of Kryv was buried in their own conversations away from us. âAre you an Alver?â
Dagny shook her head. âNo. Iâm a rather talented worrier is all.â
âSo, how do you know the Nightrender?â I hoped she didnât read into my question, because it certainly was meant as a probe into their relationship, but I had no business asking this cheer girl if he had shared her bed.
Unfortunately, Dagny was quick. âWhat do you mean? Is he a patron?â
I shrugged and tangled my fingers in the lace of my gown.
She grinned as she brushed my hair. âIâve offered a space next to me for turns as gratitude for his help to me and the other girls and boys when clients get a bit rough. I imagine heâs a sight to see beneath all those battle leathers, donât you think?â
âIâve never given it much thought.â
âRight, and Iâm the queen of SkÃtkast.â She nudged my shoulder. âTo answer your question, heâs not taken me up on my offer. But the way heâs watching you right now, I suppose I could ask you the same thing.â
I spun in my seat.
Kase wasnât looking at me at all. He had his back to us, speaking to Vali, but glanced over his shoulder when Dagny squeaked an odd, strangled laugh.
I frowned at the cheer girl. âFunny.â
âAh, I donât blame you,â she said wistfully, beginning to add braids to my hair. âIâd think you strange if you didnât hope for his attention.â
âI donât hope for it. I detest it.â
âClearly.â Dagny bit down on her bottom lip, but said nothing more on the subject. âLift your hands, fingers out.â
I obeyed and spread my fingers while she drew odd runes on each tip with a charcoal pen.
âTheyâre beautiful,â I said. âWhat do they mean?â
Dagnyâs smile faded as she revealed her own hands. Black tattoos were needled into her skin. âBeautiful shackles are what they are. The mark of a Lark girl.â Dagny waggled one little finger missing its tip. âWhen you work off pieces of your debt, well, you lose one of your shackles.â
I slapped a hand over my mouth. âThe Kryv could take you from here, Iâm sure of it.â
âThere are reasons to stay.â
âWhat could possibly keep you here?â
A tear shimmered in her eye. âA story for another day.â Dagny clapped her hands together again. âYou need to change.â
The cheer girl held up a white lacy dress with a rip in the hem. I searched for a curtain, but the room offered little by way of privacy.
âTurn around.â I pointed a finger at the men who kept stealing glances our way.
âCome on, lovey,â Raum said.
I pursed my lips. âTurn around now.â
One by one they grumbled and faced the wall. Kaseâs eyes burned a tantalizing dark gold, a hundred unspoken words hovered between us until at last he faced the door.
My tunic and trousers were stripped in a few moments, then by shifting my weight side to side, I wriggled into the tight, musky dress. When Dagny fastened the silver clasp behind my neck, the bodice squeezed the last of the breath from my lungs.
I tugged the sleeves falling seductively off my shoulders and kept adjusting the swooping neckline barely covering my breasts.
âNo, let it show, girl.â Dagny swatted away my hand and held up a furred scarf fashioned in the likeness of a fox tail. âYou need to wear this around your waist.â
She demonstrated, and sure enough, batted the fur as a tail.
âWhy would I give myself a tail?â
âItâs the Hunt!â Dagny said, flinging the fur around her neck, her voice shifted dramatically. âYouâre to become a lustful, irresistible .â
âYou arenât serious.â
âI am serious,â she said with a frown. âCostume is a selling point during the Hunt, and the patron wants a temptress of the forest.â She brushed my nose with the end of the fur. âTo play a proper , tails are a must. Now remove that pouch you wear.â
My hand went to the rune pouch with my memory vials. âNo, it stays.â
âIt will ruin the entire look.â
âThe look will need to be built around it.â
âButââ
âIt stays, Dag.â The Nightrender did not need to raise his voice to cut through a room. The rasp of the sound sent a shiver up my arms.
Dagny sighed. âFine. Iâll try to hide it.â
Once Iâd dressed, Kase called to me, and in such a brazen gown, I was rather reluctant to stand so near to him.
He wasnât as discomposed and pointed to a grungy looking arena across the road. Cheers and the thunder of hooves boomed over rocky roads. At the top of the stands were boxes made of wooden laths capable of holding five men.
âYouâll meet him in one of the top booths,â Kase said.
âHow will I get out?â
He backed toward the way we entered. âDonât worry about getting out.â
âYouâre asking a great deal of trust, when I get none in return.â
âLife is rather unfair, isnât it? Now weâre going. We have another appointment.â He signaled to the others to leave.
âWhat other appointment?â He was leaving me to do this alone?
Kase glanced once more at me and said nothing more than, âFight to the end.â
Iâd heard the saying pass about the guild and hardly believed he offered the Kryv words to me now.
âDonât worry, he never tells too much to anyone. Just enough,â Dagny said once the Kryv left. âCome on, then. Iâll take you to meet, Doft.â