Now, with a desperate surge, Dysan managed to throw off the memories that had assailed him. Again. Slipping into the shadows, he watched the men and woman navigate the mucky pathway to the road, shaking slime from their boots with every step. The woman’s features pinched. “We’ll need to cobble that. Can’t have us swimming through a stinking swamp every time it rains.”
My mud. My swamp
. Dysan remained unmoving, watching the retreating backs and resenting every word. Though he had long cursed that same quagmire, it was a familiar quagmire. It was
his
quagmire.
“Always froggin’ raining,” the apprentice muttered, and the others ignored him. “Shite-for-sure, I can’t wait to get out of this cess of a city.”
“Gravel might be better,” the mason started. “Dump a few cart-loads of broken…” His voice and the figures disappeared into the night, the lantern light visible like a distant star long after they had vanished.
Dysan’s fists tightened in increments, until his nails bit painful impressions into his palms. Once certain they were not returning, he glided to the piled stones and examined them. Their position told him everything. These strangers planned to rebuild the missing walls, which might have pleased Dysan had it not clearly meant that someone expected to take over his home.
More than five froggin’ ruins in this froggin’ run-down quarter, and they have to pick mine
. There were a lot more than five, but that was the highest number Dysan could reliably identify.
Seized by sudden rage, Dysan hurled himself against the piled stones. Pain arched through his shoulder, and his head snapped sideways. He slid to the ground rubbing his bruised, abraded skin, feeling like a fool. The mason and his foul-mouthed apprentice had not mortared yet, which meant the wall would come down, even if Dysan had to do it block by heavy block.
Dysan set straight to work. It had not taken the men long, but Dysan harbored no illusions that he could work as quickly. Strength had never been his asset. The Hand had made him understand that his frailty, the strange workings and malfunctions of his mind, his notched front teeth and bow-shaped shins were all a god-inflicted curse visited upon his mother for her sins. If the Hand had intended to drive him toward worship, their words had had the opposite ef-tect. Dysan would never throw his support to any deity who punished infants for their parents’ wrongdoing. More likely, the priests had intended the insults as a substitute for the “sheep-shite stupid” label they gave to most of the other orphans. They could hardly call Dysan brainless and still expect him to learn the language lessons they bombarded him with for much of the day.
Sometimes, in his dreams, Dysan taunted his teachers, driving them to a raw rage they dared not sate with coiled fists, whips, and Wades for fear of losing their delicately constitutioned secret weapon. In his dreams, he could triumph where, in real life, he had miserably failed. Then, Dysan had done whatever they asked because he had seen the price others paid for disobedience. He had been desperately, utterly afraid, terrified to the core of his being, dependent on the praise and approval that he received from a brother who, though only three years older, was the only parent figure Dysan had ever known. Certain her undersized, sallow baby with his protuberant belly and persistent river of snot would die, his mother had not even bothered to name him. He had turned two, by the grace of Kharmael, before she dared to invest any attachment in him. By then, the disease had damaged her physically and mentally, and she relied nearly as much on her older son as Dysan did.
Dysan examined the stonework from every angle, ideas churning through his mind. Though willing to spend the night dismantling the structure, he sought an easier and faster way. Well-placed and wedged, the gray stone seemed to mock him, a solid testament to another stolen love. He had one possession in this life that he saw as permanent, and no one was going to take it from him without a fight. He examined the base, knowing that it ultimately supported the entire pile. If he could remove a significant piece from the bottom, the whole day’s labor might collapse. He had only to find one stone, one low-placed weak point.
Anger receded as Dysan focused on the wall, here studying, there wiggling, until he found an essential rock that shifted slightly when he pressed against it. Dysan flexed his fingers, planted them firmly against the rock, and shoved with all his strength. A sheeting sound grated through his hearing, but he felt much less movement than the noise suggested. Not for the first time, he cursed his lack of size. He had stopped growing, in any direction, since he had eaten, albeit lightly, of the poisoned feast and had met more than one seven-year-old who topped him in height and breadth.
Damn it
! Dysan pounded a fist against the wall, which only succeeded in slamming pain through the side of his hand. He had long ago learned that legs were stronger than arms, so he lay on his back and braced his bare feet against the rock he had selected. Dampness permeated the frayed linen of his shirt, chilling his back to the spine. Closing his eyes, he attempted to focus his mind in one direction, though the effort proved taxing. His thoughts preferred to stray, especially when it came to anything involving counting, and it took a great effort of will to keep his mind engaged on any one task. The Hand had taught him to use anger as an anchor, and he turned to that technique now. Dysan closed his eyes and directed his thoughts.
They want to take away my home
. His muscles coiled.
They battered and broke my friends
. It was a different “they,” but it had the same effect.
Those sheep-shite bastards killed my brother
! Images flashed through Dysan’s mind: maimed women screaming in mindless terror and agony, grown men streaming blood like spilled wine and pleading for mercy, a broken fevered child begging the others to kill him so he would not have to face the tortures of Dyareela alive.
Bombarded by rage, vision a red fog, Dysan drove his feet against his chosen stone. It gave way beneath his assault, grinding free of its position in the wall. For a hovering instant, nothing happened. Dysan opened his eyes, immediately assaulted by lime and rain. His anger dispersed with the suddenness of a startled flock of birds, and he abruptly realized his danger. “Shite!” He scrambled backward as the entire wall collapsed, and stone exploded around him.
A boulder crashed against Dysan’s wrist, sparing his face but sending pain screaming through his arm. More rumbled onto his legs, one caught him on the hip, and another smashed into his abdomen with enough force to drive air through his teeth. Then, the assault ended. The world descended into an unnatural silence, gradually broken by a growing chorus of night insects.
Dysan assessed his injuries. His arm hurt, the rubble pinned his le
gs,
and pain ached through his hip. Cautiously, he wriggled from beneath the pile, stones rolling from his legs and raising a new crop of dust. Gingerly, he rose, careful not to put any weight on his left hand. His legs held him, though his weight ground pain through his right shin. Teeth gritted, he limped toward his bed, unable to fully savor what had become a bitter victory, and wished he had chosen the slower course.
Dysan awakened to a string of coarse swearing. He lay still, heart pounding, limbs aching, and forced himself to remember the previous night. Wedged into his blanketed crevice between the ceiling beams, he looked down on the Yard. The stoneworkers stood surveying the scattered stones that had once formed the beginnings of a wall far sturdier than the previous adobe. This time, two women accompanied them: one the gray-haired matron he had seen yesterday, the other a middle-aged dark blonde with a bewildered expression.
The apprentice paced with balled fists. “Gods all be froggin’ sure damn! I don’t froggin’ believe this!”
“Watch your tongue, boy. There’re ladies present.” The mason’s familiar words had become a mantra.
“The wind?” the younger woman suggested softly, with the same Imperial accent as her companion. “Perhaps it—”
The apprentice stopped pacing to whirl and face the women. He seemed beyond controlling his language. “Shite-for-sure, this ain’t done by no wind. There weren’t enough froggin’ wind last night to take down a froggin’ hay pile.”
Apparently giving up on curbing his apprentice’s swearing, the mason leaned against one of the solid walls. “Don’t pay him any mind, ladies. Lost his mother young and raised by a foul-mouthed father.”
The gray-haired woman ran her gaze around the entire area. “I don’t hire builders for their sweet manners. And, like I keep saying, I don’t understand a word he says anyway.”
The younger woman blushed. Apparently, she did. “So how did it come down?”
The mason ran a meaty hand through black hair liberally flecked with gray. “Someone worked, and worked hard, to bring this down.”
The younger woman glanced at the older, who pulled at her lower lip and examined the carnage thoughtfully. “Who?”
The apprentice threw up his hands and walked toward the mule cart, filled with new building stone.
“Don’t know,” the mason admitted. “It’s never happened before, and I’m not sure what anyone would get out of it except the pleasure of watching me and Makla do the whole thing again.”
The older woman looked up suddenly, hazel eyes darting, gaze sweeping the ceiling. Dysan froze, hoping she could not make out his shadow against the cracks, that his eyes were not as visible to her as hers to him. He had the benefits of darkness, of solid wood and blankets, of familiarity and utter stillness; but he could not help feeling as if the woman’s cold eyes pinned him solidly to the beams. Yet, if the woman noticed him, she gave no sign.
The mason set to regathering stones, and the apprentice swiftly joined him.
“A prank?” the younger woman suggested.
“Sheep—” the apprentice started, cut off by the mason’s abrupt gesture.
The mason turned to her, head shaking. “Possible. But a lot of effort for some dumb pud out looking for a frayed purse string.” He went back to his work, straightening those base stones still in place.
For several moments, the men worked in silence before the younger woman tried again. “An enemy, perhaps?”
The mason checked the alignment while his young apprentice hurled the most widely scattered rocks back toward the damaged wall. “Haven’t got any I know of.” He rose, walked to the other side, and eyeballed the construction from the opposite side. “Got a son who’s made a few, but he’s out smashing stone for another Project. His are the type who’d walk right up and plant a fist in your face, not ruin a day’s work then hide like cess rats.”
“Froggin’ cowards,” the apprentice muttered, barely loud enough for Dysan to hear.
Dysan smiled at the insult. He was used to worse.
The mason finally gave his full attention to the women again. “Begging your pardons, but not everyone’s happy to see someone new come to the Promise of Heaven. Memories of… the Hand and all.”
Though not his motive, Dysan had to agree. He hated the Dy-areelans and mistrusted the ruling Irrune, the victims of most of his spying; but he had no grievance with the established religions of Ilsigi and Ranke. He remained unmoving, watching the interaction unfold beneath him.
The gray-haired woman stiffened. The other’s mouth dropped open, and no words emerged for several moments. Finally, she managed, “But we’re not a temple—”
The older woman took her arm. “No, SaMavis, but we are dedicated believers. A passerby could assume.” She smiled at the mason—at least Dysan thought she did. Her mouth pulled outward more than upward. “Whoever did it seems like an opportunist rather than someone willing to take credit or blame for his actions. Despite his presentation, I believe the young man is right. Our vandal is a coward. He wouldn’t dare bother our mason, and he’s not likely to touch the wall while we’re here either.”
“Ma’am,” the mason started. “It might not be safe for a group of women…” As the older woman’s attention settled grimly upon him, he trailed off. “I just mean it—”
The woman’s tone held ice. “I know what you mean. But we’ve bought this place, and here we will build. We’ll eventually have to live here, women that we are. What will we have then that we don’t have now?”
“Walls?” the apprentice suggested.
Dysan swallowed a laugh, his course already clear. He would let the stoneworkers build their walls and repair the leaky ceiling. Once he chased the newcomers away, he would have a fine home for which he did not have to pay a padpol.
“We have the blessing of sweet Sabellia. She chose this place for us and She does nothing without reason.”
Dysan did not recall a visit from any goddess. In fact, they had not answered the prayers of any of the orphans trapped in the Dy-areelan Pits. He wondered how so many fanatical worshipers convinced themselves that their god or goddess held a personal interest in the mundane doings of any human’s day. Had he not committed himself to statue-like stillness, he would have rolled his eyes in disdain.
The mason went back to work without another word. To argue his point would only anger his clients, which tended to hamper payment. Dysan remained stock-still and planned his next strike.
Dysan watched the women move basic packs and provisions to the Yard, counting five, all with Imperial accents. The youngest appeared a decade older than Dysan, the oldest the solemn woman who had handled their business with the stonemason and his apprentice. Their hair colors ranged from gray to medium brown, their features chiseled and fine, their skin Rankan ivory without a hint of Ilsigi swarthiness. Dysan waited until the stoneworkers took a break and the women disappeared to gather more of their belongings. Their conversation had revealed that they did not expect the vandal to return until after nightfall, so Dysan seized the opportunity.
Slipping from his hiding place as quietly as any cat, Dysan glided around the crawl space, which allowed him a bird’s eye view of every angle in and near the ruins. No one hovered around the two still-standing adobe walls, behind the new construction, around the collected stones where the mule grazed on twisted shoots jutting between the debris. Attuned to the slightest sound, Dysan spiraled through shadows toward the packs. He trusted his senses to warn him of any traps and his intuition of any magic. Those things alone had never failed him.