The Novel Free

Midnight Tides





‘Indeed, almost finished, I’d wager. See the blue overhead?’



The axe-carrying giant faced Tehol. ‘If anyone asks, sir, you never saw me here.’



‘You have my word.’



‘Most kind.’ He faced the street again, then cautiously descended the steps.



‘Ooh,’ he said as he set off, ‘it’s wet! Ooh!’



Tehol and Bugg watched him scurry away, hunched over and weaving to avoid the deeper puddles.



Bugg sighed. ‘I admit to being greatly affrighted by his sudden appearance.’



Brows raised, Tehol regarded his servant. ‘Really? Poor Bugg, you need to do something about those nerves of yours. Come on, then, and fear nothing whilst you are with me.’



They entered the Temple.



And Tehol halted once more, as suddenly as the first time, as the point of a knife settled on his cheek beneath his right eye, which blinked rapidly. Bugg managed to draw up in time to avoid bumping into his master, for which Tehol’s gratitude was sufficient to weaken his knees.



A sweet feminine voice murmured close to his ear, ‘You’re not in disguise, sir. Which means, well, we both know what that means, don’t we?’



‘I’ve come for my daughter-’



‘Now that’s in very poor taste. We can’t abide such twisted, sick desires in here-’



‘You misunderstand – understandably, of course, that is. I meant to say, I’ve come to retrieve her, before it’s too late.’



‘Her name?’



‘Shurq Elalle.’



‘Well, it’s too late.’



‘You mean she being dead? I’m aware of that. It’s her ancestors, you see, they want her to come home to the crypt. They miss her terribly, and a few of them are getting alarmingly angry. Ghosts can be a lot of trouble – not just for you and this establishment, but for me as well. You see my predicament?’



The knife point withdrew, and a short, lithe woman stepped round to stand before him. Close-fitting silks in rusty hues, a broad silk belt wrapped about her tiny waist, upturned slippers on her minuscule feet. A sweet, heart-shaped face, strangely overlarge eyes, now narrowing. ‘Are you done?’



Tehol smiled sheepishly. ‘You must get that a lot. Sorry. Are you, perchance, Matron Delisp?’



She spun about. ‘Follow me. I hate this room.’



He glanced about for the first time. Two paces wide, four deep, a door at the far end, the walls hidden behind lush tapestries depicting countless couplings of all sorts. ‘Seems inviting enough,’ he said, following the woman to the door.



‘It’s the spent smell.’



‘Spent? Oh, yes.’



‘Smells of… regret. I hate that smell. I hate everything about it.’ She opened the door and slipped through.



Tehol and Bugg hastened to follow.



The chamber beyond was dominated by a steep staircase, which began a single pace beyond the doorway. The woman led them round it to a plush waiting room, thick-padded sofas along the side walls, a single high-backed chair occupying the far wall. She walked directly to that chair and sat down. ‘Sit. Now, what’s all this about ghosts? Oh, never mind that. You were, what, ten years old when you fathered Shurq Elalle? No wonder she never mentioned you. Even when she was alive. Tell me, were you disappointed when she decided on a career of thievery?’



‘From your tone,’ Tehol said, ‘I gather you are challenging the veracity of my claims.’



‘Which question gave me away?’



‘But, you see, I am not so ignorant as you think. Hence my disguise.’



She blinked. ‘Your disguise is to appear as a man in his early thirties, wearing sodden, badly made wool-’



Bugg sat straighter, ‘Badly made? Now, hold on-’



Tehol nudged his servant with an elbow, hard in the ribs. Bugg grunted, then subsided.



‘That is correct,’ Tehol said.



‘A vast investment in sorcery, then. How old are you in truth?’



‘Sixty-nine… my dear.’



‘I’m impressed. Now, you mentioned ghosts?’



‘Afraid so, Matron. Terrible ones. Vengeful, disinclined to discourse. Thus far I have managed to keep them penned up in the family crypt, but they’ll get out sooner or later. And proceed on a rampage through the streets – a night of terror for all Letheras’s citizens, I fear – until they arrive here. And then, well, I shudder at the thought.’



‘As I am shuddering right now, although for entirely different reasons. But yes, we certainly have a dilemma. My particular dilemma, however, is one I admit to having been struggling with for some time now.’
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