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‘I am here to speak with you,’ Bralston said, his voice painful in the silence.

The man said nothing in reply.

‘Your assistance is required.’

Bralston felt his ire rise at the man’s continued quiet.

‘Cooperation,’ he said, clenching his hand, ‘is compulsory.’

‘How long, sir, have you been seeking my company?’

The man spoke without flinching, without looking up. The voice had once been booming, he could tell. Something had hollowed it out with sharp fingers and left only a smothered whisper.

‘Approximately one week.’

A chuckle, black and once used to herald merry terrors. ‘I lament my lack of surprise. But would it surprise you that I was once a man whose presence was fleeting as gentle zephyrs?’ He leaned back, resting a hand on a massive knee. ‘I once was, despite the shrouded sorrow before you.’ He drummed curiously short, stubby fingers. ‘I once was.’

A closer glance revealed both the fact that the man’s fingers were, in fact, fleshy stumps, and that the hairy backs of his hands were twisted with tattoos. Consequently, any sympathy or desire to know what had happened to the man passed quickly.

Cragsman.

Whatever cruelties had been visited upon this man by whomever was undoubtedly kindness compared to the blood he had shed, the lives he had defiled. Bralston felt his left eyelid twitch at the fate of the last Cragsman he had known.

‘Your … days of zephyr, as it were, are the object of concern,’ Bralston said curtly.

‘No gentleman would accuse another of lying,’ the Cragsman replied smoothly, ‘and whilst I am possessed of the most gracious inclination to benefit you the title of man most gentle, I can quite distinctly detect the odiferous reek of a lie dribbling out of your craw. Were I bold enough to declare, I would that you did not come all this way to discuss the seas I’ve plied and the women I’ve loved.’

That last word sent Bralston’s spine rigid, his fist tight.

‘I am concerned with the past month of your life,’ he said, ‘nothing more.’

‘Ah, now thatbears the sweet, tangy foulness of truth to it,’ the man replied, chuckling. ‘I would still hesitate to commit fully my conscience to your claim, sir, for any man interested in the latest chapter of the script of a man named Rashodd would likely be here with the express intent of doing things more visceral than polite conversation and pleasant queries.’

His great head swung up, grey hair hanging limply at a thick jaw. His eye fixed itself upon the Librarian. Through the gloom, the yellow of his smile came out in golden crescents.

‘So I ask the man who has displayed tact towards my innards by not ripping them out through my most fortunate nose,’ Rashodd said. ‘Who sent you?’

Bralston considered carefully answering. Somehow, the words he spoke seemed tainted by the man’s presence the moment they left his mouth.

‘The Venarium.’

‘Sought by a circle of heathens, I am reduced to? From being pursued by the greatest navies of the seas? Perhaps such a degradation is fitting, having been laid low by that most meanest and crudest of callings.’

Adventurer, Bralston recognised the universal description. He did have contact with them, then.

‘I digress, though,’ Rashodd continued. ‘What can I do for you, sir?’

‘I am on an extended search,’ Bralston replied. ‘The location of one party will lead to the other, I am certain.’

‘The ultimate goal being?’

Bralston studied him carefully, wary to divulge the answer. ‘Purple-skinned longfaces.’

‘Ah.’ Rashodd smiled. ‘ Them.’

‘Your tone suggests knowledge.’

‘You may safely conclude imprisonment has done little to tarnish my talents and predilections towards the coy. My knowledge of the netherlings is from the second hand of a second hand.’

‘Nether … lings?’

Yourtone suggests our initial comprehension of their title to be mutual. The nomenclature would lend itself to the conclusion that they are descended from nether; that is, from nothing at all. I could not assure you that they do not live up to the name, sir, for I have never seen one, knowing they exist only through their anger towards my former allies.’

Bralston nodded. ‘Continue.’

‘On which subject? My allies or their violet foes? Of the latter, I know little but what I have heard: rumours of relentlessness, viciousness and faithlessness blended into one.’ Rashodd raised a brow at the Librarian. ‘Something akin to yourself, except with less fire and more yelling, I’m told.’

‘The Venarium has charged them with heresy.’

‘The practice of a heathenry that differs from yours,’ Rashodd said, nodding. ‘Ironic, is it not, that the faithless should steal a term used by the faithful to condemn those of a different faith … or is it just obnoxious? Regardless, I know as much of the netherlings as I knew of my allies, and you would do well to avoid both, lest you, too, find yourself embroiled in their deceits and find us with more in common’ — he held up his hand and wiggled his stumps — ‘than you would like.’

‘What I find is that my incredible patience is gradually, but wholly, stretched thin with your delusions of eloquence.’ Bralston allowed ire to sow his voice, fire to spark behind his stare. ‘My mission, my order, my dutyhas no concern for your need to waste my time with pretence. My questions are swift and to the point. You will answer them in kind.’

‘It is a sad day I live every day that the language of poet-kings is considered delusional,’ Rashodd replied with a sneer. ‘But I will answer your questions with as much open eagerness and hidden loathing as I can manage.’

That was enough, Bralston reasoned, to avoid resorting to anything fiery. ‘I have been informed, roughly, as to the nature of your “allies”. I do not hold the opinion that they are entirely factual.’

‘Factual, sir? One would assume that if you had been granted even the loosest of information regarding my former persons of association, you would recant.’ He canted his massive head. ‘Have you, sir?’

‘Thirty-six sailors of the Riptidehave attested to the encounter.’

‘And you cannot consider the account of thirty-six good and honourable men trustworthy?’

‘There have been mass hallucinations before, often much grander in scale.’

Rashodd’s laugh gained a horrible enthusiasm. ‘Of course. The Venarium’s unwavering stance of discrediting the Gods and strangling decent men and women with their smugness is not unknown to me. Spare me the rhetoric, sir. I am well informed on the subject, and I humbly disagree with your theory.’

‘Well informed enough to infer our stance on the idea of demons?’ Bralston asked sternly. ‘Even if we were to ignore the idea that they are stories made up by priests to cow people into coercion, we cannot, and do not, accept the idea of an incarnation of evil, as we do not accept the idea of “evil” or “good”. We acknowledge human nature.’

‘I see … and what do youbelieve, sir?’

Men would feel anger at the Cragsman’s words, men would let their composures crack. Librarians were not men, Bralston reminded himself. Librarians answered to higher authorities. Librarians might possessthe power to compel forthrightness through any manner of burning, freezing, crushing or electrocuting, but such would be a flagrant, wasteful demonstration of superiority that should, ostensibly, require no establishing.

Still, it would be satisfying …

Far more satisfying than uttering coldly, ‘There is no belief. Only knowledge.’

‘And you knowyour knowledge to be superior over that of thirty-six people? You knowthat demons do not exist?’

‘I acceptthat there are unknownstypically explained by frivolous imaginations by branding them “demons”. But, as stated, I didn’t come to exchange arguments.’