So where the hell did all the people come from? What had this crazy city beenlike before the fighting took so many? So crowded you couldn't breathe?

Their talk must have gone on half an hour. Medjhah came back, winked, went andsat in the shade and appeared to doze.

The girl came boiling out of the door down the way, looked around frantically, the back of one hand to her mouth. She was in a panic. Terror filled her eyes.

She spotted Yoseh and Arif. She looked like she went limp with relief.

Yoseh stood as she bustled toward them. He could not help staring. The scalything in his stomach thrashed. She did not look at him at all. Her cheeks werered.

"Arif! What are you doing out here? You know the rules! You're going to getthe spanking of your life when I tell your father what you did."

"Aw, Mish, I was just talking to Yoseh." "He was perfectly safe here, Tamisa.

When you tell his father will you mention that it took you a half hour tonotice that Arif had left the house?"

Her color deepened. She faced him, mouth opening to snarl. But then her eyesmet his. Nothing came out.

Down in Yoseh's stomach Old Scaly went into his death throes. Or something.

Medjhah chuckled into the silence that hung between them. Mouth dry, Yosehsaid, "My name is Yoseh." Tamisa said, "My name is Tamisa." "You are verybeautiful, Tamisa." The girl blushed. Medjhah chuckled again. Arif lookedpuzzled and displeased.

"Tamisa, don't you have another kid to watch, too?" Yoseh had just glimpsed asturdy little one headed their way like he owned Char Street.

"Oh, Aram! Stafa! Mother is right. I'm a hopeless, irresponsible half-wit."

She started to go. Too flustered to remember the older boy.

The younger one was there. The girl scooped him up as if that would save himfrom all the dangers he'd already evaded successfully.

Arif said, "Tell Mish about the time your father and Fa'tad ambushed theTuroks, Yoseh."

"I don't think girls are interested in those kinds of stories, Arif." Tamisaput the younger boy down in front of her and held on. "I don't mind. At homeall I hear is Mom grumbling about how her legs hurt."

Medjhah chuckled a third time.

Yoseh did not know what to say now. It was all in his lap. He was painfullyaware of the disapproval of the passing veydeen who saw one of their virgindaughters speaking to a Dartar.

He just started talking. After a while the girl started talking back to him.

They sat down. The boys began playing among the animals. Yoseh thought thecamels were unnaturally tolerant of their behavior. The little one, thefearless one, climbed all over them. He got bumped down once when he planted afoot too painfully, but otherwise did as he pleased.

Nogah came out of the alley with a coffle of five pasty-looking prisoners andturned them over to Medjhah. His expression was unreadable as he drank from awaterskin. But he said nothing. He returned to the alley with the waterskinslung over his shoulder.

Medjhah got a javelin and perched himself where he could keep an eye on the prisoners. There wasn't a hint of laziness or sleepiness about him now.

Yoseh tried to keep talking to Tamisa, but the appearance of the prisoners hadunsettled her. And the boys now clung close, frightened by the wild men out ofthe maze.

Medjhah whistled softly. "Hey, kid. Down the hill."

The smaller boy took off. "Daddy! Dad's home."

Old Scaly had a few convulsions left.

Azel leaned into the room where the eunuch was eating a late supper. "Hey, Torgo. We got a problem. I need to see the woman."

Torgo's eyes went tight and narrow. "I thought you walked out on us."

"Did I? I don't remember that. I remember saying I wouldn't commit suicide. Not the same thing." He kept his tone neutral. "I got to see her. Got an emergency request from the General. It's important."

Torgo rose, went to a sideboard. He washed his hands in a gold laving bowl, rinsed them in lilac water. "You're serious, eh? You would have stayed away otherwise. What is it?" "I need to see her. She has to make the decisions on this."

"She can't."

"Can't?"

"Unfortunate, but true. "The eunuch smirked. "She examined one of the children last night She won't recover before tomorrow evening. At the earliest."

Azel spat a curse.

"I hope it's not a deadly emergency." The eunuch's smirk grew malicious.

"It could be. For all of us."

Torgo was amused by his effort to be polite. Azel knew he would protract this, make it a bully's game.

Azel gave details about the highly placed Herodian spy.

Torgo said, "I don't see a problem for us in here."

"The General wants to turn the spy around. He's dead set on it. His best leverage is here. The last kid I brought in was the spy's son."

Torgo was genuinely surprised.

"The General has two requests. First, he wants the spy brought in and shownthe kid. Second, he wants the kid to be examined next so the Living can takepossession."

Torgo nodded, grinned. "She won't allow the first. And her schedule ofexaminations is set."

Azel loosed his wickedest smile. "The old man anticipated that. I'd guess hefigures this is a good time to define relationships more clearly."

"Eh?" Torgo looked uncomfortable.

"He understands the Witch. He knew her before Dak-es-Souetta and Ala-eh-din Beyh. He feels her desperation will lead her to bow to his superior wisdom."

"Or what?"

"Or he seals the Postern of Fate and pursues his war with Herod by othermeans."

Torgo snapped, "You get of a whore!"

"Not my idea, friend. I argued against it. But he's a stubborn old shit withnothing to lose and some right on his side. Her-activities are a danger to theLiving. There's a rumor the Living are behind the child-stealing. There'vebeen too many kidnappings. People are getting upset. He wants her to back off.

He wants to decide when, where, and how the children are taken."

"She won't agree."

"Her choice is agree or get no more children."

Azel watched closely. Torgo was angry but, like Azel himself, was restrainingboth anger and personal animosity. The stakes went beyond personalities. Torgopaced. He fiddled with things, flicked away specks of dust, made minuteposition adjustments. "I'll get hell for it but I'll go out on a limb. You cansee the boy. The rest will have to wait on her."

Thank you," Azel figured that would rattle Torgo.

"Bring him in blindfolded. Don't let him know where he's at or what we'redoing."

"Don't worry about me. Worry about putting the kid somewhere where he can beseen without giving away where he's being held. I'll pay my respects to Nakarnow. May he find Gorloch's favor again."

Torgo mumbled the formula sullenly. Azel grinned as he left. That ball-lesswonder couldn't root for that because it would mean losing out on hisfantasies.

Right now Torgo was as close as he was going to get to the woman he loved.

Aaron broke stride when he saw Mish with the Dartar. He glanced at the pasty- faced prisoners, the man watching them. That man looked back blandly.

Arif and Stafa arrived, whooping. Aaron settled the smaller boy on his left hip, took Arifs hand. He tried to keep his expression neutral as he looked at Mish and the younger Dartar. Arif babbled steadily as Aaron moved closer, telling him about the Dartar and his family. As he came up, Mish said, This is Yoseh, Aaron. He's the one who got hurt trying to catch the man that took Zouki."

The Dartar looked embarrassed. Mish looked frazzled.

"Why?" Aaron asked. He didn't know what else to say.

"What?" The Dartar looked perplexed.

"Why try to rescue the child?" The Dartar looked more perplexed.

The other came to his rescue. "A quaint perversion of us barbarians, Qushmarrahan. We care for children. Not something you would understand, perhaps." He spoke carefully, making sure he did not lose his meaning by slipping into dialect. He underscored by staring at Arif and Stafa. Aaron smiled. He looked at the younger Dartar. Thank you.