Chapter 48: The Fool on Stag Lane
Stag Lane looked smaller in the twilight.
It twisted between old buildings that leaned too close together, their upper floors nearly touching over the street. Rainwater dripped from broken gutters. The stones underfoot were slick with mud, soot and old blood washed thin by water. A faded shrine sat at the far end of the lane, its sun disk cracked down the middle and half swallowed by ivy.
The wounded shooter had passed through here.
The blood trail proved that much.
It began on the roof above the cooper’s shop, crossed the gutter, dropped near a broken chimney and vanished behind the old shrine as if the man had simply stepped out of the world.
Commander Cassian Vale crouched beside the last visible stain, one gloved hand resting near the stone but not touching it. Two city guards waited behind him. Neither spoke. Cassian did not like noise when he worked.
Elara stood near the shrine steps, eyes moving across the walls, windows and rooflines. Her dark cloak hung still around her. She looked like another shadow in the alley, except shadows did not breathe with that much control.
Silas watched the lane.
Too many exits.
Too many windows.
Too many places for a wounded man to disappear if someone had opened the right door.
Lyra had remained at the mill with Marrow and the ledgers. That had been her choice. She wanted to pull the records apart before anyone else could touch them. Silas had not argued. Lyra with documents was often more dangerous than a squad of armed men.
Cassian straightened. "The blood stops here."
Elara looked at the shrine wall. "It does not stop. Someone cleaned it."
Cassian glanced at her.
She pointed to the base of the shrine. "The stone is wet there, but nowhere else. Someone poured water over the step."
One of the guards leaned closer. "Could be rainwater."
Elara looked up at the sky.
There had been no rain.
The guard lowered his eyes.
Cassian stepped to the shrine and touched the damp stone with two fingers. He smelled them.
"Vinegar," he said.
Silas moved beside him. "To break the blood scent."
"And hurry the stain off the stone," Cassian said. "Whoever helped him knew enough to hide a trail, but not enough to hide the cleaning."
Elara’s eyes shifted to the roofs again. "Or they wanted us to know he had help."
Silas looked toward the cracked sun disk.
A pale animal had been scratched faintly into the stone beneath it. The shape was rough, made in a hurry, but the antlers were clear enough.
One of Cassian’s guards frowned. "Is that a stag?"
Cassian did not answer.
That silence told Silas more than the guard’s question.
The mark was fresh. The cut lines were too clean against the old stone.
Cassian’s jaw tightened.
"Do not touch it," he said.
The guard stepped back at once.
A soft clapping sound came from above.
Slow.
Lazy.
Insulting.
Everyone looked up.
A man sat on the edge of the roof above the cooper’s shop, one leg dangling over empty air. He wore a long patched coat made from pieces of faded red, green and black cloth. Not proper motley, not court silk, not beggar rags. Something between costume and warning. A crooked cap rested on his dark curls, and a small brass bell hung from one corner of it, though it made no sound when he moved.
He was eating an apple.
Not hurriedly.
Not nervously.
As if men with swords had gathered below for his entertainment.
Cassian’s guards reached for their weapons.
The man took another bite and spoke with his mouth half full.
"That was almost impressive. Not the guard. He looked at the sky after being told it did not rain. But the rest of you were close."
The embarrassed guard drew half an inch of steel.
Cassian lifted one hand.
The blade stopped.
Silas looked up at the man.
The stranger smiled down at him.
He was younger than Silas had expected. Perhaps late twenties. Lean face. Sharp cheekbones. A mouth made for lying, laughing or both. One eye was brown. The other looked almost gold in the low light, though it might have been the reflection of the lamps.
Elara’s hand had disappeared into her cloak.
"Come down," Cassian said.
The man looked at him. "No."
Cassian’s expression did not change. "That was not a request."
"Then you phrased it poorly."
The guard beside Cassian inhaled through his teeth.
Silas kept watching the stranger’s hands.
One held the apple.
The other held nothing.
That did not comfort him.
The man’s gaze shifted to Silas’s ring. "Shadow Advisor. I wondered when the Queen would start sending his pretty advisor into dirty lanes."
Elara’s eyes cooled.
Silas said, "You know who I am."
"Everyone knows who you are. Half the city thinks you saved the bread. The other half thinks you stole something important and hid behind the crown."
Cassian looked up. "Name."
The stranger sighed. "You city men always begin with the dullest questions."
"Name," Cassian repeated.
The man took another bite of apple. "Merek."
Cassian waited.
The stranger rolled his eyes. "Merek Foolsgold, if you insist on the embarrassing version."
One of the guards muttered, "The roof fool."
Merek pointed the apple at him. "See? Someone who who os well informed."
Silas had heard the name before, but only in servant whispers. A street performer. A smuggler. A singer of obscene songs near noble weddings. A man who had once escaped a debtor’s cage by convincing the jailer the lock was haunted. Most likely half the stories were lies.
The problem was deciding which half.
Elara stepped forward. "You saw the shooter."
Merek’s smile shifted.
Not gone.
Changed.
"Yes."
"Where did he go?"
"Through a door."
Cassian’s voice hardened. "Which door?"
Merek pointed lazily at the shrine.
"There."
Cassian turned.
One of his guards moved to the shrine wall and pushed against the stone. Nothing happened.
Merek clicked his tongue. "Not like that. If every door opened for every man who shoved them, then the palace would have fallen into the sewers years ago."
Silas walked to the shrine.
The cracked sun disk stared back at him. The fresh stag mark sat below it, pale against old stone.
He did not touch the mark.
Merek watched him more closely now.
Silas looked up. "What does it need?"
Merek’s smile returned. "Manners."
Elara’s dagger flashed.
Not thrown.
Only shown.
Merek looked at it and sighed. "Fine. Blood, usually. Not much. People tend to be dramatic when dealing with old sorcery."
Cassian looked at the shrine again. "Whose blood?"
Merek’s smile thinned. "Now that is the first clever question someone in uniform has asked tonight."
Cassian did not react.
Merek swung his dangling foot slowly. "Depends on the door. Depends on who built it. Some families leave their marks on banners. Some leave them where only rats could look."
The guard who had spoken earlier looked at the stag mark again, confused now.
Silas studied Merek’s face. "And this door?"
"This one opened for a man bleeding badly enough to stain three roofs and ruin a perfectly decent gutter. That means either his blood mattered, or he had something warm from someone whose blood did."
Elara looked at Silas.
The white stag pin still sat in his coat pocket.
Silas did not reach for it.
Not here.
Not with Cassian and the guards watching.
Cassian stepped toward the building. "Why are you telling us?"
Merek looked down at him. "Because I dislike crossbowmen who shoot at scribes."
The answer came too fast.
Too clean.
Silas heard the lie in its shape even without magic.
Merek must have seen something in his face, because his smile thinned.
"Also because the man who ran through that door owed me money."
Elara’s voice stayed calm. "That sounded more convincing."
"It is."
Cassian looked to his guards. "Search the neighboring buildings. Roofs, cellars, back rooms. No one enters the shrine."
The guards moved at once.
Merek watched them go. "Good men. Stiff, but good. One of them will check the wrong cellar first."
A crash sounded from inside a building two doors down.
Then a curse.
Merek winced. "There it is."
Cassian did not look amused.
Silas did.
Only slightly.
Merek noticed.
"Careful, Shadow Advisor. Laugh once and I may start charging."
"I did not laugh."
"No. But you considered it."
Elara looked up at him. "Come down."
There was no threat in her voice now.
That made it worse.
Merek looked at her properly for the first time.
Something in his posture shifted. The clown mask stayed, but his eyes grew more careful.
"You are the one in charge of the ghosts," he said.
Elara did not answer.
"That was not an insult," he said. "I like ghosts. Dead people know how to keep a secret."
Elara’s fingers tightened once beneath her cloak. "Come down."
Merek stood on the roof edge.
For a moment, he seemed to lose balance.
The brass bell on his cap did not ring.
Cassian’s hand went to his sword.
Merek stepped off the roof.
He did not fall like a man.
He dropped as if the air forgot him halfway down. His coat snapped around him, red and green and black. One boot struck a hanging sign, tipped it just enough to slow him, and then he landed on a rain barrel beside the lane.
The barrel should have broken.
It did not.
He bowed.
The bell still made no sound.
Cassian’s guards stared from the doorway.
Elara did not.
Silas watched the barrel. A coin lay spinning on its rim, bright and thin. It slowed, wobbled, then fell flat.
Merek snatched it before anyone else could look too closely.
"Luck is a rude friend," he said. "Never trust it twice."
Cassian stepped closer. "You used magic."
"Everyone uses something."
"What kind?"
"The kind that keeps me alive around men who ask questions with their hands near swords."
Lyra looked at the silent bell. "Fool’s Providence."
Merek’s expression changed.
For the first time, the smile vanished.
Only for a breath.
Then it returned, brighter than before.
"That name is old."
"So are the roads under this city."
Merek looked at him for a long moment.
The lane seemed quieter now. The distant market noise thinned behind the buildings. Even the drip from the gutter slowed.
Then Merek laughed.
A real laugh.
Short.
Almost pleased.
"Oh," he said. "You are going to be troublesome."
Cassian moved half a step closer. "You know the old roads."
Merek glanced at him. "I know songs about old roads."
"Do not waste my time."
"I would never. Time is the only thing poor men own before tax collectors discover it."
Silas said, "The shooter. Where does that shrine door lead?"
Merek looked at the cracked sun disk.
His voice lowered.
Not much.
Enough.
"Out."
Elara’s eyes narrowed. "Out where?"
"Depends on which turn he took. One path goes under the old granary. One goes to the bone cistern. One goes east, beyond the inner wall."
Cassian’s face hardened. "A passage outside the city?"
"Not a passage." Merek looked at Silas. "Old kings were very good at building exits and calling them sacred."
Silas stepped closer.
Merek did not step back.
"Can you follow it?" Silas asked.
"Yes."
"Will you?"
"No."
Elara’s dagger appeared fully this time.
Merek looked at it. "That is becoming a theme."
Silas raised one hand slightly.
Elara stopped.
Not lowered.
Stopped.
Merek saw that too.
Silas said, "Name your price."
Merek smiled again, but there was less play in it now.
"Not coin."
"Then what?"
Merek looked toward the shrine, then down Stag Lane, where the violet light could not quite reach the ground.
"There is a man in the debt cages under Goldhook Tavern. Name of Pellan. Ugly face, worse singing voice. He gets out alive."
Cassian said, "A criminal?"
Merek shrugged. "Most men in cages are. Most men outside them are luckier."
"What did he do?"
"Stole bread from men who steal grain."
Silas looked at Cassian. "Can he be released?"
Cassian’s jaw tightened. "Not without knowing who holds the debt."
Merek’s smile returned, slow and sharp. "House Caligari."
Silas understood.
Of course.
Seraphina’s thread was everywhere, thin as spider silk, strong as wire.
Elara looked at Silas. "It could be a trap."
Merek nodded. "Yes. Could be. Terrible world."
Silas watched him.
The motley coat. The silent bell. The wrong colored eyes. The easy smile hiding careful fear. Merek Foolsgold was not loyal. Not yet. Perhaps not ever.
But he knew the old roads.
And he had just named a Caligari cage.
"Bring me proof Pellan exists," Silas said.
Merek blinked.
Just once.
Silas continued, "Not a song. Not a story. Proof. Then we discuss the cage."
Merek’s smile widened.
This time, it reached his eyes.
"Oh, I like you less already."
"Good."
"Good?"
"I prefer honest dislike."
Merek bowed again, lower this time, one hand over his heart.
"No, you prefer expensive honesty. There is a difference."
Before Cassian could move, Merek flicked the coin between his fingers.
It flashed once in the twilight.
A horse screamed somewhere in the next street.
Everyone turned.
Only for a second.
When Silas looked back, the rain barrel was empty.
The lane held only the smell of wet stone, old blood and apple peel.
Cassian swore under his breath.
Elara’s eyes tracked the rooftops, but there was nothing to see.
Silas looked at the shrine door.
Then at the place where Merek had stood.
The wild card had entered the game laughing.
And somewhere beyond Stag Lane, under old roads and Caligari debts, the shooter was getting farther away.