getting sidetracked. Sharlarra stood right over there while your light-fingered nephew robbed us blind. If she hasn’t gone to reclaim the goodies, I’ll shave my head.”
Khelben lifted one brow. “It has not escaped my attention that you spoke of Sharlarra’s boredom. Will you place the same wager that your Skullport protegee will return these stolen items at first opportunity?”
Laerel took a thick handful of silver mane in each hand and draped it over the archmage’s shoulders. She entwined her arms around his neck and gave him a lascivious wink. “You should probably bear in mind that it would take me two hundred years to grow it back to this length.”
A reluctant smile tugged at one corner of Khelben’s lips. “In other words, no deal.”
The wizard sighed and lowered her bright head to his chest.
“Afraid not.”
CHAPTER FOUR
DARKNESS VISIBLE
Stalker Lemming lurched down the narrow Skullport street, his peg leg clicking briskly against the ragged cobblestone and sloshing through fetid puddles. Though he was almost home, he affected the air of one who had miles to go and scant time to get there.
A small man in his youth, he’d been further diminished with every lost battle and each misspent year. Hunched and potbellied, the native swarthy hue of his skin faded to ash by long years of underground living, he was occasionally mistaken for a duergar dwarf. Stalker did little to discourage this misapprehension. Indeed, he grew a straggly beard to heighten the illusion. Ruffians who would consider a pudgy, one-legged human easy prey might think twice before attacking a deep dwarf.
Stalker dodged a particularly unpleasant puddle and impatiently waved away the underfed and over-painted courtesan who stepped into his path. Hair like straw, he noted with disdain, and skin the color of a fish’s underbelly. In his land, the women were pleasantly rounded, and they had melting black eyes and sun-warmed skin. The thought quickened his step, as if such a woman might be awaiting him in his hovel.
He dreamed, from time to time, of returning to southern lands as the dashing, wealthy captain of his own pirate ship. More often his dreams were simpler, almost wistful: to feel the sun on his face, to see the vivid purple and gold of one more sunset. Just that, and he could die a happy man.
Well, maybe not happy. The way Stalker saw it, there wasn’t much about life to inspire happiness, and he didn’t expect death to improve matters much.
Fact was, there was no returning to the surface. Stalker figured he’d left behind at least three mortal enemies for every one of his scars, and he had a lot of scars. Enemies could be killed, but assassins cost money and lots of it. A Skullport official earned a paltry wage, with the understanding that theft and extortion would make up the difference. Given Stalker’s lifelong bend toward venality, he should have been able to put enough away to hire a band of assassinsor even the legendary Artemis Entrerito kill all his enemies and most of his friends. Making money in Skullport was one thing. Keeping it, quite another.
The clamor of a street battle increased as he neared his home. As he rounded the final corner, he noted the small, roiling crowd blocking his front door and the adjacent alley, a narrow pass roofed by the leaning, two-story hovels on either side.
A fleeting, lopsided grin slinked across his gray face. If he hurried, he could lose himself in the small melee, the goal of which appeared to be the communal dismemberment of a kobold pickpocket.
Stalker closed the distance with a lopsided gallop. Yowling with pretended bloodlust, he hurled himself into the fray.
A few confused and painful moments later, he staggered out the other side of the battle and into the alley beyond. He leaned against the tipsy building he called home to catch his breath and take stock of his injuries. Blood trickled from his nose. One eye was already swelling shut. The knuckles of
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