
The passengers were listed as Lytan and Demara Smith and Family, custom jewelry
designers, of Salesh Hills; Parradan Smith, courier, of Mount Flame City; Lord
Ermenwyr of the House Kingfisher, and Servant. All Children of the Sun.
Also listed was one Ronrishim Flowering Reed, herbalist, of Salesh-by-the-Sea. From
his name he was probably a Yendri, one of the forest people who occasionally fought
guerrilla wars with the Children of the Sun over what they felt was excessive logging.
Smith looked out at the boarding area and spotted the Yendri, taller than the other
passengers, wearing fewer clothes, and standing a little apart with an aloof expression.
The Yendri people had skin that ranged in color from a gently olive complexion to
outright damn green, and were willowy and graceful and everything you'd expect in a
forest-dwelling race. They were thought by the Children of the Sun to be arrogant,
uncivilized, untrustworthy, and sexually insatiable (when not perversely effeminate).
They said exactly the same things about the Children of the Sun.
The other passengers were equally easy to identify. The Smiths were clearly the
young couple huddled with a screaming baby, waving a sugar stick and stuffed toy at
him while their other little ones ran back and forth merrily and got in the way of the
sweating porters. Parradan Smith must be the well-dressed man leaning against a news
kiosk, reading a broadside sheet. Lord Ermenwyr, who had evidently not died in the
night, sat a little apart from the others on one of many expensive-looking trunks piled
beside a curtained palanquin.
He had changed his unicorn costume for a black tailcoat and top boots, and combed
the spangles out of his beard and mustache. It failed to make him look less like the
pasty-faced boy he was, though his features were even and handsome. His eyes were
unnervingly sharp, fixed on the screaming infant with perfectly astonishing
malevolence. He glanced up, spotted Smith, and leaped to his feet.
"You! Caravan Master. Is that damned brat going to squall the whole trip? Is it?" he
demanded, folding his arms as Smith approached him.
"I don't think so," said Smith, staring down at Lord Ermenwyr's eyes. His pupils were
like pinpoints, perhaps because of whatever drug the lordling was smoking in the long
jade tube he presently had clenched between his teeth. It produced trailing purple
clouds, vaguely sweet-scented. "Should you really be—"
"Smoking? It's my medication, damn you! If that child isn't silenced at once, I'll not be
answerable for the consequences. I'm a sick man—"
"Master, you're raving again," said a silken voice from behind the curtains of the
palanquin. "Stop that at once."
"—And if I'm harried to an early grave, or should I say an earlier grave, well then,
Caravan Master, you'll pay for it in ways you can't even begin to—"
"Nursie warned you," said the voice, and an arm flashed between the curtains and
caught Lord Ermenwyr around the knees. He vanished backward into the depths of the
palanquin with a yelp, and there were sounds of a violent struggle as the palanquin
rocked on its base. Smith stepped quickly away.
"Er—Smith!" cried his cousin. "I'd like you to meet your subordinates."
Smith turned to see a crowd of caravaneers who clearly disliked being described as
his subordinates. They gave him a unanimous resentful stare as he approached.
"May I present the esteemed keymen? Keyman Crucible, Keyman Smith, Keyman
Bellows, Keyman Pinion, Keyman Smith."
They were, as all keymen, compact fellows with tremendously developed arms and
muscle-bulging legs, and so alike they might have been quintuplets.