
and to the templars who, in the opinion of many of those behind latched doors, were the worst of scum themselves.
Despite the curfew, or because of it, there were places within Urik that were only alive in the criminal hours after
midnight. One such place was Joat's Den. Carved out of a corner of the hulking customhouse, convenient to both the
Caravan Gate's plaza and the elven market, but not part of either quarter, the Den sprawled low to the ground and open
to the sky.
A single grease-lamp above the door shone faintly on a cracked and peeling piece of leather that, in the bright
sunlight, displayed the faded portrait of a gap-toothed dwarf brandishing a tankard: Joat himself in his younger days,
when he'd been trying to attract customers.
The customers Joat got, then and now, were off-duty templars. And since the yellow-robes provided a steady, if
undistinguished, trade in which there was little threat of competition or hope of expansion, Joat let his sign fade. For
decades the dwarf had concentrated his entrepreneurial efforts on procuring the strongest inebriants at the lowest
possible price.
Tonight he was serving broy, a liquor produced when kank nectar was left to ferment in the sun for a few days,
then sealed in resin-smeared leather sacks. Broy was a pungent, slightly rancid drink with a cloying sweetness that
coated the drinker's tongue for hours afterward. It was, to say the least, an acquired taste.
Unlike the liquors fermented from fruits or grains, broy produced quiet, melancholy drunks who stared at the
stars, lost in introspection. As such, it was not the drink of choice at Joat's Den, where templars came to forget who
they were, what they did. But the templars who frequented Joat's Den acquired taste and tolerance for whatever the
old dwarf could scrounge, as long as it could kick like a broody erdlu.
Joat, himself, however, preferred the nights when broy was all he had behind the mekillot rib bar. Business was
good, of course; it always was: when templars drank, they drank until they achieved oblivion. But when they drank
broy, the furniture didn't break and the place stayed quiet as a boneyard.
Usually.
Through some quirk of fate, from a stool beside the hearth that Joat had deliberately refused to kindle, a
customer had taken it upon himself to entertain everyone. The dwarf stood ready to toss the human youth into the
back alley the moment anyone complained, but the mournful tunes the boy played on a set of pipes whittled from the
fragile wing-bones of unhatched erdlus suited the overall mood.
The youth was halfway handsome and dressed in plain, drab-colored clothes rather than a sulphurous yellow
robe. He could have been anyone, but he was a templar. Joat was sure of that. He hadn't hired any entertainment and
though nontemplars occasionally came through his doors-his place had a certain reputation for discretion, if one didn't
mind the regular clientele-no nontemplar would be foolish enough to sit here, surrounded by the most reviled denizens
of the city, lost in his thoughts and his music.
The young templar's fingers arched delicately over his instrument. His eyes were closed and his body swayed
gently in rhythm with the music that was as beautiful as it was unexpected.
Strange, Joat mused silently in a lull between refills, listening to the pipes. Where had he learned to play like
that? And why?
Joat knew the templars as well as anyone who did not wear a yellow robe knew them. More specifically, he knew
the under-rank templars from the civil bureau, who had only a few threads of orange or crimson, never gold, woven
into the hems of their sleeves. Such folk came to his place to celebrate their infrequent promotions, gripe about their
varied failures in the ruthless bureaucracy, and to eulogize their dead. There were, of course, other kinds of templars:
aristocratic High Templars who inherited their positions and seldom ventured outside their private, guarded quarter,
ambitious templars who'd betray, sell, or murder not just ordinary citizens like him, but other templars, too....
And then there were Hamanu's pets: men and women to whom the ancient, jaded king gave free rein. Those pet
names were whispered here, in Joat's Den, and feared above all others, even the king's.
The dwarf didn't particularly like his customers, but he knew them well enough to know that beneath the robes
they were very much the same as other people. They made the compromises everyone made to survive in a world
indifferent to life. He certainly didn't envy them. In his eyes their privileges couldn't outweigh the risks they took every
day, clinging tightly to their little niche in Urik s grand bureaucracy.
King Hamanu decreed that nothing changed. In the larger sense, the king spoke the truth. But change was a
constant in Joat's small world. He'd raised his family here, behind the customhouse. His wife still cooked all the food.
His children helped in more ways than he could count. Five grandchildren slept in cozy beds beneath the pantry.
It hadn't been easy; he'd endured more hard years than he cared to recall. The templars were reliable customers,
except when crop failures tightened supplies or one of Hamanu's chronic military campaigns put the whole city on war
rations. Joat's Den had been burnt out twice, most recently when Tyrian hooligans had sacked the city, trying, without
success, to free the slaves.
King Hamanu always got Urik set to rights, easing off on fines and taxes until trade was back on its feet again.
The sorcerer-king didn't claim to have founded Urik, but he, and the templarate he had founded, nurtured the city with
ferocious care. Urik survived; Urik's citizens survived. In the end, survival mattered more than the king's notorious
cruelty or any individual templar's brutality.
Standing in the twilight of his life-his eyes a bit dimmer than they'd been in his youth, his hand a shade less
steady when he poured from a full jug-Joat was proud of himself, of his Den, of their survival.
Or maybe it wasn't pride, just that forsaken, melancholy music.
The youth had entranced himself and everyone with his playing. He showed no sign of fatigue. Like as not, he'd
pipe away until sunrise, unless someone stopped him. Melancholy music that produced melancholy customers who, in