
human shield. Such a shield was, of course, meaningless to the three-ton beast that was pawing the
rag-doll remnants of the guardsman's former companion.
Then Keilin heard a high-pitched thin whine. He knew what came next. It had happened three times
before. The guardsmen didn't appear to be able to hear it . . . or didn't know what it meant. With frantic
strength the boy lunged forward and bit his captor's lower bicep with all his might. Sill grunted with pain
and jerked the boy away; Keilin desperately threw himself downward. The guard's chest, and a tardy
lock of Keilin's hair vaporized. So did half the wall behind them, and the door beyond that.
Keilin didn't wait for them to have a second shot at him. He was off, bolting through the new-made way
out of the dead end. His one glance backward showed that the Guard-Captain had made his escape
through the same hole. The man seemed to have no intention of following him, though. Kemp was just
running in blind panic.
Keilin slipped into a narrow multibranched alley, and waited hidden behind a lip of brickwork. No
footsteps followed. After a few minutes of swallowed panting and gradually slowing heartbeat, the boy
slipped quietly away in a different direction. Finally, as the sky was beginning to pale, and the first sounds
of stirring of the city's dayside began, he dropped over a wall, and then shimmied up a drainpipe. This
gave access to a narrow ledge surrounding the building at third-floor level. He edged along the dark line
of crumbling bricks, and around the corner to a small window.
It wasn't barred . . . most unusual for Port Tinarana. In fact it only appeared to be closed. A fingernail
under the edge of the rusty steel and it opened silently, or should have, after the amount of stolen oil that
Keilin had lavished on it. Instead, it opened quietly a little way and then . . . stuck. Keilin was standing on
a four-inch-wide ledge, trying to apply outward leverage. He cursed in a whisper, using language no
fourteen-year-old ought to know: not just because it was obscene, but because it was obscene in an
extinct language. Perhaps as a response, the obdurate window flew open abruptly, nearly tumbling him
down for perhaps the twentieth time. Hehad fallen once, and the memory of the fear in those
stretched-out moments was still with him. He was shaking as he pulled himself into the musty darkness.
His eyes adjusted to the dimness as he closed the window behind him. Relief washed through him as he
looked at the familiar cracked washstand from his perch on the toilet cistern. This was one of the port's
original buildings, and here, unusually, the plumbing still worked. In most public places the fittings had
long since been looted, to become nonfunctioning ornaments in some wealthy merchant's house, or
perhaps cut and fitted to the normal bucket and seat arrangement. But here . . . this place was largely
forgotten. Those who did remember its existence treated it with superstitious awe. This is the fate of
libraries in largely illiterate societies.
After a long drink of the slightly rust-flavored water, Keilin slipped out, through the crowded
stack-room, and into the little kitchen the librarians used. He knew that he was in trouble, and needed to
think of some way out, but for now he let his familiar rituals carry him. Years back Keilin had worked out
that the mistake that most thieves made was to try and attack the food chain at too high a level. If you're
hungry, don't try to steal meat pies, or gold for meat pies. Those things are well guarded, and thieves are
hunted down. The port grain silos however . . . well, they were poorly defended against rats and pigeons,
and easily accessible to a nimble boy. The porridge he made from the mortar-crushed wheat wasn't
nearly as appetizing as a meat pie, but Keilin, unlike most of his peers, wasn't malnourished. Also, the
grain made good bait for the pigeons he trapped on the roof. Keilin looked down at the porridge and
sighed. If he'd not been tempted into trying for peppers, he wouldn't have been spotted and chased into
that alley.
He cleaned up meticulously. Everything was left in its exact place. He'd been using the kitchen for three
Generated by ABC Amber LIT Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abclit.html