Going to stand beside the creature, whispering into its gray curling ear with soft
strange words, Lady Yambu fed it the living morsel of a mouse, which she took with firm
fingers from a cage beside the stand. Delicacies were almost gone now, for the lady and
her pet alike. She still had a substantial sum of money left, and a few jewels, but she
meant to save her modest wealth against some future need; her journey downriver might be
very long. Tonight, she thought, the dragon might have to be released from the window of
this room to forage for itself. She hoped that the creature would come back to her from
such a foray, and she thought it would; she trusted the one who had given her the pet
almost as much as she had ever trusted anyone.
Restlessly Lady Yambu moved back to the window again. Down at the shabby docks,
some of which were visible from this vantage point, there was still no sign of the long-
awaited riverboat that was to carry her out of the lake and down the Tungri as far as the
next cataract. The Maid of Lakes and Rivers, she had heard that the riverboat was
called. The Maid was days overdue already, and she supposed more days were likely to
pass before it arrived.
If it ever did. She had heard also that traffic on the lower river was at best far
from safe.
This was her eleventh day of waiting in this inn. It was good that the earlier
years of her life had schooled her thoroughly in patience and self-sufficiency, because-
Making a brisk decision, the lady suddenly scooped up a few small essential items
that she did not want to leave unguarded in the room while she was out of it, and moved
in two strides to the door. Locking the door behind her, she strode along the short and
narrow upstairs hall of the inn, and down a narrow stair. This stair, like most of the
rest of the building, was constructed in rustic style, of logs with much of the bark
still on them.
As the lady descended, the common dining room, now empty, was to her left, and the
small lobby, with three or four pilgrims and locals in it, was to her right.
She had almost reached the foot of the stairs when she saw, through the open front
door of the inn, to her right, the figure of a man who moved along the middle of the
unpaved street outside, advancing toward the waterfront with a steady, implacable-looking
tread. No doubt it was the size of the man, which was remarkable, that first attracted
her attention-his form was mountainous, not very tall but very bulky, and not so much fat
as shapeless. Lady Yambu could see little of this man but his broad back, but still his
appearance jogged her memory. It was not even a memory of someone she had seen before,
but of someone she ought to know, ought to be able to recognize....
Moving quickly through the lobby and out the front door, she stood on the log steps
of the inn above the muddy and moderately busy street, gazing after him. A second man,
much younger and much smaller, was walking with the one who had caught her attention, and
already both of them were well past the inn, heading down the sloping street in the
direction of the docks. The big man carried a staff, and the smaller wore a sword, which
was common enough here as in most towns. Both were dressed in rough, plain clothing.
The lady, on the verge of running after the two, but not choosing to brave the mud
and the loss of dignity involved, cast her eyes about. Then with a quick gesture she
beckoned an alert-looking urchin who was loitering nearby, and gave him a trifling coin
and a short verbal message. In a moment his small figure was speeding after the two men.
"Alas," the lady was saying to the huge man a quarter of an hour later, "I doubt
that there is any messenger, winged or otherwise, to be found in this village who could
reach Tasavalta sooner than you could yourself."
She was back in her room at the inn, sitting on one end of the small couch that
also served as a bed, while the two men she had invited in from the street stood leaning
against the outer wall, one on each side of the window. They had now been in the lady's
company long enough to tell her their story about the kidnapping of Prince Mark at dawn,