Chapter I
Snow was falling on Riverside, great white feather-puffs that veiled
the cracks in the facades of its ruined houses; slowly softening the
harsh contours of jagged roof and fallen beam. Eaves were rounded
with snow, overlapping, embracing, sliding into each other, capping
houses all clustered together like a fairy-tale village. Little slopes
of snow nestled in the slats of shutters still cozily latched against
the night. It dusted the tops of fantastical chimneys that spiraled
up from frosted roofs, and it formed white peaks in the ridges of
the old coats of arms carved above the doorways. Only here and there
a window, its glass long shattered, gaped like a black mouth with
broken teeth, sucking snow into its maw.
Let the fairy tale begin on a winter's morning, then, with one drop
of blood new-fallen on the ivory snow: a drop as bright as a clear-cut
ruby, red as the single spot of claret on the lace cuff. And it therefore
follows that evil lurks behind each broken window, scheming malice
and enchantment; while behind the latched shutters the good are sleeping
their just sleeps at this early hour in Riverside. Soon they will
arise to go about their business; and one, maybe, will be as lovely
as the day, armed, as are the good, for a predestined triumph. . .
.
But there is no one behind the broken windows; only eddies of snow
drift across bare floorboards. The owners of the coats of arms have
long since abandoned all claims to the houses they crest, and moved
up to the Hill, where they can look down on all the city. No king
rules them any more, for good or ill. From the Hill, Riverside is
a tiny splotch between two riverbanks, an unsavory quarter in a prosperous
city. The people who live there now like to think of themselves as
evil, but they're really no worse than anyone else. And already this
morning more than one drop of blood has been shed.
The blood lies on the snow of a formal winter garden, now trampled
and muddy. A man lies dead, the snow filling in the hollows of his
eyes, while another man is twisted up, grunting, sweating frog-ponds
on the frozen earth, waiting for someone to come and help him. The
hero of this little tableau has just vaulted the garden wall and is
running like mad into the darkness while the darkness lasts.
The falling snow made it hard for him to see. The fight hadn't badly
winded him, but he was hot and sweaty, and he could feel his heart
pounding in his chest. He ignored it, making for Riverside, where
no one was likely to follow him.
He could have stayed, if he'd wanted to. The swordfight had been very
impressive, and the party guests had been well entertained. The winter
garden party and its outcome would be talked about for weeks. But
if he stayed, the swordsman knew that he would be offered wine, and
rich pastry, and asked boring questions about his technique, and difficult
questions about who had arranged the fight. He ran on.
Under his cloak, his shirt was spattered with blood, and the Watch
would want to know what he was doing up on the Hill at this hour.
It was their right to know; but his profession forbade him to answer,
so he dodged around corners and caught his breath in doorways until
he'd left the splendors of the Hill behind, working his way down through
the city. It was breaking dawn when he came to the river, flowing
murky green under the Bridge. No one waited there to challenge him,
so he set his foot on the stone, plowing through snowdrifts and the
messy trails of other late-night workers who'd come before him, until
he'd put the river safely between himself and the rest of the city.
He stood now in Riverside, where the Watch never dared to come. People
knew him here, and wouldn't bother him.
But when he opened the door to his landlady's, there was a considerable
crowd assembled, all wanting to know about the fight. Other Riversiders
had been on the Hill too, that night, burgling houses and collecting
gossip, and already the rumors had begun. The swordsman answered their
questions with as much civility as he could muster, suddenly awash
with exhaustion. He gave Marie his shirt to wash, and climbed the
stairs to his own rooms.
Less than an hour earlier, Marie the whore and laundress, who also
rented out rooms by the week, had lain snoring lightly in the arms
of a dear client, unaware of the impending excitement. Her friend
was a sailor turned coiner, whose wooden leg leaned handily against
the headboard. He was her fifth and last of the night, and she, not
as young as she once was, slept through the initial pounding on her
shutters. The sailor stirred uneasily, dreaming of storms. When the
knock came harder, Marie bolted up with a cry, then shrieked at the
cold outside the blanket.
"Marie! Marie!" The voice through the shutter was muffled
but insistent. "Open up and tell us all about it!"
Marie sighed. It must be St Vier again: every time the swordsman got
up to something they came to her to find out the details. This time,
it was annoying to admit, she didn't know--but then, she didn't have
to tell them that. With the laugh that had always made her popular,
Marie got up and unbolted the door to the house.
Her sailor huddled in a corner of the bed while her friends trooped
in, taking over the room with the ease of familiarity. It was the
right room for socializing, having been the front parlor when the
house was a noble's town house. The cherubs painted on the ceiling
were flecked with mold; but most of the laurel-leaf molding still
framed the walls, and the fireplace was real marble. Marie's friends
spread their wet cloaks out on the gilded escritoire, now missing
all its drawers, and over the turquoise velvet chair no one could
sit on because of the uncertainty of its legs. Lightfinger Lucie coaxed
the fire to a blaze, and Sam Bonner produced a jug of something that
made the sailor feel much better.
"You know," said Sam ponderously, "your St Vier's gone
and killed a duke this time."
Sam Bonner was a former pickpocket with an unhandy taste for the bottle.
He'd been repeating the same thing for half an hour now, and his friends
were getting tired of correcting him. "Not the duke, Sam,"
one of them tried again. "He's working for the duke. He killed
two swordsmen, see, in the duke's garden."
"No, no, in Lord Horn's garden. Three swordsmen, I heard,"
another asserted, "and from a very reliable source. Two dead,
one wounded, and I'm taking odds on whether he'll live till morning!"
"Done!"
Marie sat on the bed with the blankets wrapped around her feet, letting
the betting and the squabbling swirl around her. "Who's dead?--Lynch--de
Maris--Not a scratch on him--Horn's garden--Hired St Vier?--Not St
Vier, Lynch--Wounded--Dying--Who's paying St Vier?--Horn--the duke--the
devil--How much?--More'n you'll ever see--"
More people trickled in, adding to the clamor. "St Vier's been
killed--captured--Five to one--"
They barely noticed when another man came in and silently took a place
just inside the door. Sam Bonner was roaring, "Well, I say he's
the best dam' swordsman in the whole dam' city! No, I'm lying--in
the world!"
The young man by the doorway smiled, and said, "Excuse me. Marie?"
He was younger than most of them there; dark-haired, of average height,
his face dirty and stubbled.
"Who the hell is that?" Sam Bonner growled.
"The best dam' swordsman in the world," Lightfinger Lucie
answered with pardonable malice.
"I'm sorry to bother you," the swordsman said to Marie,
"but you know how the stains set." He took off his cloak,
revealing a white shirt ugly with blood. He pulled the shirt over
his head, and tossed it into a corner. For a moment the iron tang
of blood cut through the smells of whisky and wet wool. "I can
pay you next week," he said. "I made some money."
"Oh, that's fine with me," Marie said with offhanded airiness,
showing off.
He turned to go, but they stopped him with the shouting of his name:
"St Vier!"
"St Vier! Who's dead, then?"
"De Maris," he answered curtly. "And maybe Lynch, by
now. Excuse me, please."
No one reached out a hand to stop him as he walked through the door.
The smell of frying fish made the swordsman's stomach lurch. It was
his young gentleman, the University student, wrapped in his scholar's
robe, hovering like a black bat over the frying pan in the ornamented
fireplace.
"Good morning," St Vier said. "You're up early."
"I'm always up early, Richard." The student didn't turn
around. "You're the one who stays out all night killing people."
His voice was its usual cool drawl, taunting in its nonchalance. The
accent, with its crisp consonants and long vowels, took Richard back
to the Hill: for a moment he was once again crouched amid the topiary
of the pleasure garden, hearing the same tones ringing on the air
from the party guests. "Who was the poor soul this time?"
"Just a couple of swordsmen. It was supposed to be a duel with
Hal Lynch, I thought I told you. Our patrons set it up to take place
at this crazy garden party of Lord Horn's. Can you imagine, having
a party outdoors in this weather?"
"They would have had furs. And admired the landscaping."
"I suppose." While he spoke, the swordsman was cleaning
his sword. It was a light, flexible dueling weapon of a sort only
he, with his reputation and his reflexes, could carry around Riverside
with authority. "Anyway, Lynch got started, and then de Maris
popped out of the shrubbery and started coming at me."
"Whatever for?"
Richard sighed. "Who knows? He's Horn's house swordsman; maybe
he thought I was attacking his master. Anyway, Lynch stepped aside,
and I killed de Maris. He was out of practice," he added, polishing
the blade with a soft cloth. "Lynch was good enough, he always
has been. But our patrons wanted it past first blood, so I think I
killed him. I think. . . ." He scowled. "It was a clumsy
stroke. I slipped on some old ice."
The young man poked at the fish. "Do you want some?"
"No, thanks. I'm just going to bed."
"Well, it's revolting cold," the scholar said with satisfaction.
"I shall have to eat it all myself."
"Do that."
St Vier passed into the adjoining room, which contained a clothes
chest that also held his swords, wrapped in oilcloth, and a large,
heavily carved bed. He had bought the bed the last time he had any
money; seen it in a Riverside market stall full of odds and ends retrieved
from the old houses, and fallen in love with it.
He looked at the bed. It did not appear to have been slept in. Curious,
he returned to the front room.
"How was your night?" he asked. He noticed the pair of wet
boots standing in the corner.
"Fine," the scholar answered, daintily picking bones out
of his fish. "I thought you said you were tired."
"Alec," said Richard. "It really isn't safe for you
to be going out alone here after dark. People get wild, and not everyone
knows who you are yet."
"No one knows who I am." Alec dreamily laced his long fingers
in his hair. His hair was fine and leaf-brown, worn down his back
in the long tail that was the defiant emblem of University scholars.
He had been in Riverside since autumn, and his clothes and his accent
were the only signs of where he had come from. "Look." Alec's
eyes, turned to the window, were dark and green, like the water under
the Bridge. "It's still snowing. You can die in the snow. You're
cold, but it doesn't hurt. They say you get warmer and warmer, and
then you fall asleep. . . ."
"We can go out later. If anyone is trying to kill you, I'd better
know about it."
"Why?"
"I can't let them," the swordsman said; "it would ruin
my reputation." He yawned. "I hope at least you had your
knife with you."
"I lost it."
"Again? Well, never mind. I can get you another when the money
for the fight comes in." St Vier shook out his arms, and flexed
them against the wall. "If I don't go to sleep soon, I'm going
to start waking up, and then I'll feel rotten for the rest of the
day. 'Night, Alec."
"Good night, Richard." The voice was low and amused; of
course, it was morning. But he was much too tired to care. He placed
his sword within reach of the bed, as he always did. As he drifted
off, he seemed to see a series of white images, scenes carved in snow.
Frosty gardens, their branches lush with white roses and crystal thorns;
ladies with floating spun-sugar hair escorted by ivory gallants; and,
for himself, opponents with long bright swords of clear and gleaming
ice.
Chapter II
By midday, most of the nobles on the Hill could be counted on to be
awake. The Hill sat lordly above the rest of the city, honeycombed
with mansions, landscaped lawns, elaborate gates, and private docks
on the cleanest part of the river. Its streets had been built expressly
wide and smooth enough to accommodate the carriages of nobles, shortly
after carriages had been invented. Usually, mornings on the Hill were
passed in leisurely exchange of notes written on colored, scented,
and folded paper, read and composed in various states of dishabille
over cups of rich chocolate and crisp little triangles of toast (all
the nourishment that ought to be managed after a night's reveling);
but on the morning after the garden duel, with the night's events
ripe for comment, no one had the patience to wait for a reply, so
the streets were unusually crowded with carriages and pedestrians
of rank.
The Duke of Karleigh was gone from the city. From what anyone could
discover, the duke had left Lord Horn's party not an hour after the
fight, gone home, ordered up his carriage despite the snow, and departed
before dawn for his estates in the south without a word to anyone.
The first swordsman who had fought St Vier, a man named Lynch, had
died at around ten that morning, so there was no asking him whether
Karleigh had hired him for the duel, although the duke's abrupt departure
upon Lynch's defeat seemed to confirm that he had. St Vier had disappeared
back into Riverside, but whoever had hired him was expected to step
forward momentarily to claim the stylish and elegant victory over
Karleigh. So far, no one had.

Excerpted from Swordspoint by Ellen Kushner Copyright © 1987
by Ellen Kushner . Excerpted by permission of Spectra, a division
of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt
may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from
the publisher.
This
exept was taken from randomhouse.com