Masquerades - Kate Novak [49]
Timmy climbed up into the kitchen. There was a low glow from the fireplace, and the thief let his eyes adjust to the dark. Two young children, scullery help, were curled in front of the fire, in an exhausted sleep. As he made his way out of the servant quarters, Timmy's boots squelched along the passageway, leaving filthy tracks on the carpets. The midden man wasted no time finding the young debutante's room and her jewelry box. The necklace, a diamond-and-ruby chain, was concealed rather amateurishly in the box's lining. There was an inscription on the clasp, but Timmy could not read, which he realized was probably his best qualification for being hired to steal the necklace.
Timmy tossed the chain into a sack, then dumped the remaining contents of the jewelry box in with it. He slipped into the master's bedroom and added the contents of the debutante's mother's jewelry box to his sack. Timmy did not bother searching for any other treasure. "Portable property only" was his motto. The bounty on the necklace and his earnings for this job, even with the fence's cut and the tax to the Night Masters, were sufficient to keep him in comfort for weeks.
Timmy headed back for the kitchen. His teacher had gotten nicked once when he bumped into the house's owners coming in the front door. "You won't meet the owner in the midden," was another of Timmy's mottoes.
Timmy snitched a peach from the kitchen larder, wolfed it down, and left the pit on the kitchen table before he slid back into the refuse pit. He peered out of the tunnel. Slick Jack, his lookout, was not standing by the hole, which was odd. Night Masks did not abandon their posts. Timmy popped his head out of the tunnel,
like a turtle from his shell, and looked around. He spotted Slick Jack across the alley, resting comfortably, unconscious, his wrists and ankles tethered with leather thongs.
Timmy the Ghast tried to back into the warm, moist darkness of the midden, but his retreat was too late. Clawed fingers grabbed him by the shoulders and pulled him from the tunnel. The thief found himself nose to muzzle with a snarling monster with a lizard's hide and the glowing red eyes of a fiend, or so he told his mates later.
The monster, unprepared for Timmy's overripe odor (freshened by his latest foray), began gasping and gagging and dropped the culprit.
The break-in artist didn't hesitate, but hit the ground running. Unfortunately, he got all of three steps before someone else tripped him with a scabbard between his legs. As he tried to get his feet beneath him again, a hand grabbed him by the collar and slammed him into the wall of the house.
"Phew! This one reeks!" his captor cried. She was a muscular woman with red hair and a blue tattoo along her right arm. Her companion, the lizard monster, snarled something, and she replied, "Hang on, let's do a little cleaning up before we wake the house."
When the watch arrived, summoned by one of the scullery maids, they found Slick Jack tied up in the alley and Timmy the Ghast naked in a rain barrel, muttering about the unfairness of being not only nicked, but forced to wash as well.
*****
Bandilegs collected the loot while Sal and Jojo held their dagger tips steady at their prey's throats. It was a moxie pinch, smooth and easy. The swells, foreign traders from Turmish, had obviously assumed from Westgate's size and prosperity that it was an outpost of civilization where they would be immune from attack. They'd been strolling the streets with their airs and their purses and their rings and
had been shocked by the three youths who'd popped out of an alleyway and demanded at dagger-point that they hand over their valuables.
Bandilegs ran back down the alley with the purses and what rings could easily be pried from nervous fingers. Even with the cut for the Night Masters, there would be plenty for everyone.