The Last Ring-bearer - Kirill Yeskov [117]
The leper stepped on the top stair and took a purple handkerchief out of his sleeve. Immediately a bunch of idle men surrounding a street performer who was juggling three daggers about twenty yards away split up – two headed left and right, cutting off the robed man's escape routes, while the other two and the juggler himself, snatching the flying blades out of the air, went straight for the prey. It became clear that the man had miscalculated – he started his descent while the gondola was too far away, about fifteen yards from the shore. He might still have made it to the safety of the boat if not for the cowardice of the man in the scarlet cape: when he saw the three armed pursuers, he panicked, and the gondolier, obeying his frantic gestures, began pulling away, abandoning his partner. The man in the robe ran down to the last step and halted – there was no escape or help coming. A couple of seconds later the 'idlers' caught up with him; two pinned his arms behind his back while the 'juggler' hit him in the liver, followed up with a chop to the neck on the rebound. It was over, the prey bagged.
However, when they dragged the 'leper' up to the embankment, an enraged crowd gathered instantly: the locals were unused to sick people being treated that way. Two Hakimians in yellow pilgrims' caps who happened to be nearby intervened for 'the man of God,' and the scandal began swiftly developing into a scuffle. Marandil's men were fiercely pushing their way towards the scene through the thickening throng, and a police whistle was already trilling unnervingly somewhere close. Meanwhile, the man in the scarlet cape came ashore three stairways from the fray, let the gondola go and left unhurriedly; it was clear that the false leper's fate was not of much concern to him.
"What do you think of the performance, dear Jacuzzi?"
"Excellent. Truly, the theater had lost a great director in Tangorn."
The Vice-Director of Operations' facial expression did not seem to change, but Almandin had known his subordinate for years and could tell that the terrible tension that had gripped him for the last ten minutes was gone, and a hint of a triumphant smile was beginning to form in the corners of his mouth. Well, this was his victory, too…
Jacuzzi called on a passing waiter: "A bottle of Núrnen, my friend!"
"Aren't you afraid of spooking our luck?"
"Not at all. It's all over, and Marandil is as good as ours."
Waiting for the wine, they watched the proceedings with interest. The fight ended abruptly, although the noise increased, and an empty space cleared in the middle; the robed man was lying there, trying in vain to get up. Meanwhile, the 'idlers' and the 'juggler' had suddenly lost all interest in their victim: not only did they let him go, but they were trying to melt into the crowd; one of them was looking at his palms with abject horror on his face.
"See, chief, they've finally figured out that the leper is a real one. This is definitely not a case of 'better late than never…' While apprehending him they must've squashed a dozen boils on his hands and got smeared in pus, so all three are dead men now. Can't blame their emotional reaction; to learn that you've got less than three months to live (if you can call it life) must be quite, quite disconcerting."
"The leper must have profited by all this, I suppose?"
"That's for sure! I think that each blow must've netted him at least a silver castamir: Tangorn is not one of those idiots who try to save on small details. What do they call it in the North: creaming crap, yes?"
When the golden Núrnen bubbled in their goblets like a mountain brook, Jacuzzi asked impudently (today he had the right): "Who's paying?" Almandin nodded, turned over the napkins, compared their notes, and acknowledged honestly: "My treat." His napkin bore a single word: gondolier, while the Vice-Director of Operations' inscription