"Fine. I'll be along soon enough. Take Paolo and Cosetta off to Gwillem and let them sit on the quarterdeck. Nowhere near the rails, mind." "Aye."
"And tell Gwillem that if he tries to give them unwatered beer again I'll cut his heart out and piss in the hole." "I'll quote that in full, Captain."
"Off with the lot of you. If you give Ezri and Gwillem any trouble, loves, Mummy will not be pleased."
Lieutenant Delmastro withdrew from the cabin, taking the two children and closing the door behind her. Locke wondered how to approach this meeting. He knew next to nothing about Drakasha; no weak spots to exploit, no prejudices to twist. Coming clean about the various layers of deception he was working under would probably be a mistake. Best to act fully as Ravelle, for the time being.
Captain Drakasha picked up her sheathed sabres and turned her full regard upon Locke for the first time. He decided to speak first, in a friendly fashion: "Your children?"
"How little escapes the penetrating insight of the veteran intelligence officer." She slid one of her sabres out of its scabbard with a soft metallic hiss and gestured toward Locke with it. "Sit."
Locke complied. The only other chair in the cabin was next to the table, so he settled into it and folded his manacled hands in his lap. Zamira eased herself into her own chair, facing him, and set the drawn sabre across her knees.
"Where I come from," she said, "we have a custom concerning questions asked over a naked blade." She had a distinct, harmonious accent, one that Locke couldn't place. "Are you familiar with it?" "No," said Locke, "but I think the meaning is clear." "Good. Something is wrong with your story."
"Nearly everything is wrong with my story, Captain Drakasha. I had a ship and a crew and a pile of money. Now I find myself hugging a sack of potatoes in a bilge hold that smells like the bottom of an unwashed ale-cup."
"Don't hope for a lasting relationship with the potatoes. I just wanted you out of the way while I spoke to some of the Messenger's crewmen." "Ah. And how is my crew?" "We both know they're not your crew, Ravelle." "How is the crew, then?"
"Tolerably well, little thanks to you. They lost the nerve for a fight as soon as they saw our numbers. Most of them seemed downright eager to surrender, so we took the Messenger with nothing more than a few bruises and some hurt feelings." "Thank you for that."
"We weren't kind for your sake, Ravelle. In fact, you're damned fortunate we were even nearby. I like to cruise the wake of the summer's-end storms. They tend to spit out juicy morsels in no condition to refuse our hospitality." Drakasha reached down into Locke's chest, shuffled the contents and withdrew a small packet of papers. "Now," she said, "I want to know who Leocanto Kosta and Jerome de Ferra are."
"Cover identities," said Locke. "False faces we used for our work back in Tal Verrar." "In the Archon's service?" "Yes."."Nearly everything in here is signed "Kosta". Small letters of credit and reference… work order for some chairs… receipt for clothing in storage. The only document with the name Ravelle on it is this commission as a Verrari sea officer. Should I be calling you Orrin or Leocanto? Which one's the false face?" *You might as well just call me Ravelle," said Locke. "I" ve been on the officer's list under that name for years. It's how I drew my pay" "Are you Verrari-born?" "Mainland. A village called Vo Sarmara." "What did you do before you served the Archon?" "I was what you" d call a patient man." "Is that a profession now?"
"I mean a master of scales and balances, for a merchant syndicate. I was the patient man because I did the weighting, you see?" "Droll. A syndicate in Tal Verrar?" "Yes." "So you surely worked for the Priori."
"That was part of the, ah, original incentive for Stragos's people to bring me into their fold. After my usefulness as an agent in the syndicate hit a wall, I was given new duties."
"Hmm. I spoke at length with Jabril. Long enough to have no trouble believing that your naval commission really is a fake. Do you have any experience under arms?" "No formal military training, if that's what you mean."
"Curious," said Drakasha, "that you had the authority to lay claim to a ship of war, even a small one."
"When we move slowly enough to avoid upsetting anyone, captains of intelligence have excessive powers of requisition. Or at least we did. I suspect my remaining peers will be shackled with a bit of unwanted oversight because of what I" ve done."
"Tragic. Still… it's curious again that when you were at my feet you had to ask my name. I'd have thought that my identity would be obvious to anyone in Stragos's service. How long were you with him?" "Five years."
"So you came after the Free Armada was lost. Nonetheless, as a Verrari—"
"I had a vague description of you," said Locke. "Little more than your name and the name of your ship. I can assure you, had the Archon ever thought to have your portrait painted for our benefit, no man in his service would stay ignorant of your looks."
"Excellent form. But you would do well to consider me dead to flattery." "That's a pity. I'm so good at it."
"A third curious thing occurs to me: you looked genuinely surprised to see my children aboard."
"It's, ah, merely that I found it strange you" d have them with you. Out here at sea. Company to the hazards of… all this."
"Where else might I be expected to keep an eye on them?" Zamira fingered the hilt of her drawn sabre. "Paolo" s four. Cosetta's three. Is your intelligence really so out of date that you didn't know about them?"
"Look, my job was in-city operations against the Priori and other dissenters. I didn't pay much attention to naval affairs beyond drawing my official salary."
"There's a bounty of five thousand solari on my head. Mine, and every other captain that survived the War for Recognition. I know that accurate descriptions of myself and my family were circulated in Tal Verrar last year -1 got my hands on some of the leaflets. Do you expect me to believe that someone in your position could be this ignorant?"
"I hate to sting your feelings, Captain Drakasha, but I told you: I was a landsman—" "Are."
"… am and was, and my eyes were on the city. I had little enough time to study the basics of survival when I started getting ready to steal the Messenger."
"Why do that, though? Why steal a ship and go to sea? Something completely outside your confessed experience? If you had your eyes on the land and the city, why didn't you do something involving the land or the city?"
Locke licked his lips, which had become uncomfortably dry. He" d pounded a dossier of background information on Orrin Ravelle into his head, but the character had never been designed for an interrogation from this perspective. "It might sound odd," said Locke, "but it was the best I could do. As it turned out, my fake commission as a sea-officer gave me the most leverage to hurt the Archon. Stealing a ship was a grander gesture than stealing, say, a carriage." "And what did Stragos do to earn this grand gesture}" "I" ve sworn an oath never to speak of the matter." "Convenient." "Just the opposite," said Locke, "as I wish I could put you at ease."
"At ease? How could anything you" ve told me put me at ease? You lie, and add flourishes to old lies, and refuse to discuss your motives for embarking on an insane venture. If you won't give me answers, I have to presume that you're a danger to this vessel, and that I risk offending Maxilan Stragos by taking you in. I can't afford the consequences. I think it's time to put you back where I found you." "The hold?" "The open sea."
"Ah." Locke frowned, then bit the inside of his right cheek to contain a laugh. "Ah, Captain Drakasha, that was very well done. Amateurish, but creative. Someone without my history might have fallen for it."
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