โKย az propped his bad leg on a low stool and listened as Anika gave her report on the earnings at the Crow Club and the status of tourist traffic on East Stave. In the three weeks since Kuweiโs auction and the plague panic, Kaz had taken over Per Haskellโs office on the ground floor of the Slat. He still slept on the top floor, but it was easier to do business from Haskellโs lair. He didnโt miss the extra trips up and down the stairs, and his old office felt empty now. Whenever he sat down to try to get some work done, heโd find his eyes straying to the window ledge.โ
The city still hadnโt returned to normal, but that had created some interesting opportunities. Prices on the Staves had dropped as people prepared for a long plague outbreak, and Kaz was quick to take advantage. He bought the building next to the Crow Club so that they could expand, and he even managed to acquire a small property on the Lid. When the panic was over and tourism resumed, Kaz was looking forward to fleecing a far higher class of pigeon. Heโd also bought out Per Haskellโs shares in the Crow Club for a reasonable price. He could have had them for nothing, given the trouble in the Barrel, but he didnโt want anyone feeling too sorry for the old man.
When Pekka Rollins returned to the city, Kaz would find a way to cut him out of the business. The last thing he wanted was for the proceeds of his hard work to go into Rollinsโ coffers.
Once Anika finished her recital, Pim gave the details heโd gathered on Van Eckโs trial. The mysterious Johannus Rietveld had not been found, but once Van Eckโs accounts had been laid bare, it had quickly become
clear heโd been using the information heโd learned on the Merchant Council to buy upย jurdaย farms. Beyond swindling his friends, tampering with an auction, and kidnapping his own son, there were even suggestions that heโd hired a team to break into a Fjerdan government building and possibly sabotage his own sugar silos. Van Eck was not out on bail. In fact, it didnโt look like heโd be out of jail anytime soon. Though his son had provided a small fund for his legal representation, it could be described as moderate at best.
Wylan had chosen to use a portion of his newfound wealth to restore his home. Heโd given Jesper a small allowance to speculate in the markets, and heโd brought his mother home as well. People in the Geldstraat were shocked to see Marya Hendriks sitting in the park with her son or being rowed down the canal by one of their servants. Sometimes they could be glimpsed from the water, standing before their easels in the Van Eck garden.
Alys had stayed with them for a time, but eventually she and her terrier had chosen to escape the city and its gossip. She would finish her confinement in the Hendriks lake house, and was said to be making dubious progress in her singing lessons. Kaz was just glad he didnโt live next door.
โThatโs good work,โ Kaz said when Pim had finished. He hadnโt thought Pim had much talent for gathering intelligence.
โRoeder put together the report,โ Pim said. โThink heโs gunning for a place as your new spider.โ
โI donโt need a new spider,โ said Kaz.
Pim shrugged. โWraithโs been scarce. People talk.โ
Kaz dismissed Anika and Pim and sat for a long moment in the quiet office. Heโd barely slept in the past few weeks. Heโd been waiting nearly half his life for this moment to become a reality, and he was afraid that if he let himself sleep, it might all vanish. Pekka Rollins had fled the city and hadnโt returned. Word was heโd holed up with his son in a country house surrounded by armed men at all times. Between the quarantines at the Emerald Palace, the Kaelish Prince, and the Sweet Shop, and the fact that he wasnโt around to put things to rights, Pekka Rollinsโ businesses were on the brink of collapse. There was even talk of mutiny within the Dime Lions. Their boss was gone, and the deal heโd made with Van Eck had made them look no better than a rich manโs henchmen. They might as well beย stadwatchย .
Brick by brick.ย Eventually, Rollins would dig himself out of the rubble. Kaz would have to be ready.
A knock sounded at the door. The one problem with being on the ground floor was that people were a lot more likely to bother you.
โLetter came,โ Anika said, and tossed it on his desk. โLooks like youโre keeping fast company, Brekker,โ she said with a sly smile.
Kaz let his glance at the door do the talking. He wasnโt interested in watching Anika bat her yellow lashes.
โRight,โ she said, and vanished, closing the door behind her.
Kaz held the letter up to the light. The seal was pale blue wax, marked with a golden double eagle. He slit open the envelope, read the letterโs contents, and burned both. Then he wrote a note of his own and sealed it in black wax.
Kaz knew Inej had been staying at Wylanโs house. Occasionally, heโd find a scrawled note on his deskโsome bit of information about Pekka or the doings at the Stadhallโand heโd know sheโd been here in his office. He slipped on his coat, took up his hat and cane, and tucked the paper into his pocket. He could have sent a messenger, but he wanted to deliver this note himself.
Kaz strode past Anika and Pim on the way out of the Slat. โIโll be back in an hour,โ he said, โand I better not still see you podges wasting your time here.โ
โHardly anyone at the club,โ said Pim. โTourists are too scared of the plague.โ
โGo to the rooming houses where all the frightened pigeons are waiting out the panic. Show them youโre in the pink of health. Make sure they know you just had a fine time playing Three Man Bramble at the Crow Club. If that doesnโt work, get your asses to the harbors and drum up some pigeons from the workers on the boats.โ
โI just came off a shift,โ protested Pim.
Kaz settled his hat on his head and ran a thumb over the brim. โDidnโt ask.โ
He cut east through the city. He was tempted to take a detour, just to see for himself how things were proceeding on West Stave. Between the Shu attack and the plague outbreak, the pleasure houses were practically deserted. Several streets had been barricaded to enforce the quarantine surrounding the Sweet Shop and the Menagerie. Rumor had it Heleen
Van Houden wasnโt going to make her rent that month. A pity.
There were no browboats operating, so he had to make the journey up to the financial district on foot. As he wended his way along a small, deserted canal, he saw a thick mist rising off the water. Only a few steps later, it was so dense he could barely see. The mist clung to his coat, wet and heavy, thoroughly out of place on a warm spring day. Kaz paused on the low bridge that spanned the canal, waiting, cane at the ready. A moment later, three hooded figures emerged to his left. Three more appeared to his right, their blue cloaks moving sinuously through the air, though there was no breeze. That much Kaz had gotten right, but their masks werenโt made of mist. Instead, the real Council of Tidesโor a very convincing set of pretendersโwore something that gave the impression of looking into a starry night sky. Nice effect.
โKaz Brekker,โ said the lead Tidemaker. โWhere is Kuwei Yul-Bo?โ โDead and gone. Burnt to ashes on the Reaperโs Barge.โ
โWhere is theย realย Kuwei Yul-Bo?โ
Kaz shrugged. โA church full of people saw him get shot. A medik pronounced him dead. Beyond that, I canโt help you.โ
โYou do not want the Council of Tides as an enemy, young man. None of your shipments will ever leave port again. We will flood Fifth Harbor.โ
โBy all means, do. I donโt own shares in Fifth Harbor anymore. You want to stop my shipments, youโll have to stop every boat coming in and out of the harbor. Iโm not a merch. I donโt charter ships and register trade manifests. Iโm a thief and a smuggler. Try to catch hold of me and youโll find youโre trying to hold air.โ
โDo you know how easy it is to drown?โ asked the Tidemaker. He lifted a hand. โIt can happen anywhere.โ
Suddenly Kaz felt his lungs filling with water. He coughed, spat seawater, and bent double, gasping.
โTell us what we want to know,โ said the Tidemaker.
Kaz drew a stuttering breath. โI donโt know where Kuwei Yul-Bo is.
You can drown me where I stand and nothing will change that.โ
โThen maybe weโll find your friends and drown them in their beds.โ
Kaz coughed and spat again. โAnd maybe youโll find the obelisk towers under plague quarantine.โ The Tides shifted uneasily, the mists moving with them. โI made those sirens sound. I created this plague, and I control it.โ
โA bluff,โ said the Tidemaker, his sleeve gliding through the mist. โTry me. Iโll spread sickness around every one of your towers. Theyโll
become epicenters of disease. You think the Merchant Council wonโt lock you all down? Demand you finally register your identities? Theyโd probably be happy for the excuse.โ
โThey wouldnโt dare. This country would sink were it not for us.โ โThey wonโt have a choice. The public will clamor for action. Theyโll
burn the towers from the ground up.โ โMonstrous boy.โ
โKetterdam is made of monsters. I just happen to have the longest teeth.โ
โThe secret ofย jurda paremย can never be revealed to the world. No Grisha would ever be safe again. Not here. Not anywhere.โ
โThen itโs lucky for you it died with that poor Shu kid.โ
โWe wonโt forget this, Kaz Brekker. One day youโll regret your insolence.โ
โTell you what,โ said Kaz. โWhen that day comes, mark it on your calendars. I can think of a lot of people whoโll want to throw a party.โ
The figures seemed to blur, and when the mists finally thinned, Kaz saw no trace of the Tides.
He shook his head and set off down the canal. That was the wonderful thing about Ketterdam. It never let you get bored. No doubt the Tides would want something from him in the future, and heโd be obliged to give it to them.
But for now, he had unfinished business.