He gave her a strange smile, then headed topside.
A skittering sound from one corner, and Telorast and Curdle scampered into view, bony feet clattering on the wooden floor.
'He is dangerous, Not-Apsalar! Stay away, oh, you've spent too long with him!'
'Don't worry about me, Telorast.'
'Worry? Oh, we have worries, all right, don't we, Curdle?'
'Endless worries, Telorast. What am I saying? We're not worried.'
Apsalar said, 'The Master of the Deck knows all about you two, no doubt compounding those worries.'
'But he told you nothing!'
'Are you so certain of that?'
'Of course!' The bird-like skeleton bobbed and weaved in front of its companion. 'Think on it, Curdle! If she knew she'd step on us! Wouldn' t she?'
'Unless she has a more devious betrayal in mind, Telorast! Have you thought of that? No, you haven't, have you? I have to do all the thinking.'
'You never think! You never have!'
Apsalar rose. 'They've dropped the gangplank. Time to leave.'
'Hide us under your cloak. You have to. There are dogs out there, in the streets!'
She sheathed the knife. 'All right, but no squirming.'
****
A squalid port, four of the six piers battered into treacherous hulks by Nok's fleet a month earlier, Kansu was in no way memorable, and Apsalar was relieved as they rode past the last sprawl of shanties on the inland road and saw before them a scattering of modest stone buildings, marking the herders, the pens and the demon-eyed goats gathered beneath guldindha trees. And beyond that, tharok orchards with their silvery, thread-like bark prized for rope-making, the uneven rows looking ghostly with their boles shimmering in the wind.
There had been something odd in the city behind them, the crowds smaller than was normal, the voices more muted. A number of merchant shops had been shut, and this during peak market time. The modest garrison of Malazan soldiers was present only at the gates and down at the docks, where at least four trader ships had been denied berths.
And no-one seemed inclined to offer explanations to outsiders.
Paran had spoken quietly with the horse trader and Apsalar had watched as more coin than was necessary changed hands, but the ex-captain had said nothing during their ride out.
Reaching a crossroads, they drew rein.
'Paran,' Apsalar said, 'did you note anything strange about Kansu?'