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Now reading: Chapter 124: The Scrivener’s Third Name from Crownless Tyrant, a Fantasy novel by Struct.

The Sovereign Record bird struck the windowsill at the seventh hour, the way Alistair had counted on it doing.

He had waited two days for it. The Record’s continental coverage ran on a schedule, and the dispatches that carried the Oasis of Grain reached Verissan at the seventh hour of every third day, so he had been at the window before the light turned, watching the courtyard.

At the sa ti, the innkeeper made her morning round below.

He took the parchnt off the sill before she finished sweeping.

Then he sat at the table and read.

The continental section ran longer today than it had the morning he left, and all of Sun Harvest’s three lines were good ones.

The Record reported that the faction had registered Frunt’s alliance with the Echelon clerk in Therasia’s arbitration office, and that the clerk had accepted it without challenge.

It reported no military activity on the Oasis periter across the preceding ten days.

It reported that the Sovereign Debt contracts in three more Therasian settlents had unraveled, quietly, with nothing breaking in the streets.

Below that, set off in a smaller column of its own, was a piece written by Due.

It was not signed Due, since Due never put his na on anything that went into the Record.

It carried instead the small geotric mark he used for letters ant to be read by people who knew his hand and missed by people who did not.

Seeing this, Alistair already knew the rest would be honest in the way only Due managed to be honest in print.

The first paragraph reported two probes against the territory edge in the past week, ten n to a group, no faction marking on any of them.

Both had withdrawn after light contact, and neither had co back. Frunt had not been touched.

The second reported that the periter watch had been tightened by agreent on both sides.

Tavin had doubled his patrols, and Sera had walked the line herself three nights running, which Due set down in the dry tone he used when he wanted to tell Alistair sothing reassuring and faintly mortifying at once.

The third made Alistair smile.

Tavin and Sera had argued about how much of the probe report should have reached Due, and the argunt had run in the front room of Frunt’s house with Sera doing the talking and Tavin doing the listening, right up until Sera won it by saying nothing at all for a quarter of an hour.

Due reported the silence like a man who had watched the whole thing from the chair across the table and enjoyed every minute of it.

Alistair read the column twice more, then folded it carefully.

He did not let himself linger on Sera, because if he lingered on Sera he would land on what she had said to him at the threshold of the base, and underneath that lay a great deal he had no room for today.

There was a line under the third paragraph, written in a tighter hand than the rest.

Sothing is gathering around us while you are away. I do not know its shape yet. Give three weeks and I will.

Alistair set the parchnt flat and laid both hands on the wood.

’Three weeks,’ he thought. ’He never asks for ti unless he already slls the thing on its way.’

He turned the page over. The Record prints its lesser items on the reverse, the ones too small to earn a column, and most of them were nothing.

Two concerned the Sunborne and their border movents, still uncharacterized.

One was a mariti trade dispute on the southern coast, which Alistair did not care about. One was a Caelmari council vote, postponed again.

The last line on the page stopped him cold.

The Scrivener will be in Verissan within the month.

Alistair went very still, his brows furrowing as he read it a second ti to be sure the letters had not rearranged themselves.

The Scrivener was Mira Solenne.

The Upholders kept her for warrants, though she did not issue them the way the lesser Upholders did, with seal and ceremony and a hearing a man could at least walk into.

Her warrants go into a register nobody sees, and the nas written in that register are dead before the month turns.

That was not rumor. Alistair had read the pattern himself across half a year of dispatches.

She had been on the road three weeks. Earlier reports placed her in the south, resolving three nas whose faces Alistair had studied in the Record over the preceding months.

Two of those nas were dead now, and the third had not been confird either way.

Now the Scrivener was coming here.

Alistair sat with that for a long while, the cold settling into him without any hurry. He thought of the Auber salon and the lamps burning in every window of it.

He thought of the small, careful smile Crane had given him over the body of the dead father. Above all he thought of Aldous Blackwood, seated sowhere inside Sovereign Record distance, weighing what to permit and for how long.

Then a colder idea arrived, and Alistair was honestly unsettled by it.

He had been telling himself that Aldous let him walk Verissan only because a watched fugitive was worth more than a buried one.

However, if that was the rule the man lived by, then it did not belong to him alone, and it never had.

’The third na,’ he thought. ’If she has not crossed it out, it is because it is still worth sothing to him. The sa as I am.’

He carried the parchnt to the lamp and held it in the fla until it curled and went, then stirred the ash down into the oil until even the ash was gone.

A knock ca at the door before he had his coat on.

"Mister Marrow?" The keeper’s voice, careful, a little too careful for the hour. "There’s a sll of burning up here."

"A bad letter," Alistair said through the door, keeping his tone level. "Bad enough I wanted no copy of it left lying about. You understand how that goes."

She was quiet a mont, then answered. "Folk who burn their letters tend to be folk that other folk co asking after, Mister Marrow. I only ntion it so you know how this house runs its business."

Hearing that, Alistair opened the door and put a coin in her hand along with a thin smile. "Then tell whoever does the asking that the gentleman in the corner room is dull as cold porridge and twice as quiet. And could the kitchen manage lunch a little early today?"

The keeper took the coin, studied him a breath longer than was comfortable, then nodded once and went back down the stairs.

Alistair shut the door and leaned his weight against it.

He had two days until the salon, and a warrant operative closing on the city carrying a na she had not yet finished.

He needed to learn whose na it was, and he needed to learn it before Mira Solenne reached the gate.

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