The inside of Caldwell House was about as pleasant a place as Hadrian could have hoped for. Overhead ran heavy beams of rough-cut wood from which a wagon-wheel chandelier hung. The place was brimming with pewter mugs, fishing rods, forgotten coats, burlap bags, garlic sprigs, and the occasional spider web. Someone had carved the initials W. A. in the center post. More initials, words, and other scars marred the six round tables and the elbowed bar, behind which rested a rack of three barrels, one marked BEER, another ALE, and the last WHISKEY. On a chalkboard was written the words: FISH ARE GOOD, BUT GILL’S THE BEST.
Nine patrons occupied the main room. The three men from the porch were now at the bar; four others sat at a table in the center, and two more stood to the rear, holding tankards. One waved at Scarlett, who smiled. “Hey, Brett, when’d you get back?”
“This morning,” Brett replied. He was one of those standing, talking to a fellow across from him who was leaning with his back to the initialed post, one foot bent up and resting on it.
Scarlett trotted across the floor and gave the man a hug—a polite, friendly sort. No kiss preceded or followed. Brett had the typical black hair and dark eyes of Maranon men, so he wasn’t her brother. But he didn’t appear to be a husband or lover, either. That was good. Hadrian recognized the four men at the table as Bull Neck and company. That was bad. They sat hunched over drinks, elbows on the table, their heads close. Luckily none looked at him, and he tried not to stare at them, either. Like an abandoned boat, Hadrian continued to drift toward the bar, where a man with a short beard and rolled-up sleeves wiped his hands on a towel. He didn’t seem to notice Hadrian, either, as he, and almost everyone else, was looking at Scarlett.
“Have a drink with us,” she cooed to Brett.
The not-her-brother shook his head. “Got a wagon to unpack, honey.”
A playful push and pout followed. “What about you, Larmand?” she asked the one holding up the post.
“Sorry, Dodge, Brett needs muscle.” He held up a bent arm, flexing.
“What does that have to do with you?” Her comment brought a communal oooh from some of the others. “Suit yourself.”
She swept back to Hadrian’s side and faced the bartender. Putting a hand on Hadrian’s shoulder, she said, “Wag, this man is buying two ryes and a pair with foam.”
“That so?” the bartender asked.
“Sure,” Hadrian replied. “Why not.”
“Gill!” the man with the towel shouted, and a boy came out from an archway. “Fetch Scarlett a bottle from the cellar.”
Hadrian pointed at the barrel marked WHISKEY, puzzled.
“I assumed you weren’t a cheap bastard,” Scarlett said as Gill went down the steps to their left and used a key hanging around his neck to enter a small door. “Wag knows what I like.”
While Gill fetched the bottle, the bartender used one hand to hold two pewter mugs beneath the barrel spigot marked BEER. “Wagner Drayton,” he said, extending his hand while still holding the beers in the other.
“Hadrian Blackwater.” He shook and received the drinks as a reward.
Only a truly forgiving or desperate woman would consider Wagner a handsome man. His face suffered from numerous pockmarks and deep wrinkles. The latter cut across his brow and added unnecessary dimension to his cheeks. The beard was likely an effort to cover his face. He kept it short, but it, too, was unsightly, as it grew in patches. He was smiling.
Well, that’s something.
Scarlett pulled over a pair of high-backed wooden stools. “Have pity on your paws.” She clapped the face of a seat and hopped up on her own, kicking her heels up onto the footrest that ran around the base of the bar.
Hadrian pulled off his spadone, propping it next to him. He sat down and picked up the mug before him.
“To a fine meeting.” Scarlett rammed his mug hard enough to send foam over the edge.
The beer was good—warm, rich, and far from flat.
“So what do you do here, Scarlett?” Hadrian asked, hoping to learn more about this woman who freely hugged men, dressed like a patchwork princess, and demanded only the best whiskey.
“I told you, I entertain.”
“Give him a taste,” Wagner said, picking up three shot glasses, which he tossed at her.
Scarlett caught each with practiced ease and began juggling, sending them higher and higher. She stood up, moved to an open space, and began catching them behind her back. Continuing their rotation, she rested each on her forehead momentarily, and then, without Hadrian seeing it happen, there were only two glasses—then just one. She walked back to her seat, the final glass vanishing into thin air.
“Impressive.” He applauded.
“Thank you.” She bowed before hopping back on her chair.
Gill returned with a dark, corked bottle, plucking straw off it as he came. The boy handed it to Wagner.
“Glasses, darling.” The bartender smiled at Scarlett, who reached up toward Hadrian’s head and pulled a shot glass from behind his ear. She placed it on the bar while reaching up for another. By the time she produced the third glass, Wagner had poured two shots of amber liquid.
“Some of the best rye whiskey in Maranon,” Wagner said, re-corking the bottle.
Scarlett lifted hers and smelled it. Her eyes closed as a dreamy look took her and an alluring smile spread across her lips. “I love this stuff.”
“That’s why I have to keep it locked in the cellar.” Wagner pointed at her and tapped his nose at the same time.
“What will we drink to this time?” she asked.
“To whiskey-loving women who juggle,” Hadrian supplied.
She grinned, and they clicked glasses more gingerly this time. She took the whole shot in one swallow.
Hadrian did the same. “I have to admit, I wasn’t expecting such a welcome reception after my friend and I interrupted things.”
“Where’s your friend?”
“He’ll be along. Sent me ahead to get a room. Which reminds me. Wagner?”
“Yes, sir?” The bartender popped a bright smile on his ugly lips.
“Could I get a room with two beds and a stall for my horse?”
“Absolutely. Horse out front, is it?”
“Yep.”
“Gill!” Wagner yelled. The boy was there in a flash, and Hadrian was starting to see why Gill was the best. “Take care of the man’s horse.”
“So tell me, are my partner and I the only new people in town? Anyone else visiting?” Hadrian asked Wagner.
“Been slow,” Wagner replied. “Why? You expecting to meet up with someone?”
“Me? No. Just making conversation is all. And now that I think about it, what’s the deal with Pastor Payne? What’d he do to deserve a tarring?”
Wagner shook his head. “Nothing. It’s not him; it’s what he’s trying to sell. We don’t need the Nyphron Church in these parts.”
Scarlett switched to a polite smile as she crossed her legs. “Dulgath has an old tradition that dates back to imperial days. The church hasn’t bothered with us until now. Brecken Moor is where the Monks of Maribor were founded.”
“Wait.” Hadrian stopped her, confused. The whiskey had hit harder than he expected. “I thought this was Brecken Dale.”
“It is,” Wagner said, then pointed across the bar, as if Hadrian could tell what direction that was. He couldn’t; the rush of the drinks on an empty stomach, combined with the twists and turns of the village roads, had left him baffled. “Brecken Moor is the old monastery up on the hill, just outside town.”
“Oh yeah, Payne mentioned something about a monastery, didn’t speak too highly of it.”
“Up north, the two sects tolerate each other, but down here…” Scarlett shook her head. “Like Wag said, we aren’t buying what they’re selling.”