
The hidden way ended in a cellar accessible both from the kitchen and an alley. Gathrid checked each and found it innocent.

Once the vagrant guaranteed his unnoted escape, he took the failure of his agents philosophically. In Torun he was as powerful as any prince. The vagrant reported to an underworld chieftain whose name, Suftko, Gathrid had heard in faraway Kacalief. An arrow burred behind Gathrid's head and thunked into the inn wall. Gathrid raced down the alley, into a side street, then round front, where he found another arsonist at work. Gathrid narrowly avoided betraying himself. He crossed the trail of a vagrant who gave himself away by moving with too much speed and suspicion. The Swordbearer didn't respond to the sleep spell." Mulenex? Nieroda? Ahlert? Hildreth, trying to frame Mulenex? Or some local entrepreneur trying to obtain Daubendiek for his own use? Torun had an underworld replete with famous names. There had to be a way to trace the principal. He grabbed a nearby keg, knocked its bung out, started splashing liquid around. He kept glancing around and muttering to himself as he stole to the cellar door. A moment later a rope dropped and the watcher clambered down. Very thorough.Ī dog with an odd bark spoke from the far side of the inn. Bowmen to prevent escapes through the windows. “There was no sense of ‘privilege’ that you sometimes/often find from people in the media.So. O’Brien says one of his colleagues at the conference commented “I love their work ethic.”Īnd Toni and Ryan’s refreshingly down-to-earth attitude didn’t go unnoticed. Ryan spoke about the time it takes, but always responding to the comments from listeners.

‘Do you think we should do the Spotify deal?’ they asked them.” “In particular, I loved how they spoke about their affection for their audience. “I was a wonderful story of a couple of young people from radio backgrounds who fell ‘accidentally’ into podcasting, and who are now working full time on a podcast that’s been picked up by Spotify.” O’Brien also thoroughly enjoyed the presentation from podcasting duo Toni Lodge and Ryan Jon. “There is still a lot to learn from the middle ground lessons of 100 years of radio craft.” “I think there is likely too much of a gap between the high-end ‘art’ podcasts, and the more informal ‘two blokes around a kitchen table’ style of podcast.
