Chapter Seven ONCE DEYU AND I left the office, there was one more thing I wanted to do in town before we returned home: pay a visit to the new office of the Tamer Collective to see if I could catch Minke Kluysters, because I wasn’t sure where he stayed. While we got on the train to the newer part of town where the office was, I asked Deyu what she thought about the Council’s town renewal project. Through her security work, she was always much better connected with the local people on the ground. “I heard some rumours about it,” she said. “Many of the keihu people don’t expect it to go through. It’s not like the Barresh Council has a good track record with these types of projects.” That was true. Over the years that I had been in Barresh, they had announced several grandiose projects th