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Mistworld (Deathstalker Prelude)

Page 18

by Simon R. Green


  And so she had holstered her gun and sheathed her sword, and used her position in the city Watch to go after Vertue, using the law and all its slow-moving processes. It wasn’t easy. As far as the law was concerned, Dr. Leon Vertue was a hard-working and honest citizen. Everyone in Mistport knew what he was and what he did, but there was no proof. Vertue saw to that. Those who enquired too deeply into his business had a habit of disappearing. But Topaz didn’t give up easily. She fought on, step by step, working her way closer to Vertue and all his hidden dirty secrets, despite everything legal and illegal he could put in her path.

  And all the time she thought how good it would feel to draw her sword and cut him down, and watch the blood flow from his dying body.

  “Are you listening to me, Investigator?” Topaz jumped as Steel pushed his face close to hers. “Much as I sympathize with the loss of your husband, you can’t spend all your time chasing after Vertue. It’s not as if you had any real evidence against him.”

  “I have enough to satisfy me.”

  “That’s not good enough, and you know it.” Steel moved away and sat on the edge of his desk, which creaked complainingly under his weight. Steel ignored it, his gaze fixed on Topaz. “You haven’t been here long, Investigator. In a place like Mistport, the Watch has to be above suspicion. There’s always going to be a certain amount of graft and kickbacks; that’s what helps keep the city running. But there’s no place in the Watch for personal vendettas. We don’t have many laws here, Investigator, but those we do have are enforced vigorously. They have to be. If they weren’t, we’d fall into barbarism in under a generation, and the Empire would wipe us out. We survive because we’re harder on ourselves than the Empire ever was. It’s not easy being free.

  “That’s why I’m ordering you to leave Vertue alone. If he’s broken the law, the law will punish him. Eventually. In the meantime, I need you here. Mistport’s coming apart at the seams, and with the rest of the Council either dead or missing, I’ve ended up in charge of the whole damn mess. I can’t handle everything, Investigator; I need people around me I can trust. That’s why I went to so much trouble to keep you out of jail after you carved up Taylor and Blackjack. But if you keep going after Vertue, there’s nothing more I can do for you. Vertue may well be as crooked as a corkscrew, but he’s gone to great pains to hide it. He also has friends in high places. Very influential friends, who are presently doing their best to make my life even more difficult than it already is. You step one foot out of line, Investigator, and I’ll have no choice but to cut you off at the knees. So, either you start pulling your weight, or I’ll withdraw my protection and let the wolves have you. Is that clear?”

  “Quite clear, Director. I had already come to the same conclusion myself; Vertue can wait. Acting under my instructions and your authority, the city Watch have sealed off Mistport. Nobody gets in or out until this plague’s under some kind of control. Quarantine is enforceable on pain of death. Surviving victims of the plague are being held in isolation, and Mistport’s medical staff are working round the clock to discover some common link between them. Now please be seated, Director, and kindly lower your voice. I don’t care to be shouted at.”

  Steel scowled, and then reluctantly sank into the chair behind his desk. Outside his office, his staff worked furiously at their posts, struck silent by the thick steelglass windows that made up his cubicle. The plague had been running wild in Mistport for almost a week now, and they were still no nearer identifying it, let alone coming up with a cure. Even so, Steel couldn’t help wondering where he’d found the courage to raise his voice to the Investigator. He was probably feverish from overwork and lack of sleep. He gestured for Topaz to sit opposite him, and she lowered herself gracefully into the stiff-backed visitor’s chair. Steel’s cubicle was designed for function rather than comfort, but from Topaz’s relaxed air she might just as well have been reclining in her favourite padded armchair.

  The Director looked down irritably at his crowded desk. His In and Out trays were swamped under overflowing piles of paper, most of them ostentatiously marked “Urgent.” Steel hadn’t bothered to read half of them. Of late all the news was pretty much the same, and he could only stand so much depression at one time. It was somehow typical that Mistport should undergo its first major catastrophe in years and he’d be the one left in the hot seat. Darkstrom and the Bloodhawk were still wandering round the outlying settlements, Donald Royal had gone haring off on some dubious scheme of his own, and poor Suzanne du Wolfe was dead, one of the first victims of the plague. Steel sighed wearily. It was a sign of how desperate he’d become that he’d started to think he’d even welcome seeing the Bloodhawk again, if he and Darkstrom would just take some of the pressure off his shoulders. Steel came out of his reverie with a start as he realised the Investigator was talking to him.

  “Director, what are the latest casualty reports?”

  Steel punched up the answer on his command monitor, and glared at the result. “Worse than ever. Three hundred and forty-seven dead, and over two thousand brainburned. More cases are being reported every hour. And on top of that, dozens of buildings have been wrecked or burnt out at more than half of the sites where plague victims were found.”

  “We’re under attack.”

  “I had worked that out for myself, Investigator.” Steel turned off the monitor, and stared grimly at the blank screen. “The Empire’s used us often enough before as a testing ground for new weapons, but there’s never been anything like this. The nearest comparison would be the mutant virus they hit us with some twenty years ago, but whatever this plague is, the old vaccines don’t even slow it down.” He leaned back in his chair and rubbed tiredly at his aching eyes. Too much work and too little sleep… “None of it makes any sense, Investigator. The victims are always either dead or brainburned. No immunes, no in-betweeners, no recoveries. The survivors range from autistic to catatonic, but not one of them has enough mind left to respond to a psionic probe. We can’t even discover how they contracted the plague.”

  “The Watch is undertaking preventative measures, Director.”

  “And a hell of a lot of good they’ve done. I’ve agreed to everything from quarantining victims’ families to torching whole streets of houses, and still the bloody plague keeps spreading.”

  Topaz looked at him steadily. “We’re doing everything we can, Director. If you’ve any other ideas, we’ll be happy to implement them.”

  “I don’t know what to do! I’m not even sure exactly what it is we’re dealing with. The only clue we’ve got is that the first cases of the plague appeared soon after the Balefire landed. What’s the latest news on that?”

  “The field technicians are still tearing the ship apart, but so far they’ve come up with nothing.”

  “Great. Just great.”

  “Director, do you remember why you first called me in?”

  “Of course. The port espers reported sensing something strange aboard the Balefire. But we checked every refugee to come off that ship, and every damn one of them was clean. We even broke open the sleep cylinders, but each and every body was where it should be, and as it should be. Unless there’s some hidden compartment…”

  “I doubt it, Director; the technicians would have found it by now. But we never did find an explanation for the espers’ readings.”

  “You think that’s significant?”

  Topaz shrugged. “Who knows what’s significant, at this stage.”

  Steel frowned thoughtfully, and clasped his hands across his belly. “The espers said they detected something strange, powerful… alien. Alien; could that be it? Some alien creature smuggled into the city, carrying an outworld plague?” He stopped suddenly, and rubbed at his aching forehead. “No. It couldn’t have gone undetected this long. Not in Mistport.”

  Steel and Topaz sat in silence for a while, each lost in their own thoughts. The monitor chimed suddenly, and the screen lit up to show the face of the duty esper.

  “Director
, I have a call from you. From Councillor Darkstrom.”

  Steel sat forward in his chair, grinning widely. “Great; put her through! I never thought I’d be so glad to see that grim face of hers again.”

  “I heard that,” said Eileen Darkstrom dryly. The screen remained blank, but her voice carried clearly from the comm unit’s speakers. “What’s happened in Mistport while I’ve been away?”

  “Death, plague, and devastation,” said Steel succinctly. “I’m glad you’re finally back; things have been going crazy here.”

  “Never mind that now,” said Darkstrom briskly, “This is important. The Bloodhawk and I came across something very disturbing in the outer settlements. Communications between them and the city have been deliberately sabotaged, to prevent us from finding out that Empire agents have been herding the Hob hounds towards Mistport.”

  “Herding?” said Steel incredulously. “Are you sure?”

  “Yes,” said Darkstrom steadily. “I’m sure. Now, that was the bad news. The really bad news is that the Bloodhawk and I got here only just ahead of the main pack. We could see them, crossing the plateau; hundreds of the filthy creatures. They’ll get here sometime during the next few days. You’ll have to take every Watchman you can find and set them to guarding the boundaries.”

  “Darkstrom, I can’t do that—”

  “You’ve got to! Look, I can’t stop and talk. I’m meeting someone and it’s important. I’ll see you afterwards, and you can fill me in on all the latest gossip then. Darkstrom out.”

  The speakers fell silent. Steel hurriedly punched a code into his monitor. “Duty esper, get Darkstrom back on the line. Now.”

  “I’m sorry, Director; she was calling from her comm unit implant. It’s not a part of our comm net. We’ll have to wait until she calls back.”

  “Damn. Very well, but I want to know the moment she calls.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  The screen went blank again, and Steel leant slowly back in his chair. “That’s all I needed. First a city racked with plague, and now there are hundreds of Hob hounds headed straight for us. I should never have got out of bed this morning. Ah hell, maybe she’s exaggerating.”

  Topaz shook her head. “Councillor Darkstrom is known for her rhetoric, but she rarely exaggerates when it comes to possible dangers.”

  “That’s right, she doesn’t. All right, take what men you can spare, and set them to watching the boundaries. We’ll worry about the hounds as and when they make their appearance. Now then… oh hell, I’ve lost track of what we were talking about.”

  “The beginnings of the plague, Director, and its possible links with the Balefire. Captain Starlight was one of the first few victims, wasn’t he?”

  “Yes. He hasn’t said a word since we found him. He won’t eat or drink or sleep; just sits huddled in a corner, whimpering. If I didn’t know better, I’d swear he’d been scared out of his mind. What kind of a plague is it where the living are worse off than the dead?”

  “Where there’s life there’s hope, Director. My husband taught me that a long time ago, and I still believe it to be true. Given enough time, our medics might yet come up with a cure.”

  “Given enough time, the plague might wipe us all out.”

  “There haven’t been many deaths so far. Not compared with the number of survivors.”

  “There have been enough, Investigator. More than enough. Most of us have lost someone to the plague.”

  Topaz looked at him curiously. There had been something in Steel’s voice… “Who did you lose, Director?”

  “A friend. His name was Jamie Royal.”

  Steel’s voice was very quiet, and his eyes were far away, lost in memory. Topaz looked at her hands, folded neatly in her lap.

  “I didn’t know the esper was a friend of yours, Director.”

  “I liked him. Everyone did. Even his enemies.” Steel sat slumped in his chair, his mouth twisted into a bitter grimace. “I couldn’t even go to his funeral. Too much to do.”

  “I didn’t think you had any friends, Steel,” said Topaz quietly. “What was he like?”

  “Jamie… was a gambling man. He owed money to everyone dumb enough to extend him credit, but he always paid his debts eventually. He never broke his word, and he never dealt from the bottom. And the only way anyone will ever remember him is as one of the first victims of this new plague. Not much of a legacy for a man like Jamie.”

  Topaz looked at him thoughtfully, then pushed back her chair and got to her feet. “We’ve done all we can for one day, Steel. Leave it for now. It’s late, and we could both use some sleep.”

  Steel nodded goodbye without looking up. Topaz stared at his bowed head a moment, and then left, closing the cubicle door quietly behind her.

  Eileen Darkstrom stood at the far boundary of Tech Quarter, staring out into the fog. All the time she’d spent trudging through the unrelenting cold of the plateau and the outlying settlements, she’d thought constantly of how good it would feel to get back to the warmth of Mistport. And now she was back, the first thing she had to do was hang about on the outskirts of the city, freezing her butt off. Darkstrom sniffed, and huddled inside her cloak. The fog was thicker than ever, with visibility no more than a few yards in any direction. The street lamps cast only shallow pools of light, and the mists muffled every sound. A heavy snow was falling, and the sinking evening sun was lost to sight. Another hour or so and it would be gone completely; night fell early on Mistworld as winter drew near. Darkstrom scowled, and kicked at the thick snow on the ground.

  Where the hell are you, Stefan?

  Darkstrom walked up and down before the boundary wall, stamping her feet to drive out the cold. The Bloodhawk had been very particular about her being on time, and here he was almost half an hour late. Typical. Not for the first time, Darkstrom wondered what the hell was so important that they had to discuss it out here in the freezing cold, so far away from everything and everyone. It had to be something to do with what they’d discovered about the Hob hounds. She’d intended to go straight to the Council and tell them everything, but the Bloodhawk had insisted that the two of them talk in private first. As if they hadn’t had enough chance on the way home. Darkstrom smiled fondly, remembering.

  There was a slight noise behind her, and she turned happily, expecting to see the Bloodhawk. There was no one there. She looked quickly around, but nothing moved in the thick grey mists, and silence lay heavily across the fallen snow. Darkstrom stirred uneasily, and dropped her hand to her sword. The hounds shouldn’t be here for at least another forty-eight hours, but there was always the chance a few outrunners had got ahead of the pack.… Darkstrom drew her sword and glared about her into the mists. Her muscular blacksmith’s arms flexed confidently, and her narrowed green eyes held an eager, dangerous gleam. She hadn’t known much about the hounds until she’d visited the outer settlements. What she’d learned there had shocked and sickened her. Hob hounds attacked humans not because they felt threatened or hungry, but simply because they enjoyed it. They showed a distinct preference for weaker prey, like women or children. Particularly children. Darkstrom gripped her sword tightly. She thought she would enjoy evening the score against the hounds a little. She hitched back her cloak to give her arms more freedom of movement, stolidly ignoring the cold, and stamped her boots into the snow to get a good footing. Whatever was lurking out there in the mists was about to get the surprise of its life. She moved slowly forward, listening intently for the slightest sound. She quickly discovered that the only sound on the quiet was the snow crunching loudly under her boots. Darkstrom scowled, and moved quickly over to put her back against the boundary wall. No point in making it easy for the hound.

  Her scowl deepened as she heard slow, unhurried footsteps approaching out of the mists. Whatever was out there, it wasn’t a hound. It could be a footpad, or an Empire agent… Darkstrom hefted her sword and dropped into a fighting crouch. The footsteps drew steadily nearer, and then a tall slim shadow for
med suddenly out of the fog. Darkstrom tensed, and then relaxed with a great sigh of pent-in breath as Count Stefan Bloodhawk came walking out of the mists towards her. He looked at her drawn sword, and raised an elegant eyebrow. Darkstrom laughed, and put her sword away.

  “I know I’m a little late,” said the Bloodhawk, reproachfully.

  “Sorry, Stefan,” said Darkstrom, smiling ruefully. “The mists have been getting to me.” She moved forward into his arms and gave him a welcoming kiss, to show she forgave him for being late. “What kept you, dear? Is there some new problem about the hounds?”

  “Yes,” said the Bloodhawk regretfully, “I’m afraid there is.” His right hand slipped the dagger expertly between Darkstrom’s ribs, and she stared at him in silent horror before the light went out of her eyes and she slumped against him. He stepped back, and let her fall into the snow.

  “I’m sorry, my dear,” said the Bloodhawk calmly, “but I really couldn’t let you talk to the Council. I want the hounds to be a surprise.”

  He sighed quietly, cleaned his dagger on a piece of rag, and sheathed it. It was a pity he’d had to kill her. He’d grown rather fond of her, in his way. But the Empire’s orders had been most specific, and he couldn’t risk upsetting his masters. Anything was worth it if it would finally get him off this stinking planet.

  Now that Darkstrom was dead, the Council would have to face the hounds unwarned; or rather, what was left of the Council would. Darkstrom and du Wolfe were dead, and he would be… missing. That just left Royal and Steel; an old man and a thief. The Bloodhawk smiled slightly. Everything was proceeding according to plan. He picked Darkstrom up and slung her over his shoulder. She was surprisingly heavy for such a small woman. The Bloodhawk walked unhurriedly back into the fog and disappeared among the mists. The sound of his retreating footsteps died quickly away, and soon there was nothing left to show that he had ever been there, save for a few scuffed footprints in the snow and a small patch of blood where Eileen Darkstrom had fallen.

 

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