Wolf in the Fold
( Hawk & Fisher - 4 )
Simon R. Green
Wolf in the Fold by Simon R. Green
Hawk & Fisher 04
Chapter One
A Head Start
When you are tired of life, come to Haven. And someone will kill you.
The city port of Haven was a bad place to be after dark. It wasn't much better
during the day. If there was a viler, more corrupt and crime-ridden city in the
whole of the Low Kingdoms, its existence must have been kept secret to avoid
depressing the general populace. If Haven hadn't been settled squarely on the
main trade routes, and made itself such a vital part of the Low Kingdoms'
economy, it would undoubtedly have been forcibly evacuated and burnt to the
ground long ago, like any other plague spot. As it was, the city thrived and
prospered, brimming with crime, intrigue, and general decadence.
It also made a lot of money from tourism.
Such a dangerous city needed dangerous men and women to keep it under something
like control. So from Devil's Hook to the Street of Gods, from the Docks to High
Tory, the city Guard patrolled the streets of Haven with cold steel always to
hand, and did the best they could under impossible conditions. Apart from the
murderers, muggers, rapists, and everyday scum, they were also up against
organized crime, institutionalized brutality and rogue sorcerers; not to mention
rampant corruption within their own ranks. They did the best they could, and for
the most part learned to be content with little victories.
They should have been the best of the best: men and women with iron nerves, high
morals, and implacable wills. Unstoppable heroes, ready to take on any odds to
overthrow injustice. But given the low pay, appalling working conditions and
high mortality rate, the Guard settled for what it could get. Most were
out-of-work mercenaries, marking time until the next war, but there was always a
ripe mixture of thugs, idealists, and drifters, all with their own reasons for
joining a losing side. Revenge was a common motive. Haven was a breeding ground
for victims.
The Guard squadroom was a large, cheerless office at the rear of Guard
Headquarters. It was windowless, like the rest of the building. Windows made the
place too vulnerable to assault. The Headquarters made do with narrow archery
slits and ever-burning oil lamps. The walls and ceilings were covered with grime
from the lamps and open fireplaces, but no one gave a damn. It fitted the
general mood of the place. Half the squadroom had been taken up by oaken filing
cabinets, spilling over from the cramped Records Division. At any hour of the
day or night, it was a safe bet you'd find somebody desperately searching for
the one piece of paper that might help them crack a case. There was a lot of
useful information in the files. If you could find it. They hadn't been properly
organized in over seventeen years, when most of the original files were lost in
a fire-bombing.
Rumor had it that if ever the files were successfully reorganized, there'd just
be another fire-bombing. So no one bothered.
And three times a day, regular as the most expensive clockwork, the squadroom
filled with Guard Captains waiting for the day's briefing before going out on
their shift. It was now almost ten o'clock of the evening, and twenty-eight men
and women were waiting impatiently for the Guard Commander to make his
appearance and give them the bad news. They knew the news would be bad. It
always was.
Hawk and Fisher, husband and wife and Captains in the Guard for more than five
years, stood together at the back of the room, enjoying the warmth of the fire
and trying not to think about the cold streets outside. Hawk was tall, dark, and
no longer handsome. The series of old scars that marred the right side of his
face gave him a bitter, sinister look, heightened by the black silk patch over
his right eye. He was lean and wiry rather than muscular, and building a
stomach, but even standing still the man looked dangerous. Anyone who survived
five years as a Captain had to be practically unkillable, but even those who
didn't know his reputation tended to give him plenty of room. There was
something about Hawk, something cold and unyielding, that gave even the hardest
bravo cause to think twice.
He wore the standard furs and black cloak of the Guard's winter uniform with
little style and less grace. Even on a good day Hawk tended to look as though
he'd got dressed in the dark. In a hurry. He wore his dark hair at shoulder
length, swept back from his forehead and tied at the nape with a silver clasp.
He'd only just turned thirty, but already there were streaks of grey in his
hair. On his right hip Hawk carried a short-handled axe instead of a sword. He
was very good with an axe. He'd had lots of practice.
Isobel Fisher leant companionably against him, putting an edge on a throwing
knife with a whetstone. She was tall, easily six feet in height, and her long
blond hair fell to her waist in a single thick plait, weighted at the tip with a
polished steel ball. She was heading into her late twenties, and handsome rather
than beautiful. There was a rawboned harshness to her face that suggested
strength and stubbornness, only slightly softened by her deep blue eyes and
generous mouth. Sometime in the past, something had scoured all the human
weaknesses out of her, and it showed. She wore a sword on her hip in a battered
scabbard, and her prowess with that blade was already legendary in a city used
to legends.
A steady murmur of conversation rose and fell around Hawk and Fisher as the
Guard Captains brought each other up to date on the latest gossip and exchanged
ritual complaints about the lousy coffee and the necessity of working the
graveyard shift. As in most cities, the night brought out the worst in Haven.
But the graveyard shift paid the best, and there were always those who needed
the extra money. As winter approached and the trade routes shut down one by one,
choked by snow and ice and bitter storms, prices in the markets rose
accordingly. Which was why every winter Hawk and Fisher, and others like them,
worked from ten at night to six the next morning. And complained about it a lot.
Hawk leant back against the wall, his arms folded and his chin resting on his
chest. He was never at his best at the beginning of a shift, and the recent
change in schedules had just made him worse. Hawk hated having his sleeping
routine changed. Fisher nudged him with her elbow, and his head came up an inch.
He looked quickly round the squadroom, satisfied himself the Commander wasn't
there yet, and let his chin sink back onto his chest. His eye closed. Fisher
sighed, and looked away. She just hoped he wouldn't start snoring again. She
checked the edge on her knife, and plucked a hair from Hawk's head to test it.
He didn't react.
The door flew o
pen and Commander Dubois stalked in, clutching a thick sheaf of
papers. The Guard Captains quieted down and came to some sort of attention.
Fisher put away her knife and whetstone and elbowed Hawk sharply. He
straightened up with a grunt, and fixed his bleary eye on Dubois as the
Commander glared out over the squadroom. Dubois was short and stocky and bald as
an egg. He'd been a Commander for twenty-three years and it hadn't improved his
disposition one bit. He'd been a hell of a thief-taker in his day, but he'd
taken one chance too many, and half a dozen thugs took it in turn to stamp on
his legs till they broke. The doctors said he'd never walk again. They didn't
know Dubois. These days he spent most of his time overseeing operations,
fighting the Council for a higher budget, and training new recruits. After three
weeks of his slave-driving and caustic wit most recruits looked forward to
hitting the streets of Haven as the lesser of two evils. It was truly said among
the Guard that if you could survive Dubois, you could survive anything.
"All right; pay attention!" Dubois looked sternly about him. "First the good
news: The Council's approved the money for overtime payments, starting
immediately. Now the bad news: You're going to earn it. Early this morning there
was a riot in the Devil's Hook. Fifty-seven dead, twenty-three injured. Two of
the dead were Guards. Constables Campbell and Grzeshkowiak. Funeral's on
Thursday. Those wishing to attend, line up your replacements by Tuesday latest.
It's your responsibility to make sure you're covered.
"More bad news. The Dock-Workers Guild is threatening to resume their strike
unless the Dock owners agree to spend more money on safe working conditions.
Which means we can expect more riots. I've doubled the number of Constables in
and around the Docks, but keep your eyes open. Riots have a way of spreading.
And as if we didn't have enough to worry about, last night someone broke into
the main catacombs on Morrison Street and removed seventy-two bodies. Could be
ghouls, black magicians, or some nut cult from the Street of Gods. Either way,
it's trouble. A lot of important people were buried in the catacombs, and their
families are frothing at the mouth. I want those bodies back, preferably
reasonably intact. Keep your ears to the ground. If you hear anything, I want to
know about it.
Now for the general reports. Captains Gibson and Doughty: Word is there's a
haunted house on Blakeney Street. Check it out. If it is haunted, don't try to
be heroes. Just clear the area and send for an exorcist. Captains Briars and
Lee: We've had several reports of some kind of beast prowling the streets in
East Gate. Only sightings so far, no attacks, but pick up silver daggers from
the Armory before you leave, just in case. Captains Fawkes and ap Owen: You
still haven't found that rapist yet. We've had four victims already and that's
four too many. I don't care how you do it, but nail the bastard. And if
someone's been shielding him, nail them too. This has top priority until I tell
you otherwise.
"Captains Hawk and Fisher: Nice to have you back with us after your little
holiday with the God Squad. May I remind you that in this department we prefer
to bring in our perpetrators alive, whenever possible. We all know your fondness
for cold steel as an answer to most problems, but try not to be so impulsive
this time out. Just for me.
"Finally, we have three new rewards." He smiled humorlessly as the Captains
quickly produced notepads and pencils. Rewards were one of the few legitimate
perks of the job, but Dubois was of the old school and didn't approve. Rewards
smelt too much like bribes to him, and distracted his men from the cases that
really needed solving. He read out the reward particulars, deliberately speaking
quickly to make it harder to write down the details. It didn't bother Fisher.
She was a fast writer. A low rumble at her side broke her concentration, and she
elbowed Hawk viciously. He snapped awake and put on his best, interested
expression.
"One last item," said Dubois. "All suppressor stones are recalled, as of now.
We've been having a lot of problems with them just recently. I know they've
proved very useful so far in protecting us from magical attacks, but we've had a
lot of reports of stones malfunctioning or otherwise proving unreliable. There's
even been two cases where the damn things exploded. One Guard lost his hand. The
stone blew it right off his arm. So, all stones are to be returned to the
Armory, as soon as possible, for checking. No exceptions. Don't make me come
looking for you."
He broke off as a Constable hurried in with a sheet of paper. He passed it to
Dubois, who read it quickly and then questioned the Constable in a low voice.
The Captains stirred uneasily. Finally Dubois dismissed the Constable and turned
back to them.
"It appears we have a spy on the loose in Haven. Nothing unusual there, but this
particular spy has got his hands on some extremely sensitive material. The
Council is in a panic. They want him caught, and they want him yesterday. So get
out there and lean on your informants. Someone must know something. The city
Gates have all been sealed, so he's not going anywhere.
"Unfortunately, the Council hasn't given us much information to go on. We know
the spy's code name: Fenris. We also have a vague description: tall and thin
with blond hair. Apart from that, you're on your own. Finding this Fenris now
has top priority over all other cases until we've got him, or until the Council
tells us otherwise. All right, end of briefing. Get out of here. And someone
wake up Hawk."
There was general laughter as the Captains dispersed, and Fisher dragged Hawk
towards the door, Hawk protesting innocently that he'd heard every word. He
broke off as they left the squadroom, and Fisher headed for the Armory.
"Isobel, where are you going?"
"The Armory. To hand in the suppressor stone."
"Forget it," said Hawk. "I'm not giving that up. It's the only protection we've
got against hostile magic."
Fisher looked at him. "You heard Dubois; the damned things are dangerous. I'm
not having my hand blown off, just so you can feel a bit more secure."
"All right then, I'll carry it."
"No you won't. I don't trust you with gadgets."
"Well, one of us has to have it. Or the next rogue magician we run into is going
to hand us our heads. Probably literally."
Fisher sighed, and nodded reluctantly. "All right, but we only use the thing in
emergencies. Agreed?"
"Agreed."
They strode unhurriedly through the narrow Headquarters corridors and out onto
the crowded street. Just a few weeks ago there'd been snow and slush everywhere,
but the city's weather wizards had finally got their act together and deflected
the worst of the weather away from Haven, sending it out over the ocean. This
wasn't making them too popular with passing merchant ships, but no one in Haven
cared what they thought.
Not that the weather wizards had done anything more than buy Haven a few extra
weeks, a month at most. Once the real
winter storms started there was nothing
anyone could do but nail up the shutters, stoke up the fire, and pray for
spring. But for the moment the sky was clear, and the chilly air was no worse
than an average autumn day. Hawk turned up his nose at the bracing air and
pulled his cloak tightly around him. He didn't like cloaks as a rule, they got
in the way during fights, but he liked the cold even less. The weather in the
Low Kingdoms was generally colder and harsher than in his homeland in the North,
and it was during fall and winter that he missed the Forest Kingdom most of all.
He smiled sourly as he looked out over the slumped buildings and grubby streets.
He was a long way from home.
"You're thinking about the Forest again, aren't you?" said Fisher.
"Yeah."
"Don't. We can't go back."
"We might. Some day."
Fisher looked at him. "Sure," she said finally. "Some day."
They strode down the packed street, the crowd giving way before them. There were
a lot of people about for the time of night, but with winter so close, everyone
was desperate to get as much done as they could before the storms descended and
the streets became impassable. Hawk and Fisher smiled and nodded to familiar
faces, and slowly made their way into the Northside, their beat and one of the
worst areas in Haven. You could buy or sell anything there; every dirty little
trade, every shape and form of evil and corruption grew and flourished in the
dark and grimy streets of the Northside. Hawk and Fisher, who had worked the
area for over five years, had grown blase and hardened despite themselves. Yet
every day the Northside came up with new things to shock them. They tried hard
not to let it get to them.
They made a tour of all the usual dives, looking for word on the spy Fenris, but
to a man everyone they talked to swore blind they'd never even heard of the
fellow. Hawk and Fisher took turns smashing up furniture and glaring up close at
those they questioned, but not even their reputations could scare up any
information. Which meant that either the spy had gone to ground so thoroughly
that no one knew where he was, or his masters were paying out a small fortune in
bribes to keep peoples mouths shut. Probably the former. There was always
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