Wicked Bronze Ambition gp-14

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Wicked Bronze Ambition gp-14 Page 16

by Glen Cook


  I asked, “Barate? Thoughts?”

  “We’re here. And she can only get healthier.”

  “Um.” On the other hand, I could just relay news of her whereabouts to the Civil Guard.

  I had questions I wanted to ask myself, though.

  Dollar Dan suggested, “We should probably do it while we still have some light and the rain hasn’t started.”

  An excellent point. The gloom kept getting thicker though the rain continued to hold off.

  Penny stated my feelings for both of us. “It’s been a long, long day.”

  It was unlikely to be over soon, either.

  47

  The anxiety all proved needless. Vicious Min was in there, yes. But she was unconscious, exhausted. Ted couldn’t get a flinch out of her.

  Penny hit me with the obvious. “We should ship her over to Himself while we can manage her.”

  And while she was still available. I feared that she might have stressed herself to a point where she could die on us.

  “Oh. Oh! Yes! We’ll need to transport her somehow.”

  “Big as she is, we’ll need a wagon,” Barate said.

  Ted added, “Preferably with springs.”

  “So. People. Spread out. See what you can find.” This was not a neighborhood I knew. “Ted, stay with Min. Keep her breathing. Keep her asleep. Damn, she’s ugly. Penny, you stay, too.”

  Naturally, she argued.

  “Dig through her stuff. You’re the only one who knows how to investigate. You’ll know good stuff if you see it. I’ll help find a wagon.”

  She accepted my contention but didn’t believe me. What I said was true, but I really just wanted to keep her out of harm’s way.

  Then I began to wonder if I should leave her at Ted’s mercy.

  Hell. I had to trust her. She was a big girl. She could make choices. And other whistling-past-the-graveyard thoughts.

  I had to get out there. How likely were Dollar Dan or Mashego to come up with a wagon? They lacked a trustworthy look. And Barate was from too far up the Hill to have a clue how to connect with real people.

  Only. . How likely indeed?

  Both Dan and Mashego scored before I got my first lead-which led me straight to the wagon Dan already had on offer from a rat person with soft connections to John Stretch.

  Mashego found a carter from the old country who was willing to do night work.

  It is truly all about who you know. I knew no one around there, in the shadow of the Bustee slum.

  We chose the rat man’s wagon because it had the longer bed. Only a yard of Min would hang out the back.

  The dogs were anxious to go. They could not stop prowling nervously and eyeing me like they wondered why I insisted on wasting time hanging out where members of the tribe might get eaten.

  Once we had Min in the wagon-an all-hands adventure shifting her, it was-I asked Ted, “Is she likely to wake up during the ride?” It was two miles to Macunado Street. Farther if we stuck to smooth pavement.

  Ted was helping Penny load stuff to be looked at later. Min had a lot, mostly junk, some of which suggested that she liked to play at being a girly girl when nobody was looking.

  “Couldn’t say for sure. Why?”

  “I was hoping I could get you to stick with me and Barate for our visit to Moonblight while Penny and Dan take Min where she needs to go.”

  Dollar Dan announced, “Dollar Dan will not go anywhere that Garrett does not go. Dollar Dan Justice’s task is to keep stubborn, uncooperative, and ungrateful Garrett alive, not to transport prisoners.”

  Ouch.

  Penny snickered. “You notice he didn’t mention anything about making sure that you stay healthy?”

  Ted hadn’t brought a full doctor’s rig, but he did have a small emergency kit. He tried to tell Penny how to use some chemicals and a wad of wool to put Min to sleep if she started to come around. She suddenly got dumb as a stump. He finally decided to go with her instead of me. “I’ll head for Shadowslinger’s place once I’m done with this.”

  Grumble, grumble. “You do that.”

  Meanwhile, Dollar Dan had a heart-to-heart with the wagon’s owner, who did not trust rat men enough to let his only means of making a living out of his sight, despite his own connection to John Stretch’s organization.

  “All set here,” Dan announced.

  I sighed, wondering why everything always has to get complicated.

  I know why some guys become loners. It simplifies things.

  48

  It would be full dark soon. The dogs were nervous and hung closer than during brighter times. They were far from familiar ground when the time of greatest danger was approaching.

  As a stray you had only what protection you could invent for yourself. Darkness could harbor dangers day walkers never noticed.

  Undead mutts? Vampire pups? Doubtful, that. But maybe nocturnal predatory thunder lizards. Thunder lizards have become uncommon in the city, but we still sometimes hear of incidents outside the busier districts, especially at night. Mutilated carcasses turn up, savaged by something bigger than rats.

  Singe intercepted us as we neared the Hill, in company with the balance of Dollar Dan’s crew. She was worn out but not yet complaining. She fell in beside me, brought me up to date on all the successful arrests. Elona Muriat alone remained sullenly unimpressed by Deal Relway and refused all cooperation. Preston Womble, on the other hand, could not shut up despite having almost nothing to say. He had had an epiphany. He had become born again. He was trying to bring his partner into alignment with the new law-and-order facts of life.

  Singe asked, “You do realize that you are being watched, tracked, and studied by the Specials, don’t you?”

  “I haven’t paid much attention, but I don’t expect to operate in a full vacuum. Do we know who hired brother Tribune?”

  A drop of moisture hit my cheek. The rain would not hold off much longer.

  “No. But they have not yet threatened him with soap and water.” She made a rude noise after stumbling over a nervous dog who wanted to stay really close. “The Director means to let you work while counting every breath.”

  “Doing his job for him.”

  “More like he wants to see what you will stir off the bottom of the cesspool.”

  “And Kevans? Any word on her?”

  That was exactly what Barate and I had thought it would be. Kevans had gone looking for Kip Prose. She had hung around with him till Kyra’s scowls and boredom reminded her that she had an obligation at Grandma’s house. She remained unconcerned about her own safety.

  The rat men now watching over her had not attracted any attention.

  They also reported that she had had other watchers already, now chased away.

  Their description was vague, because it came from rat men, but it was intriguing. An attractive pair of youngsters, the girl a young man’s fancy while the boy was a father’s nightmare.

  I exchanged looks with Barate. He said what I was thinking. “A Champion and Mortal Companion.”

  “Know anyone who fits the description?”

  The rat men did smells better than visuals. Smells. . We would have to have those two sniffed out.

  How might I leverage those two into the Director’s embrace?

  Other trackers had determined that the little blonde and her sidekick moved between several hiding places on scattered rooftops. They had a knack for disappearing not only visually but nasally, but not indefinitely. They could not long elude a determined team of rat men.

  We also got a fix on Moonslight, though the severity of her durance seemed questionable. The rat men thought she was more a reluctant guest than a prisoner, and might not have been confused with her sister at all.

  Singe opined, “They will exercise deference whichever sister they have. Any wickedness could come back a thousandfold should their employer lose courage or have a change of heart.”

  That side of our system irks me. It might never even occur to a vict
im to savage the man who gave the orders, if he was of noble standing, but woe be unto his hirelings, who were only in it to make a living.

  “Garrett?”

  “Huh?” So. There I was, gone again, this time yearning toward Relway’s ideology.

  Singe suggested, “There is another possibility.”

  “Which is?”

  “That they only want to keep her from interfering if they do think that they have Moonblight.”

  “That would mean that somebody knows Moonblight wants to sabotage the tournament.” It occurred to me then that it didn’t matter which Machtkess the villains had, that being the case. Either would provide leverage and leave Richt Hauser as the last high-power enemy of the Operators.

  Was Shadowslinger’s condition the result of hostile action?

  I broached the possibility to Mashego, who seemed to grow slighter and less obtrusive as the day faded. “I will think about that,” she promised.

  As would I. And I would try profiling the minds behind the tournament. I had a hope that I did not consider even slightly forlorn: The Operators, by nature, must be discounting, even disdaining, Mr. Furious Tide of Light.

  The Garrett beast was, after all, a no-account, bottom-feeding, common-as-it-gets, blood-sucking nothing. A flea.

  God, or Gods, Above and Below, let their minds be locked into that way of thinking.

  It wouldn’t take long to gobble that kind down.

  I tripped over Brownie. “Damn it, girls! Spread out!”

  The dogs did so, with no enthusiasm, and only for a few minutes.

  49

  Moonblight’s place was surprisingly unremarkable considering her standing and public persona. It was a small two-story on a modest plot, square, white-painted stucco with green trim, green shutters upstairs, and a green tile roof. Like Tara Chayne herself, the place seemed past its prime, about to go to seed. I told Barate, “I expected something more flamboyant.”

  “Tara Chayne Machtkess the person is actually a little timid and lacking in confidence.”

  The big green front door swung inward.

  I asked, “And her sister lives here, too?”

  “Mariska, yes. There are some younger sisters without much talent elsewhere. Mariska and Tara Chayne split the upper floor. They stay out of each other’s way. They don’t get along. It goes back to when they were girls, to a squabble over a man. I don’t know for sure, but that was either my father or Kyoga. Or maybe both. They were supposedly pretty loose.”

  I said nothing but noted that here was another scandalous disclosure involving an Algarda. Any old affair had to have taken place after Barate’s dad married Constance. “There was mention of a grandchild’s birth.”

  Dan and crew were doing a quick sniff round and posting sentries. The dogs crowded toward the light. Singe was indifferent to anything but her own exhaustion. I hoped I didn’t end up carrying her home. Mashego was no longer with us, having headed home to Shadowslinger’s place.

  “The twins both married. Tara Chayne had a son, Harou, right away. Harou didn’t come back from the war. He wasn’t smart and he wasn’t talented. He let himself be talked into trying something beyond his skill level. There were two daughters, Haroei and Haroa, the younger. Haroa had the baby. She came along after Harou died. Tara Chayne likes to think that Harou’s soul lives on in Haroa.”

  I grunted, impressed only by the fact that Moonblight had named all her kids with variants on a root meaning precious. Similar tragic histories you can collect by the score if you search.

  “Mariska had no children, by choice, after seeing what Tara Chayne went through giving birth to Harou. Mariska is not known for being unselfish or for willingly suffering inconvenience or discomfort.”

  “What happened to the husbands?”

  “They’re around as career remittance men. The girls have nothing to do with them anymore except to pay them to stay out of the way.”

  Dollar Dan let me know that he and his guys were set. We could go on. Nobody had smelled any disturbing odors from the house. “Shall I keep an eye on Singe?” Asked in wan hope.

  Singe managed a head shake. “I am good. For now.” To me, she added, “You may end up carrying me home, though.”

  “If I have to. If I can’t find somebody to buy you. But who is going to carry me?”

  Barate informed me, “Denvers is getting impatient.”

  “Denvers?”

  “Tara Chayne’s man. There in the doorway letting in moths and mosquitoes while we stand around jawing.”

  “Oh. That guy.”

  We started moving.

  Barate went back to “The younger Machtkess girls have no talent. . ”

  Light flared on the far side of the Hill, setting the belly of the overcast on fire. It faded, was followed by the grumble of baby thunder. A few raindrops hit me, but there was no connection. The grumble faded. Then flashes backlighted the skyline, accompanied by a racket like divine swords clashing.

  It took no genius for Dan to declare, “That’s sorcerers fighting!”

  Sparks flew in showers, as though from holiday fireworks.

  Barate mumbled, “Damn!” The rest of us just gawked.

  It lasted several minutes. The whistles of Civil Guards and private watchmen sawed shrilly at the night.

  “Oh my! I guess it’s started.” Moonblight had joined her man in the doorway, face pallid, eyes wide. She was not happy.

  The dogs crowded as close as Denvers would let them. They might be feral, but they carried millennia of racial memories of shared safety with two-leggers in huts and caves.

  “What is this?” Moonblight demanded.

  “They’re scared of the dark.”

  She considered the excitement yonder. “That might be smart tonight. Let them into the foyer, Denvers. Find them something to eat.” After brief consideration, she added, “The escort as well.”

  Dollar Dan moved his guys inside reluctantly, yet with relief. Being invited into a sorceress’s house was scary, but staying outside could turn out much worse.

  Moonblight cut me and Barate out of the crowd. “Come with me.”

  I gave a sad shrug to Singe, whose offended look turned into mute appeal. Tara Chayne had exceeded herself already to accommodate my nonhuman companions.

  It would do Singe good to spend time learning to deal with Dollar Dan. She would face that problem for a long time, and other rat men would want to stake claims of their own. She was a huge prize.

  50

  Moonblight led us to a sitting room where a female servant was setting a table for three. It featured glasses, carafes of wine, and a platter of cheese bits and sausage chunks. I drooled. I was ferociously hungry. And tense. And sore.

  I had roamed more than usual in a normal month. And the day was not over yet.

  “So, why are you here with a mob instead of. .” She glanced at Barate, chose to turn it off in front of my father-in-law. Barate Algarda might become unpleasant if he was offended.

  “The mob’s job is to keep me alive. People have tried to do ugly stuff to me. I came to ask some questions, to see if you’ll help with a couple of things, and to let you know that your sister has been kidnapped. But I imagine you’ve heard about that.”

  “I have. An unpleasant visitor brought the news this afternoon. He said that Mariska will be hurt if I keep trying to sabotage the tournament.”

  She seemed content with that. I prodded, “And? What else?” There had to be more. I should drag her off to see the Dead Man again.

  “I wished him luck. I told him I hoped they had fun. I suggested a few things he could do, mostly on the lines of don’t throw Mariska in the briar patch. He didn’t like my attitude. He got belligerent, so I had Denvers thump him and stuff him in the dustbin out back.”

  Was she that sure the villains wouldn’t hurt Mariska? Or did she really not care? “Did you see anything that might help us identify him?”

  “I know who he is already. No. Wait. I know what he is. A pr
iest. Orthodox. From the cathedral in the Dream Quarter. I’ve only seen him from a distance there. He never noticed me. This was the first time I ever actually talked to him. He had no idea that I’d seen him before.”

  “And you, being a clever girl, didn’t clue him.”

  “Yes. Me being a clever woman.”

  I must have started to glow. Was there a connection? A priest. Strafa had visited a priest the morning she died. We all assumed that was about the wedding. She and Father Amerigo had issues. But maybe she had gone to see a priest causing difficulties of another kind.

  I should put Father Amerigo on my interview list. Or the Dead Man’s, even better.

  I needed to remember that Playmate and Penny hadn’t seen Strafa in the Dream Quarter, which proved only that they hadn’t seen her, but it was suggestive.

  “Any chance you’d know this priest’s name?”

  “None. But a visit to Chattaree Cathedral ought to turn him up. He’s easy to spot. Or describe. He has a huge wen.” She tapped her head.

  I wanted to exchange “Aha!” looks with somebody but had to do without. Barate hadn’t been there when the wen got mentioned before. I treated myself to an evil laugh. “I do believe we’ve got one!”

  Barate asked, “Got one what?”

  “Operator. A guy with a big-ass wen was one of the gobs who commissioned those costumes and the swords we’re going to booby-trap.”

  Tara Chayne eyed me like I had just begun to shine with a howling madness.

  “Sorry. Listen. That’s the other reason that I came to see you.” She looked hopeful, but only for an instant. “By the way, what do you want to do about your sister?”

  Moonblight burned through Tara Chayne Machtkess. “We know where she’s being kept? Good. Let her marinate.”

  “Say what?”

  “All right. Have somebody keep watch. Rat men would be appropriate. I’ll pay for their time. But let her sit, otherwise. We’ll do something if things start to fall apart for her.”

  “That’s really what you want?”

 

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