Guard Against Dishonor by Simon R. Green
Chapter One
Chacal
There are bad cities, there are worse cities; and then there's Haven.
By popular acclaim the vilest and most corrupt city in the Low Kingdoms, Haven
in midwinter gleams purest white under falls of frozen snow, and its towers
shine with frost and ice like pillars of crystal. But only from a distance. The
snow on the ground is a dirty grey from the unceasing factory smoke, and
grey-faced people trudge wearily through the snow-choked streets.
Seen up close, Haven is an ugly city, in more ways than one. Even in the early
morning, when the killing cold grips the streets like a clenched fist, there is
still no peace for the city. There are still deals to be made, conspiracies to
be entered into, and blood to be spilled. Death is a way of life in Haven, and
sudden violence the pulse of its narrow streets.
And only the city Guard, stretched to breaking point at the best of times,
stands between the city and open, bloody chaos.
Hawk and Fisher, husband and wife and Captains in the city Guard, strode briskly
down the crowded street towards Guard Headquarters, their prisoner scurrying
along between them. Winter had finally come to Haven, despite everything the
city weather wizards could do, and the bitter air was several degrees below
freezing. The street was ankle-deep in snow and slush, and thick icicles hung
from every building. Roofs groaned under the weight of a week's accumulated
snow, and the iron-grey sky promised more blizzards to come. But still people
packed the street from end to end; men, women, and children jostling each other
impatiently as they hurried to and from work. No one jostled Hawk and Fisher, of
course. It wouldn't have been wise.
It was eight o'clock in the morning, but so dark that street lamps still burned
at every corner, their amber glare doing little to dispel the gloom. Hawk hated
the winter, and not just because the recent flu epidemic had hit the Guard badly
and he and Fisher were working a double shift for the third day running. Winter
meant hard times in Haven, and hardest of all for the poor and destitute. In
every street, in every part of the city, there were bodies lying stiff and cold,
caught out in the freezing night because they had nowhere else to go. They ended
up in sheltered doorways, or huddled together under tarpaulins in back
alleyways, sharing their meager warmth as best they could. Every day the garbage
squad made their rounds and hauled the bodies away, but there were always more.
Hawk found a young girl once, curled in a tight little ball over a street
grating. She couldn't have been more than five or six years old, and her staring
eyes had frozen solid in her head. Hawk hated the winter, and sometimes he hated
Haven too.
Captain Hawk was tall, dark-haired, and no longer handsome. A series of old
scars ran down the right side of his face, and a black silk patch covered his
right eye. He told lots of stories about how he got the scars, most of them
contradictory. His thick furs and official black cloak made him look
impressively bulky, but underneath his winter uniform he was lean and wiry
rather than muscular, and building a stomach. He wore his shoulder-length hair
loose, mostly to keep his ears warm, and kept it out of his vision with a plain
leather headband. He'd only just turned thirty, but already there were streaks
of grey in his hair. At first glance he seemed like just another bravo, a
sword-for-hire already past his prime, but few people ever stopped at a first
glance. There was something about Hawk, something cold and unyielding that gave
even the most belligerent hardcase pause to think twice. 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.
Captain Isobel Fisher walked confidently at his side, echoing her partner's
stance and pace with the naturalness of long companionship. 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 wore a battered and
almost shapeless fur hat, pulled down low to protect her ears from the bitter
cold. There was a rawboned harshness to her face, barely softened by her deep
blue eyes and generous mouth. She was handsome rather than pretty, her gaze was
cool and direct, and she didn't smile much. Sometime, somewhere in the past,
something had scoured all the human weaknesses out of her, and it showed. She
wore the same furs and cloak as Hawk, though with rather more grace and style.
She wore a sword on her hip, and her skill with it was legendary, in a city not
easily impressed by legends.
Hawk and Fisher, feared and respected by one and all as the toughest and most
honest Guards in Haven. They had a lot of enemies, both inside and outside the
Guard.
Their prisoner was a short, scrawny, harmless-looking man, wrapped in a long fur
coat, topped off with a pair of fluffy earmuffs. His thinning black hair was
plastered to his head with rather more grease than necessary, and he had a
permanent scowl. Benny the Weasel was not a happy man.
"You're making a terrible mistake," he repeated for the tenth time, in what he
imagined was an ingratiating tone. "Let's be reasonable about this."
"Sorry," said Hawk, without looking round. "I'm only reasonable at weekends. And
Fisher doesn't believe in being reasonable. Says it's bad for her image."
"Right," said Fisher, glaring horribly at a nun who hadn't got out of her way
fast enough.
"This is all a misunderstanding," said Benny doggedly. "I am a legitimate
businessman."
Hawk snorted derisively. "Benny, you are a small-time villain who makes most of
his money running a nasty little protection racket, advising local shopkeepers
of all the awful things that might happen to them or their premises if they
don't keep up the payments. Only this time you were dumb enough to do it in
person, in front of Fisher and me. What's the matter, both your leg-breakers
down with the flu?"
Benny sniffed. "You can't get good help these days. Look, I am an important
figure in the community. I know my rights. I pay my taxes. Technically, you work
for me."
"Then you should be pleased to be getting such value for your money," said
Fisher. "We witnessed a crime and arrested the criminal on the spot. What more
do you want?"
"You won't get away with this!" said Benny desperately. "I have friends. I have
influence. You won't be able to make this charge stick. I'll be out on the
streets again before you can blink!"
Hawk looked at him. "You know, Benny, you're starting to get on my nerves. Now,
be a good fellow and shut your face or I'll have Fisher take you into the
nearest dark alley and reason with you for a while."
Benny glanced at Fisher, and then looked quickly away when he discovered she was
smiling at him. He'd heard about Fisher's idea of reasoning with people. If she
did it where they lived, it tended to play hell with the furniture. Benny had
second thoughts, and they walked the rest of the way in silence.
Guard Headquarters loomed up before them, a massive squat stone building with
heavy oaken doors and arrow-slit windows. It had the look of a place constantly
under siege, which wasn't far off the mark. Riots, hexes, and fire-bombings were
a part of everyday life for the Headquarters, but no one had ever closed it down
for more than a few hours. It had its own sorcerers, and everyone in the
building went armed at all times, from the clerks to the Commanders. It took a
lot to disrupt the Headquarters' even running, though last year's rash of
possessions had come close.
The main doors were always open, but everyone knew that could change in a second
if danger threatened. A long-established spell on the doors saw to that, and
tough luck if anyone got in the way. A steady stream of people bustled in and
out of the building as Hawk and Fisher approached with their prisoner. There was
the usual mixture of Constables and the people helping them with their
enquiries, along with anxious relatives searching for the recently arrested, and
backstreet lawyers touting for business. And of course there were always those
who'd come to the Guard for help, all with the same thinly disguised look of
fear and desperation. Most people only went to the Guard when they'd tried
everything else. The law was harsh and brutal, and weighted heavily in favor of
the rich and powerful. There were Guards who were sympathetic, and would do what
they could for those in real need, but for the most part the poor had no reason
to trust the Guard. Like everything else in Haven, justice was for sale.
Everyone had their price.
Everyone except Hawk and Fisher.
Benny thought fleetingly of making a run for it, then noticed that Fisher's hand
was resting casually on the pommel of her sword, and quickly thought better of
it. He sighed heavily, and accompanied Hawk and Fisher through the main doors
and into the crowded lobby of Guard Headquarters. The wide, low-ceilinged room
was packed from wall to wall, and the noise was deafening. Mothers and
grandmothers sat in little groups against the walls, chatting and gossiping and
keeping a watchful eye on their children as they scampered back and forth,
getting in everyone's way. None of them had any real business at Headquarters,
but the Guard let them stay. It was the only place in that area where small
children could play safely. Besides which, the Guard Constables had found they
could pick up a lot of useful information by casually listening in on the
women's gossip.
Over by the booking desk in the center of the lobby, a seething mob of people
screamed and shouted and pleaded, together with much shedding of tears and
beating of breasts, but the three desk Sergeants took it in their stride. They'd
heard it all before. They nodded more or less sympathetically to worried
relatives, glared at the lawyers, and got on with booking the various criminals
as the Constables brought them forward, as though the utter bedlam around them
was of absolutely no interest.
Hawk and Fisher made their way through the shifting mass of bodies by sheer
determination and liberal use of their elbows. Hawk hammered on the desk with
his fist until he got a Sergeant's attention, and then handed Benny over into
his keeping. The Sergeant fixed him with a malicious grin.
"Well, well, what have we here? It's not often you grace us with your loathsome
company, Benny. What did you do to upset Hawk and Fisher?"
"Nothing! I was just minding my own business…"
"Your business is illegal, Benny, and if you were stupid enough to do it in
front of those two, you deserve everything that happens to you." He struck the
large brass bell beside him, the sharp sound cutting cleanly through the
surrounding babble, and a Constable came over to the desk and led Benny away.
Hawk and Fisher watched them go, Benny the Weasel still loudly protesting his
innocence.
"We won't be able to hold him, you know," said the desk Sergeant.
Fisher looked at him sharply. "Why the hell not? We'll both give evidence
against him."
"It'll never come to trial," said the Sergeant. "Benny has friends, hard though
that is to believe. The word will come down, and we'll have to let him go."
Fisher scowled. "Sometimes I wonder why we bother making arrests at all. These
days, it seems practically every villain and thug we meet has connections with
someone higher up. Or the judge gets bribed. Or the jury gets intimidated."
"That's Haven for you," said the Sergeant. "Hey, don't look at me. I just work
here."
Fisher growled something indistinct, and allowed Hawk to pull her away from the
desk. They elbowed their way back through the crowd, glaring down any
objections, and found a place by the huge open fireplace to warm their hands and
take a seat for a moment. They nodded amiably to the half-dozen Constables
already there. None of them actually had any business that required their
presence at Headquarters, but none of them were that keen to give up the nice
warm lobby for the freezing cold outside. Hawk turned around and lifted his
cloak to warm his backside at the fire. He smiled happily and looked out over
the lobby.
A small group of whores, looking bright and gaudy and not a little chilly in
their working finery, were waiting patiently to be booked, fined, and released
so that they could get back to work as quickly as possible. Some politician or
newspaper editor must have had a sudden attack of principles, or been leaned on
by some pressure group, and declared loudly that Something Should Be Done about
the rising tide of vice in Our Fair City. So the Guard made a big show of
arresting whoever happened to be around at the time, the pimps paid the fines
out of their petty cash, and business went on as usual. Hawk shrugged. It was
none of his business. He nodded to a few familiar faces, and then tensed as one
of the girls was viciously backhanded by her pimp. Hawk strode quickly over to
them and dropped a heavy hand on the pimp's shoulder. The pimp spun round,
knocking the hand away, and then froze as he realized who it was. He was young
and muscular, with a ratty-looking moustache, dressed to the nines and proud of
it. He studied Hawk warily.
"What do you want, Captain? I'm clean."
"You wouldn't be clean if you washed every day with sulphuric acid. You are a
pimp, Sebastian, the lowest of the low, and I know you of old. I thought I
warned you about maltreating your girls."
"Me? Hurt my girls?" said Sebastian, looking around him as though to invite the
world to witness his harassment. "I love my girls like sisters! Who sees they
always have nice clothes to wear, and looks after all their needs? They're like
family to me, all my girls. They just need a little firm guidance from time to
time, that's all."
"Your associate and business partner, that nasty little thug Bates, is currently
awaiting trial for 'firmly guiding' one of your girls by slashing her face with
a razor," said Hawk. "I know you, Sebastian; I know you and all your nasty
little ways. And if I discover you've been firmly guiding any of your girls
again, I shall be annoyed with you. You do remember what happened when I got
annoyed with Bates, don't you?"
The pimp nodded reluctantly. "He's making good progress. He should be out of
hospital soon."
"Really? I must be losing my touch. Keep your hands off the girls, Sebastian. Or
I'll tie your fingers in knots."
Sebastian smiled and nodded as though it hurt him, and disappeared into the
crowd. Hawk watched him go, nodded politely to the whores, who ignored him, and
made his way back to the fire. Fisher was down on her knees, playing with a few
children too young to be afraid of a Guard's uniform. Hawk watched for a while,
smiling gently. Isobel was good with kids. They'd talked about having children
of their own more than once, but somehow it never seemed to be the right time.
The crowd suddenly erupted in shouts and screams, and backed quickly away as a
prisoner who'd broken away from his escort lashed about him with a knife he'd
somehow kept hidden. He grabbed for one of the children by Fisher, obviously
intending to use the child as a hostage. Fisher glanced round and back-elbowed
him viciously in the groin. She rose unhurriedly to her feet as the prisoner
hunched forward over his pain, then rabbit-punched him. He collapsed and lay
still. Fisher kicked the knife away from his hand and went back to playing with
the children. Two Constables dragged the unconscious prisoner away.
Hawk decided regretfully that they'd killed about as much time as they could get
away with, and they ought really to get back to the job. They were barely
halfway through their second shift. He tried concentrating on all the overtime
they were racking up, but it didn't help. His feet were numb, his forehead still
ached from the cold, and his back was killing him. Hawk hated the winter. He
collected Fisher, waved goodbye to the kids and their unresponsive mothers, and
strode resignedly out into the waiting cold. And the first thing he saw was
Benny the Weasel shivering in a borrowed cloak as he tried unsuccessfully to
hail a sedan chair. Hawk and Fisher looked at each other, and strolled casually
over to join him. Benny saw them coming, and clearly thought about making a run
for it, before better sense took over. He drew himself up to his full five foot
six and tried to brazen it out.
"Benny," said Hawk reproachfully, "what do you think you're doing out here?"
"They let me go," said Benny quickly, his eyes darting from Hawk to Fisher and
back again. "All the charges have been dropped. That's official. Told you I had
friends."
Hawk and Fisher stepped forward, took an elbow each, and carried Benny kicking
and protesting into the nearest back alley. As soon as they put him down, he
tried to bolt, but Hawk snagged him easily and slammed him against the wall,
just hard enough to rattle his eyes and put a temporary stop to any complaints.
Hawk brought his face close to Benny's, and fixed him with his single cold eye.
"No one walks when we bring the charges, Benny. Not ever. I don't care what kind
of friends you've got, you are guilty as hell and you're going to stand trial."
"They won't accept your evidence," said Benny desperately. "The judge will let
me off. You'll see."
Hawk sighed. "You're not getting the message, Benny. If we let you walk, all the
other scum will start thinking they can get away with things. And we can't have
that, can we? So you are going to walk back into Headquarters, make a full
confession, and plead guilty. Because if you don't, Fisher and I will take turns
thinking up horrible things to do to you."
"They won't convict me on just a confession."
"Then you'd better be sure to provide plenty of corroborative evidence. Hadn't
you?"
Benny looked at Hawk's implacable face and then glanced at Fisher. She had a
nasty-looking skinning knife in her hand, and was calmly paring her nails with
it. Benny studied the knife with fascinated eyes and swallowed hard. Right then,
all the awful stories he'd heard about Hawk and Fisher seemed a lot more
believable than they had before. Hawk coughed politely to get his attention, and
Benny almost screamed.
"Benny…"
"I think I'd like to confess, please, Captain Hawk."
"You do realize you don't have to?"
"I want to."
"Legally, you're not bound to do so…"
"Please, let me confess! I want to! Honestly!"
"Good man," said Hawk, standing back from him. "It's always refreshing to meet a
citizen who believes in honesty and justice. Now, get in there and start talking
while we're still in a good mood."
Benny ran out of the alleyway and back into Guard Headquarters. Fisher smiled
and put away her knife. The two Guards left the alley and made their way
unhurriedly down the street, heading back to their beat in the Northside.
The Northside was the rotten heart of Haven, where all that was bad in the city
came to the surface, like scum on poisoned wine. Crime and corruption and casual
evil permeated the Northside, where every taste and trade was catered to.
Various gangs of drug dealers fought running battles over lucrative territories,
ruthlessly cutting down any innocent bystanders who got in the way. Spies
plotted treason behind shuttered windows, and many doors opened only to the
correct whispered password. Sweatshops and crowded slum tenements huddled
together under broken street lamps, and the smoke from local factories hung
permanently on the air, clawing at the throats of those who breathed it. Some
said the Northside was as much a state of mind as an area, but states of mind
don't usually smell that bad.
Hawk and Fisher strolled through the narrow streets, nodding to familiar faces
in the bustling crowd. Speed was a way of life in the Northside; there were
deals to be made, slights to be avenged, and you never knew who might be coming
up behind you. Hawk and Fisher rarely let themselves be hurried. You could miss
things that way, and Hawk and Fisher always liked to know what was going on
around them. They'd had the Northside as their beat for five years now, on and
off, but despite their best efforts, little had changed in that time. For every
villain they put away, the Northside produced two more to take his place, and
the soul-grinding poverty that was at the root of most crimes never changed from
one year to the next. In their most honest moments, Hawk and Fisher knew that
all they'd really done was to drive the worst crimes underground, or into other
areas. Things tended to be peaceful as long as they were around, but they
couldn't be everywhere at once. Occasionally one or the other would talk about
quitting, but they never did. They wouldn't give up. It wasn't in their natures.
They took each day as it came, and helped those they could. Even little
victories were better than none.
The stone-and-timber buildings huddled together as though for warmth, their
upper stories leaning out over the streets till their eaves almost touched.
Piles of garbage thrust up through the snow and slush, and Hawk and Fisher had
to be careful where they put their feet. The garbage collectors came once a
month, and then only with an armed guard. The beggars who normally lived off the
garbage had been driven from the streets by the cold, but there were still many
who braved the bitter weather for their own reasons. Business went on in the
Northside, no matter what the weather. Business, and other things.
In the light of a flickering brazier, an angel from the Street of Gods was
throwing dice with half a dozen gargoyles. A fast-talking salesman was hawking
bracelets plated with something that looked like gold. A large Saint Bernard
with a patchy dye job was trying to bum a light for its cigar. Two overlarge
rats with human hands were stealing the boots off a dead man. And two nuns were
beating up a mugger. Just another day in the Northside.
A sudden burst of pleasant flute music filled Hawk's and Fisher's heads as the
Guard communications sorcerer made contact. They stopped to listen and find out
what the bad news was. It had to be bad news. It always was. Anything else could
have waited till they got back to Headquarters. The flute music broke off
abruptly, and was replaced by the dry, acid voice of the communications
sorcerer.
Attention all Guards in the North sector. There's a riot in The Crossed Pikes
tavern at Salt Lane. There are a large number of dead and injured, including at
least two Constables. Approach the situation with extreme caution. There is
evidence of Chacal use by the rioters.
Hawk and Fisher ran down the street, fighting the snow and slush that dragged at
their boots. Salt Lane was four streets away, and a lot could happen in the time
it would take them to get there. From the sound of it, too much had happened
already. Hawk scowled as he ran. Riots were bad enough without drugs
complicating the issue.
Chacal was something new on the streets. Relatively cheap, and easy enough to
produce by anyone with a working knowledge of alchemy and access to a bathtub,
the drug brought out the animal side of man's nature. It heightened all the
senses while turning off the higher functions of the mind, leaving the user
little more than a wild animal, free to wallow in the moment and indulge any
whim or gratify any desire, free from reason or remorse or any stab of
conscience. The drug boosted the users' strength and speed and ferocity, making
them almost unstoppable. It also burned out their nervous systems in time,
leaving them paralysed or mad or dead from a dozen different causes. But life
wasn't worth much in the Northside anyway, and there were all too many who were
willing to swap a hopeless future for the savage joys of the present.
Hawk and Fisher charged round the last corner into Salt Lane and then skidded to
a halt. A large crowd had already gathered, packing the narrow street from side
to side. The two Guards bulled their way through without bothering to be
diplomatic about it, and quickly found themselves at the front of the crowd,
facing The Crossed Pikes tavern from a safe distance. The tavern looked peaceful
enough, apart from its shattered windows, but a Guard Constable was sitting on a
nearby doorstep, pressing a bloody handkerchief to a nasty looking scalp wound.
Blood covered half his face. He looked up dazedly as Hawk and Fisher approached
him, and tried to get to his feet. Hawk waved for him to stay seated.
"What happened here?"
The Constable blinked and licked his dry lips. "My partner and I were the first
here after the alarm went out. There was fighting and screaming inside the
tavern, but we couldn't see anything. The crowd told us there were two
Constables already in there, so my partner went in to check things out while I
watched the crowd. I waited and waited, but he never came back. After a while it
all went quiet, so I decided I'd just take a quick look through the door. I'd
barely got my foot over the doorstep when something hit me. I couldn't see for
blood in my eyes, so I got out of there quick. I'll try again in a minute, when
I've got my breath back. My partner's still in there."
Hawk clapped him on the shoulder reassuringly. "You take a rest. Fisher and I'll
have a look. If any more Guards come, keep them out here till we've had a chance
to evaluate the situation. Are you sure it's chacal-users in there?"
The Constable shrugged. "That's what the crowd said. But there's no way to be
sure. As far as I can tell, anyone who was in the tavern when the trouble
started is still in there."
Hawk squeezed the Constable's shoulder comfortingly, and then he and Fisher
moved off a way to discuss the matter.
"What do you think?" said Hawk.
"I think we should be very careful how we handle this. I don't like the sound of
it at all. Three Guards missing, another injured and so spooked he can't bear to
go near the place, and an unknown number of rioters who might just be out of
their minds on chacal. The odds stink. How come we never get the easy
assignments?"
"There aren't any easy assignments in Haven. We've got to go in, Isobel. There
could be innocent people trapped in there, unable to get out."
"It's not very likely, Hawk."
"No, it's not. But we have to check."
Fisher nodded unhappily. "All right; let's do it, before we get a rush of brains
to the head and realize what a dumb idea this is. What's the plan?"
"Well, there's no point in trying to sneak in. If there are chacal-users in
there, they'll be able to see, hear, and smell us coming long before we even get
a glimpse of them. I say we burst in through the door, weapons at the ready, and
hit anything that moves."
"Planning never was your strong suit, was it, Hawk?"
"Have you got a better idea?"
"Unfortunately, no."
Hawk grinned. "Then let's do it. Don't look so worried, lass. We've faced worse
odds before."
He drew his axe and Fisher drew her sword, and they moved cautiously over to the
tavern's main entrance. The door was standing ajar, with only darkness showing
beyond. Bright splashes of blood marked the polished wood, below a series of
gouges that looked unnervingly like claw marks. Hawk listened carefully, but
everything seemed still and quiet. He put his boot against the door and pushed
it wide open. The two Captains braced themselves, but nothing happened. Hawk
hefted his axe thoughtfully, and glanced at Fisher. She nodded, and they darted
through the doorway together. Once inside they moved quickly apart to stand on
either side of the door, so they wouldn't be silhouetted against the light, and
waited silently for their eyes to adjust to the gloom.
Hawk held his axe out before him, and strained his ears against the silence. A
fire was burning fitfully at the far end of the tavern, and some light fell past
the shuttered windows. The tavern slowly took form out of the gloom, and Hawk
was able to make out chairs and tables overturned and scattered across the
floor, as though a sudden storm had swept through the long room, carrying all
before it. Dark shapes lay still and silent among the broken furniture, and Hawk
didn't need to see them clearly to know they were bodies. He counted fourteen
that he was sure of. There was no sign of their killers.
Hawk moved slowly forward, axe at the ready. Broken glass crunched under his
boots. Fisher appeared silently out of the gloom to move at his side. He stopped
by a wall lamp, and working slowly and carefully, he took out his box of matches
and lit it, while Fisher stood guard. It wasn't easy lighting the lamp with one
hand, but he wouldn't put his axe down. The sudden light pushed back the
darkness, and for the first time Hawk and Fisher were able to see the full
extent of the devastation. There was blood everywhere, splashed across the walls
and furniture and pooled on the floor. Most of the bodies had been mutilated or
disfigured. Some had been torn apart. Loops of purple intestine hung limply from
a lamp bracket, and a severed hand beckoned from a barbecue grill by the fire.
Most of the bodies had been gutted, ripped open from throat to groin. Whoever or
whatever had done it hadn't bothered to use a blade. Fisher swore softly, and
her knuckles showed white on her sword hilt. Hawk put the lamp back in its
niche, and the two of them moved slowly forward. The tavern was still and
silent, full of the stench of blood and death.
They went from body to body, methodically checking for signs of life, but there
were none. They found the three Guards who'd gone in to face what they thought
was a simple riot. The only way to identify them was by their Constable's
scarlet cloak and tunic. Their heads were missing. There was no sign anywhere of
their attackers. Hawk wondered briefly if they might have made their escape
during the confusion, but he didn't think so. Every instinct he had was
screaming at him that the killers were still there, watching, and waiting for
their chance. He could almost feel the weight of their gaze on his back.
The tavern's bar had been wrecked. There wasn't an intact bottle or glass left
on the shelves, and the floor was covered with a thick carpet of broken glass.
Hawk drew Fisher's attention to the bartop. The thick slab of polished mahogany
was crisscrossed with long, curving scars that made Hawk think again about
claws. He looked at Fisher, who nodded slowly.
"Are you thinking what I'm thinking, Hawk?"
"Could be. We've been working on the assumption this was the work of
chacal-users, but more and more this is starting to look like something else
entirely. I don't see how anything human could have caused injuries like those,
or claw marks like these. I think we've got a werewolf here, Isobel."
Fisher reached down and pulled a silver dagger from inside her boot, and held it
loosely in her left hand. Just in case. She moved behind the bar, and then
signaled quickly for Hawk to come and join her. He did so, and the two of them
stood looking down at the bartender, lying wedged half under the bar. His throat
had been torn out, and there were bite marks on his arms where he'd lifted them
to defend himself.
"Werewolf," said Fisher.
"Maybe," said Hawk. "I don't know. The bite marks look wrong. A wolf's muzzle
would leave a larger, narrower bite…"
Something growled nearby. Hawk and Fisher moved quickly out from behind the bar
to give themselves room to fight. They glared about them, but nothing moved in
the shadowy, blood-spattered room. The growl came again, louder this time, and
then a heavy weight hit Hawk from above and behind, throwing him to the floor.
Glass crunched loudly beneath him as he rolled back and forth, trying
desperately to tear himself free from the creature that clung to his back,
pinning his arms to his sides with its legs and reaching for his throat with
clawed hands. He tucked his head in, chin pressed to his chest, and then nearly
panicked as he felt teeth gnawing at the back of his head. He got his feet
underneath him, glanced quickly about to get his bearings, and then slammed
himself back against the heavy wooden bar behind him. The creature's grip
loosened as the breath was knocked out of it, and Hawk pulled free. He threw
himself to one side, and Fisher stepped forward in a full extended lunge,
pinning the creature to the bar with her sword.
For a moment, no one moved. Hawk and Fisher stared incredulously at the
blood-soaked man transfixed by Fisher's sword. His clothing hung in rags, and he
held his hands like claws. Blood soaked his hands and forearms like crimson
gloves, and there was more blood spattered thickly over his livid white flesh.
His eyes were wide and staring. He snarled silently at the two Guards, showing
his bloody teeth, but he was still just a man. And then he lunged forward,
forcing himself along the impaling blade, his bloody hands reaching for Fisher's
throat. She held her ground, watching in fascination as the jagged-nailed hands
grew steadily nearer. Part of her wondered crazily what had happened to wreck
his nails like that.
Hawk lurched to his feet, lifting his axe. The killer lunged forward again,
blood spilling down his gut from where Fisher's sword pierced him, snarling and
growling like a wild animal. And then Fisher lifted her hand with the silver
dagger in it, and cut his throat. Blood sprayed across her arm, and she watched
warily as the light went out of his eyes and he slumped forward, dead at last.
She pulled out her sword and he fell limply to the floor and lay still. Hawk
came over to stand beside her.
"He must have been up in the rafters," he said finally. "All this time, just
watching us, and waiting."
.Fisher looked up at the ceiling. "There's no one else up there. But I can't
believe one man did all this, drug or no drug."
Hawk looked down at the dead user. "Maybe we shouldn't have killed him after
all. There are a lot of questions we could have asked him."
"He didn't exactly give us a choice," said Fisher dryly. "Besides, he wouldn't
have been allowed to talk. We'd have had to keep him in gaol till he came down,
and by then word would have reached his suppliers. They'd either have sprung him
or killed him to keep his mouth shut."
Hawk scowled. "It has to be said Headquarters' security isn't worth spit these
days. Particularly when it comes to drug arrests. You know, it wasn't this bad
when we first joined the Guard."
"Yes it was," said Fisher. "We just weren't experienced enough to recognize the
signs. There's a lot of money in drugs, and where there's a lot of money there's
a line of Guards with their hands out."
"This day started out depressing," said Hawk, "and it's not getting any better.
Let's get the hell out of here and file our report. If one chacal-user can do
this much damage on a rampage, then this city is in for some interesting times."
A low growl trembled on the air behind them. Hawk and Fisher spun round, weapons
at the ready. The tavern looked just as still and quiet as before. None of the
bodies had moved. The growl came again, but this time low and subdued, sounding
almost more like a groan. Hawk glared in the direction of the sound, and his
gaze came to rest on an overturned table leaning against a wall. It was a big
table, with room for one, maybe two, people behind it. Hawk silently indicated
the table to Fisher, and they moved slowly forward. There were no more growls or
groans, but as he drew nearer, Hawk thought he could hear something dripping.
Something… feeding.
They reached the table in a matter of moments, moving silently through the
gloom. Hawk put away his axe and grabbed the rim of the table with both hands,
while Fisher stood ready with her sword. They counted to three silently
together, and then Hawk braced himself and pulled the heavy table away from the
wall with one swift movement. Fisher moved quickly forward to stand between him
and whatever was waiting, and then both she and Hawk stood very still as the
table revealed its secret.
The second chacal-user was a young woman, maybe seventeen or eighteen. Her face
was bone-white, with dark, staring eyes, and her hands and forearms were slick
with other people's blood. She held her hands like claws, but made no move to
attack Hawk or Fisher. Someone, presumably the other user, had ripped open her
stomach. It was a wide, hideous wound that should have killed her immediately,
but the chacal was keeping her alive. She lay propped against the wall in a
widening pool of her own blood, and as Hawk and Fisher watched she dipped a hand
into the ragged wound in her gut, pulled out a bloody morsel, and ate it.
Oh, dear God, she's been feeding on herself…
Hawk moved forward, and put a gentle restraining hand on the girl's arm. "Don't.
Please don't."
"Get away from her, Hawk. She's still dangerous. We don't know how many people
she's killed here."
"Get a doctor," said Hawk, without looking round.
"Hawk…"
"Get a doctor!"
Fisher nodded, and hurried over to the main door. Hawk put the girl's hand in
her lap, and brushed her long, stringy hair from her face. The user looked at
him for the first time.
"Something went wrong," she said slowly, her voice barely rising above a murmur.
Hawk had to lean close to understand her. Her breath smelled of blood and
something worse. Her dead white skin was beaded with sweat. "This wasn't
supposed to happen. They said it would make us feel like Gods. I'm cold."
"I've sent for a doctor," said Hawk. "Take it easy. Save your strength."
"They lied to us…"
"Can you tell me what happened?" said Hawk. "You said something went wrong. What
went wrong?"
"It was a new drug. Supposed to be the best. Like chacal, only stronger. We were
going to be like Gods. We were packing it up at the factory, ready to ship it
out. Leon took some, for a lark. We tried it here, just a little. And then
everything went bad."
"Tell me about the factory," said Hawk. "Where is it?"
The girl's hand drifted towards her wound again. Hawk stopped it, and put it
back in her lap. She looked at him. "I'm cold."
Hawk took off his cloak and wrapped it around her. She was shivering violently,
and sweat ran down her face in rivulets. There was no color left in her face.
Even her lips were white. Her breathing grew increasingly shallow, and when she
spoke Hawk had to concentrate hard to make out the words.
"Morgan's place. The Blue Dolphin. In the Hook."
"All right, lass, take it easy. That's all I need. We'll get the bastards. You
rest now. The doctor will be here soon."
"Would you hold my hand? Please?"
"Sure." Hawk took off one of his gloves and held her left hand, squeezing it
comfortingly. Warm blood spilled down his wrist. "All right?"
"Hold it up where I can see it. I can't feel it."
Hawk started to lift her hand up before her face, but she'd stopped breathing.
He was still holding her hand when Fisher finally came back with the Guard
doctor.
"I didn't even find out her name," said Hawk, pulling his cloak around his
shoulders. Guard Constables and Captains summoned to the scene by the
communications sorcerer spilled around Hawk and Fisher as they moved in and out
of The Crossed Pikes tavern. They were carrying out the dead and lining them up
in neat rows on the snow, ready for the meat wagon when it arrived. The Guard
doctor hovered over them like an anxious relative, making notes on cause of
death, for when the forensic sorcerer arrived. A large crowd had gathered, but
were being kept back by two Constables. Hawk knelt down suddenly, and started
roughly cleaning the blood from his hand with a handful of snow. Fisher put a
hand on his shoulder and squeezed it comfortingly.
"You did all you could, Hawk."
"I know that."
"She killed at least a dozen people in there. Probably more."
"I know that too." He got to his feet and pulled his glove back on. "Before she
died, she told me where they're making the stuff she took. It's Robbie Morgan's
place, down in the Devil's Hook."
Fisher looked at him sharply. "Standard procedure would be to contact
Headquarters and tell them the factory's location. Since you haven't done that,
I assume there's a good reason why not?"
"I want these bastards, Isobel. I want them bad. It's a new drug, you see; they
haven't released it yet. Can you imagine what the Northside will be like once
this super-chacal hits the streets? We've got to stop it now. While we can."
"So let the Drug Squad handle it. That's what they're paid for."
"Oh no; I'm not risking this one going wrong. You can guarantee some Guard would
tip Morgan off, in return for a sweetener. The Drug Squad would get there just a
little too late and find nothing but an empty warehouse. That's happened too
many times just recently. So I think we'll do this one ourselves."
"Us? You mean, just you and me?"
"Isobel, please; I haven't gone completely crazy. Morgan's probably got a small
army of security people protecting the Blue Dolphin. But we've got a small army
ourselves, right here. There's a dozen Constables, five Captains, and even a
sorceress. We'll leave a few people here to mind the store, and take the rest."
"On whose authority?"
"Mine. If we bring this off, no one's going to ask any questions."
"And if we don't?"
Hawk looked at her steadily. "This is important to me, Isobel. She died right in
front of me, scared and hurting, and there wasn't a damn thing I could do to
help her. Just this once, we've got a chance to make a difference. A real
difference. Let's do it."
"All right. Let's do it. But how are we going to get the others to go along on
an unofficial raid?"
Hawk smiled. "Easy. We won't tell them it's unofficial."
Fisher grinned back at him. "I like the way you think, Hawk."
They finally ended up with an impromptu task force of ten Constables, two more
Captains, and the sorceress Mistique; all blithely unaware that they were about
to break every rule in the book. Which was probably for the best. That way, if
anything did go wrong, Hawk and Fisher could take all the blame on themselves.
Besides, no one with the brains they were born with would have volunteered if
they'd known the truth. At which point Hawk decided very firmly that he wasn't
going to think about the situation anymore. It was depressing him too much. All
that mattered was shutting down the drug factory, and Morgan as well, if
possible.
Hawk had heard about Morgan. Most people in Haven had, one way or another. He'd
made enough money down the years from drugs, prostitution, and murder to buy
himself respectability. He was seen in all the best places, belonged to all the
right clubs, and these days was officially regarded as above suspicion. In fact,
he still had a dirty finger in every pie in Haven, though no one had ever been
able to prove anything. But Hawk and Fisher knew, like every other Guard. They
had to deal every day with the violence and suffering his businesses caused.
Hawk frowned thoughtfully. It wasn't like Morgan to get so personally involved
in a scheme like this, having the super-chacal packed and distributed from one
of his own warehouses. And it also wasn't like him to get involved with such a
dangerous drug. The more traditional drugs brought less publicity, were just as
addictive, and therefore just as profitable. Hawk shrugged mentally. Every
villain makes a mistake sooner or later, and Morgan had made a bad one.
Hawk and Fisher led their people through the Northside at a quick march, heading
for the Devil's Hook. They made an impressive spectacle, and the crowds drew
back to let them pass. It was almost like a parade, but nobody cheered. The law
wasn't popular in the Northside. Hawk looked back at his people, and smiled to
himself. They might just bring this off after all. The Constables were some of
the toughest Guards in Haven. They had to be, or they wouldn't have been working
the Northside. And he knew both the Captains, by reputation, if not personally.
Captain Andrew Doughty was a medium-height, stocky man in his late forties; a
career Guard, with all the courage, cunning, and native caution that implied. He
was blond-haired, blue-eyed, and glacially handsome, and his job was his life.
He had a good enough reputation with his sword that he didn't have to keep
proving it, but he liked to anyway, given the chance. He'd had a lot of partners
in his time, but worked best alone. Mostly because he didn't trust anyone but
himself.
Captain Howard Burns was a tall, lean man in his late thirties, with an unruly
mop of dark hair and a thick spade beard. He was an expert in personal and
company security, and worked mostly in the Westside, overseeing the transfer of
money or valuables from one location to another. He took his work very
seriously, and had several official commendations for bravery. He had no sense
of humor at all, but then, no one's perfect. Especially not in Haven.
Hawk had worked with both of them in his time, and was glad he had someone apart
from Fisher to watch his back this time. They were both good men, men he could
depend on. The only real wild card in the pack was the sorceress Mistique. She
was new to the Guard, and still looking for a chance to show what she could do.
Mistique was a tall, slender, fluttering woman in her early thirties, dressed in
sorcerer's black, carefully cut in the latest fashion to show lots of bare
flesh. If the cold bothered her at all, she didn't show it. She had a long,
horsey face, and a friendly, toothy grin that made her look ten years younger.
She had a husky, upper-class accent and wouldn't answer questions about her
background. She also had a thick mass of long black curly hair she had to keep
sweeping back out of her eyes. All together, she wasn't exactly the most
organized person Hawk had ever met, but she was supposed to be bloody good at
what she did, and he'd settle for that. Morgan's warehouse would undoubtedly be
crawling with defensive magic and booby traps. The only real problem with
Mistique was that she hardly ever seemed to stop talking. And she wore literally
dozens of beads and bangles and bracelets that clattered loudly as she walked.
Hawk made a mental note not to include her in any plans that involved sneaking
up on the enemy.
And then they came to the Devil's Hook, and Mistique's chatter stumbled to a
halt. Even casual conversation died away quickly as Hawk led his people into the
Hook. It was a bad place to be, and they all knew it. The Devil's Hook was the
single poorest, most decayed, and most dangerous area in Haven. A square mile of
slums and alleyways backing onto the main Docks, the Hook held more crime,
corruption, and open misery than most people could bear to think about. The
squalid tenement buildings were crammed with sweatshops that paid starvation
wages for work on goods that often fetched high prices in the better parts of
the city. Child labor was common, as was malnutrition and disease. No one
ventured into the stinking streets alone or unarmed. The Guard patrolled the
Hook very loosely rather than risk open warfare with the gangs who ran it. The
gangs weren't as powerful as they once were, thanks to some sterling work by the
sorcerer Gaunt, but after he left Haven the bad times soon returned as new gangs
established themselves and fought for territory. Nobody was surprised. No one
made any complaints. The Hook was where you ended up when you had nowhere else
to go but a pauper's grave.
All in all, the perfect spot for a new drug factory.
The Blue Dolphin was a squalid little lock-up warehouse, on one end of a rotting
tenement. Chemicals from nearby factories had stained and pitted the stonework,
and all the windows were boarded up. It was cheaper than shutters. The street
was deserted, but Hawk could feel the pressure of watching eyes. He brought his
people to a halt outside the warehouse, and quickly set up a defensive
perimeter. The last thing they needed was a gang attack while they were occupied
with the drug factory. Fisher moved in close beside him.
"Are you sure this is the right place, Hawk? If Morgan's got a packing and
distribution setup here, he's going to need a lot more room than this pokey
little warehouse."
"This is the place," said Hawk, hoping he sounded more convinced than he felt.
When all was said and done, all he had to go on was the dying words of a girl
already out of her mind on chacal. He pushed the thought to one side. He'd
believed her then; he had to believe her now. Or she had died for nothing.
"There are mystic wards all over the place," said Mistique. Hawk jumped
slightly. He hadn't heard her come up behind him. The sorceress smiled briefly,
and then turned her attention back to the warehouse. "I can't quite make out
what kind of wards, though. Given the circumstances, I think we ought to tread
carefully, just in case."
Hawk nodded, and gestured to two of the Constables. They moved forward and
cautiously tried the warehouse door. It was locked, which surprised no one. One
Constable kicked the door. His clothes burst into flames that leapt up around
him in seconds. He screamed shrilly and staggered back, beating at his blazing
clothes with his hands. The other Constable quickly pulled him down and rolled
him back and forth in the snow to smother the flames. Hawk scowled. He hadn't
expected to hit a magic defense this quickly. He made sure the injured Constable
would be all right, and then turned to the sorceress.
"Get us in there, Mistique. I don't care how you do it, but do it fast. They
know we're here now."
The sorceress nodded eagerly, her earrings jangling accompaniment. She stared
thoughtfully at the door, and wisps of fog began to appear around her, circling
and twisting on the still air. The misty grey strands grew thicker, undulating
disturbingly as they drifted away from the sorceress towards the warehouse door.
The mists looked almost alive, and purposeful. They curled around the door,
seeping past the edges and sinking into the wood itself. Mistique made a sudden,
sharp gesture and the door exploded. Fragments and splinters of rotting wood
rained down on the Guards as they shielded themselves with their cloaks. Where
the door had been, there was now nothing but an impenetrable darkness.
Mistique turned to look at Hawk. Strands of fog still swirled around her, like
ethereal serpents with no beginning or end. "Fast enough for you, darling?"
"Very impressive," said Hawk courteously, trying hard not to sound too
impressed. "Can you tell us anything about what's beyond the doorway?"
"That's the bad news, I'm afraid," said Mistique. "The darkness is a dimensional
gateway, leading to a small pocket dimension, the inside of which is a damn
sight bigger than that lock-up. I've knocked out the protective wards so we can
get in there, but I've absolutely no idea of what might be waiting for us. Sorry
to be such a drag, but whoever designed this beastly setup was jolly good at his
job."
"All right," said Hawk. "We'll just have to take it as it comes. Brace
yourselves, people; we're going in. I want Morgan alive, and preferably intact
so we can ask him questions. Anyone else is fair game. I'd prefer prisoners to
corpses, but don't put yourselves at risk. We don't know what kind of odds we'll
be facing. Try not to wreck the place too much; you never know what might turn
out to be useful evidence. Right. Let's do it."
He hefted his axe and walked forward, Fisher and Mistique on either side of him.
From behind came a brief whisper of steel on leather as the Guards drew their
weapons and started after him. Hawk gritted his teeth and plunged into the
darkness. There was a sharp moment of intense heat, and then he burst through
into Morgan's factory. His first sight of the place was almost enough to stop
him in his tracks, but he forced himself to keep going to make room for the
others coming behind. Morgan's warehouse was an insane mixture of planes and
angles and inverted stairways that could not have existed in anything but a
pocket universe.
There was no up or down, in any way that made any sense. People walked on one
side of a surface or another, or on both, and gravity seemed merely a matter of
opinion. Simple wooden stairways connected the various level planes, twisting
and turning around each other like mating snakes, and walls became floors became
ceilings, depending on which way you approached them. Hawk shook off his
disorientation and concentrated on the force of armed men rushing towards him
from a dozen different directions. He didn't have to count them to know his own
small group was vastly outnumbered.
"Mistique!" he yelled quickly. "Take out the stairways. Bring this place down
around their ears!"
"I'm afraid we have a slight problem, dear," said the sorcerer, staring off into
the distance. "Morgan has his own sorceress here, and I'm rather tied up at the
moment keeping him from killing us all."
"Can you take him?"
"Probably, if you stop interrupting. And if you can keep those nasty-looking
men-at-arms away from me."
Hawk yelled instructions to his people, and the Constables moved forward to form
a barrier between Mistique and the approaching men-at-arms, while Captain
Doughty and Captain Burns stayed at her side as bodyguards. Fisher looked at
Hawk.
"And what are we going to do?"
"Find Morgan," said Hawk grimly. "I'm not taking any chances on his getting
away. Mistique, when you're ready, don't wait for orders from me. Just trash the
place."
Mistique nodded, absorbed in her sorcerous battle. Thick strands of fog twisted
around her like dogs straining at the leash. Hawk started down the nearest
stairway, with Fisher close behind him. They hadn't gone far when Hawk heard the
first clash of steel as his people met the men-at-arms. He didn't look back.
In what might have been the center of the mad tangle of planes and stairways was
a more-or-less open area with a lot of excited movement. It seemed as good a
place as any to start looking. The stairs turned and twisted under Hawk, and he
quickly learned to keep his gaze on his feet and ignore what was going on around
him. A man-at-arms in full chain mail came running up the stairs, waving his
sword with more confidence than style. Hawk cut him down with a single blow, and
hurled his body over the side of the stairway. The dead man fell in half a dozen
different directions before disappearing from sight in the maze of stairways.
More men-at-arms came charging towards Hawk, six men in the lead, with a lot
more on the way. Bad odds, on a rickety wooden staircase. He looked quickly
about him, and grinned as he spotted a large flat plane not too far away. It
stood at right angles to him, but then, so did the two men on it, frantically
packing paper parcels into two large crates on a wide table. He looked back at
Fisher, and pointed at the plane. She raised an eyebrow, and then nodded
sharply. They clambered up onto the narrow wooden banister, which creaked
dangerously under their weight, and leapt out into space towards the
right-angled plane. Gravity changed suddenly as they left the stairs, and
slammed them down hard on the bare wooden plane.
Hawk and Fisher hit the floor rolling, and were quickly up on their feet again.
The two men packing were already gone. Hawk hefted one of the small paper
parcels, and then looked at the size of the packing case. That crate could hold
an awful lot of drugs… if it was drugs. A horrible thought struck him, and he
opened the packet and sniffed cautiously at the grey powder inside. He relaxed
slightly and blew his nose hard. It was chacal. The sharp acidic smell was quite
distinctive. Fisher yelled a warning, and he threw the packet aside and looked
up. A man-at-arms leaned out from an upside-down stairway overhead and cut at
Hawk with his sword. Hawk parried with his axe, but couldn't reach high enough
to attack the man. He backed away, and the swordsman moved along the stairway
after him. There was a strange, dreamlike quality to the fight, with both men
upside-down to the other, but Hawk knew better than to let the strangeness
distract him. If he couldn't figure out a way to get at his opponent, he was a
dead man. An axe wasn't made for defense. He bumped into the table, and an idea
struck him. He grabbed the open packet and threw the chacal powder into the
other man's face. The man-at-arms screamed, and dropped his sword to claw at his
eyes with both hands.
"Hawk!"
He spun round to find Fisher standing at the edge of the plane, fighting off
three of the five men-at-arms who'd jumped down off the banister after the
Guards. Two already lay dead at her feet. Hawk sprinted over to join her, ducked
under the first man's sword, and swung his axe in a vicious sideways arc. The
heavy steel axehead punched through the man's chain mail and buried itself in
his rib cage. Bones broke and splintered, and the impact drove the man-at-arms
to his knees, coughing blood. Hawk yanked the axe free and booted the man off
the edge of the plane. The dying man fell upwards out of sight.
Fisher had already cut down another of her opponents, and now stood toe to toe
with the last remaining adversary. Steel rang on steel and sparks flew as the
blades met, hammering together and dancing apart in a lightning duel of strength
and skill. Hawk started forward to help her, and then stopped as he saw more
men-at-arms running down a winding stairway to join the fight. Fisher saw them
too, and quickly kneed her opponent in the groin.
"Get the hell out of here, Hawk. Find Morgan. I'll hold them off." She cut her
opponent's throat, and sidestepped neatly to avoid the jetting blood. "Move it,
Hawk!"
Hawk nodded abruptly, and turned and ran down the other stairway, heading once
again for what had looked like the center of operations. From behind him came
the clash of sword on sword as Fisher met the first of the new onslaught, but he
didn't look back. He didn't dare. He pressed on through the maze, passing from
stairway to plane to stairway and cutting down anyone who tried to get in his
way. All around him Morgan's people were running back and forth, looking for
orders or weapons or just heading for the exit. Morgan wouldn't have gone,
though. This was his place, his territory, and he'd trust in his men and his
sorcerer to protect him. A sudden piercing scream caught Hawk's attention, and
he looked up and round in time to see a man dressed in sorcerer's black stagger
drunkenly across a plane at right angles to Hawk's stairway. Streamers of thick
milky fog burst out of his mouth and eyes and ears. His head swelled impossibly
and then exploded in a spreading cloud of crimson mist. The body crumpled to the
floor as the last echo of the sorcerer's dying cry faded slowly away.
Hawk grinned. So much for Morgan's sorcerer. He was close to the center now; he
could feel it. There were drugs and people and men-at-arms everywhere, and
there, straight ahead, he saw a familiar face in an earth-brown cloak and hood.
Morgan. Hawk ran forward, cutting his way through two swordsmen foolish enough
to try and stop him. Their blood splashed across his face and hands, but he
didn't pause to wipe it off. He couldn't let Morgan escape. He couldn't.
Hold my hand. Hold it up where I can see it…
Morgan looked once at the bloodstained Guard rushing towards him, and then
continued stuffing papers into a leather pouch. Three men-at-arms moved forward
to stand between Hawk and Morgan. Hawk hit them at a dead run, swinging his axe
double-handed. He never felt the wounds he took, and when it was all over, he
stepped across their dead bodies to advance slowly on the drug baron.
Seen up close, Morgan didn't look like much. Average height and build, with a
bland face, perhaps a little too full to be handsome. A mild gaze and a
civilized smile. He didn't look like the kind of man who'd made his fortune
through the death and suffering of others. But then, they never did. Hawk moved
slowly forward. Blood ran thickly down from a wound in his left thigh, and
squelched inside his boot. There was more blood, soaking his arms and sides,
some of it his. Even so, Morgan had enough sense not to try and run. He knew he
wouldn't make it. They stood facing each other, while from all around came
shouts and screams and the sounds of fighting.
"Who are you?" said Morgan finally. "Why are you doing this?"
"I'm every bad dream you ever had," said Hawk. "I'm a Guard who can't be
bought."
Morgan shook his head slowly, as a father chides a son who has made an
understandable mistake. "Everyone has his price, Captain. If not you, then
certainly someone among your superiors. I'll never come to trial. I know too
much, about too many people. And I really do have friends in high places. Quite
often, I helped put them there. So I'm afraid all this blood and destruction has
been for nothing. You won't be able to make a case against me."
Hawk grinned. "You're the second person who's told me that today. He was wrong,
too. You're going to hang, Morgan. I'll come and watch."
There was a muffled sound from behind a drapery to their right. Morgan glanced
at it, and then looked quickly away. For the first time, he seemed a little
uneasy. Hawk moved slowly over to the curtain, unconsciously favoring his
wounded leg.
"What's behind here, Morgan?"
"Experimental animals. We had to test the drug, to establish the correct dosage.
Nothing that would interest you."
Hawk swept the cloth to one side, and froze for a moment. Inside a crude,
steel-barred cage lay a pile of dead young men and women, tangled together. Some
were barely teenagers. The bodies were torn and mutilated, and it was clear most
of them had died tearing at each other and themselves. One man's hand was buried
to the wrist in another's ripped-open stomach. A young girl had torn out her own
eyes. There was blood everywhere, but not enough to hide the characteristic
colorless white skin of chacal use. Hawk turned back to Morgan, who hadn't moved
an inch.
"Where did you get them?" said Hawk.
Morgan shrugged. "Runaways, debtors' prisons, even a few volunteers. There are
always some ready to risk their lives for a new thrill."
"You know what this new drug does," said Hawk. "So why are you getting involved
with it? There isn't enough bribe money in the world to make the Guard overlook
the slaughter this shit will cause. Even the other drug barons would turn
against you over something like this."
"I won't be here when it breaks," said Morgan. "There's a lot of money in this.
Millions of ducats. More than enough to leave Haven and set up a new and very
comfortable life somewhere else. You could have a life like that, Captain.
There's enough money for everyone. Just name your price, and I guarantee you I
can meet it."
"Really?" said Hawk. He stepped forward suddenly, grabbed a handful of Morgan's
robe and dragged him over to the steel cage. "You want to know my price, Morgan?
Bring them back to life. Bring those poor bastards back! Go on; give just one of
them his life back and I'll let you go, here and now."
"You're being ridiculous, Captain," said Morgan evenly. "And very foolish."
"You're under arrest," said Hawk. "Tell your people to lay down their weapons
and surrender."
"Or?"
Hawk grinned. "Believe me, Morgan, you don't want to know."
"I'll have to speak to my sorcerer first."
"Don't bother; he's dead."
Morgan looked at him blankly, and then open terror rushed across his face.
"We've got to get out of here! If he's dead, this whole place could collapse at
any moment. It's only his magic that kept it stable!"
Hawk swore briefly. He knew real fear when he saw it. "Tell your men to
surrender. Do it!"
Morgan started shouting orders, and all over the maze of planes and stairways
the fighting came to a halt. Hawk yelled orders to his men, and the Guards began
herding Morgan's people towards the dimensional portal. Hawk dragged Morgan
along himself, never once releasing his grip on the drug baron's robe. The
stairway began to sway and tremble under his feet. A nearby plane cracked across
from end to end. Streams of dust fell from somewhere high above. There were
creaks and groanings all around, and the wooden handrail turned to rot and mush
under Hawk's hand. Morgan began pleading with him to go faster. Mistique
appeared out of nowhere in a clattering of beads and bracelets and ran beside
them as they hurried towards the portal.
"So, you did get the little rat after all. Well done, darling."
"I wish you wouldn't call me that in front of the men," said Hawk. "Can you use
your magic to hold this place together long enough for us all to get out?"
"I'm doing my best, darling, but it's not really my field. We should all make
it. If we're lucky."
They reached the portal to find it bottlenecked by the last of Morgan's people.
The drug baron screamed at them to get out of the way, but Hawk held him back.
Guards encouraged the slow movers on their way with harsh language and the
occasional kick up the backside. The remaining stairways broke apart and
collapsed in a roar of cracking timber. The planes spun and twisted in midair,
fraying at the edges. Loose magic snapped on the air like disturbed static. The
last of Morgan's people went through, and Hawk and Morgan and Mistique followed
the Guards out.
The cold of the street hit Hawk like a blow, and his vision clouded briefly as
pain and fatigue caught up with him. He shook his head and pushed the tiredness
back. He didn't have time for it now. He handed Morgan over to two Constables,
along with dire threats of what he'd do to them if Morgan escaped, and looked
round for familiar faces. Fisher appeared out of nowhere, safe and more or less
sound. They compared wounds for a moment, and then hugged each other carefully.
Captain Burns came over to join them as they broke apart. He looked bloodied and
battered and just a little dazed.
"How many did we lose?" said Hawk.
Burns scowled. "Five Constables, and Captain Doughty. Could have been worse, I
suppose. Though I won't tell Doughty's widow that. Did you get Morgan?"
"Yeah," said Fisher. "Hawk got him."
And then there was a great crashing roar, and the whole tenement behind them
collapsed amid screams of rending stone and timber, and the death cries of the
hundreds of people trapped within. Flying fragments of stone and wood tore
through the air like shrapnel, and then a thick cloud of smoke billowed out to
fill the street from end to end.
Chapter Two
Going Down
Hawk pulled and tugged at a stubborn piece of rubble, and bit by bit it slid
aside. The stone's sharp edges tore at his gloves and the flesh beneath, but he
hardly felt the pain through the bitter cold and the creeping numbness of utter
exhaustion. He'd lost track of how long he and the others had been digging
through the wreckage, searching for survivors. It seemed ages since the
collapsing pocket dimension had pulled the whole tenement building down with it,
but the air was still thick with dust that choked the throat and irritated the
eye. There were still occasional screams or moans or pleas for help from people
trapped deep within the huge pile of broken stone and timber, which stretched
across the narrow street and lapped up against the opposite building.
Hawk supposed he should be grateful that only the one building had come down,
but he was too numb to feel much of anything now. He looked slowly about him as
he stopped for a brief rest. The adjoining buildings were slumped and stooped,
with jagged cracks in their walls, yet somehow holding together. The Guard had
evacuated them, just in case, and their occupants had willingly joined the dig
for survivors. Even in the Devil's Hook, people could sometimes be touched by
tragedy.
There was no telling how many might still be trapped under the debris. Slum
landlords didn't keep records on how many desperate people they squeezed into
each dingy little room. The Guard were trying to keep a count, but most of the
dead they dug out were too disfigured to be easily identified, and sometimes all
that could be found of the bodies were scattered bits and pieces. The rescuers
worked on, fired now and then from their exhaustion by the sudden appearance of
a living soul, pulled raw and bloodied from the darkness under the rubble.
Guards and prisoners worked side by side, along with people from the Hook, all
animosities forgotten in the driving need to save as many as they could.
Not that everyone had proved so openhearted. Morgan had flatly refused to lift
so much as a finger to help. Hawk was already half out of his mind with concern
for the injured, and knew he couldn't spare even one Constable to watch over the
drug baron. So he just punched Morgan out, manacled the unconscious man to a
nearby railing and left him there. No one objected, not even his own people. A
few of them even cheered. Hawk smiled briefly at the memory, and returned to
work.
They had no real tools to work with, so they attacked the broken bricks and
stone and wood with their bare hands, forming human chains to transfer the
larger pieces. They worked with frantic speed, spurred on by the screams and
sobbing of those trapped below, but soon found it was better to work slowly and
carefully rather than risk the debris collapsing in on itself, if a vital
support was unwittingly removed. Most of the bodies were women and children,
crushed and broken by the horrid weight. Crammed together in one room sweatshops
and factories, they never stood a chance. But some survived, sheltered by
protecting slabs of masonry, and they were reason enough to keep on digging.
And all the time he worked, Hawk was haunted by a simple, inescapable thought;
it was all his fault. If he hadn't led the raid on Morgan's factory, the pocket
dimension wouldn't have collapsed, taking the tenement with it, and all those
people, all those women and children, would still be alive.
Eventually the fire brigade arrived, encouraged by the presence of so many
Guards. Normally they wouldn't have entered the Devil's Hook without an armed
escort and a written guarantee of hazard pay. They quickly took over the running
of the operation, and things began to go more smoothly. They set about propping
up the adjoining buildings, and dealt efficiently with the many water leaks.
Doctors and nurses arrived from a nearby charity hospital, and began sorting out
the real emergencies from the merely badly injured. Fisher took the opportunity
to drag Hawk over to a doctor, and insisted he have his wounds treated. He
didn't have the strength to argue.
More volunteers turned up to help, followed by a small army of looters. Hawk
waited for the doctor to finish the healing spell, and then rose to his feet,
feeling stiff but a damn sight more lively. He walked over to confront the
looters, Fisher at his side. The first few took one look at what was coming
towards them, went very pale, and skidded to a halt. Word passed quickly back,
and most of the would-be looters decided immediately that they were needed
somewhere else, very urgently. The ones who couldn't move or think that fast
found themselves volunteered to help dig through the rubble for survivors.
The work continued, interrupted increasingly rarely by a sudden shout as someone
thought they heard a cry for help. Everyone would stop where they were, ears
straining against the quiet as they tried to locate the faint sound. Sometimes
there was nothing but the quiet, and work would slowly resume, but sometimes the
cry would come again, and then everyone would work together, sweating and
straining against the stubborn stone and wood until the survivors could be
gently lifted free. There were hundreds of dead in the rubble, and only a few
dozen living, but each new life snatched from the crushing stone gave the
exhausted volunteers new will to carry on. Nurses moved among the workers with
cups of hot soup and mulled ale, and an encouraging word for those who looked as
though they needed it. And still more volunteers came to help, drawn from the
surrounding area by the scale of the tragedy.
More Guards arrived, expecting riots, chaos, and mass looting, and were shocked
to find so many people from the Hook working together to help others. Fisher set
some of them to blocking off the street, to keep out sightseers and ghouls who'd
just get in the way, and put the rest to work digging in the ruins, so that
those who'd been working the longest could get some rest. Some of the Guard
Constables weren't too keen on dirtying their hands with manual labor, but one
cold glare from Hawk was enough to convince them to shut up and get on with it.
It was at this point that the local gang leader, Hammer, arrived, along with
twenty or so of his most impressive-looking bullies, and insisted on talking to
the man in charge. Hawk went over to meet him, secretly glad of an excuse for a
break—and a little guilty at feeling that way. So he wasn't in the best of moods
when the gang leader delivered his ultimatum. Hammer was a medium-height,
well-padded man in his early twenties. He dressed well, if rather flashily, and
had the kind of face that fell naturally into a sneer.
"What the hell do you think you're doing here?" he said flatly. "This is my
territory, and no one works here without paying me. No one. So either pay up,
right here, where everyone can see it, or I'll be forced to order my people to
shut you down. Nothing happens in my territory without my permission."
Hawk looked at him. "There are injured people here who need our help. Some of
them will die without it."
"That's your problem."
Hawk nodded, and kneed Hammer in the groin. All the color went out of the gang
leader's face, and he dropped to his knees, his hands buried between his thighs.
"You're under arrest," said Hawk. He looked hard at the shocked bullies. "The
rest of you, get over there and start digging, or I'll personally cut you all
off at the knees."
The bullies looked at him, looked at their fallen leader, and decided he just
might mean it. They shrugged more or less in unison, and moved over to work in
the ruins. The local people raised a brief cheer for Hawk, surprising him and
them, and then they all got back to work. The gang leader was left lying huddled
in a ball, handcuffed by his ankle to a railing.
The hours dragged on, and the search turned up fewer and fewer survivors. The
fire brigade's engineers set up supports for the adjoining buildings; nothing
elaborate, but enough to keep them secure until the builders could be called in.
People began to drift away, too exhausted or dispirited to continue. Hawk sent
most of his Guards back to Headquarters with Morgan and his people, the crates
of chacal now carefully labeled and numbered, and the gang leader Hammer, under
Captain Burns's direction. But Hawk stayed on, and Fisher stayed with him. Hawk
didn't know whether he stayed because he felt he was still needed or because he
was punishing himself, but he knew he couldn't leave until he was sure there was
no one still alive under the wreckage. Someone cried out they'd heard something,
and once again everything came to a halt as the diggers listened, holding their
breath, trying to hear a faint cry for help over the beating of their own
hearts. One of the men yelled, and everyone converged on a dark, narrow shaft
that fell away into the depths of the ruins. One of the diggers dropped a small
stone down the shaft. They all listened hard, but no one heard it hit bottom.
"Sounded like a child," said the man who first raised the alarm. "Pretty quiet.
Must be trapped at the bottom of the shaft somewhere."
"We daren't try to widen the hole," said Fisher. "This whole area is touchy as
hell. One wrong move, and the shaft could collapse in on itself."
"We can't just leave the child there," said a woman dully, kneeling at the edge
of the shaft. "Someone could go down on a rope, and fetch it up."
"Not someone," said Hawk. "Me. Get me a length of rope and a lantern."
He started stripping off his cloak and furs. Fisher moved in close beside him.
"You don't have to do this, Hawk."
"Yes I do."
"You couldn't have known this would happen."
"I should have thought, instead of just barging straight in."
"That shaft isn't stable. It could collapse at any time."
"I know that. Keep an eye on my furs and my axe, would you? This is Haven, after
all."
He stood by the shaft in his shirt and trousers, looking down into the darkness,
and shivered suddenly, not entirely from the cold. He didn't like dark, enclosed
places, particularly underground, and the whole situation reminded him
uncomfortably of a bad experience he'd once had down a mine. He didn't have to
go down the shaft. There were any number of others ready to volunteer. But if he
didn't do it, he'd always believe he should have.
Someone came back with a length of rope, and Fisher fastened one end round his
waist. Someone else tied the other end to a sturdy outcropping of broken stone,
and Hawk and Fisher took turns tugging on the rope to make sure it was secure.
One of the men gave him a lantern, and he held it out over the shaft. The pale
golden light didn't penetrate far into the darkness. He listened, but couldn't
hear anything. The hole itself was about three feet in diameter and looked
distinctly unsafe. Hawk shrugged. It wouldn't get any safer, no matter how long
he waited. He sat down on the edge, very slowly and very carefully, swung his
legs over the side, and then lowered himself into the darkness, bracing his back
and his knees against the sides of the shaft. He took a deep breath and let it
out, and then inch by inch he made his way down into the darkness, the lantern
resting uncomfortably on his chest.
Jagged edges of stone and wood cut at him viciously as he descended, and the
circle of daylight overhead grew smaller and smaller. He moved slowly down in
his pool of light, stopping now and again to call out to the child below, but
there was never any reply. He pressed on, cursing the narrow confines around him
as they bowed in and out, and soon came to the bottom of the shaft. He held up
the lantern and looked around him. Rough spikes of broken wood and stone
protruded from every side, and a dozen openings led off into the honeycomb of
wreckage. Most were too small or too obviously unsafe for him to try, but one
aperture led into a narrow tunnel barely two feet high. Hawk called out to the
child, but there was only the silence and his own harsh breathing. He looked
back up the main shaft, but all he could see was darkness. He was on his own. He
looked again at the narrow tunnel, cursed again briefly, and got down on his
hands and knees.
The rope played out behind him as he wriggled his way through the tunnel
darkness in his narrow pool of light, stopping now and then to manoeuvre past
outcroppings from the tunnel walls. The child had to be around here somewhere.
He couldn't have come all this way for nothing. He thought briefly about the
sheer weight of wreckage pressing from above, and his skin went cold. The roof
of the tunnel bulged down ahead of him, and he had to lie on his back and force
himself past the obstruction an inch at a time, pulling the lantern behind. The
unyielding stone pressed against his chest like a giant hand trying to crush the
breath out of him. He breathed out, emptying his lungs, and slowly squeezed
past.
In the end, he found the child by bumping into her. He'd just got past the
obstruction when his head hit something soft and yielding. His first thought was
that he'd run into some kind of animal down in the dark with him, and his
imagination conjured up all kinds of unpleasantness before he got it back under
control. He squirmed over onto his stomach, wishing briefly that he'd brought
his axe, and then stopped as he saw her, lying still and silent on the tunnel
floor. She looked to be about five or six years old, covered in dirt and blood,
but still breathing strongly. Hawk spoke to her, but she didn't respond, even
when he tapped her sharply on the shoulder. He pulled himself along beside her,
and saw for the first time that one of her legs was pinned between two great
slabs of stone, holding her firmly just below the ankle.
Hawk put his lantern down and pushed cautiously at the slabs, but they wouldn't
budge. He took hold of the girl's shoulders and pulled until his arms ached, but
she didn't budge either. The stones weren't going to give her up that easily.
Hawk let go of her, and tried to think. The air was full of dust, and he coughed
hard to try and clear it from his throat. The side of his face grew
uncomfortably warm from having the lantern so close, and he moved it a bit
further away. Shadows leapt alarmingly in the cramped tunnel and then were still
again. He scowled, and worried his lower lip between his teeth. He had to get
the child out of there. The tunnel could collapse at any time, bringing tons of
stone and timber crashing down on her. And him too, for that matter. But there
was no way he could persuade the stone slabs to give up their hold on her foot.
He had no tools to work with, and even if he had, there wasn't enough room to
apply any leverage. No, there was only one way to get the child out. Tears stung
his eyes as the horror of it clenched at his gut, but he knew he had to do it.
He didn't have any choice in the matter.
He squirmed and wriggled as best he could in the confined space, and finally
managed to draw the knife from his boot and slide his leather belt out of his
trousers. There was a good edge on the blade. It would do the job. He took a
close look at the stone slabs where they held the child's foot, checking if
there was room enough to work, but he already knew the answer. There was room.
He was just putting it off. He looped his belt around the girl's leg, close up
against the stone, and pulled it tight, until flesh bulged thickly up on either
side of it. Hawk hefted the knife, and then brushed the little girl's hair
gently with his free hand.
"Don't wake up, lass. I'll be as quick as I can."
He placed the edge of the knife against her leg, as close to the stones as he
could get it, and began sawing.
There was a lot more blood than he'd expected, and he had to tighten the belt
twice more before he could stem most of the flow. When he was finished, he tore
off one of his sleeves and wrapped it tightly round the stump. His arms and face
were splashed with blood, and he was breathing in great gulps, as though he'd
just run a race. He turned over on his back again, grabbed his lantern, and
began inching his way back down the tunnel, dragging the unconscious girl along
behind him. He didn't know how long he'd spent in the narrow tunnel, but it felt
like forever.
The tunnel roof soon rose enough to let him get to his hands and knees again,
and he crawled along through the darkness, hugging the child to his chest. He
suddenly found himself at the base of the main shaft, and stopped for a moment
to get his breath. He ached in every muscle, and he'd torn his hands and knees
to ribbons. But he couldn't let himself rest. The little girl needed expert
medical help, and she was running out of time. He held the girl tightly to his
chest with one arm and slowly began to climb back up the shaft, with only his
legs and his back to support his weight and that of the child.
It didn't take long before the pain in his tired muscles became excruciating,
but he wouldn't stop. The girl was depending on him. Foot by foot he fought his
way up the shaft, grunting and snarling with the effort, his gaze fixed on the
gradually widening circle of light above him. He finally drew near the surface,
and eager hands reached down to take the child and help Hawk the rest of the
way. He clambered laboriously out and lay stretched out on the rubble, squinting
at the bright daylight and drawing in deep lungfuls of the comparatively clean
air. Fisher swore softly at the state of his hands and knees, helped him sit up,
and wrapped his cloak around him. Someone brought him a cup of lukewarm soup,
and he sipped at it gratefully.
"The child," he said thickly. "What have they done with her?"
"A doctor's looking at her now," said Fisher. "And as soon as you've finished
that soup we're going to get one to take a look at you, as well. God, you're a
mess, Hawk. Was it bad down there?"
"Bad enough."
Eventually he got to his feet again, and Fisher found him a doctor who could
work the right healing spells. The wounds closed up easily enough, but there was
nothing the doctor could do for physical and emotional exhaustion. Hawk and
Fisher looked around them. The dead and injured had been laid out in neat rows
on the snow, the dying and the recovering lying side by side. A large pile of
unidentified body parts had been tactfully hidden under a blood-spattered
tarpaulin. Hawk shook his head numbly.
"All this, to catch one drug baron and his people. Tomorrow there'll be a dozen
just like him fighting to take his place, and it will all have to be done
again."
"Stop that," said Fisher sharply. "None of this is your fault. It's Morgan's
fault, for having set up a pocket dimension here in the first place. And if we
hadn't acted to stop the super-chacal being distributed, there's no telling how
many thousands might have died across the city."
Hawk didn't answer. He looked slowly about him, taking in the situation.
Engineers and sorcerers had got together to stabilize the surrounding buildings,
and people were being allowed back into them again. That should please the slum
landlords. Even they couldn't charge rent on a pile of rubble. Firemen were
moving among the wreckage, shoring up the few broken walls and inner structures
that hadn't collapsed completely. A few people were still sifting through the
rubble, but the general air of urgency was gone. Much of the real work had been
done now, and most people had accepted that there probably weren't going to be
any more survivors. The volunteers had gone home, exhausted, and Hawk felt he
might as well do the same. There was nothing left for him to do, he was out on
his feet, and it had to be well past the end of his double shift. He was just
turning to Fisher to tell her it was time to go, when there was the sound of
gentle flute music, and the dry, acid voice of the communications sorcerer
filled his head.
Captains Hawk and Fisher, return to Guard Headquarters immediately. This order
supersedes all other directives.
Hawk looked at Fisher. "Typical. Bloody typical. What the hell do they want
now?"
"Beats me," said Fisher. "Maybe they want to congratulate us for finally nabbing
Morgan. There are a lot of people at Headquarters who'll fight for the chance to
ask him some very pointed questions."
Hawk sniffed. "With our luck, they'll probably screw it up in the Courts, and
he'll plea-bargain his way out with a fine and a suspended sentence."
"Relax," said Fisher. "We got him dead to rights this time. What can possibly go
wrong?"
"What do you mean, you let him go?" screamed Hawk. He lunged across the desk at
Commander Glen, and Fisher had to use all her strength to hold him back. The
Commander pushed his chair back well out of reach, and glared at them both.
"Control yourself, Captain! That's an order!"
"Stuff your order! Do you know how many people died so we could get that
bastard?"
He finally realized he couldn't break free from Fisher without hurting her, and
stopped struggling. He took a deep breath and nodded curtly to Fisher. She let
go of him and stepped back a pace, still watching him warily. Hawk fixed
Commander Glen with a cold, implacable glare. "Talk to me, Glen. Convince me
there's some reason behind this madness. Or I swear I'll do something one of us
will regret."
Commander Glen sniffed, and met Hawk's gaze unflinchingly. Glen was a tallish,
blocky man in his late forties, with a permanent scowl and a military-style
haircut that looked as though it had been shaped with a pudding bowl. He had
large, bony hands and a mouth like a knife-cut. He'd spent twenty years in the
Guard, and amassed a reputation for thief-taking unequaled in the Guard. He'd
been day Commander for seven years, and ran his people like his own private
army, demanding and getting complete obedience. Ordinarily, he didn't have to
deal much with Hawk and Fisher, which suited all of them.
Glen pushed his chair forward, and leaned his elbows on the desk. "You want me
to explain myself, Captain Hawk? Very well. Thanks to your going after Morgan
without waiting for orders or a backup, we now find ourselves faced with major
loss of life and destruction of property within the Devil's Hook. We still don't
know exactly how many died because of your actions, but the current total is
four hundred and six. The Hook's still in shock at the moment, but when they
finally realize what's happened, and that the Guard was responsible, we're going
to be facing riots it'll take half the Guard to put down! On top of that,
there's the cost of rebuilding and repairs, which is going to run into thousands
of ducats. The landlord of the tenement is suing the Guard for that money, and
he'll probably win. And finally, you assaulted a gang leader in front of his own
people. Does the word vendetta mean anything to you, Captain Hawk?"
"I don't give a damn about any of that," said Hawk, his voice carefully
controlled. "What I did was justified by the circumstances. Morgan was preparing
to distribute a drug that would have killed thousands of people and torn Haven
apart. Now, explain to me, please, why this man was allowed to go free."
"There was no evidence against him," said Glen flatly.
"No evidence? What about the super-chacal?" said Fisher. "There were crates of
the damn stuff; I helped number and label them."
"I never saw any drugs," said Glen. "Neither has anyone else. And none of the
prisoners had any drugs in their possession when they were searched here. None
of them had even heard of this super-chacal you keep mentioning. And thanks to
your efforts, we don't even have any proof the pocket dimension ever existed.
That leaves only your word and that of your men. And that's not good enough,
against someone like Morgan. He's a man of standing in the business community,
and a pillar of society. He also has a great many friends in high places. People
with influence. He hadn't been in Headquarters ten minutes before pressure began
coming down from Above. Without real evidence, we didn't have a case. So I let
him go, along with all of his people. I might add that Morgan is strongly
considering suing us for false arrest, and you in particular for assault. I
can't believe you were stupid enough to hit him in front of witnesses."
For a while, none of them said anything. It was very quiet in Glen's office, the
only sound the murmur of people going back and forth about their business in the
corridors outside.
"There were crates of the drug," said Hawk finally. "If they've disappeared, it
can only mean they vanished on their way here, or they were removed by people
working inside Headquarters. Either way, we're talking about corrupt Guards. I
demand an official investigation."
"You can demand anything you want; you won't get it."
"I want to talk to my men, the Constables who were with me on the raid."
"I'm afraid that's not possible. They've already been detailed to other duties.
Haven't you got the picture yet, Captain? As far as our superiors are concerned,
this whole incident is a major embarrassment, and they want it forgotten as soon
as possible. You've got some very important people mad at you. At both of you.
They're looking for scapegoats, and you're tailor-made to fill the bill."
"Let me see if I've got this straight," said Hawk, his voice dangerously calm.
"Morgan has walked. So have all his people. And several tons of the most
dangerous drug Haven has ever seen have gone missing. Have I missed anything?"
"Yes," said Glen. "I've been instructed to suspend both of you, indefinitely,
while a number of official charges against you are investigated. Charges such as
reckless endangering of life and property, disobeying orders, assaulting
citizens without provocation, brutality, and possible collusion in a vendetta
against a faultless pillar of society. That last was Morgan, in case you were
wondering."
Hawk grabbed Glen's desk with both hands and threw it to one side. Papers flew
on the air like startled birds as he grabbed two handfuls of Glen's uniform,
picked him up, and slammed him against the nearest wall. He thrust his face
close to the Commander's, until they were staring into each other's eyes.
"No one's suspending me, you son of a bitch! Those drugs are still out there,
waiting to be distributed! They have to be found and seized, and I can't do that
with both hands tied behind my back! Do you understand me?"
Glen looked over Hawk's shoulder at Fisher, standing by the overturned desk.
"Call your partner off. Fisher."
She shrugged, and folded her arms. "This time, I think I agree with him. If I
were you, I'd agree with him too. Hawk can get very upset when he thinks people
are conspiring against him."
The door burst open behind them and two Constables rushed in with drawn swords,
alarmed at the sounds of violence from the Commander's office. Fisher drew her
sword and quickly moved to stand between them and Hawk and Glen. Hawk slowly put
Glen down, but kept a tight hold on him.
"Tell them to leave, Glen. This is private."
"Not anymore," said Glen. "Not after your foul-up this morning. You can't fight
your way out of this one, Hawk. Not even you and Fisher can take on the entire
Guard."
Hawk grinned suddenly. "Don't bet your life on it, Glen. We've faced worse odds
in our time. Now, tell those over-eager friends of yours to leave, and we'll…
discuss the situation."
He let go of Glen, and stepped back a pace, his right hand resting casually on
the axe at his side. The Commander nodded, and gestured for the two Constables
to leave. They looked at each other, shrugged, put away their swords and left,
not quite slamming the door behind them. Glen looked at Hawk.
"You've upset them."
"Oh dear," said Hawk. "What a pity. I'm not going on suspension, Glen. I've got
too much to do."
"Right," said Fisher.
"Help me pick up my desk," said Glen, "and we'll talk about it."
Hawk did so, while Fisher leaned against the wall, still holding her sword. Glen
picked up his chair, and sat down behind his desk again. He glanced briefly at
the papers scattered over the floor, then fixed his attention on Hawk and
Fisher.
"All right, no suspension. But I'll have to find somewhere to put you so you're
out of sight until things calm down again."
"Sounds sensible," said Fisher. "What did you have in mind?"
"I can't have you working together; word would be bound to get out. But as it
happens, I've got two jobs to fill that should suit the pair of you nicely. As
you know, even though officially you shouldn't, Peace Talks are taking place in
Haven at the moment, to try and put an end to the border clashes between the Low
Kingdoms and our traditional enemy Outremer, before they get out of hand. The
Talks themselves seem to be going well enough, but there are a number of
political and business interests on both sides who would like very much to see
them fail. Captain David ap Owen is currently in charge of security, but he's
been under a lot of pressure and could use some assistance. Think you could
handle that, Captain Fisher?"
"Sounds fair enough to me," said Fisher, glancing at Hawk. "What level of
security are we talking about?"
"Absolute minimum. Officially, the Talks aren't happening here at all. We can't
use troops to guard the delegates; that would be too conspicuous, so there'll
just be yourself, Captain ap Owen, and a dozen Constables in plainclothes. We
can't use any magical protection, either. Same reason; it would just attract
attention. So if anything happens, you're on your own. By the time you could get
word to us it would all be over, one way or the other. You'll have to cope with
what you've got."
"Do the delegates know that?" said Hawk.
"They suggested it. They're expendable, and they know it. Well, Captain Fisher,
is the assignment to your liking?"
"Sounds like fun," said Fisher.
Glen looked at her for a moment, and then turned to Hawk. "I need someone to
find the drugs that went missing. Surprisingly enough, I had worked out for
myself how dangerous this super-chacal could be. I want to know how the stuff
disappeared, and where it is now. And if you should find a way to incriminate
Morgan in the process, I wouldn't be at all displeased. Find yourself another
partner, someone you can trust, but keep your head down, and stay out of the
public eye. If anything goes wrong, I'll swear blind you were acting on your
own, and it's all nothing to do with me. I can't afford to have Morgan's friends
as enemies. You'll report directly to me, and no one else. Is that acceptable,
Captain Hawk?"
"Sounds good to me," said Hawk. "Why didn't you tell us this earlier?"
"You didn't exactly give me a chance. You were more interested in feeling
aggrieved and wrecking my office."
Fisher smiled. "Next time, talk faster."
"Besides," said Hawk comfortingly, "it wasn't much of an office anyway."
Glen looked at him.
Hawk was working on his second beer when Captain Burns found him. The Cloudy
Morning was a semiofficial off-duty tavern for the Guard, a traditional place
for winding down at the end of a long shift. It was fairly basic as taverns go,
with no frills and few comforts, but the beer was good and reasonably cheap, and
the Guards needed a place where they could talk freely without having to worry
about who might be listening. The place was run by an ex-Guard, and the general
public were politely encouraged to drink elsewhere, unless they were Guard
groupies. There were such, though not many Guards encouraged them. They tended
to get obsessive.
The place was crowded, as usual at the end of a shift, and Captain Burns had to
squeeze his way through the press of bodies to reach the bar. Several Guards
called out to him, and clapped him on the shoulder as he passed, but he just
smiled and kept going. Hawk's message had sounded fairly urgent. He finally
reached the bar, grabbed a seat as it became vacant, and sat down beside Hawk.
For a moment Hawk didn't look up, staring into his beer. Then he took a long
swallow, and gestured for the bartender to bring Burns a beer.
"I'm surprised you're still on the loose," said Burns. "The smart money was
betting you'd be arrested the moment you set foot in Headquarters. You've upset
some really powerful people this time, Hawk."
"There was some talk of suspension," said Hawk. "But I talked the Commander out
of it."
Bums smiled. "Yeah, I heard. Did you really bounce him off the walls of his own
office?"
Hawk looked at him innocently. "Would I do such a thing to a superior officer?"
Burns nodded to the bartender as his drink arrived, and sipped it
appreciatively. "So what's happening with you and Fisher? All forgiven?"
"Hardly. We've been split up, and told to keep our heads down. But I've got a
case to work on, and I'm looking for a new partner."
For a moment, Burns didn't get it, and then he looked sharply at Hawk. "You mean
me? We hardly know each other."
"I've seen you fight, and I thought you might like a chance to get back at the
bastards who killed your partner. Besides, Morgan isn't going to stop with
Fisher and me. Eventually, he's going to go after everyone who helped destroy
his factory. He takes setbacks personally. If you don't go after him now, while
he's vulnerable, you can bet that sooner or later he's going to be coming after
you."
"You've got a point there," said Burns. "But you've got a real nerve, you know
that? You got me into this mess, and now I'm supposed to help save your neck."
"Are you in or not?"
"Of course I'm in. I don't really have any choice, do I? And you're right about
one thing, at least. I'd worked with Doughty on and off for nearly eight years.
He was a good partner. Never had much to say for himself, but the best damned
swordsman I ever saw. I always felt safer with him to guard my back. I didn't
see who killed him at the factory. Everything was happening too fast. But even
if I didn't see whose hand held the sword, I know who was responsible for his
death."
"Morgan."
"Right. I'm with you, Hawk. But it's not going to be easy. Morgan has
influential friends. The kind of people it's dangerous to cross."
"Everyone keeps telling me that," said Hawk calmly. "It's not going to stop me.
I can be dangerous too, when I put my mind to it. But I shouldn't worry about
his precious friends too much. If we bring Morgan down hard enough, his friends
will desert him like rats leaving a sinking ship rather than risk being brought
down with him."
Burns shook his head amusedly. "You almost make it sound easy. All right, what
do we do first?"
"Well, to begin with we could do with another drink. We've got some hard
thinking to do."
Burns chose his words carefully. "Not for me, thanks. I think better on a clear
head."
"You're probably right," said Hawk. "But it has to be said, there's something
about Haven that drives a man to drink." He looked at his empty glass, then
pushed it regretfully away. "You know, when I first joined the Guard, I really
thought I could make a difference. I was going to be a force for justice, and
put all the bad guys behind bars, where they belonged. It didn't work out that
way. Crime and corruption are a way of life for most people here. Some days I
think the only way to clean up Haven would be to burn it down and start over
again."
Burns shrugged. "I've lived here all my life, but from what I've heard, Haven
isn't really that different from any other city. We're just more honest about it
here. You mustn't let it get to you, Hawk. You can't expect to undo centuries of
corruption overnight. Real change always takes time. In the meantime, we do our
best to hold things together, and every now and again we get a chance to put
away a piece of slime like Morgan. Settle for that."
They sat for a while in silence, each thinking his own thoughts.
"Where did you come from originally?" said Burns.
"Up north. There were family problems over my marriage to Isobel, so we struck
out on our own. Traveled around a lot, and finally ended up here. It seemed a
good idea at the time."
"There are worse places than Haven."
"Name two." Hawk looked thoughtfully into his empty glass. "It was my fault, you
know. If I hadn't gone barging in, without checking the situation properly, I
might have found a way to shut down Morgan's factory without destroying
everything. And all those men and women and children would be alive now."
"Maybe," said Burns. "But I doubt it. Morgan was ready to ship those drugs out.
If we'd burst in even an hour later, we'd probably have found nothing but an
empty warehouse. But either way, it doesn't make any difference. You did what
you thought was right at the time. That's all any of us can do. Beyond a certain
point, worrying about past mistakes just becomes self-pity and self-indulgence."
Hawk looked at him, and smiled. "Maybe. Let's talk about Morgan, the bastard.
The first thing we have to do is figure out where the super-chacal disappeared
to, and then try and link it directly to Morgan in a way he can't shrug off.
Which means asking pointed questions and making a nuisance of ourselves until
people tell us what we want to know."
"Just once," said Burns, "wouldn't you like to try it the easy way? Morgan is
going to have to shift the super-chacal in a hurry, so that he can't be caught
with it in his possession. Which means using established channels of
distribution. And there aren't that many people in Haven who can handle a deal
that size. All we have to do is discover which distributor has suddenly become
very busy, and we'll have our first lead."
"But that's only part of it," said Hawk. "We also need to know which Guards took
money from Morgan to look the other way while the drugs went missing."
"If you say so," said Burns. "But Hawk, we're going to do this professionally,
right? Getting personally involved in a case is always a bad idea. It stops you
thinking clearly. In Haven, you win some and you lose some. That's just the way
it is."
Hawk looked at him. "I don't believe in losing."
Chapter Three
Talking Peace and War
Fisher strode scowling through the well-ordered streets of Low Tory, and wished
Hawk was with her. She didn't like leaving him alone in his present mood. He'd
taken the deaths in the Hook personally, and right now he was mad enough and
depressed enough to do something stupid. Usually it was the other way round,
with Hawk keeping her from doing something dumb, but there were times when he
needed her to see the right path clearly. He needed her now, and she couldn't be
with him. Commander Glen had made it very clear that their splitting up was a
condition of their continuing to work. Still, they'd had time to discuss who
Hawk should choose as his new partner, and Captain Burns seemed solid enough.
She wondered what her own new partner would be like. Probably turn out to be
some ex-mercenary with more muscle than brain, and even less ethics. There were
a lot like that in the Guard.
She looked unobtrusively about her as she strode along, trying to get the feel
of the new area. She hadn't worked Low Tory before, but by all accounts it was
an upwardly mobile, middle-class area, full of merchant families so long
established they were city aristocracy in all but blood and breeding. They were
indecently rich, had a finger in every political pie, and, as a class, showed
all the ethical restraint of a shark in a feeding frenzy. Having reached the
pinnacle of their profession, their ambition turned in the only direction left
to them, and they set their sights on the Quality. Even in Haven, the poorest
aristocrat could still look down his nose at the richest trader. So, in recent
times certain wealthy merchant families had been negotiating marriage contracts
with the more impoverished Quality Families, quite openly offering to pay off a
Family's debts in return for marriage into the Quality. The results were rarely
happy, with the nouveau Quality snubbed and openly mocked by High Society, but
the practice persisted.
As a result, Low Tory had flourished in the past few years, tearing down the
faded and crumbling houses of the lesser Quality and replacing them with grand
new mansions that rivaled and occasionally even surpassed the old Family Halls
and Granges of High Tory. The streets were wide and open and bordered with neat,
orderly rows of specially imported trees. New walls had been replaced with newer
walls carefully constructed to appear old and weathered. Everything had to look
right. Unlike most of Haven, the streets were calm and quiet and practically
deserted. Regular patrols by private guards and men-at-arms saw to that. Only
those with approved business in the area were allowed to tarry in Low Tory. To
Fisher, more used to the bustling crowds of the Northside, the streets appeared
almost eerily deserted.
The recent snow had been shoveled aside into tidy piles at the street kerbs, but
here and there small bands of workmen still struggled with the more stubborn
drifts. Servants attired in finery more costly than that worn by some
lower-class merchants hurried along, looking neither left nor right, bearing
messages and business documents and an almost palpable sense of their own
self-importance. Private guards patrolled in pairs, looking faintly embarrassed
by their overelaborate uniforms. None of them looked particularly pleased to see
Fisher. She ignored them all, and concentrated on the directions she'd been
given. They'd seemed simple enough back at Guard Headquarters, but Fisher had a
positive genius for getting lost, and today seemed no different. Still, after a
certain amount of backtracking she'd finally found the right street, so all she
had to do now was locate the right house.
It occurred to her that this street was actually surprisingly busy, by Low Tory
standards. There were half a dozen workmen lackadaisically shoveling snow, and
as many servants strolling unhurriedly up and down the street. A hot-chestnut
seller was tending his brazier, but showed remarkably little interest in
drumming up trade. Two men were bent over an open sewer grating, but seemed to
be spending as much time watching the street as anything else. Fisher had to
smile. Try as they might, some Guards just couldn't get the hang of plainclothes
work. It wasn't enough to look the part; you had to act it as well. Still, it
showed she was in the right place.
None of the plainclothes people made any move to approach her, for which Fisher
was grateful. She wasn't in the mood to explain what she was doing there without
Hawk. She finally reached her destination, and stopped at the main gate to study
the surroundings with an experienced eye. It was a plain, pleasantly
unornamented house, standing a way back from the street in its own grounds. The
high stone wall surrounding the snow-covered lawns was topped with iron spikes
and broken glass. Fairly impressive, but the tall iron gates were unlocked and
unguarded. She'd have to speak to someone about that.
She pushed the gates open and walked into the grounds. A few yards away stood a
life-sized figure of a warrior, carved from pale marble in the classically
idealized style popular in the last century. It carried a sword and shield, and
was minutely detailed, even down to bulging veins on the muscular arms. Fisher
looked away. She didn't care for such statues. They'd always given her the
creeps as a child.
As she passed the marble warrior, there was a low, grating sound as the statue
slowly turned its head and looked at her. Fisher jumped back, her hand dropping
to her sword. She stayed where she was, her heart beating painfully fast, but
the statue made no further move. Fisher edged closer, a foot at a time, and
reached out to poke it with a hesitant fingertip. It felt hard and unyielding,
the way marble should. Fisher took a deep breath and backed away, still keeping
a careful eye on the statue. The thing must be part of the house's security
system. They might have warned her… She turned her back on the marble figure and
continued on her way. Behind her she again heard a low grating sound as the
statue turned its head to follow her progress. Fisher wouldn't let herself look
back, but walked a little faster, despite herself. Up ahead, scattered across
the grounds, were three more statues, staring off in different directions.
Snow crunched loudly under Fisher's boots as she approached the house. Now that
she'd had a chance to get used to the idea, she approved of the statues. Simple
but effective security, and completely unobtrusive until activated by an
intruder. She couldn't help wondering what other surprises Captain ap Owen might
have set up in the grounds. The thought had only just crossed her mind when a
huge dog suddenly appeared out of nowhere right in front of her. She stumbled to
a halt, and the great hound thrust its head forward, sniffed at her
suspiciously, and then vanished into thin air. Fisher opened her mouth to say
something, and a second, different dog appeared out of nowhere just to her left.
It was even bigger than the first, its head on a level with her belt. It sniffed
at her, wagged its tail, then snapped out of existence. Fisher realized her
mouth was still hanging open, and shut it. Guard dogs. Of course. Entirely
logical. She walked on, and tried to get her breathing to go back to normal.
She finally came to a halt before the massive front door, beat on it smartly
with her fist, and made a quick use of the iron boot-scraper. And if anything
else appears, I'm going to hit it first, and ask questions afterwards. The door
opened almost immediately, confirming that they'd been watching her.
The man in footman's uniform looked convincing enough, and even had the barely
civil bow and haughty expression down right, but there was no getting away from
the fact that he was simply far too muscular for a gentleman's servant. He stood
back politely as she entered the brightly lit hall, then shut the door firmly
behind her. The sound of a key turning in the lock was quickly followed by the
sound of four separate bolts sliding home. Fisher smiled, and relaxed a little.
Maybe they did know what they were doing here, after all. She handed the footman
her cloak, waited patiently while he figured out where to hang it up, and then
allowed him to lead her down the hall and into the study, where Captain David ap
Owen was waiting for her.
The study was too large to be really cosy, but had all the comforts money could
buy. Captain ap Owen sat behind a large, ornate desk, talking quietly to someone
who looked as though he might be a real footman. Ap Owen glanced at Fisher as
she came in, but finished giving his instructions before waving both footmen
away. He got up from behind the desk and came forward to greet Fisher with an
outstretched hand. His handshake was firm, but hurried, and he sat down on the
edge of the desk to take a good look at her. Fisher stared back just as openly.
Captain ap Owen was in his mid-thirties, and a little less than average height,
which meant he had to tilt his head back to meet her gaze. It didn't seem to
bother him as much as it did some people. His build was stocky rather than
muscular, and his uniform had a sloppy, lived-in look. Fisher approved of that.
In her experience, Guards who worried too much about their appearance tended not
to worry enough about getting the job done right. Ap Owen had flaming red hair
and bright green eyes, along with a broad rash of freckles across his nose and
cheekbones which made him look deceptively youthful and open. His apparently
relaxed stance was undermined by an unwavering slight frown and occasional
sudden, jerky movements. Even sitting still, he gave the impression of a man
constantly on edge, just waiting for an attack so he could leap into action.
"Take a seat, Captain Fisher," he said finally. "Glad to have you with us. I've
heard a lot about you."
"It's all true," said Fisher easily. She dragged a chair over to the desk,
ignoring what that did to the carpet, and slumped gracelessly into it. The chair
was a rickety antique, but more comfortable than it appeared. She looked sharply
at ap Owen. "I take it you've heard the latest news about me?"
"Of course," said ap Owen. "If it hadn't been for your recent… troubles, I'd
never have got you on my team. Make no mistake, Captain, everyone here,
including you and me and the six delegates, are all considered expendable. If
these Talks work out successfully, fine; if not, no one's going to miss us.
They'll just start over, with new delegates and new Talks. The odds are we're
all going to be killed before the Talks are over. There are a lot of people out
there who want us dead, for various political and business reasons, and I
haven't been allowed enough men to ward off a determined attack by a group of
lightly armed nuns. Had to be that way. The whole idea of this operation is to
be unobtrusive and hopefully overlooked. Personally, I think it's a dumb idea,
given the number of spies and loose mouths in this city, but no one asked my
opinion. The point is that if things go wrong and our cover is blown, we are
supposed to defend these Talks with our lives, and we probably will. Even though
they and we are completely replaceable."
"I see you're the kind of leader who believes in a good pep talk," said Fisher.
"Are you normally this optimistic?"
Captain ap Owen grinned briefly. "I like my people to know what they're getting
into. Ideally, this should have been a volunteers-only operation, but since we
couldn't tell them what they'd be volunteering for, there didn't seem much
point. How much did they tell you about our situation here?"
"Not much. Just that it was minimum security, with essentially no backup."
"You got that right, but it's not quite as bad as it sounds. The Talks aren't
actually taking place in the house itself, the building's far too vulnerable.
Instead, a Guard sorcerer has set up a pocket dimension, linked to the house.
It's been so thoroughly warded, a sorcerer could walk through this place from
top to bottom and never know the dimensional gateway was here. Clever, eh?"
"Very," said Fisher carefully. "But pocket dimensions aren't exactly stable, are
they? If you know about my current problems, then you can understand that I'm a
bit bloody wary about going into another pocket dimension."
"Don't worry about it; once the dimension's been established, it's perfectly
secure. The only reason Morgan's fell apart is because he designed it that way,
with booby traps in case he was discovered. He didn't want any evidence
surviving to incriminate him."
Fisher looked at him blankly. "You mean it wasn't Hawk's fault after all? Then
why didn't Commander Glen tell us that? He must have known… Damn, I've got to
talk to Hawk!"
She jumped to her feet, but ap Owen didn't budge. "Sit down, Captain Fisher.
You're not going anywhere. No one here is allowed to leave these premises until
the Talks are over. It's a matter of security. You must see that."
"You can't stop me leaving."
"No, I probably couldn't. But if you did leave, Glen would undoubtedly have you
declared a rogue, and put out an order for your arrest. And how is that going to
help Hawk?"
Fisher glared at ap Owen, then nodded reluctantly and sank back into her chair.
"That's why Glen sent me here, so Hawk would be left alone with his guilt. He's
always easiest to manipulate when he's feeling guilty. Glen wants Hawk to go on
believing it was his fault, so he'll be properly motivated to go after Morgan.
Damn him!"
There was an uncomfortable silence. When Fisher finally spoke again, her voice
was calm and cold and very deadly. "When this is all over, there's going to be
an accounting between me and Commander bloody Glen."
"Assuming we get out of this alive," said ap Owen.
Fisher glanced at him sharply. "You're a real cheerful sort, you know that?"
"Just being realistic. Let me fill you in on the six delegates taking part in
the Talks. They're a pretty rum bunch themselves, particularly the Outremer
delegates. They were mad as hell when they arrived. Apparently it took them the
best part of five weeks to get here through the winter weather, and that was
before the worst of the storms hit. I don't see why they couldn't have just
teleported in."
"Teleports don't work that way," said Fisher. "It's hard enough to shift one
person over a short distance. There isn't a sorcerer alive with the kind of
magic it would take to teleport three people from one country to another. There
are lots of nasty ways for a teleport to go wrong. Get the decimal point in the
wrong place and you could end up appearing a hundred feet above your
destination. Or under it."
"I didn't realize you were such an expert," said ap Owen dryly.
Fisher shrugged. "I've had some experience with traveling that way."
"Actually, the weather is something of a blessing. The storms are keeping
Outremer's more disruptive elements from getting here. Let's just hope the
storms continue till the Talks are over."
"Maybe someone should have a word with the city weather wizards."
"No, low profile, remember? Nothing that would attract attention."
"True. All right, tell me about the delegates. Who's representing the Low
Kingdoms? Anyone I might have heard of?"
"Maybe. Lord Regis is heading the home team. This is his house we're in.
Mid-forties, old Haven Family, good reputation, with an impressive background in
the army and the diplomatic corps. Can't say I warm to him myself. Smiles too
much, and takes too long to shake your hand. Likes to clap you on the shoulder
while looking you right in the eye. Hail-fellow-well-met type. He gets on my
nerves something fierce, but he goes down well enough with the other delegates.
"Then there's Jonathon Rook, representing the Merchants Association. Early
forties, and better padded than the average sofa. He likes his food, does
Jonathon. Sharp as a tack when it comes to business, but he does love a title.
Practically milorded Regis to death this morning, while we were waiting for the
Outremer delegates to show up. Word is he's angling for a Family marriage for
his eldest, more fool he.
"And finally, there's Major Patrik Comber. You've probably heard of him. Led his
battalion into Death's Hollow to rescue a company of his men who'd been cut off
by Outremer troops. Took on better than five-to-one odds, and kicked their arses
something cruel. Won all sorts of medals, and a swift promotion. He also
sacrificed a lot of good men in the process, but the minstrels don't usually
mention that."
Fisher grinned. "I can see you're going to be a real barrel of laughs on this
job. How about the Outremer delegates? Do you like them any better?"
"Not much. The leader is Lord Nightingale. Pleasant enough sort, but I don't
think I'll turn my back on him. He's got cold eyes. Then there's William
Gardener for the merchants, and Major Guy de Tournay. Can't tell you much about
them. Gardener likes his drink and talks too loudly, while de Tournay's hardly
opened his mouth to me since he got here."
Fisher frowned thoughtfully. "Interesting that both sides have put forward a
lord. The Quality aren't normally considered expendable. Particularly not
someone as noticeable as Lord Regis. And from what I've heard, Major Comber's
something of a popular hero at the moment. The Powers That Be must be taking
these Talks pretty seriously."
"Seems likely. Both sides have been losing a lot of men and equipment in the
border skirmishes, and it's getting expensive. You know how the Powers That Be
hate to lose money. Of course, they hate to lose face even more, which is why
it's taken till now to set the Talks up."
"All right. Fill me in on what security measures you've set up here. If we're
not allowed to call attention to ourselves, it cuts our options down to
practically nothing, doesn't it?"
"You've got that right," said ap Owen grimly. "For all the good we'd be in a
real crisis, we might as well not be here. I take it you spotted the
plainclothes people outside? I'd be surprised if you hadn't; everyone else knows
who and what they are. Luckily, they're just opt there for show. My real
undercover operatives have been here for days, establishing their characters and
getting to know the area. We didn't just choose this place on a whim, you know.
Both the grounds and the surrounding streets are wide open, with nowhere to
hide. The way we've got things set up, no one can get within a hundred yards of
this house without being spotted a dozen times. And since we haven't a hope in
hell of beating off an armed assault, at the first whisper of an attack, or even
an intended attack, the plan is for all of us to retreat into the pocket
dimension and seal it off.
"In theory, we should then be perfectly safe. No one can get at us without the
proper co-ordinates, known only to a top few people, so all we have to do is sit
tight and wait until reinforcements arrive, and the emergency is over. Of
course, there's always the very real possibility that the delegates themselves
will seal off the dimension at the first whiff of trouble, leaving us out here
to fight off the attackers. In which case, we get to earn our money the hard
way. Got it?"
Fisher nodded glumly. In other words, it was another damned watching brief. Lots
of sitting around doing nothing, waiting for something to happen and hoping it
wouldn't. It was at times like these that Fisher seriously considered the simple
pleasures of a desk job, and the security to be found in lots of nice safe
paperwork. Of course, she'd be bored out of her mind in a week… Ah well, if
nothing else, she should be able to catch up on her sleep here. Working two
shifts in a row had drained most of her strength, and helping Hawk drag
survivors out of the tenement rubble had all but finished her off. She felt as
if she could go to sleep right there in her chair, She caught herself slumping
forward, and quickly sat up straight. Almost without realizing it, her eyes had
been closing, and she'd actually come close to nodding off. That would have made
a great first impression on Captain ap Owen. She glanced quickly at him to see
if he'd noticed anything, but he was apparently absorbed in leafing through the
papers on his desk.
"Tell me about the Talks themselves," she said, to show she was still with it.
"Are they making any progress?"
"Beats me. I'm just the hired help round here; no one tells me anything. I'm not
even allowed into the pocket dimension unless one of them calls for me, and
though the delegates take an occasional break out here, none of them are much
for small talk. As far as I can discover, their brief is to agree on a border
frontier both sides can live with, and put an end to all those squabbles over
which ragged old piece of map takes precedence. Both the Low Kingdoms and
Outremer are going to end up losing some territory, so both sides are throwing
in lucrative trade deals as sweeteners to help the medicine go down. Whatever
happens, you can bet a lot of people living near the border will wake up one
morning to find that overnight they've become citizens of a different country.
Poor bastards. Probably end up paying two sets of taxes."
Fisher frowned. "Those special trade deals are going to put a lot of noses out
of joint in the business community. Nothing like a little preferential treatment
to stir up bad feelings."
"Right," said ap Owen. "And let's not forget, there's a hell of a lot of money
to be made out of a war, if you've got the right kind of contacts with the
military."
"Any more bad news you'd like to share with me?"
"You mean apart from political extremists, religious fanatics, and
terrorists-for-hire?"
"Forget I asked. Do you think it'll come to a war, if the Talks fail?"
"I don't know… Countries have gone to war over a lot less in the past. The Low
Kingdoms have traditionally preferred action to talk, and Outremer can be touchy
as hell where its honor is concerned. I wouldn't be surprised if a war did break
out, but then it must be said I have something of a vested interest in war. I've
always made most of my living as a mercenary. I only ended up as a Guard because
I'd spent too long between jobs and the money had run out. Ironic, really, that
I should end up protecting Talks whose purpose is to keep me and my kind out of
work. You ever been caught up in a war, Captain Fisher?"
"Just once," said Fisher. "Several years back. It's funny, you know; at the time
I would have given everything I owned to be somewhere else, somewhere safe. But
now, looking back, it seems to me I've never felt so alive as I did then. We
were fighting for great stakes, and everything I did mattered; everything I did
was important. But I wouldn't go through it again for all the money in the Low
Kingdoms' Treasury. I saw too many good people die, saw too many people I cared
for hurt and maimed."
"Did you win?"
"Yes and no." Fisher smiled tiredly. "I suppose that's true of any war. Our side
won in the end, but the Land was devastated by the fighting. It'll take
generations to recover. I suppose you've seen a lot of war, as a mercenary?"
Ap Owen shrugged. "More than I care to remember. One war is much like another,
and the campaigns all tend to blur into each other after a while. Endless
marching, rotten food, and lousy weather. Waiting for orders that never come, in
some godforsaken spot in the middle of nowhere. And every now and again, just
often enough to keep your nerves ragged, there'll be a sudden burst of action.
You get used to the blood and the flies and seeing your comrades die, and
there's always the looting to look forward to afterwards. I could have been a
rich man a dozen times over, if I could have kept away from the cards and the
dice and the tavern whores. I started out fighting for a cause, but that didn't
last long. First thing you learn as a mercenary is that both sides believe
they're right.
"So why have I spent most of my adult life fighting for strangers? Because I'm
good at it. And because, just as you said, you never feel more alive than when
you've just cheated death. In its way, that feeling's more addictive than any
drug you'll find on the streets." He broke off, and smiled at Fisher. "You're a
good listener, Fisher, you know that?"
Before she could say anything, a ring on ap Owen's finger pulsed with a sudden
silver light, and he rose quickly to his feet. "That's the delegates' signal;
they're going to take another break. Just stay back out of the way, for the time
being. I'll introduce you if I get a chance, but don't expect any great show of
interest. We're just hired help as far as they're concerned."
Two footmen entered the study in response to some unheard summons, carrying
silver trays laden with assorted delicacies of the kind Fisher hadn't seen in
the markets for weeks. Whoever was funding these Talks obviously didn't believe
in doing things by halves. The footmen put down their trays on the main table,
by the cut-glass wine decanters, then withdrew without saying a word. Fisher
decided they were probably real footmen, if only because of their supercilious
expressions.
Ap Owen stood before his desk, staring at the far wall. Fisher followed his
gaze, but couldn't see anything of interest. She started to ask something, and
then shut up as a door appeared out of nowhere, hanging unsupported on the air a
few inches above the floor. It was plain, unvarnished wood, without pattern or
trimmings, but its very presence was subtly disturbing. A mounting chill
emanated from it, like a cold wind blowing into the room. Fisher's hand dropped
to her sword, and she had to fight to keep from drawing it as the door swung
slowly open.
The delegates appeared through the doorway, chatting quietly together, and
headed for the food and wine without so much as a glance at ap Owen and Fisher.
The door shut silently, and disappeared. Fisher took her hand away from her
sword. Ap Owen moved in beside her and quietly identified each delegate by name.
Fisher looked them over carefully without being too obvious about it.
Lord Regis of Haven was of average height and weight, and in pretty good shape
for a man in his early fifties. He had dark, flashing eyes and a quick smile
buried in a neatly trimmed beard. He used his hands a lot as he talked, and
nodded frequently while he listened. Lord Nightingale of Outremer was twenty
years younger, six inches taller, and muscular in a broad, solid way that
suggested he lifted weights on a regular basis. Which was a little unusual. As
far as most of the Quality were concerned, strenuous exercise was something best
left to the lower classes. The Quality only exerted themselves in dueling or
seducing. Usually both, as one often led to the other. Nightingale, on the other
hand, looked as though he could have picked up Regis with one hand, and torn him
apart with the other. If Regis was aware of this, it didn't seem to bother him.
The two traders. Rook and Gardener, were talking together quite amicably,
smiling and laughing as they rummaged through the out-of-season delicacies on
the trays. Fisher's stomach rumbled, but she made herself pay attention to the
two merchants. William Gardener of Outremer was in his early forties, with
thinning hair and a droopy moustache. He was skinny as a rake, but wore clothes
of the very latest cut with casual elegance. Jonathon Rook was the same age, and
dressed just as well, but had the kind of figure politely referred to as stout.
His hands were weighed down with jeweled rings, and he paid little or no
attention to the expensive food with which he was stuffing his face. Fisher
moved in a little closer to listen in on their conversation. They both
studiously ignored her, which suited her fine. It soon became clear that both
merchants thought they had a lot to lose in the event of a war, and were
pressing for peace at practically any cost. It was also clear they were finding
it an uphill struggle.
Major Comber and Major de Tournay stood a little way off from the others,
talking quietly and only picking at their food. They were both in their late
thirties, with short-cropped hair and grim faces. They'd swapped their uniforms
for civilian clothes, and Fisher was hard put to tell which of them looked the
most uncomfortable. They both glared at her when she got too close, so she
didn't get to overhear what they were saying. She sensed, however, that neither
one was too pleased with the way the Talks were going, from which she deduced
that neither side had gained the upper hand yet.
They all finally put down their plates and turned away from the table. Captain
ap Owen coughed loudly, and then again, louder still, and having got their
attention, introduced Fisher to each of them. Fisher bowed formally, and got a
series of perfunctory nods in reply. Lord Regis smiled at her coldly.
"Good to have you with us, Captain. Your reputation precedes you."
"You don't want to believe everything you hear," said Fisher easily. "Only the
bad bits."
Regis smiled politely. "Is your partner, Captain Hawk, not here with you?"
"He's working on a case of his own at the moment, and can't leave it, I'm
afraid. But not to worry, my lord. You're safe in our hands."
"I'm sure we shall be."
"I trust you'll pardon my interruption," said Lord Nightingale, looking only at
Lord Regis, "but we are rather short of time. Perhaps you could continue this
conversation later…"
"Of course," said Regis.
He nodded politely to Fisher and ap Owen, and turned to face the far wall. The
door reappeared, and swung silently open. Fisher shivered suddenly. She tried to
see what lay beyond the door, but there was only an impenetrable darkness. The
delegates filed through, and the door swung shut behind them and vanished.
Fisher sank back into her chair and stretched out her legs. This was going to be
a long, hard job, she could tell. She looked thoughtfully at the food left on
the table, but didn't have the energy to get up and go after it. She hoped Hawk
was taking it easy, wherever he was, but doubted it. Without her to keep an eye
on him, there was no telling what he'd get up to.
Chapter Four
A Matter of Trust
Hawk led Captain Burns into the rotten heart of the Northside. The streets grew
steadily narrower, choked with filthy snow and slush, and bustling crowds that
made way for the two Guards without ever looking at them directly. Even so, they
made slow progress, and Hawk had to fight to control his impatience. The
pressure seemed to be bearing down on him from every side now, but he knew his
only hope of dealing with it was to stay calm and controlled. His enemies would
be delighted to see him striking out blindly in all directions and missing the
real targets. Besides, he didn't want to spook Burns. And yet behind his grim,
impassive face, Hawk's thoughts danced restlessly from one problem to another,
searching for answers that eluded him. The super-chacal was out there somewhere,
poised to sweep across the city in a tidal wave of blood and death. Morgan was
out there too, hidden somewhere safe and plotting the deaths of everyone who
knew the truth about his new drug. Not to mention Hammer, the gang leader from
the Devil's Hook, and his threatened vendetta.
And also back at the Hook, the little girl Hawk had rescued from underneath the
wreckage was lying in a hospital bed, still in a coma. The doctors didn't know
whether she'd ever regain consciousness.
On top of all that, the Guard wanted his scalp for screwing up, and they'd taken
Isobel away from him. Some days you just couldn't get a break. Hawk realized
Burns was speaking to him, and looked round sharply.
"I'm sorry. What?"
"I said," Burns repeated patiently, "is it always this bad here? I'd heard
stories, of course, but this place is disgusting."
Hawk looked around at the squalid buildings and the ragged people, and the
overriding sense of violence and despair that rose from them like an almost
palpable mist. After five years working the Northside he'd grown inured to most
of the misery and suffering, for the sake of his sanity, but it still disturbed
him enough to appreciate how bad it must seem to an outsider. Haven was a dark
city wherever you looked, but the Northside was dark enough to stamp out the
light in anyone's soul eventually. Hawk realized Burns was still looking at him
for an answer, and he shrugged harshly.
"It's quiet today, if anything. The snow and the cold are keeping most people
off the streets, even the beggars, and those who are out and about aren't
hanging around long enough to start any trouble. But you can bet that somewhere,
someone is starting a fight, or stabbing someone in the back for no good reason.
There's all sorts of crime here, everything you'd expect in an area as poor as
this, but the violence never ends. To a Northsider, everyone is an enemy, out to
steal what little he has, and most of the time he's right. There's little love
or comfort here, Burns, and even less hope. And the only thing the Northsiders
hate more than each other is an outsider. Like us."
"How do you cope with working here?" said Burns. "I'd go crazy in a week."
Hawk shrugged. "I've seen worse. All you can do is try and make a difference for
the best, where you can. What brought you here from the Westside?"
"Doughty and I were filling in for some Guards who were down with the flu. When
I heard they were sending us here, I seriously thought about calling in sick
myself, but of course it was too late by then. Doughty didn't mind. There wasn't
much that bothered him."
"I'm sorry about your partner," said Hawk.
"Yeah. He had a wife, you know. Separated three years back, but… Someone will
have told her by now. I should have done it myself, but she never liked me
anyway."
They walked in silence for a while, not looking at each other.
"So, what's the plan?" said Burns finally. "Are we headed anywhere in
particular?"
"I thought we'd start off with Short Tom," said Hawk. "Has a nice little
distribution setup, down on Carlisle Street. He'll move anything for anyone, as
long as the money's right. Not one of the biggest, but certainly one of the
longest established. I doubt he's handling the super-chacal himself, but he'll
probably have a damned good idea who might be."
"Will he talk to us? Do you have a good relationship with him?"
Hawk looked at Burns. "This is the Northside, no one here talks to the Guard
willingly. We're the enemy, the ones who enforce the laws that keep them in
their place. The poverty here's so bad, most people will do anything to escape
it. They don't care who they rob or who they hurt. All they care about is making
that one big score that will finally get them out of the Northside. You can't
reason with people like that. Short Tom will talk to me because he knows what
will happen to him if he doesn't."
Burns stared straight ahead of him, his face expressionless. "I don't approve of
strong-arm tactics. I put on this uniform to help people, not oppress them."
"You've spent too long in the Westside, Burns. They still like to pretend
they're living in a civilized city over there. Here in the Northside, they'd
quite happily cut you down for the loose change in your pockets, or a chance at
your boots. The only thing that keeps them off my back is the certain knowledge
that I'll kill them if they even think of raising a hand against me. I have to
be obviously more dangerous than they are at all times, or I'd be a dead man.
Look… I used to think the same as you, once. There are good people here, same as
there are good people everywhere, and I do my best to help and protect them.
Even if it means bending or ignoring the rules to do so. But when you get right
down to it, my job is to enforce the law. Whatever it takes."
"Being a Guard doesn't give us the right to beat up someone just because we
think they might have information that might help us. There are procedures,
proper ways of doing things."
Hawk sighed. "I know. I've read the Manual too. But the procedures take time,
and for all I know, the super-chacal's already seeping out onto the streets. I
could threaten to arrest Short Tom, maybe even drag him down to Headquarters and
throw him in a cell to think things over. But I couldn't hold him for long, and
he knows it. I don't have the time to be a nice guy about this, and to be blunt,
I don't have the inclination. My way works, and I'll settle for that. I've never
laid a finger on an innocent man, or killed a man who didn't deserve it."
"How can you be sure? How can you be sure you haven't killed an innocent man by
accident? The dead can't defend themselves from other people's accusations.
We're Captains in the Guard, Hawk—not judge, jury, and executioner."
"I go by what works," said Hawk flatly. "When the people in the Northside start
playing by the rules, so will I. Look, there are just four Captains and a dozen
Constables to cover the whole Northside. We can't be everywhere at once, so we
have to let our reputations go ahead of us. It's a big area, Burns, and rotten
to the core. All we can ever hope to do is keep the lid on. Now, I don't care if
you approve of how I do my job or not; just watch my back and don't interfere.
The only thing that matters now is stopping Morgan and his stinking drug."
Burns nodded slowly. "Of course, finding the super-chacal would go a long way
towards reinstating you in the Guard, wouldn't it?"
Hawk looked at him coldly. "If you think that's the only reason I'm doing this,
then you don't know me at all."
"Sorry. You're right, of course. Hawk, can I ask you something… personal?"
"I don't know. Maybe. What?"
"What happened to your eye?"
"Oh, that. I pawned it."
Short Tom's place was a two-storey glorified lean-to, adjoining a battered old
warehouse on Carlisle Street. The street itself was blocked from one end to the
other by an open-air market and the tightly packed crowd it had drawn. The
tattered, gaudy stalls crowded up against each other, and the vendors behind
them filled the air with their aggressive patter. Most of them were bundled up
to their ears in thick winter furs, but it didn't seem to be slowing them down
any. Some of them were all but jumping up and down on the spot in their attempt
to explain just how magnificent and amazingly affordable their goods were. Hawk
glanced at a few stalls, but wasn't impressed. Still, with Haven's Docks closed
by the winter storms, goods of all kinds were getting scarce, and even rubbish
like this was starting to look good. The smell was pretty bad, particularly
around the food stalls, and Burns pulled one face after another as he and Hawk
made their way slowly through the crowd. Even their Guards' uniforms couldn't
make them any room in such a crush.
Short Tom's lean-to loomed up before them, looking more and more unsafe the
closer they got. It looked like it had been thrown together on the cheap by a
builder in a hurry, trying to stay one step ahead of his reputation. The walls
weren't straight, the wood was stained and warped, and the door and window
frames were lopsided. It was a mess, even by Northside standards. Still, it was
no doubt cheap to rent, and for a man in Short Tom's line of business, that was
all that really mattered.
Two large bravos in heavy sheepskin coats stood before the main door, arms
folded, glaring impartially about them. Hawk walked up to the one on the left,
and punched him out. The second bravo yelped in disbelief and started to unfold
his arms. Hawk kicked him in the knee, waited for him to bend forward, and then
knocked him out with the butt of his axe. No one in the milling crowd paid any
attention. It was none of their business. Burns looked at Hawk.
"Was that really necessary?"
"Yes," said Hawk. "They wouldn't have let us in without a fight, and if I'd
given them a chance to draw their swords, someone would have got seriously hurt.
Most probably them, but you never know. Now follow me, watch my back, and let me
do all the talking. And try to at least look mean."
He stepped over the unconscious bravos, pushed open the door and stepped
through, followed closely by Burns. Inside, all was surprisingly neat and tidy,
with clerks sitting behind two rows of desks, shuffling pieces of paper and
making careful entries in two sets of ledgers. One of the clerks shouted for
them to shut the bloody door and keep the bloody cold out, and Burns quickly did
so. Hawk glanced at him, and shook his head. Far too long in the Westside. He
looked back at the clerks, who had finally realized who the newcomers were. One
clerk opened his mouth to shout a warning.
"Don't," said Hawk.
The clerk looked at the axe in Hawk's hand, thought about it, and shut his
mouth.
"Good boy," said Hawk. He looked about him, and the clerks shrank down behind
their desks. Hawk smiled coldly. "My partner and I are going upstairs to have a
nice little chat with Short Tom. Just carry on as normal. And by the way, if
anyone was to come up after us and interrupt our little chat, I will be most
upset. Is that clear?"
The clerks nodded quickly, and did their best to look as though the idea had
never entered their heads. Hawk and Burns strolled casually between the desks
and up the stairway at the back of the room. Burns watched the clerks' faces out
of the corner of his eye. They'd all recognized Hawk by now, and there was real
terror in their faces, and not a little awe. Burns frowned thoughtfully. He'd
heard stories about Hawk—everyone had—but he'd never really believed them. Until
now.
They found Short Tom in his office, right at the top of the stairs. It was a
nice little place, neat and tidy and almost cosy, with thick rugs on the floor,
comfortable furniture, and attractive watercolor landscapes on the walls. Short
Tom looked up as they entered, and his face fell. Not surprisingly, given his
name, he was a dwarf, with stubby arms and legs and a large head. He wore the
very latest fashion, and it was a credit to his tailor that he didn't look any
more ridiculous than anybody else. He was sitting at a normal-sized desk, on a
custom-made chair, and he pushed it back slightly as he reached for a desk
drawer.
"I wouldn't," said Hawk. "I really wouldn't."
Short Tom nodded glumly, and took his hand away from the drawer. "Captain Hawk.
How nice to see you again. Absolutely marvelous. What do you want?"
"Just a little chat," said Hawk. "I've got a problem I thought you might be able
to help me with."
"I'm clean," said Short Tom immediately. "One hundred per cent. I'm entirely
legitimate these days."
"Of course you are," said Hawk. "In which case, you won't mind my bringing in
the tax inspectors to go through all your invoices, will you?"
Short Tom sighed heavily. "What can I do for you, Captain?"
"Morgan's got a small mountain of drugs on his hands that he has to move in a
hurry."
"He hasn't contacted me. I swear he hasn't."
"I know he hasn't. You're not big enough for this. But you can give me some
names. With a deal this urgent, there's bound to have been talk already."
"I've heard about your run-in with Morgan," said Short Tom carefully, "and I
can't afford to get involved. I'm just a small-time operator, dealing in
whatever odds and ends the big boys can't be bothered with. As long as I know my
place, no one bothers me. If I start talking out of turn, Morgan will send some
of his heavies round to shut me up permanently. You'll have to find your help
somewhere else."
"Thousands of people could die if we don't stop this drug hitting the street."
"That's not my problem."
Hawk raised his axe above his head and brought it sweeping down in one swift,
savage movement. The axe-head buried itself in Short Tom's desk, splitting the
polished desktop apart. Hawk yanked the axe free and struck the desk again,
putting all his strength into it. The desk caved in, sheared almost in two.
Splinters flew on the air, and papers fluttered to the floor like wounded birds.
Short Tom sat very still, looking down at the wreckage of his desk. He raised
his eyes and looked at Hawk, standing before him with his axe at the ready.
"On the other hand," said Short Tom very politely, "I've always believed in
cooperating with the forces of law and order whenever possible."
He came up with four names and addresses, all of which Hawk recognized. He
nodded his thanks, and left. Burns hurried after him, having almost missed his
cue. His last glimpse was of Short Tom staring glumly at what was left of his
desk. Burns followed Hawk down the stairs and back through the rows of clerks,
all of whom were careful to keep their eyes glued to their work as the Guards
passed. Hawk and Burns stepped out into the street again, and Burns winced as
the bitter cold hit him hard after the comfortable warmth of the offices. He
stubbed his toe on something, and looked down to find the two bravos who'd
guarded the front door still lying where they'd fallen. Only now they were
stark-naked, having been stripped of everything they owned. Their flesh was a
rather pleasant pale blue, set against the dirty grey of the snow. Hawk
chuckled.
"That's the Northside for you."
"We can't just leave them like this," protested Burns. "They'll freeze to
death."
"Yeah, I know. Give me a hand and we'll dump them back in the offices. Short Tom
will take care of them. But let this be a lesson to you, Burns. Never give a
Northsider an opening, or he'll steal you blind. And the odds are there's not
one person in this crowd who would have lifted a finger to help these two
bravos. They'd have just left them there to freeze. In the Northside, people
learn from an early age not to care for anyone but themselves."
"Is that where you learned it?" said Burns.
Hawk looked at him, and Burns had to fight down an urge to look away from the
glare of the single cold eye. When Hawk finally spoke, his voice was calm and
unhurried.
"I think we're going to get on a lot better if you stop acting like a character
from a religious pamphlet. I don't know how you've managed to survive this long
in Haven; I can only assume they've had a hot flush of civilization in the
Westside since I was last there.
"Look, Burns, let's get this clear once and for all. I'm only as hard as I need
to be to get the job done. I take no pleasure in violence, but I don't shrink
from it either, if I decide it's necessary. I didn't see you holding back when
we were fighting for our lives in Morgan's factory."
"That was different!"
"No, it wasn't. We're fighting a war here in the Northside, against some of the
most evil and corrupt sons of bitches this city has produced, and we're losing.
For every villain we put away, there are ten more queuing up to take his place.
The only satisfaction we get out of this job is knowing that things would be
even worse without us. Now, am I going to have any more problems with you?"
"No," said Burns. "You've made yourself very clear."
"Good. Now help me get these two bravos inside before they freeze their nuts
off."
It didn't take long to discover that none of the distributors knew anything
about Morgan's super-chacal. The word from every one of them was that Morgan had
gone to ground after his release from custody, and no one had heard anything
about him since. Hawk gave them all his best, menacing glare, but they stuck to
their story, so in the end Hawk decided he believed them. Hawk and Burns stood
together in the street outside the last distributor's warehouse, and looked at
each other thoughtfully.
"Maybe Morgan's set up his own distribution network," said Burns.
"No," said Hawk. "If he had, I'd have heard about it."
"You didn't know about the super-chacal."
"That was different."
"How?"
"The drug could be produced and guarded by relatively few people, hidden away in
the pocket dimension. A new distribution system would need a lot of people, and
someone would have been bound to talk. No, Morgan has to be using an established
distributor. Maybe someone who doesn't normally move drugs, but has the right
kind of contacts."
"Maybe." Burns pulled his cloak tightly about him, and stamped his feet in the
snow. "So, what's our next step?"
"We go and talk with the one man who might know what Morgan is up to; the man
who knows everything that's going on in the Northside, because nothing happens
here without his approval. The big man himself: Saint Christophe."
Burns looked at him sharply. "Wait a minute, Hawk, even I've heard of Saint
Christophe. He takes a cut from every crime committed in Haven. Word is he has a
dozen judges in his pocket, and as many Councilors. Not to mention a personal
army of four hundred men, and a private mansion better protected than Guard
Headquarters. We don't stand a chance of getting in to see him, and even if we
did somehow manage it, he'd probably just have us killed on sight. Slowly and
very horribly."
"Calm down," said Hawk, amused. "We're not going anywhere near his house."
"Thank all the Gods for that."
"I've got a better idea."
Burns looked at him suspiciously. "If it involves bursting in on him where he
works and smashing up his desk, you are on your own. Saint Christophe is the
only person in the Northside with an even worse reputation than you."
"Have you finished?" said Hawk.
"Depends," said Burns darkly. "Tell me your idea."
"Every day, at the same time, Saint Christophe has a bath and sauna at a private
little place not far from here. It's pretty well guarded, but there's a way to
get in that not many people know about. I did the owner a favor once."
"And at what time of day does Saint Christophe visit this bathhouse?" said
Burns.
"About now. "
Burns nodded glumly. "I thought so. You've had this in mind all along, haven't
you?"
Hawk grinned. "Stick with me, Burns. I know what I'm doing."
Burns just looked at him.
The private baths turned out to be a discreet little place tucked away on a side
street in a surprisingly quiet and upmarket area right on the edge of the
Northside. It stayed quiet and upmarket because the Northside's more successful
villains used the area for their own rest and relaxation, and everyone else had
the sense to stay out of their way. Everyone except Hawk.
He walked breezily down an alleyway and slipped into the baths through a door
marked "Staff Only." Burns hurried in after him and shut the door quickly behind
them, his heart beating uncomfortably fast. Hawk looked around once to get his
bearings, then set off confidently through a maze of corridors that Burns
wouldn't have tackled without a map and a compass. Every now and again they
encountered a member of the staff, but Hawk just nodded to each attendant
briskly, as though he had every right to be there, and the attendant just nodded
back and continued on his way. Burns grew increasingly nervous, and felt a
growing need to find a privy.
"Are you sure you know where you're going?" he whispered harshly.
"You must learn to trust me, Burns," said Hawk airily. "The owner himself showed
me this route. We'll find Saint Christophe in cubicle seventeen, just down this
corridor here. Assuming he hasn't changed his routine."
"And if he has?"
"Then we'll just walk up and down the corridor, slamming doors open, till we
find him."
Burns realized with a sinking heart that Hawk wasn't joking. He thought about
the number of major villains who were probably relaxing all unknowing behind the
other doors, and swallowed hard. He started to plot an emergency escape route
back through the corridors, realized he was hopelessly lost, and felt even
worse.
Cubicle seventeen looked like all the others, a plain wooden door with a gold
filigree number. Hawk put his ear against the door and listened for a moment,
then stood back and loosened the axe at his side. Then he kicked the door open,
strolled casually into the steam-filled sauna and leaned against the door,
holding it open. Burns stood in the doorway, keeping one eye on the corridor, in
case some of the staff happened along. The steam quickly cleared as the
temperature dropped, revealing Saint Christophe sitting at the back of the room,
surrounded by twelve muscular female bodyguards wearing nothing but sword belts.
The bodyguards surged to their feet, grabbing for their swords as they
recognized the Guards' uniforms. Hawk just leaned against the door, and nodded
casually to Saint Christophe. Burns wanted desperately to draw his sword, but
had enough sense to know it wouldn't help him much if he did. His only hope was
to brazen it out and hope Hawk knew what he was doing. He squared his shoulders
and lifted his chin, and gave the bodyguards his best intimidating glare. If it
bothered them at all, they did a great job of hiding it. And then Saint
Christophe stirred on his wooden bench, and everybody's attention went to him.
He gestured briefly to his bodyguards, and they all immediately put away their
swords and sat down again, ignoring the two Guards. Burns blinked. He couldn't
have been more surprised if they'd all started speaking in tongues.
Saint Christophe was a big man, in more ways than one. Though no longer
personally involved in any particular racket, every other villain in the city
paid him homage, not to mention tribute. He funded a great many operations, and
planned many more, but never took a single risk himself. He ran his organization
with brutal efficiency and was reputed to be one of the richest men in Haven, if
not the Low Kingdoms. He had a partner, once. No one knew what happened to him.
It wasn't considered prudent to ask.
The man himself was over six feet tall, and was reputed to weigh three hundred
and fifty pounds. Sitting down, he looked almost as wide as he was tall, a
mountain of gleaming white flesh running with perspiration. Rumor had it there
was a surprising amount of muscle under all the fat, and Burns believed it. Even
sitting still, Saint Christophe exuded an air of overwhelming menace—partly from
his imposing bulk, and partly from his unwavering, lizardlike gaze. His face was
blank and almost childlike, his features stretched smooth like a baby's by his
fat, an impression heightened by his thin, wispy hair. He moved slightly, and
the wooden bench groaned under his weight. His bodyguards were already beginning
to shiver from the dropping temperature, but he didn't seem to notice it. His
gaze was fixed entirely on Hawk, ignoring Burns, for which Burns was very
grateful. When Saint Christophe finally spoke, his voice was deep and cultured.
"Well, Captain Hawk. An unexpected pleasure. It's not often you come to see me."
"I have a problem," said Hawk.
"Yes, I know. You have a talent for annoying important people, Captain, but this
time you have surpassed yourself. The Guard wants you suspended, a gang from the
Devil's Hook has declared vendetta against you, and Morgan wants your head on a
platter. You've had a busy morning."
"It's not over yet. I need to know how Morgan is going to distribute his new
drug."
"And so you came to me for help. How touching. Why should I help you, Captain
Hawk? It would make much more sense to have you killed, here and now. After all,
you've caused me much distress in the past. You've shut down my operations,
arrested and killed my men, and cost me a great deal of money. I really don't
know why I didn't order your death long ago."
Hawk grinned. "Because you couldn't be one hundred percent sure they'd do the
job. And you know that if they didn't kill me, I'd kill them, and then I'd come
after you. And all the bodyguards in Haven couldn't keep you alive if I wanted
your head."
Saint Christophe nodded slowly, his face impassive. "You always were a
vindictive man, Captain. But one day you'll push me too far, and then we'll see
how good you really are with that axe. In the meantime, my offer to you still
stands. Leave the Guard, and work for me. Be my man, I could make you rich and
powerful beyond your wildest dreams."
"I'm my own man," said Hawk. "And there isn't enough money in Haven to make me
work for you. You deal in other people's suffering, and the blood won't wash off
your money, no matter how many times you launder it through legitimate
businesses."
"Anyone would think you didn't like me," said Saint Christophe. "Why should I
help you. Captain? You spurn my friendship, throw my more-than-generous offers
back in my face, and insult me in front of my people. What is it to me if Morgan
is pushing a new drug? If it wasn't him, it would be somebody else. The market's
appetite is always bigger than we can satisfy."
"This drug is different," said Hawk flatly. "It turns its users into maddened,
unstoppable killers. A few hours after the drug hits the streets, there'll be
hundreds of homicidal maniacs running loose in the city. The death toll could
easily run into thousands. You can't sell your precious services to dead people,
Christophe. You need me to stop Morgan because he threatens your markets. All of
them. It's as simple as that."
"Perhaps." Saint Christophe leaned forward slightly, and his wooden bench
groaned loudly. His bodyguards tensed for a moment, and then relaxed. "This is
important to you, isn't it, Captain?"
"Of course. It's my job."
"No, this is more than just your job; it's become personal to you. One should
never get personally involved in business, Captain; it distorts a man's judgment
and makes him… vulnerable. Let us make a deal, you and I. You want something
from me, and I want something from you. I will agree to shut down all
distribution networks in Haven for forty-eight hours. More then enough time for
you to find Morgan and put a stop to his plans. In return… you will leave the
Guard and work for me. A simple exchange, Captain Hawk. Take it or leave it."
"No deal," said Hawk.
"Think about it, Captain. Think of the thousands who'll die if you don't find
Morgan in time. And you won't, without my help. You really don't have a choice."
"Wrong. You're the one who doesn't have a choice." Hawk fixed Saint Christophe
with his cold glare, and the bodyguards stirred restlessly. "The Guard still has
some of the super-chacal we confiscated from Morgan's factory. Whoever made the
drug disappear from Headquarters missed one batch. So either you cooperate, and
tell me what I need to know, or I'll see that when the drug finally gets loose,
you'll personally get a good strong dose. If Haven's going to be torn apart
because of you, I'll see you go down with it."
"You wouldn't do that," said Saint Christophe.
"Try me," said Hawk.
For a long moment, nobody spoke. The atmosphere in the sauna grew dangerously
tense. Burns glanced from Hawk to Saint Christophe and back again, but neither
of them looked to be giving way. He let his hand drift a little closer to his
sword. All it would take was one sign from Saint Christophe, and the twelve
bodyguards would attack. Hawk might actually be able to handle six-to-one odds
with that bloody axe of his, but Burns had no false illusions about his own
fighting skills. Maybe, if he was quick enough, he could jump back and slam the
door in their faces, slow them down enough for him to make a run for it. That
would mean abandoning Hawk…
"Very well," said Saint Christophe. "I agree. I will see to it that the
distribution networks are shut down for twenty-four hours."
"You said forty-eight," said Hawk.
"That was a different deal. You have twenty-four hours. Captain. I suggest you
make good use of them, since regretfully I have no idea as to where Morgan might
be at present. He seems to have disappeared into a hole and pulled it in after
him. But Captain, when this is over, you will answer to me for your threats and
defiance. Please close the door on your way out."
Hawk turned and left without speaking. Burns hurried after him, shut the cubicle
door firmly, and then ran after his partner as he strode off down the corridor.
"I don't believe what I just saw," said Burns in amazement. "You faced down
Saint Christophe without even drawing your axe, and got him to agree to help the
Guard. That's like standing in the harbor and watching the tides go out
backwards."
Hawk shrugged. "It was in his interests to help, and he knew it."
"Where did you find the extra batch of super-chacal? I thought it had all
disappeared."
"It did. I was bluffing." Burns looked at him speechlessly. Hawk grinned.
"There's more to surviving in the Northside than knowing how to use an axe."
Hawk was never sure how he knew when he was being followed, but over the years
he'd learned to trust his instincts. He glanced at Burns, but he was apparently
lost in his own thoughts and hadn't noticed anything. Hawk slowed his pace a
little, and found various convincing reasons to look innocently around him. He
frowned as he spotted not one tail but several, moving casually through the
crowd after him and Burns. Whoever they were, they must be pretty good to have
got so close without his noticing them before. His frown deepened as he realized
the tails were gradually moving so as to surround him and Burns. It was looking
more and more like an ambush, and they'd chosen a good spot for it. The street
was growing increasingly narrow, and was blocked off at both ends by market
stalls. There were alleyways leading off to both sides, but none of them seemed
to lead anywhere helpful. And the next main intersection was too far away, if it
came to running. Besides, Hawk didn't believe in running. He let his hand fall
casually to the axe at his side, and looked for the place to make a stand.
"I make it seven," said Burns quietly. "They picked us up not long after we left
the baths."
"I wasn't sure you'd even noticed we were being followed."
"Working in the Westside, I spent a lot of time escorting gold- and silversmiths
to the banks with their week's receipts. There's nothing like guarding large
amounts of money in public to make you aware of when you're being followed. So
what are we going to do? Make a stand?"
"I don't think we've much choice. And it's eight, not seven. See that man in the
doorway, just ahead, pretending not to watch us?"
"Yes. Damn. And if we can see eight, you can bet there are just as many more
lurking somewhere handy out of sight, just in case they're needed. I don't like
the odds, Hawk."
"I've faced worse."
"I wish you'd stop saying that. It's very irritating, and I don't believe it for
a moment. Who do you think they are? Morgan's people?"
"Seems likely. He must have known I'd have to go to Saint Christophe eventually,
so he just staked the place out and waited for us to turn up. Damn. I hate being
predictable."
"We could go back to Saint Christophe and ask for protection."
"You have got to be joking. He'd love that. Besides, I have my reputation to
think of."
"If we don't think of something fast, you're going to be the most reputable
corpse in the Northside!"
"Calm down, Burns. You worry too much. If the fighting ground is unfavorable,
then the obvious thing to do is change the fighting ground. You see that
fire-escape stairway, to your right?"
"Yeah, what about it? Hey, wait a minute, Hawk. You can't be serious…"
"Shut up and run."
Hawk sprinted forward, with Burns only a pace or two behind. Their followers
hesitated a moment, and then charged after them, forcing their way through the
crowd with brutal efficiency. Hawk reached the metal stairway, and ran up it
without slowing, taking the steps two at a time. Burns hurried after him, the
fire escape shuddering under their combined weight. Hawk pulled himself up onto
the roof and scurried across the uneven tilework to crouch beside the nearest
chimney. Burns clattered unsteadily across to join him, and clutched at the
chimney stack to steady himself. Hawk shot him a grin.
"Check the other side of the roof; see if there's any other way to get up here.
I'll prepare a few nasty surprises."
"You're just loving this, aren't you?" said Burns through clenched teeth,
hugging tight to the chimney.
"What's the matter with you?"
"I hate heights!"
"Oh, stop complaining, and get over to the other side. This is the perfect spot
to take them on; lots of hiding places, and they're just as much at a
disadvantage as we are. Trust me, I've done this before."
Burns scowled at him, reluctantly let go of the chimney, and moved cautiously
across the tiles towards the spine of the roof. "All right, what's the plan,
then?"
"Plan? What do we need a plan for? Just find something to hide behind, and jump
out on anything that moves!"
Burns disappeared over the roof ridge, muttering to himself. Hawk looked quickly
about him, taking in the gables, cornices, and chimney stacks that jutted from
the undulating sea of roofs to either side. He drew his axe and waited patiently
in the shadows of the chimney, listening for the first giveaway sound. It was at
times like this that he wished he carried a length of tripwire.
He looked around him, taking in the state of the roof. A lot of snow had fallen
away from the tiles, pulled loose by its own weight and the vibrations of
passing traffic below, but there was enough left to make the tiles suitably
treacherous. A sudden thud followed by muffled curses from the other side of the
roof suggested that Burns had reached the same conclusion. Hawk grinned
suddenly, as an idea hit him. He moved carefully away from the chimney,
unbuttoned his fly and urinated over a stretch of apparently safe tilework. It
steamed on the air, but froze almost as soon as it spread out across the tiles.
Hawk finished and quickly buttoned up again, wincing at the cold. He looked
round sharply as he caught the muffled sound of boots treading quietly on the
metal stairway, and he scurried back to crouch down on the opposite side of the
chimney stack. He breathed through his nose so that his steaming breath wouldn't
give him away, and clutched his axe firmly.
He listened carefully as the first man stepped off the stairway onto the roof,
hesitated, and then moved slowly forward. Timing his move precisely, Hawk
suddenly emerged from behind the chimney, swinging his axe in both hands.
Morgan's man spun round just in time to receive the heavy axehead in his
shoulder. The blade sheared clean through his collarbone, and blood flew
steaming on the bitter air. The impact drove the man to his knees. Hawk pulled
the axe free, put a boot against the man's shoulder and pushed. The man-at-arms
screamed once as he slid helplessly across the roof and over the side.
Hawk heard footsteps behind him and turned just in time to see the second man
hit the patch of frozen urine. The swordsman's feet shot out from under him and
he all but flew off the edge of the roof. The third man was standing by the fire
escape with his mouth hanging open. Hawk bent down, snatched up a handful of
snow, and threw it at him. As the man-at-arms raised his hand instinctively to
guard his face, Hawk stepped carefully forward and swung his axe in a vicious
sideways arc. The axehead punched clean through the man's rib cage and sent him
flying backwards. He disappeared over the edge of the roof and fell back down
the fire escape. There was a brief flurry of yells and curses from the other men
coming up the stairway, and Hawk grinned. He hurried forward, and his feet shot
out from under him.
He hit the roof hard, and slid kicking and cursing towards the edge of the roof.
He threw aside his axe and grabbed at the iron guttering as he shot past it. He
got a firm grip on the trough with both hands, and the sudden shock of stopping
almost wrenched his arms from his sockets. The guttering groaned loudly, but
supported his weight. Hawk hung there for a moment, breathing hard, his feet
dangling above the street far below, and then he started to pull himself back
up. The trough groaned again and shifted suddenly. There was a muffled pop as a
rivet tore free, and Hawk froze where he was. The guttering didn't look at all
secure, especially when seen from underneath, and he didn't think it would hold
his weight much longer. On the other hand, one sudden movement might be all it
would take to pull it away completely. He pulled himself up slowly and
carefully, an inch at a time, ignoring the sudden groans and stirrings from the
ironwork, and swung one leg up over onto the roof. A few moments later he was
back on the roof, reaching for his axe and wiping sweat from his forehead. The
sound of approaching feet on the fire escape caught his attention again and he
grinned suddenly as a new idea came to him.
He moved carefully over to the metal stairway and looked down. Seven men-at-arms
were heading up towards him. They looked grim, and very competent. Hawk waved at
them cheerfully, and then bent forward and stuck his axehead between the side of
the stairway and the wall. He threw his weight against the axe, and the fire
escape tore away from the wall with almost casual ease. The seven swordsmen
screamed all the way down to the street below. Hawk put his axe away. Sometimes
there was a lot to be said for cheap building practices.
He clambered up to the roof ridge and looked down the other side. Burns was
crouching at the edge of the roof, sword in hand, keeping watch from behind a
jutting gable. There was no sign of any more men-at-arms. Hawk called out to
Burns, and he jumped half out of his skin. He spun round, sword at the ready,
and then glared balefully as he saw it was only Hawk.
"Don't do that!"
"Sorry," said Hawk. "I take it none of the men-at-arms got this far?"
"Haven't seen hide nor hair of them. I don't think they were interested in me,
only you. How many came after you?"
"Ten," said Hawk, casually.
"Bloody hell. What happened to them?"
Hawk grinned. "We had a falling out."
They made their way back to Headquarters, but though there were no further
incidents, Hawk couldn't shake the feeling they were still being followed. He
tried all the usual tricks to make a tail reveal himself, but he didn't see
anyone, no matter how carefully he checked. It was always possible his current
situation had him jumping at shadows, but he didn't think so. The crawling itch
between his shoulder blades stayed with him all the way back to Guard
Headquarters. He stopped at the main doors and peered wistfully down the street
at The Cloudy Morning tavern. A drink would really hit the spot now, after the
long day's exertions, but he could just visualize the look on Burns's face if he
were to suggest it. All the partners he could have chosen, and he had to pick a
saint in training. He strode scowling into Headquarters, and everyone hurried to
get out of his way. Burns walked silently beside him, nodding casually to
familiar faces. He'd been unusually quiet ever since Morgan's people jumped
them. Hawk shrugged mentally. Apparently Burns was still mad at him for not