Faded Steel Heat (45 page)

Read Faded Steel Heat Online

Authors: Glen Cook

BOOK: Faded Steel Heat
3.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Because if I go slicing shifters up, I’ll probably piss off about half the people in this zoo. Look around. Every one of these clowns is looking for an angle and trying to figure out how to use this. If they can sneak around the stormwarden — beforehand. Anyway, we need to find out how widespread this changers cancer really is. Which we can’t do using dead men. That being a stormwarden over there, not a necromancer.” And I, for my part, being obsessively curious, wanted to ferret out a few whys as well as the whos and whats. And that took getting people’s minds into the right frame by asking the right questions so the right answers would float to the surface.

Marengo didn’t say much interesting about Brotherhood Of The Wolf. They’d been his first effort to give The Call real muscle, a band of unimpeachable war heroes, accomplished, skilled, and dedicated. But having grown accustomed to deal with the King’s enemies unsupervised, for weeks or months at a time, they tended to act without consulting their superiors. When they tried to drive the Inner Council to adopt policies they favored, by means of an unspecified intervention that left the council no other option, said council ordered them disbanded. They would be replaced by less elite, more pliable believers. The new groups grew haphazardly till Colonel Theverly came along. Most of the Wolves joined the new freecorps. A few, like Gerris Genord, dropped out and went elsewhere.

Marengo insisted that the Wolves, disaffected or not, would never knowingly ally themselves with Karenta’s enemies.

Only the thickest-witted witness would have failed to understand that just from observing the captive Wolves.

Devotion to the Crown is a foundation stone of the freecorps ethic. We had plenty of evidence that shapeshifters did not share that dedication.

North English said his piece and retreated as fast as he could. His courage was extremely inconstant tonight. Perilous Spite really worried him.

I got the impression that the reverse wasn’t true. The sorcerer was indifferent to everyone but the shapeshifters.

 

 

103

I studied face after face while others spoke. Those not anticipating punishment were growing impatient. Only the stormwarden’s presence held them in check.

I went down to Genord, tried one more time. “You meant well but you were conned. And not just by these things.” I indicated the shifters. “That’s not really your fault. You didn’t know they weren’t human even though you’d worked with them in the Cantard.”

Genord showed me the same blank face he’d worn since he’d come through the door.

I got down on one knee. “Look, guy, I’m trying to give you something to work with. They don’t hang you for stupid. But they sure will for stubborn. Who got the Wolves back together? Who got you into this? Who are you covering for? You think maybe he knew about the Dragons? Eh?”

Genord and I both knew that Brotherhood Of The Wolf never disbanded. But we could pretend.

“Who decided to target the Weider family? And why them?”

Genord wouldn’t talk but his buddies weren’t as single-minded. They’d gotten a grip on the notion that they didn’t have to throw themselves on their swords. There might be a way out of their fix. If they’d been tricked into serving evil...

“You guys haven’t killed anybody, have you? Except Lance?” There wouldn’t be any getting out of that for Genord.

Gerris remained donkey stubborn. He believed he was a good man fighting the good fight. Too bad his determination was wasted.

One of the Wolves volunteered, “We haven’t killed anyone.” The restlessness around us lessened immediately. People jockeyed for vantage points. They might hear something interesting.

Genord gave the talker a black look. His attitude was shared by none of the other Wolves. The man speaking looked like he was used to being in charge. “We’re guilty of nothing but striving to serve the movement and the Crown.” He glared at the balcony, at the unseen North English, angry, clearly feeling betrayed.

“Suppose you explain that.” I surveyed the audience. I leaned back to check the chandelier. The ugliest bird of the century stared back. Still alert. Good. I glanced at the settling tank. I had hold of a thread, now. Finally. Things might start to unravel. Which could mean some real excitement. “Get away from that tank!” I yelled. Trail, Storey, and Shale were back trying to figure out how to get beer out of the vat. Quipo Trim, though, had established herself permanently beside an active keg of Reserve Dark. She muttered with Winger as she sucked it down. Winger was putting her share away, too, instead of looking out for Singe. No beer disappears faster than free beer. With my luck the women were swapping Garrett stories. I growled. I did not want Winger getting drunk. She loses all sense of caution once she’s had a few.

The Goddamn Parrot launched himself off the chandelier, swooped around the room. People ducked. People cursed. The bird landed on Winger’s wrist just as she started to take a drink. Beer flew. She glared up at me. I indicated Morley. “Remember, the jungle chicken was his fault.” The bird roosted on the chandelier again. I glared at Winger’s mug. She began to get the idea. But how long could it stick?

Upstairs, Belinda and Nicks joined Alyx and Tinnie. They must’ve gotten a cue from Max or Manvil. They had North English surrounded and were keeping him out where he could be seen. If they added Tama Montezuma, they’d create a coven of heart-wreckers of diabolic magnitude.

Where
was
Marengo’s favorite niece? I couldn’t see her for the surrounding crowd. Hadn’t seen her for a while now, come to think.

The Wolf continued his story. “Privately we were told that we weren’t disbanding. That the announcement that we were would get that asshole Theverly down off his high horse.” The Wolf spokesman seemed determined to stare a hole right through North English. Weider and Gilbey had joined the ladies, now, compelling Marengo to face his critic. Max was extremely unhappy with his friend. “We were told we were going underground to do the stuff we’d trained for. Some of us should take positions in the private world. Openings would be arranged. Some should join Theverly’s command and monitor it from inside, taking as much control as we could. Some of us should move over to other rights groups so we could keep track of what they were doing. These were all things we were convinced we should’ve been doing already.”

I gave North English the fish-eye myself. That was exactly the sort of stuff a guy like him would pull. But he called down, “That’s not true. I told the Brotherhood to disband because I wanted it disbanded. I agreed with Theverly. They wouldn’t be managed. Obviously, time has sustained the wisdom of our decision.” Nevertheless, he remained shifty-eyed and kept his face averted from the stormwarden.

The man in chains didn’t buy North English’s protests. “We got orders from you every day. The last couple of months you’ve sent word three or four times a day. It got to where you were practically controlling every breath we took.”

The man believed what he said. I didn’t doubt that a bit.

The Wolf had said, “... sent word...” And it hadn’t been that long since I’d mentioned the changers’ talent for telling Karentines exactly what they wanted to hear. This Wolf had been fed a story exactly suited to his emotional need.

North English looked baffled. Maybe he believed what he said, too.

The Wolf plowed on, “The Call was going broke. They wanted to get ahold of a lot of wealth fast. Two, two and a half weeks ago, not long after we started working with Black Dragon, we got word that the Weider brewing empire would be taken over. We’d worked on that project for a long time. Just in case. The Dragons tried to recruit brewery workers in our name. That was hard for us; you kept us tied up in meetings all the time.” The man’s conviction began to waver in the face of North English’s steadfast headshaking. North English was getting angry enough to ignore the presence of the sorcerer.

Marengo said, “I haven’t spoken to you three times in the last year, fellow.”

“You couldn’t, could you? Colonel Theverly would throw one of his tantrums. You —”

Pular Singe squealed. Saucerhead Tharpe bellowed. Playmate boomed something. Sarge roared. The Goddamn Parrot shrieked. A sorcerous voice whispered “Beware!” in my ear just as
Look Out
! rumbled inside my head. A woody crash came from the direction of the dining room. Shrieks followed that. Something was headed my way.

That something was a whirlwind of horror that looked like a troll with a bad case of the uglies. It had claws like scimitars. It had fangs like a saber-tithed tooger, top and bottom. It was preceded by breath foul enough to gag a maggot. It bulled straight toward me. Bodies flew and people screamed.

There wasn’t a hero in the place. Whatever direction the thing looked it saw flying heels. My first impulse was to show it one more pair. So was my second. I listened to that one.

“Down!” said the little voice in my ear.
Down!
insisted the big voice inside my head. I’m a bright boy. I can take a hint. I flung myself down and clung to cold stone like the gods had announced that they were going to do away with gravity.

Came a sound like somebody slapping a brick wall with the flat side of a big wet board. The sound of big bacon frying followed instantly. The ugly apparition shrieked louder than all the shrieking around it put together. It collapsed upon itself, passing through repeated twisting changes before it assumed the shape like those in the Lamp ruin tanks.

A huge, sourceless voice filled the hall. “Stand back. It’s stunned, not dead.” The thing began to assume human shape. Evidently young shifters adopt some base form to which they’ll revert automatically if they can’t maintain a shape they’ve chosen.

The shifters bound in chains made unhappy noises. Their despair was so strong I felt it — maybe because I’d been exposed to the Dead Man for so long.

Stunned didn’t last. An arm grew to an impossible length. One incredibly nasty, sicklelike claw tipped it. That claw slashed at me. I was just fast enough to dodge or the shifter was just slow enough to miss.

A waterlogged blanket slapped a stone floor. Big bacon crackled. The shifter leapt into the air, shrieked, then flopped around like its back was broken. I told Morley, “I think I’ll back off a ways.”

“Clever fellow. Sign me on as your assistant.”

I noted that he wasn’t watching the shifter. “Whatcha looking for?”

“Just keeping an eye out.” He used his “I’ve got an idea but I’m not ready to talk about it” tone. I looked around, too.

Block and Relway were busy making sure men kept guarding every entrance. I looked up at Tinnie and the girls. They hadn’t fled. But they had let Marengo get away again. Two large gentlemen from the shipping dock had joined the ladies. Max, Manvil, and Ty now formed a glowering knot at the foot of the grand staircase, evidently concerned that my new playmate might develop a taste for toothsome wench. A taste I can’t say I begrudge almost anyone.

I limped over to Genord. I’d banged my hip good getting down onto the floor. “Here we go again. Want to tell me anything now?”

Gerris
still
wasn’t talking.

“Live a fool, die a fool — Now what?”

Another racket from the kitchen, that’s what. Neersa Bintor was
very
upset about something. Had Singe?... No, Singe was there by the dining-room door, just steps away from Relway, shaking like a last autumn leaf, looking at me, in a stance that begged forgiveness for failing to expose the changer in time.

Still looking around, Morley asked, “You want some bad news?”

“No. I’d cherish some
good
news, though. Just for the novelty. What?”

“Crask and Sadler went missing during that excitement.”

Gah! “You’re shitting me.”

Sure enough, their fetters were empty. How the hell?... They’d been out of the way and everybody had been distracted, but... I stormed toward Relway. “You want to tell me how Crask and Sadler could do a disappearing act in the middle of a hundred people?”

“What? They couldn’t. I’ve got the only key...” A twisted hand came out of a pocket empty. “Hunh?” He was flabbergasted. It’s a memory I’ll cherish. Relway is seldom at a loss. “Somebody picked my pocket.” He started growling at his own people, forgetting, for the moment, that he didn’t want to reveal himself.

I went to Pular Singe, told her, “You did just fine. You couldn’t be everywhere at once. Once the shifters understood that you could identify them they just stayed out of your way. Are you all right? You think you can work? I might need you to track those bad men again.”

“Never mind the bad men,” Morley said from behind me. “She turned them loose strictly for their diversion value.”

Slap and bacon crackle happened again. People who should’ve been concentrating on that last shifter had let themselves be distracted by trying to keep track of me. That changer was off the floor again. It lurched toward its brethren, sprouting scissorlike claws capable of snipping silver. It seemed to be developing an immunity to the stormwarden’s sorcery. A double application was needed to put it down this time.

“Someone would have to know me pretty good to think I’d drop everything if they...” Of course. Somebody who controlled the resources of Brotherhood Of The Wolf and Black Dragon Valsung could find out all about me. Somebody who’d had me dogged since before I knew I was getting into this mess. Somebody who... Who? I could look around me and see everybody involved in the case except Crask and Sadler. But they were pawns. Of the rest only Marengo remotely fit. Like the lead Wolf said.

North English might be one hell of an actor. But he had been behaving strangely ever since he’d gotten hurt. A fact which left me squinty-eyed with suspicion.

 

 

104

Wait! What about the redoubtable Lieutenant Nagit? Mr. Nagit was an excellent candidate. He probably felt underappreciated... Then I recalled something he’d said. Something I hadn’t taken the trouble to hear at the time.

An evil globule of bright feathers hit my shoulder hard. “Goddammit!...”

“Do not be willfully stupid, Garrett. Do not be willfully blind.”

Other books

Death Has a Small Voice by Frances Lockridge
Witch Bane by Tim Marquitz
The Measure of a Man by Sidney Poitier
House of Reckoning by John Saul
Bursting With Love by Melissa Foster