An excerpt from SPELL OF CATASTROPHE by Mayer Alan Brenner. Copyright © 1986-2007 by Mayer Alan Brenner. Made available under Creative Commons license (Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0).
CHAPTER 2. THE CREEPING SWORD
At the same time Haddo was flying Max toward Karlini's castle I was sitting at my desk minding my own business, the major thought on my mind being whether I'd be able to afford to eat after the day after tomorrow. There was no way I would have known about Max and Haddo at that point, of course, but I wouldn't have cared anyway since I'd never heard of Haddo or Max or Karlini. Food was the issue, and realizing it was already past the middle of the day and I hadn't had a customer in a week, and wondering how hungry I'd have to get before I'd be walking the streets looking for odd jobs and manual labor. Then someone knocked on the door. I put the half-drained flask I had been nursing in a drawer and said, "Come in.”
A woman came in. "My husband
has been kidnapped," she said, and that meant all of a sudden things were
looking up.
Her husband had a large warehouse
on the docks and a fleet of barges on the river. He hadn't come home the previous
night. According to her, he had always come home before. A note had appeared
under the door in the morning. She passed it over to me.
Payment of 20,000
gold zalous will cause the return of Edrik Skargool. He is not hurt, yet search
will cause death. More instructions will forthcome.
The Creeping
Sword
"Huh," I said. The style
was stilted, making me think of someone who was trying to sound educated
without the benefit of actually having an education. On the other hand, the
words were spelled right and the penmanship was neat. Still, I didn't have to
look too closely to find the major unusual detail. The medium was a sheet of
burnished copper, and the words had apparently been etched into it with fire.
"Do you have any idea who this
Creeping Sword is?" I asked.
"Certainly not, of course
not," she said. "That is your job, isn't it?"
I made a noncommittal sort of
hrrumphy sound and let her start talking again. She had gone to the police,
such as they were. With the current political situation, the police weren't
about to investigate anything, unless the order came as a command from the
Guard. So she’d gone to the Guard. The Guard was having too much fun enforcing
martial law to worry about another kidnapping. The only kidnappings they were
interested in were the ones they were doing themselves. I hoped for Skargool’s
sake they weren’t the ones who had picked him up. I wasn't about to fight the
Guard for him, even if she paid me a lot, and I didn't think anyone else would
be prepared to either. "Will you find him?" she asked.
"I’ll do my best," I
said, "under the circumstances. That's my job."
She made an unhappy face at me.
Sometimes that was a good tactic - I'm a man, and like any man I’ll turn gooey
under the right circumstances - but it wasn't going to work on me this time. I
already didn’t like her. "If I pay you good money and give you my
trust," she said, "I would expect that you would at least be willing
to guarantee -"
I had been leaning back in my
chair. Now I let the chair fall forward so the two front legs hit the beam
floor with a sharp "thud", and pointed a finger at her for further
emphasis. "Look, lady," I said. "Roosing Oolvaya is a big city.
There must be fifty thousand people here. Any day of the week a bunch of them
disappear and never get found. Now we’re sitting with a dead Venerance, the son
who probably knocked him off is in charge, and mercenaries are running around
the streets giving orders to the rest of the normal Guard. You think the mess
out there doesn't make the usual mess worse? Well, it does, lady, a lot worse.
People are getting rounded up, people are getting executed, and people are
getting kicked into the sewers just for being in the wrong place. Not
criminals, not only political folks, just people, you understand that? In this
kind of situation, a lot of old grudges find themselves getting settled, a lot
of nastiness pops up. It's rough out there."
"But." she said, still
pouting, "but what should I do, then?"
"If you hire me, I'll find
your husband if he's findable. Are you hiring me?"
"Yes, yes, of course I am,
even if -”
“Then get ready to pay this Sword
person."
"But 20,000 zalous! How could
I -"
"I’ll get you the money back
if I can."
"But can't you bargain with
-"
"You might reflect," I
said, "on the fact that money can generally take more wear and tear than
husbands can."
She shut up. I asked questions, but
none of the answers were helpful. She didn’t know of any disgruntled employees.
The list of business enemies was short; she said her husband had a reputation
as a straight dealer. They had no children.
"Who gets everything if he
dies?" I said.
"Why, I'm not sure. I really
don't know."
I had yelled down for a messenger
earlier, after the scent of work had floated in with her, and the messenger now
returned with Turbot. Turbot was in more-or-less the same line of work as me,
whatever that was, and we used each other as backup man when things were
happening. He was glad to have something to do that might pay, at least as glad
as me. As the wife was leaving in Turbot's custody she paused and looked back.
"Will you find him?" she
repeated.
"Yeah, I'll find him," I
said. I strapped on my sword and headed for the man’s warehouse.
Skargool Cargo was a hulking
two-story building with heavy timber walls attached to its own wharf. The
manager was a hulking man named Kardu Chog. He wasn't attached to a wharf, but
one finger was brandishing a ring with a stone the size of a rowboat.
"Me, I was first mate on the
first barge Skargool ever sailed," Chog said expansively around a cylinder
that looked like a cigar but smelled a lot more like a swamp after a range
fire. Tobacco leaves were one of the things Skargool imported, shipped up the
river from the south. "First mate, aye, and crew too. The two of us, like brothers."
He waved at the humidor on his desk, offered me a cigar. I shook my head. He
shrugged and took a massive pull on his own, a line of solid ash advancing
toward his mouth. "Skargool and me, we go way back.”
"What about his wife?" I
said.
"What do you mean," he
said slowly, "about his wife?"
"His wife. How long does she
go back?"
Chog leaned back in his chair and
squinted up through the smoke. "Mind you now, I don't really know her, but
she's been around now for, oh, five years, six. Why are you interested?"
"Just asking questions,"
I said. "Part of the job." I poked around, checking in with the
workmen.
From all accounts, Edrik Skargool
was indeed that rare thing, a rich boss well liked by his employees. Another
relevant fact also came to light: Skargool walked home daily, along the same
route.
I left the warehouse, crossed the
street, and entered the dive on the other side; step out on any street around
the wharves and there was bound to be a bar within arm's reach. When my drink
came I laid an ool next to it. "The Skargool place," I said.
"Yeah?" said the
bartender.
"Anybody seem interested in
it?" I spun another ool in the air.
The bartender licked his lip and
thought, then shook his head sadly, eying the ool on the counter. I pushed it
toward him. "Let me know," I said, and told him how to find me.
I worked my way along. From the
feel of the kidnap note this thing had been a job worked out in advance, not a
bit of random work popped on the spur of the moment. The Creeping Sword,
whoever or whatever he was or they were, would have hung around getting a
handle on Skargool's movements, and might even still be keeping an eye on
things. Maybe somebody had noticed something. It wasn’t a real good bet - the
waterfront was always filled with transients, and with the number of
out-of-town fighters bolstering the Guard things were bound to be worse, but
maybe one of the regulars had an eye open. 1f nothing else, the Creeping Sword
might hear I was asking questions and go after me. Coming out of the fourth bar
I felt a bump and tug at my side. Attached to the touch was an arm. I grabbed
it as the kid tried to twist away. He was somebody I knew.
"How's business, Glinko?"
I said.
Glinko looked around at me and
turned white. "It’s you," he said.
I shook him up and down a few
times. "Yeah, Glinko, it's me," I said. "You’re losing your
touch. You’re also turning into an idiot."
"I didn’t know it was
you," he said plaintively.
"Save it. Just as well you’re
here. Maybe you can do something for me."
A look of calculation appeared. I
shook him again, then opened my hand and dropped him. The street was muddy. The
streets were always muddy. "You didn’t have to do that," he said.
"You didn’t have to try to
pick my purse, either. Fortunately for you, I generally take the long
view." I showed him an ool out of Skargool’s wife’s advance.
Glinko stopped trying to clean
himself off. The coin interested him. Coins always interested him. Coins
interest most of us. "Who cares about mud anyway?" he said.
"What do you need?”
"The Creeping Sword," I
said.
"The who?"
"That’s what I want to know.
This Sword kidnapped a businessman."
"Skargool?" Glinko said.
"Yeah," I said,
"that’s right. Tell me about it."
"You going to give me
that?" he said, meaning the ool.
"You going to give me a reason
to?"
He glanced around the street, then
slipped around the corner of the bar into a narrow alley. The street had only
been about three times the width of the alley, but except for us the alley was
empty. "I know Skargool," Glinko said in a low voice, "I know
most of the guys down here. That’s what I do, I keep an eye out." Glinko
was a spotter for one of the thief-gangs. "Skargool’s a right guy, pays
good, he’s good to the workers, you know? Half the guys around want to work for
him. Then a couple of weeks ago a lot of bad talk started. A ship of his was
late, see, and all of a sudden there’s talk like Skargool might have sold the
crew to the slavers. That’s how it started. Last I saw him was two days ago. He
was walking home. He didn’t look good. He looked real depressed. Now today he’s
missing, it’s all around the street."
"Okay." I gave him the
ool. He said he'd nose around for me and check in later. He went back to the
street, and I slipped out the other end of the alley.
I tried a few more bars without
much more luck and ended up at the Grumpy Gullet. Civil unrest or no, Slipron
was there, at his usual table in the back. I handed him the kidnap note
Skargool's wife had given me.
Slipron screwed a lens into one
eye, Oolvayan glass in a bone housing, and scrutinized the engraving, rubbing
the copper plate between two fingers. Then he tapped the plate with a
fingernail and swiveled the lens up at me. "It's worthless, of course,
excepting perhaps only the metal itself."
Slipron being the best fence in
Roosing Oolvaya, his comment meant he could move the thing for a profit and was
willing to bargain, but selling it was not what I had in mind at the moment. I
told him so.
"Ah," Slipron said.
"Well. This engraving is not professional work." He rested a finger
across the inscribed wards and closed his eyes. The letters around his finger
swam briefly. He brought the plate up to his face and sniffed. "A firepen.
Definitely a firepen."
The tapster was passing with a tray
of foaming mugs, and I snagged a full one for Slipron. He handed me back the
ransom note. "I know of Edrik Skargool, and I consider him a good
man," Slipron said. "I also note the line of this letter that reads
'Search will cause death'."
"I figure they’re talking
about search by sorcery," I said. If an anti-search spell had been set up
around Skargool, any finder probe keyed to him would set up feedback in the
protector field, feedback that might be enough to fry him. Whether the Creeping
Sword had the facility or the money to get a spell like that was another
matter. I thought it was a bluff. Even if it was a bluff and a sorcerous search
might find Skargool, hiring a magician to run a decent search would cost a lot
more than my own time. If it wasn’t a bluff, and the magician wasn’t good
enough to avoid or neutralize the no-search field, that would be it for
Skargool.
Of course, I wouldn’t hire a
magician. I wouldn’t even go near magic unless it grabbed me by the neck and
forced my nose into it. Magic is more trouble than it’s worth. It messes up
everybody’s life. It had messed up my own life enough in the past to give me
more of an education than I'd ever wanted. No, all this case needed was
legwork, and legwork I know.
Slipron said. "What if they
don’t care what kind of search it is, and they Sword people spot you looking
for him?"
"Give me a little
credit," I said. "This is my job, and I know what I'm doing. I know
how to be careful."
Slipron looked doubtful. A chair
scraped next to us, and a gust of garlic announced the arrival of Gag the
Hairless. The name went back to the time when the bladder of gas Gag had been
using to blow open the strongbox aboard a barge had blown up in his hand
instead. His hair had grown back around the flash-burn scars, but a name is a
name. "The word’s out you’re looking for a snatcher," Gag said.
"Sure," I said, "why
not? Have you got one?"
"Who knows?" Gag said.
"This town’s so crowded this week, you can’t keep anybody straight."
I tossed him an ool. Fortunately
for me, Skargool's wife was paying expenses. Gag flagged the barmaid. The
barmaid brought him a bottle, which Gag upended, wiping green froth off his
mustache. He burped, and said, "Okay, now," leaning forward on one
elbow. "A guy hears lots of things. You don’t always know what to think,
you know what I mean? This guy Skargool, one day you hear one thing, then you
hear something else. One day everybody wants to work for him, the next day you
hear he's flogging his crews."
Slipron, whose attention had
apparently wandered off to another part of the room, looked back at Gag.
"Flogging?"
"Yeah, flogging," Gag
said, "I mean like with whips. All these years he's shipping grain, oats,
like, and then all of a sudden they say there's always been loot underneath.
Treasure, I mean, gold, jewels, real loot. Buried under the oats, all these
years. I mean, I've got nothing against oats, I've got to eat too, but oats
isn’t the same as loot."
"That's an interesting story,
Gag," I said. "Now work the Creeping Sword into it."
"You out of your mind?" Gag
said. "What’s that?"
"That’s what I'd like to know.
You find it out and it’s worth money."
"How’s about a, whatta you
call it, a retainer?"
"I’ll pay," I said,
"when I have something to pay for. Don’t push your luck. You hear plenty
of stuff, Gag, and that’s good. Find out who started this talk about
Skargool."
Gag scowled and drained the bottle.
I had been keeping an eye on the rest of the room, watching for someone else,
and now he came in, heading straight for a small table in the back of the place
in a corner mostly in shadow. I rose and went over. A steaming casserole was
already present on the table, and the guy was digging into it by the time I
crossed the room.
I pulled up a chair across from
him. "I want to talk to your boss," I said.
He didn’t bother to look up; I was
sure he'd spotted me on my way over. He didn't miss much, that's why he had the
job he had. "Are you on a case," the man said, swallowing a mouthful
off his knife, "or you just looking for some action?"
"It’s a case."
He grunted, pulled a piece of fish
out of the casserole, squinted at it, and threw it over his shoulder where it
stuck to the wall. "We may have a job, too. Interested in some honest work
for a change?" The guy laughed a coarse harsh laugh.
"Depends on the work," I
said.
"Sure it does," he said.
"Somebody'll come by your place."
"Right," I said. The
table I'd shared with Gag and Slipron was empty, so I headed for the door. I
was almost there when it crashed open behind a pair of lances and a rabble of
tough-looking men wearing the freshly printed armbands of the Guard.
"All right, you goons,"
the corporal shouted as he raised a truncheon, "this place is closed! Move
out to the street and -"
The place erupted. I ducked as a
small table flew over my shoulder directly toward the corporal, plunged my fist
into an eye, shook my left leg loose from a set of sharp teeth, and as I shoved
a hand with a knife out of my way something crashed into my back and knocked me
to the floor next to the wall. Sticking close by the wall, I dodged and crawled
forward and climbed through a broken shutter onto the street. A knot of
fighting guys spilled through the door to my left, the three Guard mercenaries
watching the front of the building turned to deal with them, and I limped away
from the bar down the street and around the first corner. My back was
throbbing, but I figured that was part of the job; maybe I'd sock Skargool's
wife for some extra expense money when I hit her with the final bill. I rinsed
my face in a trough and walked away from the wharves into the city.
My office was over a laundry in the
Ghoul’s Quarter near the wall on the south side, the clapboard sign with its
open staring eye creaking gently in the breeze from the river. A man was
waiting outside my door at the top of the stairs. "You are examining the
disappearance of Mr. Edrik Skargool?" he said.
"What’s it to you if I
am?" I said, unlocking the door.
He followed me into the office.
"I represent the Oolvaan
Mutual Insurance Carriers."
Oh, no, I thought. "Insurance?"
"Yes indeed. Mr. Skargool has
a substantial policy, amounting to perhaps 140,000 zalous."
I lowered myself gingerly into my
chair. "Bonded insurance?"
"Yes, of course, bonded.
Certainly."
Insurance, dammit, insurance. This
was real trouble. I'd never worked an insurance case before, and I didn't want
to start now. Look at it this way, a lawyer who’d once shared a bottle with me
had explained things. When you can ride for an hour and get to a new place
where there's a totally new set of laws and jurisdiction, when people disappear
without a trace all the time, either because they're dead or just because they
want to disappear, when you need to buy a policy in one city and know it'll be
recognized someplace else, you’ve got to have one key thing. You've got to have
some widespread authority nobody’s going to argue with.
Insurance was a contract with one
of the gods.
The tweedy man crossed his legs.
"Unfortunately, our organization is understaffed and" (he gave a
delicate cough) "chronically overworked, so it is our policy to rely on
local assistance for claims investigation whenever possible."
"Now wait a minute," I
said. "Let’s clear a few things here. I -"
"I apologize if I have not
made myself clear." With his faded tweed cloak and his slack pale face, he
could have been any nameless functionary buried in a bureaucrat’s coattails.
His voice, though, had the uncompromising tone of someone who always got his
way, on his own terms. Even if he wasn't dangerous himself, he had to have
big-time friends. “Whenever an investigation is in progress," he told me,
"we employ its findings."
"Come on, at least you’ve got
to pay a royalty on -"
"No. Consider the effort a tax
on your business practice. You may also consider it a licensing test. We expect
any investigator to comply with our own standards for proof-of-claim."
"Standards?" I said.
"What do you mean, your standards? I know this job like I -"
"Then you will have no
difficulties," he said, “will you. A causal chain or other validator of
legitimacy must be demonstrated. Cases of fraud or collusion are punishable,
both on the part of the beneficiaries and the investigator."
I'd never seen one of these
policies, of course, but that wasn't going to be any excuse. If you got noticed
by the gods, I'd always heard that the best thing to do was keep your mouth
shut and do whatever they wanted, and hope they’d forget about you when you
were finished. But what would it take to get finished? "What if this, ah,
investigator can't come up with a definite solution? Sometimes nobody can tie
up all the pieces, no matter how good they are."
"Ah," he said ."h’m.
Indeterminate cases are not desirable. With proper validation and under special
circumstances, they may be, ahem, reluctantly accepted. Quite reluctantly."
"Okay," I said, "I
get it. I’ve got no choice. I’ll do what you want, I'm not an idiot. So what
kind of insurance does Skargool have, anyway?"
"Life," he said, "Of
course."
"Don’t you have ways of
knowing whether he's still alive?"
He turned up one corner of his
mouth in what might have been a smile, or maybe just a nervous tic.
"Omnipotence is not one of our patron’s virtues. These things take time
and energy, and attention." He got to his feet.
"Just one more question,"
I said.
"Yes?"
"Who took out the insurance,
and when?”
He gave me the tic again. "The
wife," he said, "of course. One month ago."
“Right," I said. "How
will I get in touch with you?"
"I will be in touch with you.
Good day." The door closed behind him. I opened the desk drawer and took
out the flask, then decided to just hit my head against the wall for a few
minutes. I turned around, and while I looked for a spot on the wall that didn’t
already have a dent the door creaked open
behind me again.
"What now?" I said, but
this time the man who’d come in was different.
With a shapeless cap pulled low
enough over his face to rest on the bridge of his nose, and a generally squat
frame, the guy looked like no further than second cousin away from a giant
toad. "Da time ta see de boose is now," he said.
"Yeah," I said, "da
boose." I forgot about the flask and followed after him out the door.
We wound around local streets,
heading generally back toward the docks, and finally entered a shuttered house
where we descended to the basement. Beneath an old rug was an iron grate. The
guy rolled up the edge of the rug, being careful not to disturb a slender
thread that ran from one frayed corner off into the darkness. Then he turned
his back, did something behind him in the gloom, and waited. Running water
gurgled below the grate, gradually growing fainter. Finally the grate clanged
and squeaked open. The edge of a ladder was revealed, leading down into a big
pipe that I hoped wasn’t the sewer.
A concealed mechanism drained the
last swirls of water away as we reached the base of the ladder. Next to the
ladder a section of the stone facing wall had opened, revealing a crawlway.
Bending low, I followed the guy into the wall, through several ascending turns
thick with slime and algae, and up out of the garbage into a small torchlit
anteroom. Three other exits led down through the floor or into the walls in a
similar manner as the one we’d entered through. Four men got up from a table
and pushed me against the wall. One of them frisked me, two others kept their
hands on their swords, and the final one nervously slapped a large cudgel
against his palm. They didn’t find anything; as I kept finding reasons to
reiterate I wasn’t an idiot. The thugs moved aside and one grunted, tilting his
head in the direction of a wall tapestry. I moved the tapestry aside and went
through the concealed door behind it.
The new room had walnut
wall-panels, a bookcase filled with leather-bound volumes, and a large desk
with a man seated next to it. The man was wearing a dressing gown embroidered
with dragons and other mythical beasts and on his nose he had a pair of
spectacles, through which he was studying a ledger-book. He looked
mild-mannered enough, and he could be, but generally he wasn't: this wasn't the
first time we’d met. The boss looked up at me, over the tops of the spectacles,
and said, "Sit down. What's on your mind?"
"Its not a what," I said,
sitting. "It's a who. Edrik Skargool. Somebody kidnapped him, but it
doesn’t sound like you."
"Hah," he said. "The
kid has a lip." He leafed through his book, alternately watching me over
his glasses and glancing down into the book. "Skargool. Here he is."
The boss read for a moment. "He's rich, yeah, but it's mostly property,
not a lot of cash. He pays his protection dues regular, no trouble there.
Kidnap rating’s low, so you’re right, hah, why should I take him out? Stupid.
Whoever did it, stupid. Some people got no business sense." His eyes
looked up at me again. "Like to know your own ratings, hah?"
"Sure, except I’m sure it
would cost me more than I’m worth to find out.
I'm sure you know that, too."
"Hah," he said
noncommittally.
"Anyway, that’s beside the
point," I said. "The one thing I do need is this. You have anything
on somebody called The Creeping Sword?"
"The what? Creeping Sword? You
got to be kidding. What idiot kind of name is that?"
I passed him the kidnap note.
"Creeps," he said,
studying it. "Some punk. Punks all over the place. Whole damn town is
crawlinl with punks." He glowered at the note, then glowered at
me, and then spun the note back at me like a throwing star. Then, for good
measure, as I ducked out of the way and let the note chew itself into the back
of my chair, he grabbed his ledger book and hurled it across the room. It was
big, and heavy for a book, and made a loud thud against the stone wall. The
guards from the room outside the tapestry suddenly appeared and began to drag
me out the rest of the way out of my chair. "Civil wars," the boss
yelled, glowering now at everyone in sight. "I hate ‘em. Bad for business.
Lousy for everybody. What?"
I had been gargling at him, hoping
he would remember me before the boys actually started carving. The boss stared
at me for a second, then said, "Forget about him, he's all right. Put him
down."
They dropped me back across the
chair and filed out. I sat up, worked my shoulder around a bit, and worked the
kidnap note out of the wood of the chair as I worked on steadying my breathing.
"Thanks," I said.
"Yeah," he said, which
from him passed for an apology. "So I've got a job too you can come along
and help. You know Kriglag?"
''I’ve heard of him, never met
him." Kriglag ran the wharf rackets.
"He’s a dope. He thinks he's
gonna work with this new Venerance, what's-his-name, cooperate with all these
fresh mercenaries, end up fencing their loot maybe, I don't know what all.
Maybe he's a big enough idiot to work with somebody who’d call himself a
Creeping Sword."
"I’m listening."
"I'm gonna take him out,"
the boss said. "I'm gonna take him out tonight. You want to be
there?"
"Yeah," I said, "I
do. Thanks again."
"You're with Netoo." He
jerked his head at the tapestry. I went through it and told the boys I was with
Netoo. I followed the one with the cudgel through another tapestry and down a
hall.
There were thirty of us, more or
less, divided in four teams. I strolled around the assembly room, asking the
usual questions, until we moved out.
Night had fallen by the time the
first two teams sloshed off into the sewers; sometimes I think more activity
and commerce in Roosing Oolvaya takes place in the sewers than overhead in the
streets. Nevertheless, the bunch of us under Netoo headed into the streets with
the sorcerer. She was up in the front, next to Netoo, helices of fine blue
lines making gloves around her gesturing hands as she walked. The blue shapes
left a slowly fading trail behind her in the air.
The clamor of some riot a
neighborhood or so to the north came intermittently to us through the tangled
alleys. There was no sign of the Guard, though, and I wondered if the boss had
managed to convince somebody to concentrate on other areas for this particular
evening. A tendril of river fog curled around a building ahead of us and up our
street. We entered the fog, and Netoo stopped the team to confer with the
magician.
The magician gestured a few times,
almost lost from my view in the fog, cocked her head to listen to nothing, and
nodded. Netoo motioned us on. We crept one block, exiting and then reentering
the fog, turned right, and moved down an alley. Netoo touched the shoulder of a
man holding a bow. The man fitted an arrow and shot. The arrow turned into a
shadow and disappeared into the mist. This was followed half-a-second later by
a soft clunk and rattle, and then the thunk of a falling body. The magician
nodded again and whispered to Netoo. "Around the next corner," Netoo
said. "The house with hanging plants. All ready? Okay, go."
We spread out and padded quickly
around the corner.
Shadows dark against the light mist
flitted over the rooftops from other directions. They hit the roof as we hit
the front.
Steel abruptly clashed. I paused to
let my teammates engage, then charged through the crowd and hit the door
shoulder-first. The door burst easily open onto a courtyard with other forms
already struggling there. I charged through them too, aiming for the inner
door. Shouts of "No mercy for traitors” and "Death to the usurper!”,
our attempt to disguise our origin by implicating local malcontents, came from
behind, above, and below, indicating that the sewer teams had reappeared as
well. I grappled with the inner door and it sprang open. A robed functionary
scuttled past down the interior hall, looking frantically in my direction. I
grabbed him by the collar and said, "The Creeping Sword."
"I know nothing," the man
said, trying to faint, so I hit him over the head with the flat of my sword.
It went like that for awhile. Then
I found Kriglag. Taken totally unprepared and with all his escape routes cut
off, Kriglag was trying to make the best of a hopeless situation. He was drunk.
I wedged myself into the closet with him and dragged him to his feet. Jugs
rolled off his chest and shattered on the floor. "Kriglag!" I said.
"Hwazigah?" he said,
eyelids sagging.
"The Creeping Sword, Kriglag.
The Creeping Sword!" I said, yelling it into his ear.
"A bad, a bad guy,"
Kriglag said, and started to snore. I shook him. Then I broke the neck off a
jug he’d apparently missed in the confusion and poured the contents over his
head. Kriglag opened his eyes and said, "Wha?"
I put the tip of my award where his
crossed eyes could focus on it. “The Creeping Sword, Kriglag."
"Gemmy outa here.”
"Tell me about the Creeping
Sword."
“You get me outa here first."
I slapped him across the jaw.
"Tell me why I should bother,” I said.
Kriglag’s head was clearing.
"Creeping Sword, yeah. This guy from up-river someplace. Had this idea.
He'd make cash and a good-guy image at the same time, snatching rich
rats."
Maybe his head wasn't that clear
after all. "Rich rats?"
"Rich scum." Kriglag
paused to cough for breath. "Guys with lots of dough who got it by being
scum. People nobody would miss, be glad to see them go."
"So he came to you. What did
you tell him?"
"I’m no fool." Kriglag
said. "I told him, try it out. If it worked maybe I’d take him on."
"Where did he go?"
"I dunno. He was supposed to
come back when he had results."
"Anybody else know about
it?"
Kriglag smirked and breathed a foul
breath in my face.
"My partner," he said.
I lay the edge of my sword along
his throat. "Who?"
Kriglag kept smirking. "Get me
out of here or you'll never know."
I hesitated. Then, with a chorus of
"No collaboration!", a bunch of my new friends burst into the room
behind us. Kriglag looked over my shoulder at them, glanced back at me, and
lunged toward my blade. I couldn’t believe a survivor type like Kriglag would
go so far as to impale himself, but just in case I pulled the sword out of his
reach. "You’re a sap," he yelled at me as they dragged him away.
I spent a few minutes with his ledgers.
Kriglag kept records so lousy you couldn’t figure out a thing, which surely
meant, from his perspective, they were some pretty fancy accounting. Still, I
was able to tell that he’d done a lot of business moving hot goods, goods that
had started out in warehouses on the wharf. I couldn't find out which
warehouses, but I made a list of the stuff. One of Netoo's people arrived to
take charge of the books, so I wiped off my sword and went home.
A messenger woke me in the middle
of the night with a note from Turbot.
New message received. Ransom drop tonight.
Turbot, always maniacally terse,
apparently had things under control. I went back to sleep.
I spent the next morning running
down the list of business rivals Skargool’s wife had given me. None of them had
anything bad to say about him, and none of them seemed to have anything to
hide. None of them had missed any of the hot warehouse goods Kriglag had
entered in his ledger books, either. It wasn’t until I was finishing up with
the fourth name on my list that I suddenly wised up. I asked the guy for his
own rundown of Skargool’s competitors.
The names he gave weren’t on my
list.
Their stories were even more
interesting than the ones from the list of Skargool's wife. They knew Skargool
better. They knew him well enough to know he’d been getting upset. He’d found
out someone was stealing from his stocks. And he’d gotten suspicious about his
wife's fidelity.
They couldn't understand how
Skargool had suddenly picked up these rumors about flogging, and slavers, and
being a general taskmaster. They all liked him, and they were his competitors
in a notoriously cutthroat field. According to them, he was honest to a fault
and underworked his employees, if anything.
Then I wasted a few hours talking
to firepen dealers.
The firepen had been a fad item a
few seasons before. After the initial enthusiasm, people realized that the pens
wore out much too fast to be of real use, and in any case weren't good for
anything besides graffiti. They would write on walls, metal, pavement, indeed
on anything but paper and parchment. Paper and parchment they would ignite.
Flashy but impractical, and occasionally downright dangerous. The type of thing
some upriver yokel might think was pretty hot stuff.
One minor sorcerer was still making
the things, selling some out of the stall in front of his home and a few others
to local merchants. Demand had settled down to maybe a dozen pens a month, so
he was able to tell me quickly where each one of them had gone. The second merchant
he sent me to was a hit.
"This kid with pimples and a
big rusty sword and an accent," the woman said. Displayed on a table in
her stall were an array of neatly stacked fresh fish and assorted gewgaws in
baskets. "Thought he was heaven’s gift itself. Maybe he was, back home,
with them country girls." She sneered at me and tried to sell me a fish.
The guy had bought the pen three
days before, which fit.
I went back to the wharves to hunt
up Glinko. When I found him, I wished I hadn’t looked. He’d been fished out
from the ebb spot behind a piling under a wharf. Somebody had gotten his
fingers around Glinko's throat. The marks of the fingers remained, and
something sharp on one of the fingers had torn open his carotid.
As I gazed down at Glinko I became
aware of another man gazing down next to me. It was the representative of the
Oolvaan Mutual Insurance company. "You are making progress?" he
asked.
"Absolutely," I said to
Glinko. “Lots of progress."
“Will we have to pay on the
claim?"
"Without knowing the exact
terms of Skargool's policy, I don’t know. You might."
"When will I know?"
"Tonight," I said,
"sounds like a good bet."
He inclined his head at me and
stepped away. Since I was already in the area, I stopped in to see Chog, the
manager at Skargool Cargo. The man with the boat-sized sharp-jeweled ring.
"Had some trouble, I
see," I said to him. One of his eyes was red and purple and swollen shut,
and his knuckles were scraped raw.
“With the Guard," said Chog.
"Hounding me, they were, mercenaries hounding me, me with a reputation in
this city."
"Right. Mrs. Skargool got
another note this morning, did you hear?"
"Good news, that must be good
news. My friend's return must be near. The two of us, Skargool and me, like
brothers."
"So you said," I said.
"I'm going to make the ransom drop tonight."
"I must know the outcome as
soon as possible."
“As long as you mention it, you can
hear it direct. Drop by Skargool’s house tonight around midnight."
"Midnight. I surely will be
there." Chog smiled.
I went to Skargool’s myself and
settled accounts with his wife. She was holding up remarkably well under the
strain, tried flirting with me, more seriously this time, and everything. I
took Turbot aside and discussed things with him, and then he took his sword and
left.
I had never seen that morning’s
note, so I examined it to pass the time. It was firepen on copper again. When I
compared it to the first one, though, the script was slightly different. I
showed it to Mrs. Skargool.
"You ever see this handwriting
before?" I asked her.
She held it close to her face and
studied it carefully, then looked up at me, her clear blue eyes wide and
guileless. "No, no, I1m certain I've never seen this
before," she said. "Is it important?"
"Not really," I said.
At dusk a messenger arrived with
the last note. The messenger didn’t know anything, he'd just been handed the
note on a street corner with an oolmite coin, and after handing it over he
scurried quickly off into the dark without even asking for a tip. The note read:
Pack the money in two sacks. At eight the detective
will take the sacks and walk to the corner of Avenue of the Fifth Great Flood
and Brewer Street. He will come alone.
The intersection was in a shabby
section of the wharf district. We prepared the loot, and at eight I left the
house.
Tacked to a wall at Fifth Great and
Brewer was a folded cloth. Inside the cloth was another copper plate. The
inscription told me to go to the Haalsen Traders wharf, which was about a
three-minute block away. At the wharf, yet another note instructed me to go
down a ladder and put the sacks into a dinghy moored at the base. It was about
time to put the sacks down somewhere; twenty thousand zalous could get pretty
heavy on you. The note also suggested I wait at the bottom of the ladder for
the next half-hour or so. I put the bags in the boat, a cable tied to the boat
drew tight and pulled the boat away into the shadows under the wharf next door,
and I cooled my heels for a time. When I decided I'd rested long enough I climbed
the ladder and went back to Skargool's house.
As soon as I walked through the
door Skargool’s wife pounced. I'd had trouble dragging a useful word out of her
for two days, and now she’d finally decided to talk.
"Did you give them the money?
Where's the money now, didn’t you get it back? Where’s my husband? What
-?"
"Shut up," I told her.
"I only want to say the whole thing once, and I1m not going to
say it until everybody's here."
"Where's my husband?"
"I don’t think he's
coming."
She started to snarl and spit at
me, but at this point I didn’t care. I knew her too well by now, not that there
was that much to know. Kardu Chog the manager arrived, followed shortly after
by Turbot. He gave me a very slight nod and sat down by the door.
"Now will you tell me -" said Skargool's wife.
"Not yet," I said.
"That's not everybody."
The wife and Chog both started.
"What are you talking about'?" Chog said.
"What I said," I said.
"We’re waiting for somebody else."
Mrs. Skargool looked around
nervously, at everything and everybody except Chog.
Exactly at midnight, several
minutes later, there was a final knock on the door. It was the guy from the
insurance company.
I stood up and started to talk.
"Skargool’s dead," I said, mostly addressing his wife. "He was
probably dead before you came to see me. Skargool was kidnapped by The Creeping
Sword, but that's about all anybody's told me that's been true.
"Chog, here, was the silent
partner of Kriglag -"
Chog made a sudden lunge out of the
couch.
"Stay," the insurance
agent said.
Chog stayed. His hand had frozen in
the air, on the way into his opposite sleeve, and one foot was raised. I nodded
at Turbot. He went and pulled a long knife out of Chog's sleeve, then pushed
him back onto the sofa. Chog was breathing, and his eyes were darting
frantically, but otherwise he didn't move at all. Turbot sat down too.
"Kriglag ran the
wharves," I continued, "and one of the things he ran was hot
merchandise. A lot of the merchandise was stuff that Chog stole from his own warehouse.
Skargool's warehouse, really, but Chog was running it. Since Chog kept the
records and Skargool trusted him, it took awhile for Skargool to catch on.
"By the time he did, Chog had
another plan. Kriglag had told him about The Creeping Sword. The Sword was this
idiot kid from upriver someplace, probably, and he had this idiot idea. He
would kidnap a businessman who was both rich and nasty to his employees, but
not so nasty that someone wouldn't be willing to pay the ransom. I guess the
Sword wanted to become some kind of folk hero, kidnapping only people who
deserved it. If his victims didn’t show up again, either, nobody was supposed
to be too upset. After all, they were bad people, right?
"All Chog had to do was run
around spreading stories about how rich and how terrible Skargool was, and wait
for the Sword to bite. I don’t know exactly how long it took, but he was right
on the mark. The Sword showed up, right on cue.
"The thing was, Chog was
following Skargool too, and when the Sword picked up Skargool, Chog followed
the Sword. After the Sword wrote his first kidnap note, Chog came in and got
rid of them both.
"That was it for The Creeping
Sword, and that was it for Skargool. That’s about it for the case, too." I
waited until I could see the look of relief appear on the face of Skargool’s
wife. That’s how much I didn’t like her. "Except for one thing," I
said to her, "the insurance. That was dumb, real dumb, taking out the
policy yourself. I don’t know whether you love Chog or he loves you, or whether
he made you think he does or you made him think you do, and I don’t care. I
don’t even care if you deliberately set me up so I'd figure out about Chog and
the Sword and think that was the whole story. What I do care about was the
other thing on your husband’s mind, finding out that you and Chog were playing
around behind his back, and probably figuring out the other reason he’d never
noticed Chog stealing from him. You, keeping his attention distracted. It
wasn't just Chog, it was you too. Both of you conspired to kill Skargool and
get the insurance and take over the business."
She had frozen, like Chog, when I
mentioned the insurance. The insurance man hadn’t bothered to interrupt, he'd
just pointed a finger at her. I turned to him.
"Satisfied?" I said.
"Eminently," he said. He
pointed a finger at Chog and then at Skargool's wife. Balls of flame
materialized and consumed them. Then his form lit up in a quick flash followed
by a column of billowing smoke. When vision returned a few seconds later he was
gone, apparently dematerialized into the vapor. I think only I noticed the
catch on the front door as it snapped shut, and the small puff of cold outside
air. That was all right with me; I figure everybody's entitled to their tricks
of the trade.
"Who was that?" said
Turbot.
"Either a magician working for
the insurance company," I said, "or some god, slumming."
Hopefully he wasn’t a god, and if he was I hoped I'd done well enough by him so
now he'd leave me alone. As it turned out later, I'd done too well for my own
good, but I still didn’t think I'd had a choice. We split the ransom money,
which Turbot had stashed outside after he'd recovered it from the hiding place
he'd found when he'd tailed Chog from the ransom pickup spot earlier, and went
home.
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