Faded Steel Heat (22 page)

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Authors: Glen Cook

BOOK: Faded Steel Heat
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“No,” Relway said. “My people have orders not to leave a crime site if they’re alone. Peckwood carried out his orders.”

“Shit.”

“I should encourage more innovation?”

“What good would it do if he’d followed them? We still wouldn’t know anything happened. And he’d probably get killed for his trouble.”

“Glad you see that, Garrett. Most people would argue.”

“I want to argue. I just can’t. I’m in over my head here. I don’t know anybody inside the Outfit well enough to approach. Maybe none of them
would
help. Well. I could go to her father’s place but by the time I went out there and got back it would be tomorrow night.”

“I’ll bet they were in too bad a shape to worry about covering their trail.”

There was plenty of blood in the street. But nobody is filled with enough to leave a trail all the way to the sort of neighborhood where Crask and Sadler would hide.

“I don’t like ratmen.”

“Did I ask you to like them?” Relway smirked. “You need a good tracker, Garrett. When you need a good tracker you have to deal with ratmen.”

Some races are just naturally better at some things. Ogres, trolls, humans, elves, dwarves, none of us are much good at tracking in the city. Ratmen with the talent can sniff out a trail through the worst alleys better than any hound.

Favorite trail-covering devices, among those who can afford them, include little sorcerous traps that crisp the nose and whiskers.

Still smiling, cognizant of my aversion, Relway said, “Never be a better time than now. Garret. It’s the middle of the night.”

Absolutely. The ratpeople live on the underbelly of the night city. We were at the peak, or depth, of their day. “Any notion who or where?”

“I don’t use ratpeople.”

“And you sneer at my prejudice?”

“The problem is their prejudice, I don’t use them because they start wailing when they find out who wants to hire them. They think we’re the death squad branch of The Call, or something.”

Ratpeople are timid. They’ve learned the hard way. I lug around a burden of prejudice but I’m nicer to them than most. I make an effort to control my bigotry.

I sighed. I’d wanted to stay away from Morley, as much for his sake as mine. Now that choice had been taken away.

Relway asked, “You’ll let me know how it goes?”

Like he would not as soon as I did. “Why not?” I started walking.

Tinnie was going to promote me back to the top of her hate list. Who did I think I was, running off to save some woman in trouble? Some
other
woman. Especially
that
woman.

It was all right when I saved
her
sweet patootie.

 

 

52

The Goddamn Parrot plopped onto my shoulder seconds after I parted with Relway. He was shivering. It was cool out now. Or maybe he was scared. There were a lot of night predators around. They snacked on one another when nothing tastier presented itself. The small nocturnal flying lizards will attack anything smaller than themselves, including cats and dogs and the little people. And they are too stupid to figure out that doing the latter is suicidal.

The price of thunder-lizard leather and parchment might plummet.

“My luck ain’t never gonna turn,” I grouched. “I thought sure you were catfood by now.”

Mr. Big had nothing to say.

“Cat got your tongue?” Snicker. What a joker.

Still nary a word. Apparently the Dead Man had no minds left over for me.

Nevertheless, I talked to the bird all the way to The Palms. Night people of all stripes watched nervously from the edges of their eyes. They gave me room. You had to be careful about humans who talked to themselves. Some conversed with ghosts or got messages inside their heads that resulted in attacks on imaginary foes with too-real weapons.

A ploy worth remembering, I told myself. Though with my luck nobody would be impressed the day I tried it. Or somebody would be rounding up recruits for the looney ward at the Bledsoe.

 

I ran into a new waiter three steps into The Palms. He demanded, “Can I help you, sir?” He eyed me as though I suffered from some grotesque skin condition
 

though his nose was so high in the air he must have checked me out with mirrors. Maybe I had bloodstains on me somewhere.

“No.” I kept going.

I spied a familiar face. Dang me. Tama Montezuma looked better than she had at Weider’s. She seemed recovered from her distress. She smiled like she wished we could be pals.

The fellow with her had a back that looked familiar, too. Aha! Marengo North English, brave and bold. Of course. Surprise!

I had my comradely smile on before he turned to see who his niece was ogling.

I nodded to both and kept moving. I noticed others who had been at the Weider mansion. Celebration becomes social disaster when people start dying. That stuff is entertaining only when it goes on between the families of the bride and groom.

“Well, at least ya tried ta dress decent oncet,” Puddle grumbled. “Goes ta show. Anyting can happen, ya wait long enough.”

“What?”

He ignored that. “What happent? Gang a pansies work ya over an’ make ya play dress-up?” He whistled into the speaking tube. I didn’t hear a response but one must have come. He said, “It’s dat guy wit’ da pet parrot. Yeah. Dat one. Agin, I don’t know what he wants. I never axed. Garrett. What da hell ya want?”

“Plug your ears.”

Puddle gaped.

“I mean it. Plug them up.” Once he did shove beefy, grubby fingertips into his furry ear canals I leaned to the tube. “Crask and Sadler just snatched Belinda.” That would get Morley’s attention. “I need a tracker fast.”

Dotes was still buttoning buttons and hooking hooks when he hit the bottom of the stairs. A plaintive call pursued him. He ignored his startled customers, eyed my apparel in mock astonishment. “What happened? They knock you out and dress you up before they made the snatch?”

“Snatch? What snatch?” Puddle demanded. “It was pansies done it, boss. I got dat on good autority.”

“His own,” I said. “He makes it up as he goes along. I wasn’t there. CeeJay was. Got himself dead for his trouble. So did Two Toes Harker.”

“Harker was a good man. Dog loyal.”

“No virtue goes unpunished. They did hurt Crask and Sadler before they bought it. Maybe pretty bad. And so did one of Relway’s guys who showed up during the excitement but couldn’t keep them from getting away.”

“They left a trail?”

“They were bleeding.”

“Puddle. Run tell Reliance I want his best tracker right now. Tell him Garrett will pay top marks.” He showed me sharp teeth, dared me to argue. I didn’t. Ratpeople are venal.

Someday Morley will get his ass in a sling again and come to me. And I’ll get even. And then I’ll pile on the expense charges till I’ve got a lien on his soul. Then I’ll shop around and see if I can’t get a couple brass tokens for that.

I didn’t warn him. If it comes as a surprise, it’ll be more exciting for all of us.

Puddle took off.

“That shouldn’t take long,” Morley said. “Reliance is desperate for cash. Was it smart, you coming here? Being involved with rightsists?”

“My pal Marengo North English is right over there. With the gorgeous brown beast. Supposedly his niece. Incest is best. He’s seen me already. I’ll worry about that after Belinda is safe.”

“That would be the infamous Tama Montezuma?”

“The very child. Which you should know, soaring at your new heights.”

“I ignore gossip, Garrett. She’s outstanding. And completely wasted on a sour old fart like that.”

“Absolutely. So why don’t one of us go over and offer to carry her away from her life of luxury and popular envy? Bet you she’ll jump at a chance to elope with a guy who’s poor but handsome.” Then I stunned Dotes by going to squat beside North English’s table.

I pretended to speak to the lady while telling North English, “Belinda Contague was abducted after she left the Weider place. Several men were killed. I know who did it. I’m collecting specialists to go after them. Would you care to join me?”

North English eyed me coolly. He glanced at his companion, who seemed very distressed by the news, then at the shadows to the rear of The Palms. It was hard to make out anything back there but he was, without doubt, cognizant of the management’s background. He was the sort of man who would have found occasional uses for a Morley Dotes. He nodded graciously. “I appreciate the information, Mr. Garrett. And I wish I
could
join you. The young lady was quite charming. But, as you can see, I have preclusive obligations. Do let me know how this tragedy plays out, though, won’t you?”

The preclusive obligation wasn’t fooled. I winked. Miss Tama Montezuma awarded me a very friendly twitch of her lip. She seemed to be in a strange mood, feeling no affection at all for her uncle. North English seemed pretty cool toward her, too.

Montezuma was no bimbo, whatever her reputation.

When I rejoined him I told Morley, “I have a suspicion that that could be one very interesting woman.”

“Darn! And here you are already up to your ugly, unpointed ears in interesting women. What a pity.” He eyed the Goddamn Parrot. “What did you do to Mr. Big? He doesn’t look right. Narciscio will be brokenhearted if you —”

“Nothing.” Morley’s vain nephew had a place on my list only a couple of slots below his uncle and the talking buzzard.

“He isn’t talking. Not that I mind that right now, right here, understand.” Like he feared that I would cozen that ugly jungle crow into being himself for a few minutes. Right here in front of the paying customers.

“This’s where he learned to talk, isn’t it? He really shouldn’t hold back in familiar surroundings. Find him a cracker.”

“Garrett!”

“Heh-heh. Come on, pretty boy. Say something for Uncle Morley.”

The little vulture persisted in his silence. If there was a way to disappoint me, he was sure to find it.

Morley’s anxienty faded. He put on a smug smile, offered me another fine look at all his pearly whites. He had more of those than two predators deserved. Made me wish I was a ventriloquist after all.

“Ultimate justice does exist, Morley. My hour will come.”

“All things are possible. But it isn’t going to happen tonight.” Quietly, he had begun flirting with Tama Montezuma. Already.

“Don’t you have something going upstairs?”

“When I have a friend in desperate need? I couldn’t let myself be distracted by trivia.”

“I could.” And so could he when it suited him. Which was most anytime there was a Tama Montezuma type in the equation.

Puddle joined us. I indulged in silk purse and sow’s ear anatomical reflections. However Morley dressed him Puddle couldn’t look like anything but what he was. Morley takes care of his friends, which keeps them fiercely loyal. They go along with his every mad scheme. Even unto managing upscale vegetarian watering holes.

Personal loyalty tells you more about most individuals than any surface glitter or grime.

Puddle whispered to Morley. The name Reliance occurred several times. I knew it only by reputation. Reliance was a ratman getting just enough above himself to have become feared and respected within his own community. He was part civic leader, part gangster, but as yet not in any way big enough to arouse the ire of humans. Ratfolk respect Reliance because he has enough nerve to deal with other species. They respect any of their own who are strong, good or bad.

Morley beckoned, headed for the kitchen. Puddle oozed along behind us. I glanced back past him. Several people seemed interested in us, North English and his lovely niece in particular.

Could there be a connection between The Call and Belinda’s predicament? Possibly, but it seemed unlikely. North English had thugs of his own by the battalion.

 

 

53

Three ratpeople awaited us behind The Palms. One was Reliance himself. He was bigger than most ratmen and had gray in his fur. He had survived longer than most ratmen did. He was dressed better than any ratman I’d run into before, colorfully, including a pair of tall black pirate boots and an ugly purple-and-white thing flopped on top of his head. He was unusually confident for a ratman.

He needed something to complement the red-and-yellow shirt and the green trousers. Mr. Big really belonged on one of those skinny, sloping shoulders.

Morley introduced me. Reliance produced a pair of specially designed TenHagen spectacles and examined me. Dotes suggested I state my case myself. I did so.

“Belinda Contague, Chodo Contague’s daughter, has been kidnapped. The men who did it are notoriously vicious.” I didn’t name names because Crask and Sadler
were
so notorious. I didn’t want to scare anybody off. “I need to track them so I can rescue Belinda.”

Reliance glanced at his companions. Light escaping from The Palms made his eyes turn red at the right angle.

“Would be valuable to have the friendship of Chodo Contague,” Reliance hissed. His Karentine lay just this side of intelligibility. Rat throats don’t handle human speech well. They use a polyglot mess of their own.

Their speech, like most dialects, becomes intelligible if you’re exposed continuously. Like my brother’s speech impediment. I never noticed except when other people asked about it. Which doesn’t happen much anymore. The Cantard wasn’t as kind to him as it was to me.

“It would,” I told Reliance. Chodo’s friendships are unpredictable but legendary. He did well by me. I owe him, really. But how do you repay a debt to a human vegetable? Take care of his family? I was doing that now.

Reliance eyed us intently. Most ratfolk aren’t bright. They fall between a brilliant dog and a slow human. This guy was a genius for a ratman. He indicated Morley, then me. “I have heard of you. You worked with Shote. Your reputations are sound.” He spoke slowly, carefully, so that we could follow him. He knew neither of us ever did his people any willful harm. Shote was another tracker I’d employed. “I will help you. And Chodo Contague will owe me.”

“Absolutely.” He didn’t want money? Ratmen always want money — despite being weak on the cause-and-effect relationship between wages and work. They can make dwarves look fiscally indifferent, though only at the pettiest level.

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