The curio shop was dark. At this time of night, all the shops were closed. There were only two people visible, a pair of men buried in greatcoats, hats and scarves, muttering to each other as they walked past.
Frey knocked again impatiently. ‘Doesn’t anyone
hurry
any more?’ he griped. He peered through the shop window, and saw a faint light in the back, and movement. ‘Finally. Someone’s coming.’
‘I don’t like this plan you’ve got, Cap’n,’ Crake murmured.
‘That’s because it’s barely a plan at all. If I had something better, I’d use it. But we’ve got no leverage. So we either get the relic out of him this way, or we go to plan B.’
‘Plan B? Isn’t that just code for ‘‘wade in there and shoot anything that moves’’?’
‘Exactly. And that means bullets flying everywhere. And because I don’t like getting shot much, I try to avoid Plan B when I can.’
‘Remarkable how often we end up using it, though,’ Crake commented.
‘That’s because Plan A never bloody works.’
The door was opened by a pinch-faced bruiser with hulking shoulders. A little bell tinkled cheerily overhead. ‘Mr Frey and Mr Crake, right?’
‘
Captain
Frey,’ said Frey.
The thug gave him a long and deeply unimpressed stare. Frey returned a cheesy grin.
‘
Captain
Frey,’ the thug said at length. ‘Come in, then.’ He let them through, locked the door behind them, and then searched them for weapons. They weren’t carrying any, for the same reason that Frey had only brought Crake from his crew. They were going to try and do this the nice way.
The curio shop was an unsettling place. Shelves of glass-eyed dolls stared down at them as they were led towards the back. They passed a stuffed beast that Frey didn’t recognise, some kind of hunting cat with a mane of spikes like a porcupine. He was half-convinced it was going to spring to life and snap at him. Ticking toys shifted restlessly in the dark: the kind of clockwork junk Pinn was fond of. He was reminded of the night Pinn had rashly announced his intention to be a famous inventor. The pilot appeared to have forgotten all about it, which was probably for the best.
Mind on the job, Frey. You’ve got one chance to play this right. Don’t mess it up like you did with Trinica.
He shut away that memory. Her scorn had burned him. He’d never even had the chance to tell her about the curse.
Nine nights left. Was it really true? It had been three nights since he’d seen the vision in the cargo hold and spoken to the sorcerer, and there’d been no sign of the daemon in between. Despite Crake’s strange readings, despite the sorcerer’s words, he still couldn’t fully convince himself of the threat. He kept trying to reason his way out of it. A simple hallucination wasn’t too much to worry about, really. Maybe Crake’s readings were skewed. And the sorcerer was hardly reliable: he might be as much a charlatan as the Awakeners were.
He couldn’t quite believe that there was a daemon out there, waiting to get him. That margin of doubt was what kept him going.
Crickslint sat behind a desk in a small area at the back of the shop. There was a single electric lamp hanging from the ceiling above his head. He had a jeweller’s glass fixed to his eye, peering at a small golden casket that he was turning over in his hand. Two more bodyguards, inconspicuously armed, stood at the edge of the light. Frey and Crake settled themselves in antique seats that had been placed in front of the desk.
Crickslint ignored them for a while. Darian waited. He was used to these boring displays of importance from people he dealt with.
‘Darian Frey,’ he said eventually. He put the casket aside, took out the jeweller’s glass, steepled his fingers and smiled a chrome-toothed smile. ‘We meet again.’
Frey winced inwardly. He’d forgotten how irritatingly theatrical Crickslint was. Every movement, every expression was exaggerated; his conversation was full of dramatic pauses and flamboyant surges in volume. The annoying piece of shit seemed to think he was the Dread Lord of Vardia or some such bollocks, instead of a weasel-faced runt with a voice like a girl.
‘Yes,’ said Frey, as neutrally as possible. ‘Apparently we do.’
‘And who is your friend?’ asked Crickslint, drawing out the syllables, tapping a finger against his cheek as if pondering deeply. His face lit up. ‘Why, it looks like Grayther Crake, the daemonist.’
‘How do you do?’ Crake said politely, seemingly unfazed by Crickslint’s over-the-top delivery. Coming from the aristocracy, he was probably used to odder things.
‘Now,’ said Crickslint. He adjusted the sleeves of his jacket and made a show of arranging himself. ‘What business might you two gentlemen have with me?’
Frey sized up his opponent, trying to spot anything that might give him an angle. Crickslint’s teeth were new, since the last lot had been knocked out. He could have had a natural-looking set made up, but he clearly preferred to think of himself as fearsome, so he’d chosen metal. His face was sallow as ever, with small weak eyes. Thin blond hair was slicked back over a long skull.
Frey knew his sort. He was just like the weedy, sickly children at the orphanage where Frey grew up, the ones who got beaten up and pushed about their whole adolescent lives. Frey had to resist the urge to bully him
now
. Something about him made it instinctive.
But Frey would have to tread carefully. Crickslint had grown sly, and he’d gained the power to get revenge on the world for all those humiliations. That made him dangerous.
‘Trinica Dracken sold you a relic recently,’ Frey said.
‘She did.’
‘I’d like you to loan it to me.’
Crickslint blinked. ‘Excuse me?’
‘A loan. You know. Two weeks. I’ll pay, of course, and I can leave you a Firecrow as collateral. I just need to borrow it.’ He shrugged. ‘You lend money to everyone, right? This is the same thing. You can still sell it on at full price after I’m done.’
Crickslint looked faintly amused. ‘That’s an odd proposition. And what do you intend to do with it?’
‘That’s my business. But you have my assurance, my absolute assurance, that it’ll be returned to you in perfect condition.’ It was an easy enough promise to make, since Frey wasn’t thinking much further than getting his hands on the relic at this stage.
Crickslint leaned forward across the desk, so that the light from above fell onto his face, calculated to lend him a sinister air. ‘Do you even know what it
is
, Captain Frey? The relic, I mean?’
‘No,’ said Frey. ‘Do you?’
‘Perhaps.’
Frey narrowed his eyes. ‘I reckon you don’t. I bet you don’t even know where it came from.’
‘Oh, I can tell you that quite easily. It was found by an explorer. Ugrik vak Munn kes Oortuk, in fact.’
‘Uh-huh. I’m guessing he’s not from around here.’
‘He’s a Yort. He’s actually quite famous.’
‘Never heard of him. Where’d
he
get it from?’
‘That, I’ll admit, I don’t know.’
‘So how’d the Sammies get hold of it?’
‘They caught him. Sammies don’t like people wandering about outside of the Free Trade Zone. Especially not those who go around stealing their ancient relics.’
‘And you heard about it. Through a whispermonger, I’m guessing. And then you sent Trinica Dracken to get it for you.’
Crickslint clapped slowly. ‘Very good, Captain Frey. None of which gets you any closer to having it yourself.’
Frey leaned back in his chair. If there was a time to make his move, it was now. ‘I like your new teeth,’ he said.
Crickslint gave him a sharklike smile. ‘Flattery. You must really have
nothing
to bargain with.’
‘My friend here’s got something similar. Show him your gold tooth, Crake.’
Crake leaned forward and offered a dazzling grin. His tooth glittered in the light from overhead. Crickslint, half-interested, glanced at the tooth. Then a strange expression crossed his face and he peered closer.
‘That
is
a nice tooth,’ he said.
Frey felt a stirring of hope as he saw Crickslint’s eyes glaze over. He’d seen it happen to people before, as they stared into their own reflections in Crake’s daemon-thralled tooth. They became mesmerised and suggestible. If he was lucky, the bodyguards wouldn’t even notice what was going on.
‘It is a nice tooth, isn’t it?’ he said. ‘Listen, Crickslint, we go way back. Why don’t you just lend me that relic, and let’s not worry about a price. I’ll bring it right back to you when I’m done with it. How’s that sound?’
‘Oh, yes,’ said Crickslint, not taking his eyes off Crake’s tooth. ‘Yes, that sounds
fine
. Whatever you want.’
‘Really?’ Frey was faintly surprised at how easily he’d agreed.
Crickslint got up in his chair and leaned across his desk to get a closer look. ‘Yes, yes,
take
it. Just one thing I’d ask, though.’
‘What’s that?’
Crickslint hit Crake hard across the face, a ringing slap that echoed through the empty curio shop.
‘Don’t embarrass yourselves by trying any more of that daemonist shit with me!’ he hissed, and sat back down. He motioned to one of his thugs. ‘Get him out of here.’
Crake was shocked, holding the side of his face. ‘He
slapped
me!’ he said to Frey in indignation.
‘I saw,’ said Frey grimly, as the thug descended on Crake and dragged him out of the shop. The bell above the door tinkled happily as Crake was flung out on to the street.
Crickslint had steepled his fingers again, gazing steadily at Frey, having returned to his self-appointed role as pantomime villain. ‘Now that . . .
distraction
is out of the way, perhaps we can negotiate man-to-man?’
‘Can’t blame a feller for trying,’ said Frey. The tooth only worked on people who were weak-willed or stupid. Crickslint was apparently neither.
‘I believe you were interrupted in the process of making me a ridiculous offer? You were asking me to entrust to you a valuable Samarlan relic, many thousands of years old, with a
Firecrow
as collateral? You do know the market’s been flooded with second-hand Firecrows since the Navy upgraded their fleet?’
‘Crickslint,’ said Frey. ‘It’s a classic aircraft. And you could own one, for a limited time.’
Crickslint laughed, a high, hysterical laugh that sawed through the brain and down the spinal column. Frey had to clutch the sides of his chair to resist punching him. He was just so
punchable
. Although it might be pretty hard on the knuckles with those chrome teeth in place.
‘You could own one! Very amusing. No, I think we’ll forget about the Firecrow.’
Frey was sort of relieved. He didn’t fancy explaining to Harkins that he’d have to do without his beloved aircraft, even though it technically belonged to Frey.
‘What about I do some jobs for you?’ Frey suggested. ‘For free, of course. You always need smugglers, right? I’m good at that.’
I really hope he doesn’t remember how good I was at stealing from him, too,
Frey thought. But if Crickslint did remember, he wasn’t showing it.
Crickslint sat upright, one finger pressed against his lips in a classic pose of thought. The very artificiality of it made Frey murderous. He hated having to beg like this. He had half a mind to leave and come back with Plan B – B for ‘Bess tears everyone’s heads off’ – when Crickslint spoke again.
‘I have a proposal,’ he said. ‘I hear you have an exceptional pilot on your crew by the name of Artis Pinn.’
Pinn. Pinn with his arm in a sling.
‘What of it?’ Frey asked carefully.
‘I have a way that you could do me a service. After that, I might consider loaning you the relic you need.’
‘Go on.’
‘I know a man who owes me a lot. He’s also quite the gambler. I have an interest in seeing him lose a large amount of money. Then I’ll call in his debt and bankrupt him.’
‘Won’t that mean that you lose some of your money?’
‘Yes. But by bankrupting him I’ll be doing a far more valuable service to his rival. It’s a game of checks and balances, Captain Frey; you really don’t need to worry about it.’
‘So what do I have to do?’
‘There are races held outside the city. Single-seater craft, racing round a circuit. They’re illegal and unregulated, and a lot of money changes hands on them. The man I want is the backer for a pilot named Gidley Sleen. He places big bets on every race. I’m given to understand that Sleen is a virtual certainty to win tomorrow; the competition is feeble. Short odds will mean his backer will place an even bigger bet than usual to get a good return.’
‘You want me to enter Pinn in the race?’
‘I want you to enter him, and I want him to win. He’ll go in as an unknown. I’ll back him myself: the odds will be very favourable. When he wins, I’ll make a lot, and my target will lose a lot, I’ll call in my debt at the right moment and—’ He clicked his fingers.
‘Then you’ll loan me the relic?’
‘For two weeks. And if it’s not back in my hands by then, I will find you.’ He snapped his teeth together. ‘You don’t want that.’