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Authors: Glen Cook

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I had investments? How come I didn’t know about that?

Because I would have spent the money instead of investing it.

Another female doing my thinking for me.

“You are doing well with your investments.”

“Especially Amalgamated?” I had a small percentage but never considered it an investment. I hadn’t put money in, just me.

“Especially. But I put some of your cash into other things. You will continue to have an income stream if Amalgamated comes apart.”

I wasn’t paying attention. I mostly saw a ratgirl when I was with her. I didn’t look for signs that she might be making sure I’d be all right if Tinnie, Amalgamated, and I had a falling out. I would get it later, though.

“I see.” We had begun talking about stuff that didn’t require us to confess how much we missed each other.

Dean came back. He brought his own tea and cookies. He took an empty chair. “Are you back, Mr. Garrett?”

 

 

8

I wandered around the house, cataloging changes and remembering some whens. The changes consisted of paint, new wall finishes, and new furniture.

I lugged a big mug of beer. There was a supply.

I had thought there would be. Singe was a fan.

“You haven’t been bringing guests in?”

“No one but my brother, some workmen, and the Dead Man’s students. Humility only comes on business since I stopped his beer privileges.”

Her brother, real name Pound Humility but known on the street as John Stretch, was chieftain of the biggest ratman gang in the city. He was of a different litter so they shared only the same mother, but their relationship was surprisingly tight.

Singe said, “He just could not help being a rat. He took advantage.”

“Don’t piss him off. He’s a handy guy to know.”

“Garrett.”

“I’m sorry. I can’t help fussing.”

“And yet you resent it so much when people do it to you.”

I shrugged. Being consistent is a sign of a narrow mind.

That was the moment we first stepped into the chill of the Dead Man’s room.

One small candle burned in a sconce outside the door. It didn’t cast much light when I took it in. It wasn’t there for that. It was meant to fire lamps when His Nibs had people in who needed the comfort of the light.

I raised the candle high. The Dead Man was right where I’d left him. Where he had been since I bought the house, seated in a massive wooden chair, looking like a badly rendered idol featuring an anthropomorphic elephant god. I said, “Cold in here.”

“Yes.”


Really
cold in here.”

She explained the mix of spells, leased from the same supplier as those chilling the cold well in the kitchen. “Kip Prose designed the suite. It does not cost that much. It will make sure he is with us for a lot longer.”

“Kip Prose. Of course. He’s into sorcery, now, too?”

“No. He could not make a rock fall down if he had to use magic. He can come up with mathematical models to make spells work more efficiently, though.”

The last contractions had dropped out of her speech. She was talking slower. She had begun to show a little of the ratman lisping accent.

She was nervous.

“How much
is
the cold costing?”

“Less than you might think. It is an investment in our future. We can keep food fresh in here, too.”

I do fuss about money. Someone has to make people think a little before they empty my pockets.

I was the despair of Dean and the Dead Man, and of Singe after she helped herself to a place in my life, because I am disinclined to work any harder than necessary to avoid ending up ranting on the steps of the Chancellery in hopes somebody will be amused enough to toss a coin into my tips box.

I heard harsh talk about poorhouses as those fine business minds missed the fact that the poorhouses were shutting down. Without a war there was no need for sweatshops to make things soldiers needed.

Life, I will confess, has been generous to me. Big bags of money have wandered in just when they would be most welcome. I bought a house. I have investments that generate income enough to keep the place up and to house its occupants in comfort — though that is mostly Singe’s fault.

Singe is a big part of my luck.

I got no sense that the Dead Man was remotely close to awake.

Singe asked, “You’re going to do what Belinda wants?” Her crisis had passed. Contractions were back. She was an amazement. Ratpeople voice boxes aren’t made for colloquial human speech.

“It’s Morley, Singe. I have to.”

“And Tinnie? This could poison...”

“I have to. If she can’t understand, we’ve both been wasting our time.”

“Wow.”

Yeah. I was terrified. That might be the case. Tinnie turned into a different woman once she was sure she made herself the only woman in my life.

Things men associated with the dark side of a redheaded woman became exaggerated immediately.

I will stipulate that the plus side remained as marvelous as ever.

“All right.”

Singe sounded like she was having trouble believing what she heard. “Since I know you will head straight for this Ice and Fire place, I’ll handle Tinnie.”

I started to protest, then grinned. People don’t handle Tinnie. Tinnie handles people. “Wrangle away. And good luck.”

“Are we likely to make money out of this, Garrett?”

“No. This time is for love.”

“That is the way you think most times. Maybe we’ll get lucky this time, too.”

 

 

9

Singe made sure I was armed and ready for the older, less friendly TunFaire before she let me leave. “I will pray to the human gods that the Civil Guard doesn’t roust you. You aren’t a good liar. They’ll pat you down ten seconds after they stop you.”

And my record as one of the finest subjects of the Karentine Crown would not tilt the balance away from an arrest for possession of proscribed weaponry.

Singe would not let me go with anything less. And, “Even though this does not look like a situation where we will need the Dead Man, I’ll try to wake him up.”

“Singe, you are a treasure.”

That was a wonderful straight line. I regretted it before I finished saying it. Singe, however, confounded heaven and earth by disdaining her opportunity. “I know. I have trouble imagining how you have survived without me. Get along. No! Wait! What about your other friends?”

Symptomatic of my reduced status, I asked, “What? Who?”

“Saucerhead. Winger. Playmate. Half a dozen others.”

“Oh. Them.” At the moment Mama Garrett’s boy didn’t have much of a positive attitude toward her second favorite son. I had done so little to keep in touch. “I guess you could, like quietly, let them know there’s a situation. Without mentioning what happened to Morley. But I don’t think we’ll be asking them to get involved.”

Singe just shook her head.

I needed to get out there and make my special ratgirl happy by finding the real, missing Garrett.

 

 

10

Fire and Ice wasn’t hard to find. It was a well-known establishment on the frontier of Elf Town, serving the needs of the successful working man. Meaning it wasn’t quite the upscale hook shop I expected but it wasn’t rodent’s belly nasty, either. It was a place where shopkeepers and skilled tradesmen could relax of an evening. A throwback kind of place, actually, because it didn’t make its money on volume, nor entirely on marketing its keystone service.

I expect the relaxed atmosphere was one way the house competed for scarce disposable income — much of which, these days, ends up in TunFaire’s gaudy theaters.

Play-going was all the rage, in part because a man could take his wife. And the wives knew that.

I gave my name at the door. It was no shibboleth. I tried Belinda’s.

There was the magic.

A veteran brunette — absolutely a heartbreaker not long ago — turned up quickly. She had something special going. I was tempted to fail to remember that I was taken.

“You came from Miss Contague?”

“She asked me to keep watch on your injured guest.”

She considered my claim. She considered me. She consulted some recollection. She decided that I was the real thing, though she was not prepared to be impressed. My feelings were bruised. I was willing to be impressed by her. And I was as fine a specimen of former Marine as you’re likely to find still vertical. I had my dings and scars but they just let you know that I was the genuine article.

“All right. Come with me.” After a glare that dared me to even think about running with that.

We passed through the fancy public lounge works, entirely uninhabited at the moment. Potential witnesses had been cleared out. In the back, where delicacies comestible and sensual got prepared, I spied several toothsome lasses enjoying a light repast and steadfastly taking no interest whatsoever in anyone passing through. Two appeared to be full-blood elf girls. The others were nearly as gorgeous.

“Stop slobbering on the carpet.”

“Sorry. I don’t get out much anymore.”

“Here’s a suggestion. Keep your hands to yourself while you’re here.” Then she snorted. She was one of those people who can’t keep their laughter out of their noses. It took me a few seconds to get the joke.

“I’m taken,” I said stiffly.

“Most of our clients are.” We came to a narrow, steep back stair.

“I’m Garrett,” I said, though my name had failed to awe anyone yet.

“I know. I’ve heard of you. I’m aware of your reputation.”

“Damn! I didn’t know I had one. It’s probably all lies and exaggerations. Who are you?”

“You can call me Miss Tea. If I find out that you’re tolerable, I’ll let you call me Mike.”

“Mike?” One of those? Here? “I had a brother we called Mikey.”

“For Michel.” That was a hard “ch.” “He didn’t come back?”

“No. It broke my mother’s heart.” She gave up. She’d already lost my father and hers, and some brothers, to the terrible beast of war.

Mike turned a little less hard-ass. Very little. Like almost every human in Karenta she shared the experience. “You were luckier.”

“I was. Most of me made it home.”

She looked me straight in the eye. “And now you’re stalling so I’ll go up the steps first. So you can be behind me and watch my ass.”

“That hadn’t actually occurred to me, but now that you mention it, sure, I’ll be a gentleman and let you to go first.”

“Living up to expectations so far. Enjoy the show. It’s the best you’ll get around here.”

Did I threaten her somehow? Was she a secret agent of the redheaded Tate? “I’ll do that. It’s a sin to ignore what the gods generously set before us.”

“And me without my work boots.” She started up the stairs and laughed mockingly as she went. And, hard as she might have tried, she could not help putting a touch of flounce in her step. “And you said you were taken. Hypocrite.”

“Are you my conscience?” I was a tad flustered and confused. So I did try to lean back and enjoy what the gods set before me.

I began to suspect that Misty was not entirely disinclined to have her assets appreciated. And that she considered her behind to be the best of those. And I thought she might be right, seen from where I was standing.

 

 

11

They had Morley stashed in a second-floor bedroom at the back of the house. I stuck my head in long enough to make sure he was breathing. He was lying on his back in a big, comfortable bed. He had bandages all over. He was having trouble breathing. A punctured lung?

Two house operatives were there with him, looking decidedly rough, as though standing a deathwatch over their one true love.

I wanted to hop in and give my dark elf buddy a good swift kick. He was out of it, trying to die, and still he had women swooning.

“What are you doing?” my guide demanded when I didn’t rush right in.

“Scouting ways somebody might use to come after him. In case the folks who put the holes in him want to add to his collection.”

Madam Mike didn’t follow my reasoning but indulged me.

There were three ways to get to Morley. Up the front stairs the clients used. Up the back stairs from the kitchen, the way I came. Up the outside of the building, then through a window. That would require a small, skinny assassin. The window would open only six inches.

For the villain with gaudier ambitions there was the time-honored option of burning the house with Morley inside it.

While I examined the window my guide evicted Morley’s caretakers. She promised them they could handle communications between the room and the world.

After they left, I asked, “How old are those two?” They seemed a little fresh to be in the life.

“DeeDee is twenty-nine. She has some elf in her. She’s just gotten to the point where we can’t auction her virginity. Her daughter Hellbore is sixteen.”

“Hellbore?”

“Really.”

Both were legal, then. I couldn’t imagine the older one having weathered the vicissitudes of her career so well.

I said, “I’ll settle here. If you have something like a field cot, I’d never have to leave.”

“That would be useful. Business has been slow. I don’t want what clientele we do get scared off by you.”

“By me? Come on!”

“You’re so straight-arrow a blind man can see it. They’d think you were spying for their wives. Or you were a Runner collecting stuff for the Unpublished Committee’s files.”

The Unpublished Committee for Royal Security were the secret police. “I’ll be good. I’ll stay in here with my boy, making my list and checking it twice. Been a pleasure meeting you, Misty.”

Flirty brown eyes flashed. “Not Misty, dolt! Miss Tea. As in the capital letter. For Teagarden.”

I gave her my special raised eyebrow, the one that gets the nuns salivating. Miss T came close to slamming the door as she left.

I had been out of circulation too long. I needed to sharpen my tools. Unless she was one of those lesbian types. That would explain her natural resistance.

I paced. I watched the world outside the window. I studied Morley and felt bad for him. I paced some more; then I inventoried chamber pots, bedpans, pitcher of water and bowl. Then a second pitcher and bowl on a small table in a corner, accompanied by a bar of soap and a stack of towels.

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