Read Tomorrow, the Killing Online

Authors: Daniel Polansky

Tags: #Fantasy, #General, #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #War & Military, #Action & Adventure, #Urban Life

Tomorrow, the Killing (7 page)

BOOK: Tomorrow, the Killing
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After a moment I noticed someone peering out from around the corner. A young girl, ten or twelve, I’m bad at that sort of thing. She had her brother’s red hair and her father’s fierce gaze.

I crooked one finger in hello. She scowled and approached me.

‘It’s my brother’s birthday,’ she said.

‘Is that why all these people are here?’

‘Of course,’ she said, clearly thinking me very foolish. As a line, the Montgomerys had many virtues, but not one of them possessed anything resembling a sense of humor.

‘Are you supposed to be up so late?’

‘No one cares what I do,’ she said.

At her age I had been five years on the streets, orphaned by the Red Fever, scraping by on theft and low cunning. It had been quite literally the case that no one cared what I did. ‘Don’t you have a nanny or something?’

‘She thinks I’m in the privy.’

‘A budding criminal genius.’

‘I don’t want to be a criminal,’ she said.

‘Most don’t.’ I very much had the urge to smoke a cigarette, but decided it was better not to offer the pubescent an opportunity to feel morally superior to me. We stared at each other for a while.

‘Do you want to sit down?’ I asked.

‘Will you tell Father that I’m out of bed?’

‘I won’t.’

‘Do you promise?’

‘I promise.’

She rolled over the worth of my word. ‘I shouldn’t believe you,’ she said. ‘But I will.’ She plopped herself next to me on the sofa.

‘That’s very kind.’

We sat quietly while the familial dispute worsened.

‘My brother’s a hero,’ she said suddenly, as if expecting me to contradict her.

‘I’ve heard that.’

‘My father too.’

‘That’s the word.’

There was the sound of something breaking. One of the participants had thrown something against a wall. I assumed it was Edwin. He’d something of a reputation as a firebrand, despite his age.

‘They fight a lot,’ she said. ‘I’m not supposed to know that.’

‘I don’t think either of us are.’

‘If they’re both heroes,’ she asked, ‘then why do they fight so much?’

‘Heroes can’t disagree with each other?’

‘Of course not,’ she snapped. ‘Being a hero means you always know what the right thing to do is.’

‘What if there’s more than one?’

‘There’s only ever one right thing to do,’ she said, the final moral authority on the subject.

‘Often not even that.’

What little enthusiasm I’d managed to inspire in the girl dissipated quickly. She all but leapt up from her seat. ‘I don’t think I like you,’ she said.

‘A popular sentiment.’

She lifted her chin till it pointed at the ceiling, turned imperiously and marched back the way she’d come.

Free of the possible censure of a child, I smoked a cigarette and said a silent prayer for those poor fools who’d chosen to personally ensure the continuation of the species. It must be exhausting, having to pretend you had the answers. My position within Black House required a rather casual relationship with the truth, but even I wasn’t forced to uphold such an absurd fiction every moment of the day.

I never ended up seeing Roland. A few minutes after Rhaine went to her bed I decided to head to my own. It had been a long trek to Kor’s Heights, with little enough to show for it.

When the general had asked me if I’d met his daughter, I’d lied and said I hadn’t. At the time I hadn’t seen any point in mentioning our initial conversation, brief and meaningless as it was. Having had a follow up, I wasn’t so sure. There seemed to be a great deal of the child I’d met in the woman whose life I was trying to save.

8

I
awoke the next morning stewed in my own sweat, and well past breakfast.

I didn’t mind. It was too hot to eat, too hot to do anything but lie in bed and be too hot. Sadly I didn’t have that luxury, so I stretched myself into yesterday’s shirt and dropped down the stairs.

Wren was hung over a table, naked from the waist up.

‘I’ve got a message I need run.’

‘Can it wait till the afternoon?’ he asked. ‘It’s hot as hell out.’

‘It’ll only get hotter,’ I said, and he pulled himself up off the wood sulkily. ‘I need you to find Yancey. Ask him what he’s got going on this evening. Tell him I’d like to pay him a visit.’

He smiled. He liked the Rhymer. Everybody liked the Rhymer. ‘Where are you going?’

‘I gotta make my tithe.’

He nodded sympathetically and went back to not moving. I watched him enviously, then slipped out the back.

The job of the city guard, contrary to popular belief, is not to stop crime. They do stop crime, albeit rarely and mostly by accident, but doing so is not their primary function. The guard’s job, like the job of every other organism, singular or collective, is to maintain its existence – to do the bare minimum required to continue doing the bare minimum.

I’m in the same general racket, which is why once a week I nip over and toss the hoax a cut of my enterprises. Not a big one, but not a small one either. Enough for them to leave me alone and let me know if anyone is planning to do otherwise. Everybody in my line does, everybody who isn’t a fool, everybody who wants to keep at it for more than a fortnight. Because while as a general rule the guard don’t seriously concern themselves with catching criminals, they’re apt to rediscover their zeal if they hear of anyone keeping too much of their own money.

Low Town headquarters is, befitting its inhabitants, derelict and unimpressive. Very little of the guard’s earnings, from the official budget or that provided by me and my ilk, seemed to be going towards its upkeep. A sentry milled aimlessly about in the shadow of its three stone stories, a pair of which could comfortably have been removed without affecting life in the borough. A stoop led to a set of double doors, one to walk into with high hopes, and one to walk out of disappointed. I skirted the main entrance and went through the back, up a short flight of steps and straight to the Captain of the Watch, nodding at the duty officer on the way in.

Galliard’s position required him to collect money and not rock the boat, and he was well suited to both. On a bad day he ate two meals between breakfast and lunch. Today was a good day, and he was polishing off a plate of smoked ham when I came in.

‘Morning, Warden. Good to see you. Take a load off.’

I dropped into the stool opposite him. ‘Captain.’

He pointed at the buffet, finger-fat jiggling. ‘Fancy a bite?’

‘It’s a little hot for salted meat.’

‘Not for me,’ he said, lowering a sinew of pink-white muscle into the bulge of his neck. ‘How you been?’

‘Standing.’ I took a pouch of ochres out from my satchel and set it on top of the table. ‘You?’

‘Sitting,’ he acknowledged. He weighed the purse expertly in his hand, then tossed it onto his desk. When I was gone he’d redistribute it accordingly, slivers of my wealth going to the men above and beneath him, food for children and jewelry for whores. ‘You hear the Giroies wiped out the James Street Boys? I didn’t figure them for the balls to make that kind of play.’

The Giroies were an old school Rouender syndicate, had their fingers in some pies out near Offbend. In recent years they’d been struggling to keep themselves stable, their forces weakened after they went a round with the Association during the Second Syndicate War. ‘Since Junior took over they’ve been thinking they’re big time. You gonna do anything to convince them otherwise?’

He shrugged, though it was more effort than he was used to. ‘Why?’

Why indeed. ‘There’s muttering that two Islanders got sent to Mercy of Prachetas with a rash that looked like the plague.’

He batted aside the suggestion with a wave of his flipper. ‘Idle gossip. I talked to a man at the desk, said it was just another case of the flux. The seafarers need to stop drinking from fouled wells, though what with the heat I can hardly blame them.’ Surprising thing about the hoax, they knew more than you’d credit them with. They just never bothered to do anything with the information. ‘Course the plague ain’t the only plague. There’s been a buzz coming from the Association these last few weeks. They’ve got a rally scheduled next week over this thing with the pensions, gonna pull out all the stops.’

‘I never understood the big deal about marching. I walk places all the time, no one gives me any credit.’

‘Word is they told a crew of Courtland Savages to stop moving vine through their neighborhood. You know the Savages got Giroie backing.’ Galliard slapped a pad of butter over a crust of brown bread, then expunged both with three quick bites. ‘You were in the army, weren’t you, Warden?’

‘They wouldn’t let me in, on account of I only got one arm.’

‘If you’re close with anyone over there, you ought to let them know they’re starting to draw attention.’

‘I don’t have any friends left in the Association.’

‘We’ve been getting feelers out from Black House.’

‘I don’t have any friends left there either,’ I said, and that was an understatement. ‘The vets been respectable a long time – they don’t have the teeth to make trouble.’

‘Maybe, maybe not. I don’t imagine they’ve forgotten which end of the knife to hold, even if they’ve kept it sheathed the last few years.’

‘Joachim Pretories ain’t Roland Montgomery.’

‘Let’s hope he knows it,’ Galliard said. From the open window I could hear two street children arguing over something. A brief scuffle decided the issue, the loser running off squealing. Galliard wiped his mouth with a napkin tucked into his collar. ‘Maybe it’s just the heat. Seems like the whole city’s gone crazy the last few weeks. We picked another hooker out of the canal this morning. Third one this month.’ He rubbed his hands against each other, crumbs falling to the floor, tits jiggling beneath his shirt. ‘Things will get worse before they get better.’

‘People say that – but in my experience things usually just get worse.’

Galliard chortled, then fell silent.

I stood to leave. ‘Well then, I’ve my duties to attend to, as I imagine you’ve yours.’

The captain lifted his corpulent buttocks from his chair and shook my hand. ‘Quite right, quite right. See you next week.’

‘Next week,’ I agreed, and found myself out.

9

I
wasn’t expecting to come back to the Earl and find Hroudland and Rabbit waiting for me at the bar. If I had, I probably wouldn’t have showed – I’d have found my way to the docks, lit up a twist and hoped for a breeze.

They were the only people in there, the rest of the coterie out for the morning, trying to take care of a day’s worth of errands before the sun made travel too uncomfortable. That meant I wouldn’t be able to count on Adolphus’s muscle if things went sour – but it also meant I didn’t have to bother with any pretense of amiability. ‘What the fuck do you want?’

Rabbit belched out a giggle, and Hroudland answered me with an easy lilt to his voice. ‘You know, Lieutenant, there’s really no need to begin the conversation in such a combative fashion.’

‘I suppose that’s something else we’ll need to disagree on.’ I rolled up a cigarette. The flare of the match was an unnecessary aggravation in the heat. ‘Let me make it easy on you, because I know dialogue isn’t your strong point. Adolphus ain’t here.’

‘Not looking for Adolphus,’ Rabbit piped in, a smile swelling his lips, looking for all the world like a child spoiled with a secret. ‘We’re here for you.’

‘Why, Rabbit, is that you over there? You cheeky devil, hiding in the back, so quiet I’d never even notice! And then you start dribbling nonsense and ruin the whole effect! You don’t want to see me, Rabbit, because I don’t want to see you. I was fairly clear on that point, last time we spoke.’

Rabbit laughed again, laughed and blushed, and Hroudland took over the reins. ‘The big man wants a word with you.’

‘I’m not sure who you’re referring to.’

‘Commander Joachim Pretories.’

‘Is he really what you’d call big? Guess we’ve got a different sense of scale.’

‘I don’t want to argue with you, Lieutenant.’

‘Well, I’m in no mood to dance, Hroudland – and since you don’t want to argue and I don’t want to dance, I’m not sure what’s left for us.’

‘The commander just wants a few minutes of your time. Surely that’s not such a sacrifice.’

‘You haven’t factored in the opportunity costs – a few minutes of my time is like a decade to you or Rabbit. Who knows all the extraordinary things I could do with a half hour? Write a sonnet maybe, or find a cure for the flux.’ I shook my head. ‘If you think about it that way, it’s actually quite a lot that you’re asking – more than I feel like offering.’

‘The commander said I was to insist.’

‘He said you were to insist now, did he? You hear that, Rabbit? The two of you are supposed to insist.’

‘That’s what the captain said,’ Rabbit agreed.

‘That’s what he said all right.’ I stubbed out my smoke. ‘You so sure you could compel my attendance?’

‘No,’ Hroudland said. ‘Not at all. Which is why I’m hoping you’ll do the smart thing, and come for a little walk with us, rather than push this into a direction it doesn’t need to go.’

That was in fact the smart thing to do, even if it was Hroudland saying it. And if Hroudland wasn’t sure he and Rabbit could force my attendance, I wasn’t sure they couldn’t. And it would be a damn stupid thing to die over, because I felt like taking the weather out on two men I vaguely disliked.

‘You’ll buy me an ice on the way over, Rabbit?’

Rabbit laughed, the same as he had with death thick in the air. ‘Lieutenant wants to know if I’ll buy him a ice!’

Rabbit was an easy audience. It was one of his few positive qualities.

The Association for the Advancement of the Veterans of the Great War – or the Veterans’ Association if you were a fan of brevity, or simply the Association if you were really obsessed with the concept – was an institution claiming to represent those unfortunate souls who had found themselves manning the trenches during the Empire’s last foray into mass suicide. It was founded by Roland Montgomery six months after the Humbling of Donknacht loosed a quarter of a million former soldiers back upon the homeland they had killed to protect. When Roland died two years later, it had been taken over by his long-time second, Joachim Pretories, and he’d spent the interim turning it into a respectable political power. For all its pretensions it was a typical corporate entity, nominally advocating for the rights and privileges of its members, in practice cadging for the few lucky souls at the top.

BOOK: Tomorrow, the Killing
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