The news of the Stadtprasident’s death was joined in the papers by the wreck of the Argus. “Heroic former Parliamentarian John MacTavish Escapes Blaze Caused by Spade Accomplice” could be found just beneath “Stadtprasident Longstreet Murdered by Rogue Shamus Spade!” or some variation on the same on the front page before the fold on each of Cinder City’s three major papers. The entire Bluebell Watch gathered for the death of the Stadtprasident in front of One Cinder Plaza. Businesses were closed all the following day as a solemn blue and white parade marched through Silver City. Even the residents of Alstat came out in mourning for their fallen prince, their own Alstat Stadtprasident.
The coffin processed atop an enormous
catafalque of black with long black streamers. Pipes and horns clashed and
thundered along with the march of the innumerable Blue constables.
Luftleighners hung low over Silver City and Regensburg, trailing black crepe
paper and mournful flags. “Today the city has lost a father,” Cory Adelaide
wept from the rostrum. “Today it has lost its leader, its first citizen, and
the only man who cared about the poor.” Commissioner Wilder glared from his
place on the bandstand, his eyes firing murderous shot at the priest.
The combines held a moment of silence
before their meetings for the fallen prasident, but no more than that. For
them, the day was consumed with frantic planning. When and where and how to
march? The city was leaderless, rudderless, about to descend into chaos. What
could be done? What should be done? Lee Finster pushed hard for the
Steelworkers to take the streets with their brothers in arms. “Now, and only
now, can we finally force the big business interests to take us into
consideration. The prasident is dead. Will we let them replace him with some
Boss Harker clone?”
The only Blues not on duty at the
parade were in the Alstat serving eviction papers. Credit Mobilier, that
mysterious foundation that had apparently sprung up out of nowhere a year and a
half ago, was not taking the day lying down. Before anything else, they would
ensure their plan moved forward. Who was giving the orders? Not MacTavish, who
was recovering in a Regensburg hospital, cozy and safe, protected by pistoleros
and a handful of Blues, but then again, did MacTavish ever give any of the
orders? Or did he simply design the plans and hand them off for someone else to
carry out the dirty work?
Varda Ovirov cried in the kitchen.
Hadrada dead, and for nothing. What was left in this accursed city for her? The
eviction notice was limp in her hands.
For Dolora, the few hours of night between
the death of the Stadtprasident and the rising sun were a morass of confusion
and pain. Her knee was ruined, truly ruined this time. She had pushed it beyond
any reasonable boundary to get Longstreet. When his weight was off her
shoulders and dropping to the pavement below she collapsed in agony and found
herself unable to move for several long minutes. She clutched at her knee. No
massage would bring it back from this brink. No brace could steady it. She knew
she had to leave, had to get up and limp to the stairs, get down from the roof,
get away from the scene of the crime before the Blues swarmed the building and
arrested everyone and anyone within, but she couldn’t stand, let alone hop.
There were shards in there, shards
not just of metal, but of bone, too, and every time she shifted her weight she
could feel them moving.
This was it then. She would never have
mobility in that leg again. Like Kit, she’d given it up to get the bad guy. Who
was now, she reminded herself, a smear on the pavement at the bottom of One
Cinder Plaza. A fitting end for Heward Longstreet, the slime.
She dragged herself across the concrete
surface of the rooftop. The sirens were getting louder. When she reached the
stairs she clung to the railing. That helped, but it was still an enormous
amount of effort to scramble down. She stopped in Longstreet’s office, fearing
every minute that a Blue squad would burst through the doors and throw her in
cuffs. She needed her cane, and she found it amongst the charred down and
scorched leather.
The elevator motors were running, a
loud hum from the corridor outside. Dolora struggled back to the rear
staircase. She couldn’t risk running into the Blues in the hall, or take the
gamble of being trapped in an elevator. Instead, she used her cane to brace her
descent down the back stairway, clanking every step of the way. At some point,
somewhere above, she heard the Blues battering open the door from the
Stadtprasident’s office. They poured into the stairwell above, a thunderous
clatter of boots. Someone shouted, “The roof! He was pushed from the roof!”
She went on with her descent, moving
slowly enough to still the noise from her cane. Each step down threatened to
betray her anew. Don’t let them come down,
she thought, clenching her teeth as tight as she could to keep the hiss of pain
brought on by each fresh jolt or jar locked safely behind them.
Dolora knew the lobby would be crawling
with Blues from all over Silver City. When she reached the lobby door, she was
relieved to find stairs kept going down. She followed. Throughout the descent
she ticked over the people who knew she had been in One Cinder Plaza during the
night. Kit, but she would never say anything. The ersatzmenn, but their
testimony would be treated as bunk as long as there weren’t any corroborators.
You couldn’t trust a giantsblood junkie, could you, much less one with a djinn
whispering in his ear. There was… whoever she’d called on the parly to get
through to Longstreet, and… had there been a secretary when she came in? Her
mind was so scrambled by the events of the evening that she couldn’t remember.
She had talked to someone, hadn’t
she? For her sake, she hoped Longstreet didn’t keep an appoint book with
entries for blackmail meetings.
The stairs came to an end at a basement
door, which she took with care. The room beyond was hot, dark, and big;
somewhere off to her right there burned a massive incinerator or furnace, a
story high, shedding menacing red light. Just beyond the door was a kind of
work station for services staff. A few were there sitting around a table,
muttering, laughing, eating cold sandwiches. They stared as she emerged from
the stairwell. It took a moment for her eyes to adjust and make out the Cog
banner draped from the blank brick wall nearby.
“You’re the one who was upstairs,” a
flabby janitor said.
An Alkebulan engineer in coveralls
flashed a grin of predatory teeth. “You know how long we’ve been trying to get
something like that going? And here, this one does it one night.”
A third man—no, woman, a tough woman in
a cap and coveralls like the Alkebulan—spit into a coffee tin. The smell of old
nasvy rose from the table as bidis burned on lips or in ash trays. “You best
get out to the street. You have somewhere to go?”
“I’ll be fine,” Dolora muttered. Who
were these people? Commonists, a
voice inside told her. Instinctively, another whispered Don’t trust them. But would she be fine? Where would she go? Correis, she’d exhausted every last ounce of Kit’s
good will, she couldn’t go back there. Even if she could, she wouldn’t want to
put Kit in danger. It was as sure as signing a warrant for her that if she went
back to Kit’s place, the Blues would eventually catch up to her there and
figure out the connection between Kit and Miles on the luftleighner. The luftleighner.
The enormity of what had happened
slammed into her like a loading crane packed with granite. Miles was dead.
MacTavish was likely dead, too. She would discover her mistake only later, when
she got a look at the papers, but then in that basement room she had no reason
to doubt it. Stadtprasident Longstreet was dead. That wasn’t enough to stop the
evictions, or change the course of Credit Mobilier’s plan. There were still
people who would benefit from the forced sale and relocation of the Alstat
residents. The plan was proceeding with or without them: the emptying of the
Alstat, the gutting of its homes, and its colonization and transformation, the
way the New Territories had been colonized and transformed by Continentals. It
was the same story all over again: money to be made.
How had she thought so romantically of
the New Territories before? She couldn’t understand any of it. The whole
history of the city appeared different to her now, changed. It wasn’t a brash
young explorer in the wild. The New Territories hadn’t been wild. They had been vibrant and full of
life. The giants whose bodies were mined for the precious giantsblood had been
the gods of the New Territories. Before the Closure, hundreds of thousands of
Continentals had poured over from Ae Vira and Aere, Etoille and Leovic, Aon and
every other land beyond the Closed Sea. Miles had said something about it once,
about the slaughter in the Territories, and Dotti had reminded her of the Slave
War, which Dolora had honestly forgotten until that day on the docks. So much of
the history of the city was forgotten.
There were no statues dedicated to the
Slave or Sugar wars in the city. The Territorial Wars, however, got big honor
in the city. Why, right on Cinder Plaza there was a brass giant, kneeling,
surrounded by Cinder City troops in iron. This monument made up the heart of
the streetwagon exchange, around which all public transportation in Silver City
turned.
She hobbled by the servicepeople and
burst out onto the streets. Where will I
go? Black autowagons with Bluebell shields painted on them were still
pulling up to the front of One Cinder Plaza. The horizon was pink with the
rising sun. A crowd had gathered on the far side of the building to see the
remains of the beloved Stadtprasident Longstreet. Patrol lighters buzzed the
top of the building, and the streets were filled with chaos.
Dolora swam upstream, away from the
crowds, limping and resting heavily on her cane.
The Kowalski house was a few blocks north
of the Sanitorium in Alstat, a block from the elevated streetwagon that bent
east into Centrum. It was a little building from the last century, with a porch
and a yard. An unpainted picket fence marched along the edge of the tiny yard,
hemming the grass away from the road. The Kowalskis had an autowagon and a
converted stable—Miles said they used to have a horse and buggy for his tata’s
sewing business to go door to door, but they sold it when the Juncker Autoworks
put out their Standard Model, the cheap black wagon that every household could
afford on a payment plan.
Dolora didn’t reach it until
mid-morning. She debated other places: should she go to Dotti? To her
apartment? The Blues might be hunting for her already. Best to do without
everything at home and avoid any potential run-ins. She had dropped her new
Firedrake off a streetwagon going through Shipston and watched it smash to
pieces on the street below. The Blues might recover it, but they’d never get
any information from it. The way the barrel shattered, it was unlikely they
would even be able to use toolmarks to confirm it was the pistol that shot at
Longstreet.
Nor
will they find any slugs in Longstreet’s body. The whole damn thing was his
fault. If he’d
come in peacefully, or even offered to cooperate in exchange for leniency… but
he knew better than that. That had been a suicide, plain and simple. He
couldn’t face the forces in control of the city knowing full well they would
grind him up and crush him. If it hadn’t
been Longstreet, it would have been someone else. Boss Harker, maybe, or some
Kirk stooge. It didn’t absolve him, but it did put him in a certain light.
She struggled to reach the door. The
porch creaked under her heavy footsteps. Rather than ring the bell, she rapped
with the head of her cane, then collapsed into the rocking chair beneath the
window. Alte Kowalski answered, gasping when she saw the condition Dolora was
in. “Oh no, my poor little one,” she said, bustling outside. “Moshe! Moshe!
Come out here! It’s Ms. Spade!”
“It’s who?” came a voice from within.
“Dolora Spade! Bogomiles’ partner! Oh,
darling,” she said softly to Dolora, “you look like you’ve been through the
other side and back.”
Dolora knew she was bedraggled. Her
suit was torn, her knee bloody and oozing, her hair singed by krafger fire. She smiled weakly. “I’m
sorry Mrs. Kowalski,” she whispered. “I’m sorry.”
“Is it true?” Alte asked, kneeling by
Dolora’s side. “Is it true what they said about our Bogomiles on the radio?”
Dolora’s heart broke at the pain in Alte’s eyes. She smelled of paprika,
butter, and flour.
Dolora turned away, sucking in a
hitching breath. “I don’t know, Mrs. Kowalski… but I think so. I saw the ship
go down. He was on it.” I put him on it.
I sent him after MacTavish. I killed Miles.
In the late afternoon, Johnathan
MacTavish got on the radio and assured everyone in Cinder City he was still
alive. Dolora sat up from the chair in the Kowalski’s living room where she’d
been recovering and turned up the volume. Alte and Moshe came in from the
adjoining rooms where they’d been cooking and working respectively. Moshe wore
a long prayer shawl and had written Fiddish letters on his arms with charcoal.
Dolora raised her eyebrows but thought better of asking. Alte observed her
husband’s new garb with scorn.
“The Argus was destroyed as a result of a terrorist attack by the
commonist Bogomiles Kowalski.” Dolora bristled. She recognized that smarmy,
mealy-mouthed voice. It was MacTavish, alright, just as he’d sounded back in
his Iron Island days. She imagined him with a mouthful of oatmeal, sputtering
his vile lies onto the microphone.
Alte exploded. “Commonist!” she spat.
Moshe only moaned and shook his head. Dolora missed the next few seconds as
Alte began to rant. “Our Bogomiles was not a commonist! He was a good boy!”
“Restrain yourself, Fidene harridan!”
Moshe groaned, “I want to hear!”
“…planned this well in advance,
together. It’s no coincidence that Kowalski was on the Argus at the same time his accomplice, Dolora Spade, was in the
Stadtprasident’s office shooting at him. The city itself is under attack, and
until these two are brought to justice there will be no safety for any citizens
of Cinder City or anyone living on the peninsula.”
“I know this woman, Spade. She was
thrown off the Bluebell Watch for her single-minded quest to destroy me
personally. I don’t know what she has against me, except that I’ve been
successful. That’s really the thing that gets these commonist dogs more than
anything else: they can’t stand someone who’s managed to accomplish something
in life. Kowalski and Spade were both wash-outs, failures, Alstat scum. Now,
we’ve had a Stadtprasident who promised to take care of the gutter-scum in
Alstat and see how grateful they were? It’s time to reconsider the city’s
policy toward that slum. We need to get someone in the Stadtprasident’s office
who knows how to control the orcs, the ogres, and the foreign elements with a
firm hand.”
The radiograph man broke in. “Does that
mean you’re going to run for Stadtprasident, Mr. MacTavish?”
There was a pregnant pause. Dolora
leaned forward, her mind awash with fire. “I don’t know, to be honest. Maybe it
does.”
“You heard it here first, folks.
Johnathan MacTavish, Chief Officer of Cinder City Consolidated, is considering
a run for the highest office in the land!”
Alte snapped the radio off.
“It’s only a matter
of time,” Alte said. “Girl-child, you know I love you and I know you are not
responsible for Bogomiles’ death,” she went on, while Dolora thought But I am - I sent him there. It should have
been me in that airship, “but you cannot stay here. Your Blue watch will be
here any time. Your name is all over the radio and will be in the papers.”
“We can hide the girl, just you see,”
Moshe replied. Dolora didn’t even have a chance to speak. “There are ways. Just
like back in Vaclav.”
Alte clucked. “You think you are some
big hero revolutionary. You aren’t commonist. Bogomiles wasn’t commonist. We
are just two poor foreigners at the mercy of the city.”
“Foreigners!” Moshe thundered, stomping
around the room like an angry bear. “Foreigners? Have I not slaved and worked
for these people half a lifetime? We raised a boy here! We forgot our home here
to become ‘Cinder City’ like everyone else. What foreigners? I am no more
foreigner than Mr. MacTavish or Heward Longstreet! None of us belong in this
place. You know that as well as I. Who are the people not foreigners in this
land? The giants, dead, the Unspoken Name bless their tormented souls. The
Territorians, dead or slaves, the Unspoken Name bless them. But now we have the
chance to do good, to finally show that we are not cowards, and you say
pfaugh!”
Alte took Moshe by the arm and led him
slightly away from Dolora, across the threadbare carpet, to the window. She
supposed that Alte didn’t want her to hear the hissing remonstrations, but
Dolora could hear every word. “I did not say we can’t help her, Moshe, you old
fool. I said we couldn’t hide her here. The Blue watch will come poking and
prying and opening everything. Like the Coemniks, you understand? You’ve lived
here long enough to know. Miles told us enough that you should not be
surprised.”
“Then what are you saying, you old woman?” he asked.
Alte rolled her eyes and look
heavenward for assistance. “We will keep her here for now, but any minute the
Bluebell boys will come battering down our door. So, you should hurry to the
church and find Father Gornisht.”
Moshe nodded vigorously, suddenly
simpatico. Dolora didn’t know who Father Gornisht was, or understand what was
going on between them, but Moshe was all of a sudden full of life. “You wait
here, maydl child, and I will be back
fast as a tinker’s piss. If your old friends in the double-breasted uniform
come, up to the attic with thee.” He nodded, clearly content with himself, and
started to the door.
“Moshe,” Alte said, in warning.
Moshe paused, laughed, then took the
shawl from his shoulders and smudged the markings on his arms. He rolled down
his sleeves. “Of course, of course. All these years, I had forgot.”
“You didn’t forget. You wanted to go
out with that on. You were testing me.” From the way Alte said it, Dolora would
have thought Moshe was a divine punishment.
“Testing you? Woman, I have no need to
test you. I tried you already, and found you bitter!” Moshe said, grabbing his
cap and hopping through the door before Alte could spit a rejoinder.
Ivar Gornisht chewed thoughtfully on the
long stem of his pipe. He was seated in the kitchen of the Kowalski house,
bouncing his knee and drawing the occasional thin stream of nasvy-smoke into
his mouth. He was tired. He had been tired for a long time. His first memories
were of the Kreuzemperor Hanz Drang being deposed at home in Aon. Like many
Colsci, his family had lived in the borderlands between Aon and Dvangar, that
lowland of forests and tidal valleys through which armies had marched since the
beginning of history. He’d moved to Vaclav as a young man, in part to escape
the generation-long war rippling out of Aon. When he was twenty-one, the
Dvangar commonists overthrew the Autokrator, leaving Vaclav in the contested
region between Aon and the new Commonwealth of the Guilds, the Cog.
He was a staunch Colsci Sacramentalist,
and the commonists at first drove the priests out of their churches. Ivar had
trained for the priesthood in Aon-occupied Colsci until the age of twenty. He
wore the long black frock of an Oenotrian Sacramental priest and managed to get
himself a posting at the Great Cathedral of Vaclav. He’d helped print and
distribute commonist literature for the Vaclav revolt, and even though the
commonists closed the churches for thirty years, he still supported them. Why?
Because unlike the hierophant Salsmarg, the commonists actually helped the
people they said they would. They brought food to Vaclav’s starving. They
brought guns to those who no longer wanted to live under the personal union of
Hanz Drang’s Aon and Avendin.
When the Aonik forces came to crush the
Vaclav revolt, Ivar escaped the city on an eisenbahn headed west. The interim
government of Aon was permissive, but not progressive. The commonists were
occasionally permitted to run in the Aon parliament, the Ratsberg, and
occasionally terrorized by government death squads. He did what he could to
help. When he was thirty-five, the Ratsberg was bombed and the elvish nobility
joined with the owners of Stromkrupp and the other big Aon consortia to crush
the combines and usher in a renewed age of war. That’s when he applied to
Oeonotrios for a transfer to Cinder City and left the Continent under suspicion
of being a commonist.
In those days, the Cinder City postings
were for ethnic minorities. He was sent to Little Colam, in the Alstat, just at
the edge of the hills. He got to know his community there, comprised in large
number of crypto-Fids hiding from their past. He knew it well. He had been in
Vaclav during the repression, had seen the Aon interim government, even before
it was the hated Aonrijk, get its military officers involved in the murder of
Fids. This was an old shell game on the Continent. Whenever something went wrong,
there were always the little communities of the Fids to blame. Wealthy,
insular, looking out for themselves, the Fids had been the target of every
repression since the reign of King Clotar.
It was in this capacity that he met
Moshe and Alte. He was about ten years their younger. They had come before him,
and had spent years living in the New Territories when he first arrived. The
Fiddish community came to him to ask that he protect these Colsci Fids as much
as he could. “No one knows, you see,” they told him, and it was true, or mostly
true. Very few people knew. And it wasn’t as if the anti-Fid sentiment had been
left behind on the Continent. No, indeed, for the Peninsula had been settled by
Ae Virans and Aons. It showed in every name in the New Territories: that Aonik
burr.
“Explain it to me one more time,” he
said slowly to Moshe, “just so I can be sure I understand.”
“The poor girlchild is running from the
authorities. We don’t know how long we have,” Moshe said sorrowfully. “She and
Bogomiles were trying to indict the Stadtprasident. She went to confront him,
but he wouldn’t go easy. Miles…” his voice trailed off.
“You could say they’re freedom
fighters, in a sense,” Father Gornisht prompted.
Moshe nodded. “Yes. My son. A freedom
fighter.” Uncontrolled tears streaked his face. Father Gornisht put his hand on
Moshe’s.
“Don’t worry, Moshe. We can take care
of her.” He wondered if the Little Colam church were the best place for her. He
could make parly calls once she was safely out of the Kowalski’s living room,
maybe. The church had many connections.
The church in Little Colam, Saint
Wenceslawius, was a cramped construction of brick with a high steeple of the
same material. Instead of a belfry, there was a rounded dome in the
north-eastern Continental style that Dolora had always thought was distinctively
Dvangrish. The bricks were two tones, making course after course of zig-zagged
stripes. Father Gornisht took her to the rectory in the back of his wagon. The
church didn’t have enough money for an autowagon. “We don’t need one,” Gornisht
said as he and the Kowalskis secured her in Miles’ back yard. Father Gornisht
had her lie down in the bed of his wagon and covered her with a tarp.
Please,
Correis and all the Fabricators, let him be trustworthy. She had never met the old fraud
before, but the Kowalskis seemed to trust him with their lives. To Dolora, he
had seemed the consummate dissembler: from his little clay pipe to the devilish
twinkling in his eyes, from his thick black leather Colsci boots to his heavy
outer coat, he looked like the very incarnation of the Dvangar con-artist. She
half-expected him to offer to sell her bootblack.
The cart was hell on her back and knee,
both of which had been playing up since the flight from Cinder Plaza the
previous day. She felt like she could weep blood, so long had it been since she
had proper sleep. The Kowalksis had helped, letting her nap in their sitting
room and feeding her with warm noodle soup to keep up her strength and
replenish a system depleted by giantsblood wine, stress, and anxiety, but with
the splintery wood beneath her back all the good the afternoon had done slipped
away. Autowagons had springs. Hell, even coaches had springs. Father Gornisht’s
cart had nothing to absorb the impacts of every bump and jolt. She could feel
each pothole, dip, or twist in the road and the uneven clopping of the pony was
fit to drive her insane. Not to mention that the bed of the cart smelled of old
hay, and that she had to stare up at the underside of a canvas sheet the entire
trip.
“Good thing we’re on our way,” Father
Gornisht said to her after a little while. She estimated they were passing
beneath the elevated streetwagon line, given the rumble.
“Why?”
“Blue autowagons coming up. Probably
searching the neighborhood for you. Hsst, quiet now.” She heard an autowagon
engine, then Gornisht grunting, “Officer,” and then the pony clopped on.
When they arrived at Saint
Wenceslawius, the tarp was drawn back to reveal the rectory stable. Father
Gornisht helped her out before setting about the tending of the pony and the
cart. An ogre Colsci woman ducked through the door from the rectory house and
Gornisht babbled to her in Colsci. Explaining
who I am, Dolora reckoned. The ogre rushed to her side and helped her
through the tiled kitchen and into a little dining room.
She was lowered into a luxuriously soft
cushioned chair and promptly and peacefully fell asleep.
Uneasy dreams troubled her. At first she
dreamt that Gornisht had turned her over to Commissioner Wilder. She was hauled
before the Juridicium to swear she hadn’t killed Longstreet in front of a
judge’s podium. She dreamt of the Penitentiary and solitary confinement, but in
the cell she discovered her flesh was the flesh of Tyrsis Trist. She was
inhabiting the elf’s body, or had become the elf, or was remembering his life.
She wasn’t sure which. The dream ended, or rather slipped into deeper dreaming,
when a Pen guard in his gray woolen coat opened the cell door to kill her. In
the dream she shrieked as the heavy club crashed on her skull. In the rectory,
she whimpered, and her bad leg twitched spasmodically. Father Gornisht covered
her with a blanket.
In the dream that followed, she was
back in the war. This was the magnetic lodestone. She could not escape it.
Everything revolved around it. It had become her polestar. This time, in her
dreams, she was running from her crimes. She signed up under an assumed name
and took a ship to the Continent. Instead of army camp and training, which she
had really done in the New Territories, she was shipped straight to Etoille.
In her dream, the trenches cut right
through Saint-Denis. Aonrijk troops were shelling the Cathedral of the Lord
Ascended, and Ae Viran snipers fired from the rooftops at Avandin columns
moving along the Rue de Marche. Sergeant Lusky was alive again and with her.
She hadn’t dreamed of Lusky’s unshaven face in months. It was a shock to see
him again, full in the flesh, toting his stromrifle and big Ae Viran pistol.
“We have to go to the front,
girlchild,” he said. That was not how Lusky spoke, but he spoke that way in the
dream, with the voice of Moshe Kowalski.
Dolora tried to argue. “We’re at the
front! The Rijklanders are here! Inside Saint-Denis!”
“Not this front, the other one,” he
growled. That was Lusky’s voice again: hard, to the point, but reassuring.
Somehow, they got into a luftlighter from the top of the Cathedral of the Lord
Ascended, as though it were a tower in downtown Silver City. Lusky fired the
propellers. The djinn in the engine glowed and hissed at her back, and then
they were off.
Some time later, she didn’t know how
long, they were over the Rijkland forest where Lusky had died. Schloss Harbau
stood at the top of its gentle hill, surrounded by overgrown gardens and
waist-high walls. Stromkanon
artillery was squatting on the flagstones behind, occasionally belching a
scorching line of lightning deep behind the allied lines. Triple Alliance
soldiery swarmed up through the trees.
“That’s where you’re going, private.”
The lighter hung in place, even though
that was impossible. Every time the stromkanon
glowed and growled she was filled with the sudden fear that they’d been spotted
and were about to be blasted out of the sky, but the stroke never fell on them.
It was as though they were invisible.
“Down there? That’s where you died,
Sergeant.”
Lusky gave her a look to kill a viper.
“You think I don’t know that? But you’re going down there. I may be dead, but
you aren’t, Spade. You know who’s down in Schloss Harbau?” He paused, as though
she might respond. He searched her face with his eyes. “John MacTavish and all
his cronies. You aren’t going to let them get away with this are you?” And
there, suddenly, was the hole in Sergeant Lusky’s forehead again. Brain matter
and blood leaked from it. She hadn’t heard anything, hadn’t seen him shot. He simply
was, dead, again. “You’re not
going to let me die for nothing, are you? I took sniper fire for you, Spade.
And you came right back to Cinder City and started working with those Rijkland
murderers again. But this is your chance. Your chance to put it right.”
She looked down at the schloss. It
wasn’t a fortress, had never been intended to repel an invasion. It was a
pleasure house, a hunting lodge. It wasn’t impermeable, even bristling with
weapons as it was. She just needed the right plan of attack.
Dolora was woken some time after dark. Father
Gornisht stood in the doorway, little more than a glowing bead of embers with
shoulders. She smelled the sweet nasvy of his pipe. “Did I fall asleep…?” she
asked as the dreams fell from her like snow from a windblown pine.
“There’s someone you should talk with,
I think,” Gornisht said. “It’s night, now. We can give you some dinner,
perhaps.” He turned to look behind, into the pool of light spilling from the
kitchen
An unfamiliar voice replied. “Perhaps
best if I talk to her first,” it said. “Then you can eat, and after that we’ll
decide what to do.”
Dolora didn’t like this. It was all too
ominous. The Kowalskis trusted Gornisht, but should she…? She half-rose from
her seat as the other figure stepped into the room. He was a tall man, slender,
with a Sacramentalist’s black cassock and high collar. “Dolora Spade?” he
asked, approaching her. “Cory Adelaide.” He pulled a chair from the nearby
table and sat it next to her. When he folded into it, his legs spread akimbo
and he placed his elbows on his knees. “Tell me what happened.”
The
priest!
Well,
obviously he’s a priest, kid, just look at what he’s wearing. You’re in a
church, ain’tcha?
Yeah, but not just any priest. This is
the campaign architect, the man behind the man when it came to Heward
Longstreet. “You don’t have to worry about Father Adelaide,” Gornisht said.
Adelaide nodded. “You could call me the
reform candidate.”
“The Holy Father was wrong about
Dvangar,” Gornisht added, “and about the Commonwealth countries. But Arkhangelo
is gone, now. We have a new Holy Father.”
“Admittedly one who isn’t much better,”
Adelaide said darkly. “But you can trust me. It’s Dunsane you have to look out
for. I’m on your side.” He drew a small red leather patch from his pocket and
showed it to Dolora. A golden cog-wheel was embossed on the surface. Beneath
that, a scythe of gold with strange Dvangrish lettering along its handle.
Commonist
trappings; not just commonist, but Cog. How was this strange priest related to the commonists? Did he know
Dotti? Dolora tried to lean forward to get a better look. The room was swathed
in shadow as the sun westered on the far side of the rectory garden. She
reached out. Adelaide didn’t stop her from running her fingertips over the
leather. Can I trust this priest?
On the one hand, Adelaide was the man
who’d arranged the vote-dumping scheme. On the other, Miles had seemed
impressed by him. On the other,
Longstreet said Adelaide was in love with him. If he thought Dolora had been
the one to kill his beloved Heward, he might turn her over just for that. But
on the other hand (how many damn hands did she have) what choice did she have?
Adelaide was here. She could be cagey, but she was wanted. The entire Bluebell
Watch was either out to get her or would soon be. Would it help to lie to the
priest? Probably not. Might as well tell
him the truth.
“It’s alright,” Adelaide said, right as
she was making up her mind to talk. He leaned back in his chair, affecting a
relaxed attitude that seemed like it would be more at home on a Dragon gambler
than a priest seeking high ecclesiastical office. It was so incongruous on him
that Dolora nearly laughed. She could see why the lanky priest drew people to
him. There was something about him that she couldn’t put her finger on. He had
a sort of charismatic gravity. “Come, lets have some of Mrs. Wozniak’s stew and
cabbages.” Adelaide smiled, the natural and unforced grin of a man on the
corner sharing a bidi with a friend.
That decided it. As Gornisht and Mrs.
Wozniak (she assumed that was the name of the ogre housekeeper) brought the
stew and candles in for supper, Dolora started the story. It was going to take
a long time to disclose, so she might as well begin. Over toasted bread and
butter, she explained first the trail that led her and Miles to the Marcone
mob, Tyrsis Trist, and the church. Adelaide listened attentively, correcting
here or there when he knew the answer to questions Dolora still had. “The
ersatzmenn were Heward’s. He employed them because he didn’t trust the
Development Council. They came to us very early. It was on election night, if
you can believe it, as the ballots were being tallied. They realized we were
going to win, I guess. The next week we started hiring the ersatzmenn for
protection.”
When she got to Trist and her
suspicions that he’d been killed to protect the ballot-dumping so Trist would
join Hadrada in hell, Adelaide nodded. “I don’t doubt it. But it didn’t come
out of Longstreet’s office. It was to protect him, but it wasn’t his people. I
mean, I could be wrong, but… You said it was a Blue who got Hadrada, and at
first it was a Marcone mobster in the Pen, and then a guard. We don’t have
connections with those people. The Development Council does. They were
protecting their investment in the office.”
“Why? Wouldn’t they rather have someone
pliable, someone already in their pocket, like Harker?”
Adelaide shook his head. “No, because
it would delay everything for Heward to founder on an election scandal. They
couldn’t go forward with the plan if the prasidency were being contested. They
needed stability.”
So the murders hadn’t come from the
Stadtprasident’s office. At least, according to Adelaide. But how could she
trust him? Longstreet said he would do anything
to protect him. Even now, perhaps. Especially
now, maybe, to protect his memory. But everything he said made sense. It
fit with what Dolora knew. That was more reliable than personal credentials,
any day. Anyone could lie, for any reason, but if their reports lined up with
real evidence, that was something else.
The afternoon grew long in the rectory
dining room, until Cory at last convinced Dolora that she should come to the
city cathedral. “It’ll be safer there. Farther away from the Kowalskis, and we
can go in my auto.”
Dolora wondered. There must still be
some way to get MacTavish for what he’d done… and perhaps Adelaide was the key.
It was late when Cory entered his office.
The moon hung fat over the peninsula. He’d carried Dolora Spade out of Little
Colam under disguise and dodged Bluebell barricades the whole way. The woman
was brighter than she looked, although still lacked the good sense not to go
sticking her nose into meat grinders. But that might work out in Cory’s favor.
It might just. She was sleeping now, safely away from Father Dunsane’s prying
eyes, in the basement of the Cathedral. There was a locked storeroom to which Cory
confidently carried the only key. He’d moved some things for the steelworkers,
the longshoremen, and the teamsters through there before and Dunsane had never
found. It seemed natural to squirrel Spade away down there. When Gornisht
called, he’d dragged the spare bed in, and made it up. It was almost nice down
there.
The giantsblood whisky swirled in his
cocktail glass. Back in Aere and Ae Vira, people in his position drank
wyrmsblood. Here, across the Closure, it was too expensive even for men of the
cloth to take casually. He held it up to the lamp and looked through the ruby
red contents of his glass. Wyrmsblood was the same color, albeit a little
darker. He’d had it on a few occasions when he was dining with the Vesco. If
everything went as he expected, he would be breaking into the smoky wyrmsblood
soon.
Dragons and Giants. Creatures of the
vanished past. Brought to heel, those godlings, by the force of Continental
arms. Cory folded up into rocking chair and closed his eyes. The bulb in his
lamp blinked out, then on, then out again for a long moment, before the
fulminating power was restored. Fucking
MacTavish, he cursed, and all the
Development Council pricks. This was their doing. This constant pressure on
the fulmination lines, the drive to build a new station, everything. They had
ruined every plan Cory had laid before he laid it. The commonists had told him
it would happen. They were always so down about Longstreet’s chances. But Cory
had known - hadn’t he? - That Heward could win.
And now look at him. A mark on the
pavement. His beautiful Heward.
Unbidden, a tear began to bud in his
right eye. He rubbed it away vigorously before it had the chance to fall. To
hell with Heward. He had never appreciated the lengths Cory went through for
him.
The Spade woman had swallowed the
balony about Tyrsis Trist, too. That meant she might be willing to work with
the Marcone mob again. How she hadn’t seen it, he didn’t know. She wasn’t as
attentive to detail now that she was on the run, maybe. Hadrada Varnag had been
offed by the Development Council through Leon Krasky, but Cory had been
scrambling when Varnag died. He couldn’t risk the details of the election
getting in the paper. Trist had been his
doing, first through Marcone, and then through the Pen guards themselves.
A sudden jolt of anger surged up from
the subterranean reservoir beneath him. It manifested in a strangled cry that
burbled out of his lips, hauling his body to his feet, and hurling the snifter
from him. Giantsblood, thick and sweet, spilled from it and splattered the
carpet. The glass struck the floor with a thud and rolled under a chair.
Heward!
You ungrateful bastard!
How dare he die. How dare he! And if
the Spade woman was to be believed, he did it to himself. Why? Rather than face the truth. Rather than face
what we worked for. I would have helped you! I would have saved you!
Suddenly, Cory wasn’t just angry at the world for taking Heward, but angry at
Heward himself. A coward! A coward!
The silent simmering was silent no longer. The glass wasn’t enough, the
startled and stillborn shriek wasn’t enough. His eyes burned as though he stood
over an open oil fire. He moved without his will, his frame acting without any
direction from above. Before he knew it, his fist was striking the doorframe.
His knuckles cracked and a streamer of pain ran up his arm. It left no mark on
the wood, but his hand throbbed.
He wanted to scream. He wanted to tear
the church apart stone by stone until there was only an open pit in its place.
He wanted to mount the ladder of heaven and go to war with the Godhead itself,
to overthrow it and cast it into the sea, to claim Heward from the afterlife
with his bloodied hands and demand his fealty. Coward! I would have done
anything for you. I would have killed—! I have killed. God, I have destroyed
myself for you, and your cowardice took you away from me.
Suicide was only the beginning, or
rather the final and horrific end, of things. We could have had everything. We could have conquered the world. But
you, Heward, were too scared to admit it. You kept your wife, your precious
house, your prospects, because you couldn’t be honest. You fucking coward.
Just like that, the morning eulogy and the long afternoon of talking to Spade
fell away like they were nothing. The only thing that was left was the white
hot iron of his anger, his absolute fury at the way Heward had shied away at
every turn.
On election night, when the results
were announced, they’d been alone in Longstreet’s office in the Alstat. They
embraced. They’d embraced! Heward
would have kissed him, had that damn dwarf Itzak not walked in right at that
moment. Fuck you, Heward. He wasn’t
seated by the side of the Godhead in heaven. He was in hell, which is where
Cory was going. But if he was going, he would at least make it worth while.
The real enemy was the Development
Council. They waited until he took office to descend on him like the vultures
they were. No one in the campaign had ever heard of them before that day.
Heward had barely settled into his chair when a Cinder Plaza secretary
apologized and said there were people there to see him. Cory and Heward had
thought nothing of it: ward bosses and Kirk luminaries had been coming to pay
homage all day. Cavaliers who wanted to work with the new administration were
coyly delivering their greetings. Even the Unionists, those right-madmen who
wanted to dispel the Closure and rejoin Ae Vira, came to see the face of the
Alstat merchant who’d won the prized Stadtprasidency.
Cory had been excited for the Kirk
Members of Parliament who would have to swallow their pride at Heward’s win.
Cory had run against the mainstream Kirks, without their permission. He had
that power. The church was behind him. Vesco Donovan had backed him. Heward was
the only candidate who gave a single fuck about the poor, and it was still part
of the Oenotrian creed to care for the disenfranchised, and there were no more
disenfranchised than the people of Alstat, Iron Island, Shipston. With Donovan
backing him and Heward as the candidate, Cory had opposed the entire party. The
Kirks were supposed to be against Continental interests, unlike the Cavaliers,
to watch out of the New Territories for the citizens of the New Territories.
Did that mean, in order to win, that
Cory had courted the commonists? Maybe so! So what if the Harker administration
had outlawed political discourse with the representatives of the Cog? The
combines were behind him, and the Cog money came through their strange, cagey
representatives. Harker hadn’t known it (or maybe he had?) but the attack ads
he ran on the radio were true: Heward Longstreet had the help of the Cog
commonists backing him.
They were everywhere, these commonists.
They pretended to care about the poor, too, which put them nominally on Cory’s
side. But the reality was they were trying to overthrow, undermine, break
apart, and destroy everything that made Cinder City itself. Cory didn’t wan to
see the city flying Cog banners or closing the churches. He wanted to right the
keel of the wayward ship, not sink it. Still, you took help from the places you
could. Heward needed money and he’d needed the combines to back him, and the
commonists could deliver. At least in Alstat.
On Iron Island, things were different.
Cory didn’t know if there were commonists cells there, but if there were they
were meaningless. The power on Iron Island was split between CCCG&S and the
factions of the mob. Cory and Heward had gambled on Marcone, and had won.
But that afternoon, it wasn’t the mob
who came calling. It was the Development Council. MacTavish and eleven of the
other biggest industrialists and business owners in Cinder City filed into the
office to lay out to Cory and Heward just how things were going to be. Heward
had sat, chastened, sinking into his chair, while Cory watched slack-jawed.
These men talked not like the constituents he’d known them to be, but like the owners of Cinder City itself. There were
no questions. They did not ask. They told. When Heward said he was going to get
his revitalization plan passed anyway, they warned him that they could hold up
every vote, turn the entire Parliament on him, cripple his prasidency, and call
for a no-confidence re-election within two years.
When they left, Heward was silent. They
had given him an option out: to claim the revitalization package and still go
forward with their plan for Credit Mobilier to throw out the residents of
downtown Alstat, to make it a victory for both sides. And Heward would get to
line his own pocket-book with the redevelopment money, sharing in a morsel of
the fat that went to the Development Council. Cory hadn’t seen a way out, and
for that, Heward was dead.
Heward was a coward, but Cory knew that
it was his own fault for failing to find a road out of the labyrinth of graft. If I could have extracted us from that, he
would still be here. He died because he trusted me and I failed. The sting
of it would never leave. The taste of bile would always sting his mouth.
MacTavish and the Development Council
were at the root of it all. Heward could have been a good Stadtprasident. He
could have been the best prasident the city had ever seen. He was hemmed in by
the graft and corruption of old Kirk leaders and Cavalier businessmen. He was
hamstrung by things beyond his control. The
levers of power were never in his hands at all. They’d been stolen by the
consortium interests long ago. How could he have helped anyone with the
Council breathing down his neck? Yes,
Cory decided, it was the Development
Council who killed him.
With that out of the way, his next
steps were clear. The Spade woman had been there when Heward died, had been the
efficient cause that threw him from the rooftop of One Cinder Plaza, so he was
disinclined to be kind to her. He could use her, though. Besides, she might
even like the plan he was brewing. Fragments clung together in his mind as he
poured himself a new drink. Marcone still owed him a favor, and if anyone hated
MacTavish as much as he and the Spade woman did, it was the boss of Iron
Island. Spade had the evidence that would get the Development Council to a
meeting. Marcone had the firepower to end it.
No
more cowardice, he told
himself as he lifted the parly-horn and asked the operator to connect him with
the boss.
In the morning, the search for Dolora was
on. The Blues had scrambled the afternoon after Longstreet’s death to see if
they could catch her. Eyes had been posted at the eisenbahn stations and the
ferry terminals. No one reported seeing her leave the city, which meant she was
still within their grasp. The peninsula was vast, and there were many places to
search. Her apartment had already been ransacked, and Kit Winter dragged in for
questioning.
She hunkered down in the little storage
space beneath the cathedral. She could hear the organ for morning mass, the
shuffling of many feet, and the drone of song rising up toward the Hieratic
god. She, being a Fabricationist, was made mightily uncomfortable by the
presence of so many Oeonotrian rites. It gave her the creepy-crawlies.
When she wasn’t listening to the
Oeonotrian hymns, she was thinking about MacTavish and how he’d escaped the
exploding wreckage of the Argus while
her partner, her friend, Miles Kowalski had plunged to a fiery death. She
needed a strummer. She’d tossed her last replacement after the encounter on the
rooftop with the Stadtprasident. Not that it had done much good - her coming
and going was now known well enough that the Blues were out to get her.
MacTavish was all over the news and radio blathering about how he’d been
attacked by Miles on the luftleighner, and how he’d narrowly escaped by taking
one of the planes. No one could yet explain how the djinn had been freed, but
twelve Academic magicians were flown into Parliament Channel to combat and
dispel it.
If only getting rid of the Development
Council were that easy. Djinn were an evil not native to this world, called
here by the lure of giantsblood and magic. The Development Council were an
all-too-worldly evil, men warped by the greed that grew in their hearts like
weeds. She paced, she fretted, she alternately decided they deserved little
more than public execution and then that instead they should be dragged before
the press and defamed.
The news did not mention any of her
evidence. That meant Dotti had lied, kept it hidden, and so her last ace card
had evaporated. Dotti had what were likely the only remaining copies of the
proof. The set in the tower was already in Wilder’s office, certainly; the copy
Miles took with him was destroyed in the crash. The set in Dolora’s apartment
was likewise already in the hands of the Blues. Even now, MacTavish might be in
his office on Iron Island destroying the originals. They are slipping out of my grasp! And meanwhile she was confined
to this basement, this dusty room of thirty square feet.
Come lunch, Father Adelaide unlocked
the door and gave her a tray of stew and coffee. He sat and talked with her a
while, but seemed distracted. He barely listened to what she had to say, and
instead kept looking through the narrow window by the ceiling, at the garden
above. When she quietened down, her nervous chatter settling in so she could
eat something, he turned to her. The expression on his face was one she’d not
seen him wear before: one of quiet intensity. He pursed his lips and drew a
strummer from his frock. For a moment, she thought he meant to shoot her. His
hand trembled as he produced the weapon. He lay it on the bed at her side.
“I’ve spoken to Marcone. He sent this.
And a friend.”
Father Adelaide looked toward the door.
Dolora’s eyes followed him. Slim, in his slouch hat and cream-colored suit, was
lounging in the cramped hall beyond. He smelled of peppermint, a sharp
distinction from the incense and organ grease of the basement. “Ms. Spade,” he
said, tipping his hat.
“Mr. Solomon,” she replied, surprised.
Slim smiled. “This here Father Adelaide
told you what he wants of you yet?”
Cory shook his head. Dolora raised her
eyebrows and let her fingers trace the etched Sage & Hoenecker maker’s mark
on the barrel. “I can guess.” If Longstreet was to be believed, Adelaide was
his unrequited lover. Could a priest want her to get the vengeance she so
justly sought on MacTavish? He’s not like
the Rijklanders though. This isn’t a war.
“Someone has to make them pay,” said
Father Adelaide.
Dolora shrugged.
“They’re bad folks,” Slim said, “you
know that. You told Mr. Marcone. That MacTavish is a murderer himself. And a
rapist, if you’re right. And he killed your partner. Ain’t that enough to do
what needs to be done?”
“It’s not a war,” she said softly,
repeating her thoughts aloud. “He’s not like a Rijkland soldier.”
“Yeah?” Slim’s brows shot up. “Ain’t
he? Or, no, I guess you’re right. He’s more like those board room pricks over
there on the Continent that got everything started. Sure, he’s not like the
boys in helmets who were excited to go out and shoot a dwarf, or an orc, or a
black Alkebulan.” He sneered self-depreciatively. “But I guess he’s not so much
different from the people that sent those boys out to do the killing. And what
happened to them?”
“They were tried and executed,” Dolora
said.
Adelaide clicked his tongue. “Some of
them where. They died for the sins of the rest.”
“The rest they brought over here, or
left to run things there. That’s the kind of cockroach MacTavish is. I remember
when he was just a petty ward boss on the Island.” Something gleamed in Slim’s
eyes. Something dark. “So, come on. Pick up that strummer.” He rolled his
shoulder, revealing the pistol beneath his coat. “I’ll even let you plug
MacTavish yourself.”
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