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The Powder Mage Trilogy: Promise of Blood, The Crimson Campaign, The Autumn Republic

Page 133

by McClellan, Brian


  Though, he acknowledged to himself, his unease this morning was likely of a different sort.

  Lord Claremonte was the late Lord Vetas’s employer. And anyone who employed such a monster would surely be a monster himself. Every fiber of Adamat’s being told him to turn around and run, to return home and lock his door and never take a job in the city again—and bugger Ricard and Tamas and Claremonte and everyone else involved in this deadly dance.

  But he’d made a promise to Ricard, so he straightened his jacket and dusted off the brim of his hat.

  Most of the gardens had become overgrown, untended over the summer, and dozens of sentries in the colors of the Brudania-Gurla Trading Company were posted about the grounds. Adamat’s carriage traveled up the front drive, past the immense, silver-plated doors and along the front of the palace until they rounded one corner and proceeded to the servants’ entrance.

  Adamat emerged from his carriage just as three policemen and the commissioner of police stepped out of theirs. The commissioner tipped her hat to Adamat and then strode up to a rather ordinary set of double doors and rapped twice.

  The door opened a crack. Words were exchanged, and then the commissioner headed inside, with her officers on her tail. Adamat followed.

  “Keep close,” Adamat said to SouSmith as the big man emerged from the carriage behind him. “I don’t trust Claremonte in the least.” He jogged to catch up with the commissioner. “What the pit is Claremonte doing here?” he asked.

  “Running for First Minister,” Commissioner Hewi replied, straight-faced. Hewi—a sharp-eyed, soft-spoken woman with light-brown hair curled tightly beneath a small hat—was wearing a loose-fitting day dress that managed to look both utilitarian and elegant at the same time. She had been appointed by the Iron King not long before his death and had, from the rumors, been one of the first people informed of the coup. Upon hearing that the Iron King’s son was to be executed, her words had famously been, “It’s about damn time.”

  “I meant here. In the palace.”

  “He’s rented the space from the city,” Hewi said. “Housing his troops and Privileged here.”

  “And we just let him rent it?”

  “The Reeve agreed to it, from what I hear,” Hewi said. “Better than letting it sit empty. Claremonte’s paying an astronomical fee for use of the building and grounds, and the city needs the money.”

  “I’m surprised Tamas didn’t have the place burned down,” Adamat said.

  “I’m not. It’s part of our cultural heritage. Over four hundred years old. Many of the walls and ceilings are works of art in and of themselves. I think Tamas knows better than to destroy all that out of spite.”

  Adamat conceded to himself that the commissioner had a point. He noted that even the walls of the cavernous kitchens, as they passed through them, were covered in bright murals.

  “Still,” Hewi added, “Tamas had most of the art and furniture removed to the national gallery. Some of it was sold to pay off debts, from what I heard. The rest will be put on display for the public. Laudable, I think.”

  “Though it would have been far safer to destroy every vestige of the nobility.”

  “Right. Seems Tamas is something more than simply pragmatic. Who would have thought?”

  They left the kitchens and went up the servants’ stairs to the main floor. Adamat had heard that the passageways behind the palace were a labyrinth all to themselves, but this was his first time experiencing them. They ducked around so many corners, led by one of Claremonte’s servants, that Adamat imagined that men without his Knack could very well get lost. He frequently stopped to urge SouSmith along so that the boxer didn’t get distracted gazing at all the art.

  They passed by dozens of rooms, each one seemingly bigger than the last, with more ornate gold-work trim and colorful frescoes. Marble-faced fireplaces took up entire walls in some rooms. Curtains were drawn in most of them, casting the rooms into shadow, and what little furniture was left had been covered in white sheets to keep the dust off.

  The servant stepped aside suddenly and gestured to a doorway.

  Hewi and her officers went inside. Adamat paused momentarily, wondering if there was any significance to Claremonte’s having them use the servants’ halls and entrances instead of the immense, echoing hallways and full-length doors. Letting them know they were beneath him, perhaps?

  Adamat glanced at SouSmith to reassure himself and then went in.

  “Welcome, welcome!” Claremonte’s voice bounced off the vaulted ceilings. The room was about thirty feet by forty. Unlike the others they’d passed, this one was decorated entirely in silver—metallic paint on the walls, ornate silver-plated trim. Even the dual fireplaces were a marbling of light and dark gray that matched the walls. On the ceiling was a mural showing some ancient hero making a deal with a two-faced celestial being.

  Brude. Fitting that Claremonte would pick a room watched over by Brudania’s two-faced patron saint.

  Claremonte wore a fine robe over silk pajamas, though it was well past nine in the morning. He lounged lazily in a wingback chair beside one of the windows overlooking the garden and held a cup in one hand, newspaper in the other. He stood as they approached, repeating his welcome.

  “I’m sorry I’m not yet dressed, Commissioner. It was a late night last night, working on a campaign speech for a meeting I’m having this afternoon with the Society for City Gardens.”

  Hewi extended a hand. “Thank you for allowing us to come by on such short notice.”

  “No trouble at all. Oh, Inspector Adamat. Good morning to you, sir.”

  “Good morning,” Adamat said stiffly. He felt a drop of sweat snake its way down the nape of his neck.

  “How are your lovely wife and children?”

  Adamat forced a tight-lipped smile. This had been a terrible mistake.

  “I wasn’t aware you knew the inspector,” Hewi said. “Or that you’ve met his family!”

  “The inspector was among those who greeted me upon my arrival to the city,” Claremonte said, a magnanimous smile on his lips. “And I only know his wife by reputation.”

  To other men, Claremonte’s smile may have been gracious. To Adamat, it seemed full of mockery. Claremonte extended his hand to Adamat.

  “Pardon if I don’t shake,” Adamat managed.

  “Of course.” The words were almost a purr. “Hewi—may I call you Hewi? Hewi, I can only assume that you’ve come to ask me about the unfortunate incident with Ricard Tumblar yesterday.”

  “That’s true,” the commissioner said.

  “I want to assure you that I had nothing to do with it.” Claremonte moved back to his chair by the window and dropped gracefully into it, sending his robe fluttering. “Can I offer any of you some breakfast? Eggs? Coffee? Biscuits?”

  “Nothing, thank you,” Hewi said. “You understand that we’ll need to look into your records? This case will be very high-profile and you are running against Mr. Tumblar for First Minister of Adro. You have the means and the motive.”

  “I understand. Your men are welcome to my records and to question my employees. As long, of course, as it does not interfere with my campaign.”

  “We’ll do our best to keep the investigation discreet.”

  “Many thanks.”

  Adamat let his eyes search the room once more, trying to find anything he had missed—and trying to get his emotions under control. No good inspector could allow himself to be ruled by emotion.

  There were three other chairs aside from the one Claremonte sat in, but he hadn’t offered his guests a seat. The sun blazed through the window, casting long shadows on the floor and inside wall and making it hard to look directly at Claremonte. Strategic placement, or happy coincidence?

  Something about that bothered Adamat. He couldn’t quite place what it was.

  Strategic placement, Adamat decided. A man like Claremonte didn’t do things by accident. Which meant his pajamas were meant to say something as well. Presenting ca
sual indifference? Disrespect?

  “Lord Claremonte,” Adamat said, interrupting something Claremonte had been saying. “Can you give us any reason why you wouldn’t want Ricard dead?”

  Claremonte seemed taken aback. “Why, several. For one, attacking Mr. Tumblar and failing to kill him will only raise his public sympathy.”

  “Or expose your opponent’s weakness.”

  “Perhaps, but he’s very well liked. For another thing, if he had been killed, his Second Minister would have stepped forward to run in his place. And I have no desire to run against a war hero like Taniel Two-shot. Not with all these rumors going around that he’s killed a god and what other nonsense. He’s got a cult of worship among the people almost as deep as his father’s.”

  But would he step up, Adamat wondered. He decided not to voice the question, lest it give Claremonte any ideas. “So you think you have the best shot of winning with Ricard alive?”

  “Yes. Alive, and in one piece.” Claremonte shook his head sadly. “Regardless of who is to blame, some of the public will surely blame me. I would rather the whole event never have happened. I’m in a very good place right now—public perception is high and supporters are flocking to me in droves. I’ve just landed an incredible endorsement. The election is just over a month away, and anything like this bombing that could destabilize public perception can only work against me.”

  “May I ask who will be endorsing you?”

  “You’ll find out with the rest of Adro in a few weeks. He’s my trump card, if you don’t mind the saying. I don’t want to let out the word too early.”

  “I see. I’m sorry to have interrupted, Commissioner,” Adamat said, lapsing into silence.

  Hewi examined Adamat for a moment and then turned back to Claremonte, asking him a series of standard questions. Adamat was pleased to hear her go a little harder on him than she would have before Manhouch’s removal. He had heard from his friends still with the police that investigations were so incredibly easier now that kowtowing to the nobility wasn’t a standard part of the job.

  Adamat listened to the questions for several minutes before slipping out the front of the room and into the grand hallway of the north wing of Skyline Palace. He needed to clear his head. Something in that room bothered him. It lurked on the edge of his awareness, tantalizingly out of reach.

  He strolled down the hallway, listening to the click of his cane and the heavy footfalls of SouSmith following along behind him. Aside from those sounds, the hall was absolutely silent. Strange, what with most of Claremonte’s five thousand men stationed on the grounds. He would have thought there to be more activity.

  A small sound caught his attention. He followed it, head turned, past three empty sitting rooms and into a fourth, where a series of small scratching noises proved to come from fifty pens all writing at once. A salon had been turned into a clerks’ office. Several dozen men sat at desks set up in the room, working studiously while a monitor moved up and down the aisles, occasionally bending to whisper to one of the clerks.

  Adamat continued to explore the wing of the palace. He found two more rooms filled with Claremonte’s employees and another with printing equipment. The presses were all cold and empty, but they must have been used recently, as the room had been lined with cotton batting to keep down the sound. Thousands of newspapers were hung to dry on lines up in the vaulted ceiling.

  Printing his own paper, in addition to the presses he’d bought from Ricard’s competitors. Smart. “Claremonte seems very confident,” Adamat commented, his words echoing down the hall.

  “Yeah,” SouSmith rumbled. “Too confident.”

  “I don’t like it. Have you heard anything about this endorsement?”

  SouSmith shook his head. “People talk. Some like him. Some hate him. Nothing certain.”

  Well, that wasn’t much help. Adamat drummed his fingers on the head of his cane. “Did anything seem strange about Claremonte himself?”

  SouSmith shrugged. “Seems nice enough.” He cracked his knuckles, the sound echoing down the hallway, and a dark look passed over his face. Lord Vetas had killed SouSmith’s nephew, and SouSmith wasn’t ever going to let that go. Adamat realized suddenly that bringing the big boxer here may not have been the best idea.

  Of course, if he put Claremonte’s head through a wall, it would certainly make life a lot easier for everyone.

  “There’s just something…” Adamat trailed off as they returned to the silver sitting room. Claremonte’s manservant eyed him and SouSmith suspiciously, but didn’t ask where they had been.

  “Ah, there you are,” Hewi said. “We were just leaving, Inspector.” She made an impatient gesture toward the door with her hat.

  “Pardon me, Commissioner,” Claremonte said, “but could I speak with Adamat alone?”

  Hewi gave a nod and stepped outside. Adamat felt his heart suddenly beat a little faster. Alone? With Claremonte? The temptation to brain him over the head with his cane might prove too much. He nodded to SouSmith, and a moment later he was alone with Lord Claremonte.

  “Inspector,” Claremonte said. “I hope that any past unpleasantness that you may think occurred between us can remain in the past.”

  Adamat bit his tongue. Your man kidnapped my wife and family! Abused them in unspeakable ways, and caused the death of my son! I’ll see you dead. “As you say,” he said, remembering one of the phrases he used to use when caught in an awkward conversation with a nobleman.

  “Don’t waste your time with me, Inspector. I didn’t try to kill Mr. Tumblar. I don’t know who did. I would offer my help with the investigation, but I don’t think you’d accept it.”

  “We’ll see,” Adamat said, matching Claremonte’s condescending tone. “Thank you for the advice.”

  Claremonte quickly rose from his seat and crossed the room to stand beside Adamat. The sun shone just behind him, surrounding Claremonte with a glowing halo and forcing Adamat to look away. “If I wanted Mr. Tumblar dead, Adamat,” Claremonte said, his voice barely above a whisper, “then he’d be dead.”

  “Or else your men cocked up the job.”

  Claremonte snorted. “Indeed. You’re a very suspicious man, Inspector. Be sure it doesn’t put you in an early grave.” Claremonte turned away, his back to Adamat, and Adamat was sorely tempted to take a swing at him. One well-placed strike with his cane could paralyze the man—Adamat was sure he’d then be able to strangle him before anyone returned to the room.

  Instead, he tried to come up with some witty retort. When none was forthcoming, he joined Hewi, SouSmith, and Hewi’s officers in the servants’ halls.

  “What did he want?” Hewi asked.

  “Nothing important,” Adamat murmured.

  They were led back out through the maze of corridors and servants’ doors to the side of the palace and Adamat got inside his carriage. It rocked heavily when SouSmith climbed in beside him. Adamat rapped on the ceiling with his cane, but the carriage didn’t move.

  “Inspector,” Hewi said, coming to the window. “You should steer clear of Claremonte.”

  I should. But I won’t. “I have work to do, Commissioner. With all due respect.”

  “And with all due respect, steer clear. Claremonte isn’t the man we want.”

  “How do you know?”

  Hewi tipped her hat back and leaned into the carriage. She glanced at SouSmith, then gestured for Adamat to step outside. He followed her a dozen paces from the carriage. “One of the officers I had with me is a Knacked,” she said in a low voice. “We keep it quiet, because he’s very hard to see in the Else if you have the third eye.”

  “What is his Knack?” Adamat asked.

  “Swear to keep this quiet?”

  Adamat nodded.

  “He can hear lies. He knows when a man is telling the truth or a fib. It’s one of our secret weapons, and if it ever got out, the Proprietor would doubtless have him killed.”

  Adamat whistled. “With good reason.” He’d heard of
Knackeds like that. One of the most valuable Knacks in the world, and very rare. Adamat wanted to ask what the man was doing working for a police force in Adopest when he could be some king’s truthsayer and living like, well, a king. But that would have to wait.

  “And you’re saying that Claremonte didn’t lie?”

  “Not a word of it. Fudged a little bit when he said we could have access to all his employees, but that’s no surprise. A man like that has secrets. But he didn’t order Ricard killed.”

  Adamat bid farewell to the commissioner and returned to his carriage, dropping into his seat with a sigh.

  “Somethin’ important?” SouSmith asked.

  “Claremonte isn’t our man.”

  “Hmm.”

  “My thought exactly. I don’t even bloody well know where to start if it’s not Claremonte.” The carriage was soon rolling, and Adamat slowly went through the list of Ricard’s known enemies in his head. “We’ll have to go see Ricard. I have to find out if Claremonte has as good a chance at winning as he seems to think. Maybe we’ll have a…” Adamat trailed off, a thought entering his mind.

  “What?”

  “We need to go to the library, too. It’ll have to wait until tomorrow, but… Pit!”

  SouSmith cocked an eyebrow at him. “Yeah?”

  “I just figured out what was bothering me so much about that room. Claremonte was sitting in the window, with the morning sun at his back.”

  “And?”

  “And he didn’t cast a shadow.”

  CHAPTER

  28

  Field Marshal Tamas!”

  The voice echoed up the line and made Tamas’s shoulders tighten with recognition. He could hear the approaching rhythm of hoofbeats and the occasional curse of the infantrymen as a man rode up the lines too closely. A glance beside him showed Olem turned in his saddle—not, as some might think, to look toward the rider, but to see which soldiers he’d show the back of his hand later that night.

  This was no time to tolerate any show of disrespect, even to Adro’s enemies.

  “Good afternoon, Beon,” Tamas said as the rider came abreast of him.

 

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