Low Town: A Novel

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Low Town: A Novel Page 29

by Daniel Polansky


  The party was in full swing, the conviviality of the early evening giving way to an outright bacchanal. Multicolored clouds of smoke hovered above the congregation, and the once immaculate counterfeit snow drifts had been scattered about haphazardly. The hanging trays of dreamvine were distinctly depleted, a far cry from the cornucopia of narcotic delights they had once offered. Off in the corner I could see a fat man doing something with one of the servers which I understood to be frowned upon in polite society. The magical light emanating from the statue of Śakra had faded from a bright orange to a duller violet, rendering the proceedings at once malefic and chimerical.

  I’m not sure what it was that possessed me to speak to Brightfellow, our previous interactions not being so enjoyable as to strongly warrant sequel. When I’d seen him slip in earlier in the evening I was worried he’d attach himself to me, and I’d be stuck trading barbs all night. Instead he’d taken a seat in the back and downed every glass of booze that came within reach, supplementing it with frequent sips from a pocket flask.

  It made all the sense in the world to leave him alone. If Kendrick came through, and if Celia’s working was right, there was no point in shaking him down, not that the sorcerer had shown himself easily susceptible to intimidation. Maybe it was my innate drive toward making trouble. Maybe I just felt like killing time.

  But I think the truth was I relished the opportunity to give him a few solid kicks now that he was on the ground. He was an easy man to hate; indeed he almost seemed to cultivate it. It’s better not to feel that way about whoever you’re going up against, personal enmity clouds the mind—but then self-control was never my strong suit. I thought about the children, and Crispin, and then I was on my feet and heading over.

  He looked up as my shadow dropped over him, struggling to make me out against the kaleidoscopic backdrop. During our brief acquaintance I had yet to see Brightfellow sober—but neither had I really seen him drunk. He’d struck me as the sort of person who needed a shot or two to get through the day, who isn’t at peak condition until his blood reaches a few points proof.

  He was well clear of that point, at the end of an active effort to reach insensibility. His eyes were carmine dots surrounded by swelled flesh, thick beads of sweat trailing down the slant of his forehead and off his stubbed nose. At first he managed something of his usual bravado, sneering at me with a credible imitation of homicidal loathing. But it faded quickly, buried beneath the booze he’d been swilling, and his head sank back down to the ground.

  “Long night?” I asked, taking the seat next to him. His rank press leaked through the perfume he’d doused himself with.

  “The fuck you want?” he asked, forcing each syllable through an uncooperative maw.

  “You looked so pretty, I thought I’d ask for a dance.”

  He let that one pass. Indeed he seemed barely to register it.

  I sipped at my glass of champagne. It was my fourth or fifth, and the fizz was playing havoc with my stomach. “Really a bunch of hateful motherfuckers, aren’t they? To think that half the nobles in Rigus are here defiling themselves. I’d say they need religion, but I’m pretty certain that’s the First Abbot over there, passed out in the punch bowl.” The First Abbot was not passed out in the punch bowl—he was passed out next to the punch bowl, but it sounded better the way I said it.

  “I’d see every one of them rotting in the ground,” Brightfellow answered, and I nearly recoiled at the malice in his voice. “I’d put them there.”

  “Would the Blade get a pass?”

  “Not if I’m handing them out.”

  “Then what the hell was the point? When this thing falls, it’ll be the end of both of you.”

  “You know why you do everything you do?”

  “I can usually hazard a guess.”

  There was a long pause, so long I thought maybe the sorcerer had slipped full-on into stupor. Finally, with a great deal of effort, Brightfellow swung his eyes up to meet mine. “You were an agent,” he said. “And now you aren’t.”

  “Yeah.”

  “Was that your choice?”

  “In a sense.”

  “Why’d you make it?”

  “A woman.”

  “That’s a pretty good answer,” he said, and turned back toward the blur of the crowd. “I didn’t think it would go this far. I didn’t want it to.”

  Something about Brightfellow’s self-pity reignited my fury. “Don’t mistake me for a priest—I’m not interested in your confession, and I’m not selling redemption. You dug your hole, now lie in it.” I sneered, though since he wasn’t looking, the effect was wasted. “I’ll tip the Blade in after, so you don’t get lonely.”

  I thought that was a pretty good shot and I thought it’d rattle him. But when he spoke, his voice was level, and he didn’t sound angry, just certain and sad. “You’re a fucking idiot.”

  I took a twist of colored dreamvine from a dish beside us. “You might just be right about that one.”

  He didn’t say anything else, and I got up and faded into the background, and after I finished my glass of champagne I didn’t grab another.

  Up front the Blade and his entourage were drinking and smoking and occasionally laughing uproariously. I wondered where he was getting his supply of cronies—I’d done for four of them two nights earlier, but he wasn’t having difficulty finding replacements, nor did the death of his previous coterie seem to weigh heavy on the duke’s soul. Every so often he would toss me what he thought was a threatening glance, though having been tutored in intimidation by the likes of Ling Chi and the Old Man, I found myself unimpressed.

  The doctor was in the building by this point. The night was only getting later, and my initial awe had given way to the generalized contempt I felt for my betters, sybarites so degenerate even their base pleasures were synthetic and hollow. The prospect of pawing at one of the servers was less than enticing, so I just sat alone, worrying what would happen if I’d misjudged Kendrick or if Celia’s working had rung false or if my alchemical skills hadn’t been up to the task.

  It happened without preamble. One of the servers dropped her tray and followed it soon after, huddled on the ground weeping—apparently she had dipped into the master’s stash a bit early. By coincidence the next to go was a young fop standing over her, who fell to his knees and soured the air with bile. Like a wave it passed through the crowd, groups of people overcome with nausea, clutching their bellies and scanning desperately for an appropriate place to boot.

  Any fool can cut pixie’s breath with something that will kill a man—spite’s bloom or a few drops of widow’s milk—but to mix in something nonlethal is more difficult. And of course it wouldn’t have been possible if Beaconfield hadn’t run through the first cache of breath I had given him and demanded more for the party. But he had and I did, and here we were. Whatever the Blade thought, I hadn’t come to negotiate or to engage in another tête-à-tête. He wasn’t much of a sparring partner, all told, and it was a long trek up here to tell a man I hated that I hated him.

  I’d come to make sure the hour I had spent dropping three grains of mother’s bane into every vial of pixie’s breath I’d sold Beaconfield that day in the gardens hadn’t been wasted. I’d promised the doctor a distraction, after all.

  The duke hadn’t yet made the connection between me and the illness sweeping his guests, and I decided to head out before that changed. At least I could rest comfortably knowing I had done my part to make what would likely be the Blade’s final Midwinter party the most memorable one yet.

  I slipped out through the main door and started back toward Low Town. If Kendrick couldn’t find a way to break into Beaconfield’s study while the entirety of the party was violently ill, then his reputation was pretty damn far from earned. I took the joint from my pocket and put it to my lips, lighting it despite the snow. All in all, it had been a fine evening, clean as clockwork.

  So I couldn’t understand why I spent the walk home in anxious silence, u
nable to shake the nagging feeling I’d fucked myself sideways.

  The next morning I bundled up tight and headed out to meet the doctor, and against the storm there was a bounce in my step I hadn’t had for days. Unless my thief had completely blown his assignment, I’d be able to clear myself of the Old Man’s sentence with a solid day to spare, and that was enough to make me forget the snow for a few minutes.

  Once inside the Daevas’ Work pub I took a back booth and ordered a cup of coffee. A few minutes later the doctor came in, brushing ice off his thick winter coat. He sat down and slipped me a packet of papers underneath the table. “From a false bottom inside his desk, and the dart trap was coated with fen-eel venom.”

  “I hope it proved difficult enough to interest you,” I said.

  He didn’t answer, and I started to flip through the file he’d given me. Mairi might be a treacherous whore, but her sources weren’t bad. The first half of the package consisted of the Blade’s ledgers, and it didn’t take an accountant to see that he was deeper in red than a virgin on her wedding night. I had motive.

  But that wasn’t the interesting part. Coupled with the ledger were a series of correspondences between Beaconfield and several men I knew to be the espionage agents of various foreign embassies. It seemed that before moving on to child murder, the Blade had studied treason. Miradin, Nestria, even the fucking Dren—there wasn’t a country on the continent poor Beaconfield hadn’t tried to sell his soul to. None of it had gone very far—like most amateurs in the field of spycraft, Beaconfield mistook gossip for intelligence. In fact, the letters listed little more than the polite refusal of various low-ranking operatives to contract for the Blade’s services. His incompetence would be no defense at trial of course, and his status as a peer made any contact with a foreign emissary a hanging offense.

  It was interesting, but it didn’t relate directly to the murders, and I knew it wouldn’t be enough for the Old Man, not with the hard-on he had for me. My heart beat double time, and I worked to settle it. “Was that everything?”

  From the moment he had sat down in front of me, I could see Kendrick had an edge to him that contrasted with the amiability he had displayed during our first conversation. Now it reached a crescendo, my casual question eliciting a scowl that sat incongruously on his face. “No, that isn’t everything. That isn’t everything at all.” Underneath the table he passed me a parcel wrapped in brown butcher’s paper. I undid the string and let the object inside fall into my hands.

  If I saw it on a shelf or behind glass, it wouldn’t have meant anything, an open razor of the sort you could buy in any corner store in the city, a bit of sharpened steel folded back into a brass hilt. But holding it I could tell clear what it was; as soon as I touched the metal a line of bile wretched itself up from my throat and my testicles held firm to the flesh of my thigh. Vile things had been done with this weapon, acts that had stained its very substance. Its contact with the void had leaked out into our reality and left behind a memory of its blasphemies. You didn’t need to be a scryer to recognize it, needed no extra degree of perception—you felt it in your gut, in your soul. I wrapped the thing back in the paper and shoved it into my bag.

  The doctor had felt it and he was not happy to have done so. “You didn’t say anything about this.”

  “I didn’t know anything about it.”

  He brought himself to his feet. “Send my money to my agent, and don’t contact me again. I don’t like being in the dark.”

  “It’s a shit way to spend time,” I agreed.

  I sat there as he walked out, and for a while after. The doctor wasn’t my favorite person, and I wouldn’t have tossed him another gig even if he’d been up for taking it—but I couldn’t fail to recognize that lately I’d been convincing a lot of people to stop speaking to me.

  Still, I had what I needed. There was no way the Old Man could ignore the instrument of sacrifice with which Beaconfield had disposed of two children.

  I was back in the Earl twenty minutes later—the whole errand had taken less than an hour. I yelled a greeting, crowing with success and expecting accolades from the gallery. I knew Adeline would be out for groceries, but still figured Wren and my partner would be around to commiserate my success.

  But the boy was nowhere to be seen, and I found Adolphus sitting next to the fire, his face stone and a slip of paper open in his hand. He passed me the note without comment, and before I even opened it I had a pretty good idea what it said.

  I have the child.

  You will do nothing until I contact you.

  I folded it in two and cursed myself for a fool.

  Adolphus and I were plotting in the corner when Adeline came in, plump and red cheeked, anticipating the Midwinter feast she was about to prepare. If it was just me I could probably have carried it, but you don’t share a man’s bed for a decade without gaining some ability to appraise his mood. Besides, Adolphus ain’t much for guile. “What’s wrong?”

  Adolphus and I exchanged the kind of look that prefaces the arrival of bad news, but neither of us said anything.

  She inspected me with a gaze that would be the envy of many a magistrate. “Where’s Wren?”

  A hole opened up in the bottom of my stomach and I fell into it. I stumbled through a lie. “I left him at the Aerie.”

  “You never mentioned anything about visiting the Crane today.”

  “I don’t tell you every time I void my bowels, but the chamber pot still gets plenty of use.”

  A burst of movement, faster than I would have credited her for, and she was in front of me. Her voice was louder than usual, but steady. “Stop lying—I’m not a fool. Where is he?”

  I swallowed hard and nodded at Adolphus. He slipped the paper out of his back pocket and handed it to her.

  I’m not sure what I expected, how I thought she would react. For all her low voice and sweet nature, for all that she allowed Adolphus his delusions of tyranny, Adeline was no weakling. But then I couldn’t imagine what the arrival of Wren to a woman long childless meant. She read over the missive, the grim set of her face unaltered. Then she looked back at me, her eyes incredulous. “How could this happen?” Not angry yet, just confused.

  “He must have followed me out of the bar. He did it once before, but I thought I told him off. I’m not sure, I didn’t see him.”

  She struck me once across the face, closed palm. “You stupid, stupid man.” She raised her hand again, then dropped it. “You stupid man.”

  I swallowed that.

  “Swear to me you’ll find him.”

  “I’ll do what I can.”

  She shook her head and grabbed the lapel of my coat, her eyes wide and furious. “No—swear to me, swear to me you’ll bring him back safe.”

  My throat was so dry I stumbled over the words. “I swear.” As a rule I don’t promise anything I can’t deliver—I wished I could take it back as soon as I had said it.

  She let go of me and collapsed into Adolphus, her composure broken, weeping softly. He patted her softly on the back. I moved to leave. “I’ll be back in an hour.”

  “You aren’t …” Adolphus let the sentence trail off.

  “Not yet. I’ve got something I need to do first.”

  It wouldn’t do to murder a member of the peerage without notifying the authorities. I needed to see the Old Man.

  I pushed open the doors into Black House like I was still the top agent in the place, instead of a low-rent pusher. I must have done a decent enough impression because the guard on duty let me by without any trouble. From there I made my way deeper into the labyrinth, unsurprised to discover I hadn’t forgotten my way.

  The Old Man’s office is located in the dead center of the building, at the heart of a web of dull offices and unattractive carpeting. I entered without knocking, but somehow he knew I was coming and sat comfortably in his chair, owning absolutely the space he inhabited. The wooden desk in front of him was clean of paper, book, or bauble, the only adornment a
small bowl of hard candy.

  “A day early,” I said, taking the seat opposite his and tossing the packet onto the desk.

  It landed with a thud. The Old Man looked up at me, then at the dossier, then back at me. He took hold of the folder and then settled into his seat, flipping through it with agonizing slowness. Finally he set the papers back on his desk. “This does make for interesting reading—unfortunately, it isn’t the information I tasked you to find. For your sake, I certainly hope this isn’t all you came here with.”

  The razor sat in my satchel. All I needed to do was lay it down on the table and walk out, free and clear, at least until the next time they wanted something from me—the razor pulsed with the void; it was as good as a signed confession. But with the boy gone that was out; one street urchin didn’t matter anything to the Old Man, didn’t matter an eyelash or a clipped toenail.

  The Blade drew too much water for him to disappear into Black House and never come out again—if they went after him they’d have to uphold a pretense of legality, weeks of subpoenas and judicial wrangling, and I didn’t imagine Beaconfield would leave Wren alive through that. This of course assumed the Old Man would try to bring him down, which I doubted. More likely he’d use what I gave him to flip Beaconfield, put him back out on the street in Black House’s employ—the duke was worth more in his pocket than swinging on a rope.

  The only chance I had of getting the boy back safe was if I was holding the reins, and that meant I needed to play this tight, pass out enough to get sanction on the duke without tipping my hand so far that the Old Man decided to steal my play.

  I took a sweet from the dish, unwrapping the paper and popping the confection into my mouth. “That was just motive of course. I assume Guiscard already told you of the Blade’s connection to Operation Ingress.” The agent’s sudden willingness to help had never smelled right, but it wasn’t until I was sitting in front of his boss that I decided to voice my suspicions. It was something of a shot in the dark, and I was gratified to see surprise hiccup across the Old Man’s perfect composure. “After he failed to find any takers for his illicit services, the Blade moved on to plan B. Someone, probably Brightfellow, contracted out the abduction to the Kiren. When that didn’t work, they aced him and took the matter into their own hands. I can go on if you want—I know it’s been a long time since you did actual police work.”

 

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