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Hex and the City

Page 7

by Simon R. Green


  “So you say,” I said. “But then, to paraphrase another great thinker, you would say that, wouldn’t you?”

  She looked at me, still smiling, but her eyes were cold, cold. “Did you ever let your lover see the stranger in your soul? All the dark, petty, hidden things you never admit, even to yourself? Did you ever bind yourself utterly to another person, even in the hottest fires of the Inferno? My Sidney did. I have never known such a thing before. There is no love, in Hell. That’s why it’s Hell. I need to know why he feels the way he feels about me. I need to understand, even if I don’t know why.”

  “But you’ve known so many men,” I said.

  “Oh yes,” said Pretty Poison. “You have no idea how many, and none of them ever meant a damned thing to me. They said they loved me, here on Earth, but down in the sunless lands they all sang a different tune. They would have betrayed me a hundred times over, for just one more moment of life and light. I never mattered a damn to any of them. Sidney…is different.”

  “Pretty Poison was the only one of her kind not to take part in the recent angel war over the Nightside,” Sinner said mildly. “Because I asked her not to. Make of that what you will. Now, word travels quickly in the Nightside. And the word is, you’ve been hired to investigate the true beginnings of the Nightside. By no less a Being than the mercurial Lady Luck herself. You do mix with the most interesting people, John. I have to say, the true nature and purpose of the Nightside is a mystery that has long fascinated me. Do I take it you wish me to accompany you on this most dangerous of quests?”

  “Got it in one,” I said. “With you and Madman as human shields, I might get through this case alive after all. If I can drag you away from your vital researches, of course…”

  Sinner closed the Bible and drummed his fingers on the cover. “My only hope of ever getting into Heaven lies in doing good deeds,” he said flatly. “And I mean really impressive, major good deeds. I think keeping you alive in the face of all the really nasty Powers and Dominations who will undoubtedly try to kill you should qualify as good deeds above and beyond the call of duty.”

  “But what about me, Sidney?” said Pretty Poison. “You wouldn’t leave me behind, would you? You know we can only be together forever in Hell.”

  Sinner smiled, and patted her hand fondly. “I wouldn’t go to Heaven without you. Because if you weren’t there, it wouldn’t be Heaven.”

  “Dear Sidney.” She leaned over, kissed him on the forehead, and tousled his hair with a lazy finger.

  Sinner fixed me with a firm stare. “If I go with you on your quest, Pretty Poison comes with me. I will not be parted from her.”

  “Hell, I’m bringing Madman,” I said. “The more firepower, the better.”

  “I heard that,” said Madman, from deep in the stacks. “I am not firepower. I am a deterrent.”

  “The truth concerning the origins of the Nightside is long buried,” Sinner said thoughtfully. “Probably with good cause. It stands to reason that an appalling place like this would have a truly awful beginning. The roots of the Nightside are almost certainly soaked in blood and suffering. You must understand, John—should the secrets we discover pose a threat to the safety and stability of the people of the Nightside, I could not allow them to be made public. Above all, I always strive to do no harm. Is this an acceptable condition to you?”

  “Of course,” I said. “I only report to my client, in this case Lady Luck. What she might do with the information afterwards is something you and she would have to sort out between you. Is that acceptable to you?”

  He nodded, and we all smiled at each other in a very civilised way. Behind the smiles, I was quietly seething. Having Pretty Poison along struck me as a really bad idea. Things were going to be complicated enough without having a demon succubus from Hell peering over my shoulder. (Assuming I ever was stupid enough to turn my back on her.) But it was clear her presence was a deal-breaker for Sinner, so I had no choice but to agree, for now. Maybe we could use her for defusing booby-traps.

  “Oh dear,” Sinner said abruptly, rising to his feet. “I do believe something bad is about to happen.”

  I looked quickly about me. “What makes you say that?”

  “Because Madman’s music has just got all tense and dramatic.”

  He was right. It had. And thirteen men in smart city suits were strolling arrogantly through the Library stacks towards us. A Devil’s Dozen of proud, purposeful-looking men, all of them heading straight for me. The few remaining scholars were gathering up their papers and fading away into the surrounding stacks with remarkably speed and dexterity. Even the Library staff were making themselves scarce. They didn’t want anything to do with what was about to happen, and I didn’t blame them. I knew who these thirteen men were. These were Walker’s famous, or more properly infamous, I Mean Business people—the legendary Reasonable Men. So called because Walker sent them out to reason with people who were causing the Authorities particular concern.

  Every one of the Reasonable Men was a refined gentleman, in an immaculate suit set off by the old-school tie, moving with that calm, arrogant grace that only comes from centuries of breeding and lording it over the peasants. Some of them looked around the Library and sniffed superciliously, as though they were slumming just by being there; and perhaps they were. I didn’t underestimate them just because they didn’t have a chin among them and looked like a bunch of upper-class twits. The Reasonable Men were all trained combat magicians. Their leader crashed to a halt right in front of me and tilted his head back the better to look down his nose at me.

  Jimmy Hadleigh, the professional snob, had a lot of nose to look down, and cold blue eyes that surely only the truly unkind would point out were just that little bit too close together. Otherwise handsome, with jet-black hair, his mouth came with a built-in sneer. He wore a splendidly cut suit, and smart grey gloves, so he wouldn’t get his hands dirty. We knew each other. In passing. We’d never got on, partly because he considered himself an authority figure, and mostly because I considered him an overbearing little shit. Walker must be really upset with me if he’d unleashed Jimmy Hadleigh and his dogs. He looked at Sinner, Pretty Poison, and Madman, and dismissed them all with one flick of a perfect eyebrow.

  “Oh God, Jimmy,” I said. “Teach me how to do that with just one eyebrow. It’s so damned impressive.”

  “Taylor, dear boy,” said Jimmy, in his best icy drawl, ignoring my attempts at humour as he always did. “I knew Walker would send me after you one of these days. Always poking your proletarian nose into the business of your betters. But now it seems you’ve really upset our revered lords and masters, and Walker has decided he doesn’t love you any more. You’re to come with us. Right now. Be a good boy and do as you’re told. Because if you don’t come along quietly, I’m afraid we’ve been authorised to do severely unpleasant things to you and bring you along anyway. Guess which way we’d prefer.”

  The Reasonable Men chuckled quietly behind him, striking casual aristocratic poses and making lazy magical gestures with their long, slender fingers. No-one was ever that languid by accident, the affected little mommy’s boys. I still didn’t underestimate them. A sense of power only barely held in check hung about them, ready to be released at any moment. Combat magicians were trained to take on major players. They were serious, dangerous people, so of course I just leaned back against a stack, crossed my arms, and sneered back at them. The day I couldn’t out-think and outwit a bunch of pompous public school punks, I’d retire. I’d run rings around Powers and Dominations in my day. I was pleased to see some of the smiles disappear from their faces as it became clear I wasn’t going to come quietly and that I wasn’t impressed by their reputation. I just hoped they were secretly impressed by mine.

  “Good to see you again, Jimmy,” I said. “You’re looking very inbred today. So, the Authorities don’t want the origins of the Nightside investigated? Well, tough, because I’m going to do it anyway. If only because I want to know. Pardon me
if I indulge in a little name-dropping, but I was hired by Lady Luck herself, and my companions here are Sinner and Madman. Which basically means I outnumber you. So you run off back to Walker, Jimmy, like the good little errand boy you are, and tell him John Taylor declines to be bothered, bullied, intimidated, or interfered with. And be quick about it, before I think of something amusing to do to you.”

  Several of the Reasonable Men shifted uneasily, but Jimmy Hadleigh didn’t so much as flinch. “How very tedious,” he murmured. “I’ve never believed any of the things they say about you, Taylor. You’re just a dreary little man with a good line in bluff and deceit. We, however, are the real thing. So now we get to do this the hard way, and you only have yourself to blame.” He looked at Sinner. “You—stay out of this. Return to your books and your brooding. We’re not here for you.”

  Sinner laughed softly. “Walker would have to send a lot better than you, to take me anywhere against my will. And unfortunately for you, John is under my protection. Because I’ve decided I want to know the secret origins of the Nightside, too.”

  “Stand back,” said Jimmy Hadleigh, and his voice was very cold.

  “I have seen much scarier things than you, in my time,” said Sinner. “Run away, little man. While you still can.”

  Two bright red spots of pure fury appeared on Jimmy’s pale cheeks at being so openly defied, and he stabbed one hand at Sinner in a mystical gesture, deadly energies sparking and spitting on the air. I decided things had gone far enough, and kicked Jimmy in the balls. His eyes bulged, and he bent sharply forward at the waist, as though bowing to me. And Pretty Poison stepped forward and ripped Jimmy’s head right off his shoulders. No-one threatened her Sinner and got away with it while she was around. She kissed the head on its slack lips, then tossed it aside. The headless body sank to its knees, its hands twitching aimlessly, while blood fountained from the ragged stump of the neck. Stray magics discharged harmlessly around the body, and blood splashed against the surrounding bookshelves. Sinner looked reproachfully at Pretty Poison, who just shrugged prettily.

  The Reasonable Men were crying out in shock and horror and anger, only to fall silent as Sinner and I turned to look at them. Their faces froze with angry determination, and their hands snapped through mystical designs, throwing magic at us. The first spells discharged harmlessly around Sinner, and backfired horribly on a few of the spell-casters, turning them inside out. Red and purple horrors collapsed to the Library floor, squirting blood and inner liquids onto the dusty air. Other magics homed in on Pretty Poison, who snatched them out of mid air and ate them up, grinning like a naughty schoolgirl. She was a fallen angel and older than the world, and the minor magics of men were nothing to her.

  I pulled a pair of chaos dice from my coat’s inner pocket and tossed them into the midst of the Reasonable Men; and suddenly everything that could go wrong for them did. Spells misfired, muscles spasmed, and they fell over each other like clowns. One of them drew a heavy handgun, its gleaming steel acid-etched with potent runes and sigils. He fired it at Sinner. The bullet punched a neat hole in Sinner’s chest, but no blood flowed. He stood looking down at the hole for a moment, almost sadly, then he looked at the shocked Reasonable Man.

  “Magic guns? I have known the torments of Hell, boy. But still, you really shouldn’t have done that. It wasn’t respectful. Pretty Poison?”

  “Of course, darling Sidney.”

  And Pretty Poison surged forward, moving almost too quickly for human eyes to follow. She raged among the Reasonable Men, tearing them, literally, limb from limb with awful, impossible strength, laughing breathily all the while. Some tried to run, but she was quicker. While they were distracted, I put my back up against a towering bookshelf, slammed my weight against it, and overturned the whole damn thing onto two of the Reasonable Men. The great weight crushed them mercilessly to the floor, and they didn’t move again. And almost as quickly as that, it was over. It was quiet again in the Library, the loudest sound the slow dripping of blood from various surfaces. The Reasonable Men were all dead. It wasn’t what I wanted; but this was the kind of thing that happened when you allied yourself with people like Sinner and Pretty Poison. She was looking around at all the terrible things she’d done and smiling brightly. I looked around for Madman and found that even he’d got involved, in the end. Somewhere along the way he’d decided he was in a Samurai film. He was wearing a kimono and standing over a dead Reasonable Man with a bloody katana in his hands. He’d chopped the poor bastard into bits. He looked down at the scattered bloody pieces before him and scowled balefully.

  “Well? Have you had enough? Answer me!”

  It would have been funny, if the man hadn’t been so very dead.

  Pretty Poison came tripping daintily between the corpses to embrace her Sinner and make sure he was okay. He looked sadly at her, and at all the things she’d done, but said nothing. Pretty Poison snuggled up against him, not even breathing hard. She noticed there was blood on her hands, and sucked the blood off her fingers one by one, savouring it. She saw the disappointment in Sinner’s face and pouted like a child.

  “I’m sorry, Sidney, but no-one gets to hurt you while I’m around. And after all, a girl has to follow her impulses.”

  Sinner sighed and looked out over the scattered bodies. “We should have left one alive, to take a message back to Walker.”

  “Oh, I think he’ll get the message,” I said. “Thirteen dead combat magicians makes for one hell of a powerful statement. Walker…is not going to be pleased about this.”

  “Good,” said Madman, back in his old clothes again. “Never liked the man. He tried to have me locked up once. Well, several times, actually.”

  “Still,” I said, thinking it through, “Perhaps I’d better go and have a word with him, smooth things over. Or he and his various bully boys will be haunting us every step of the way. Yes, I’ll go and talk with the man. I know how to handle Walker.”

  “Should we come with you?” said Sinner.

  “I think I’ll do better alone,” I said. “This calls for diplomacy, fast-talking, and an outrageous amount of bluffing. Not blood and guts all over the carpet. And I can’t have him thinking I need other people to back me up when I talk with him. Walker notices things like that. So keep Madman here with you and try to keep him out of trouble till I get back.”

  Sinner winced. “Please. Don’t be long.”

  I made my way out of the Library, smiling apologetically at the various members of staff I passed, and called Cathy at my office, to see if she knew where Walker might be found, just at the moment.

  “Oh sure,” she said almost immediately. “No problem. I’ll just check the computers. We subscribe to a service that keeps constant track on all the real movers and shakers in the Nightside, and lets us know where they are at any given moment, through constant updating.”

  “We do?” I said.

  “I knew you weren’t paying attention at my last briefing! Honestly, John, you never listen to a thing I say…Now, Walker, Walker…Ah yes. He’s currently dining at his Club. Alone. Anything else I can do for you? How are you getting on with Sinner and Madman?”

  “It’s been…interesting,” I said, and hung up. I didn’t want to worry her.

  FOUR

  Warning Shots

  Going to see Walker is a lot like visiting the dentist; it may be necessary, but it’s never going to be much fun. Walker, that quiet and refined gentleman in his neat city suit, is the public face of the Authorities, those shadowy background forces who run things in the Nightside, inasmuch as anybody does, or can. Walker always seems to know everything that’s going on in the Nightside; but if that were really true, he’d have had me arrested, suppressed, or killed long ago. Still, sending the Reasonable Men to haul me away by main force was certainly a new step in our complicated relationship. He’d never hesitated to threaten or even blackmail me in the past, when he wanted me to do something dangerous and expendable for him, or just as often, stop
me doing whatever it was I was already up to. But sending the Reasonable Men—that was just downright nasty.

  There are many private and even secretive Clubs in the Nightside, and nearly all of them are clustered together in a very discreet and select area called, not surprisingly, Clubland. A quiet little square in a quiet little neighbourhood, regularly patrolled and even better guarded. These Clubs exist to provide secure meeting places for the kind of groups whose beliefs or practices are so extreme that the outside world wouldn’t tolerate their existence for one moment. The Clubs provide a haven for those of like tastes to band together, protect their interests, and pool their information. And do the things they need to do, behind securely locked doors. These Clubs aren’t about religion; you find that on the Street of the Gods. And they’re not about sex; you can find that anywhere in the Nightside. No, these Clubs are strictly for the distinct and the damned. For example: The Tribes of the Night, a Club whose membership consists solely of vampires, werewolves, and ghouls. (No half-breeds.) Then there’s Club Dead, exclusively for the many creations of Baron Von Frankenstein and his descendants, who have been very busy bunnies since the nineteenth century, with varying degrees of skill and success. (Club motto: We belong Dead.) And, of course, Club Life, for all the various forms of immortal. (Club dues are paid thanks to the miracle of compound interest.) Club motto: Live forever, or die trying. The old jokes are always the best.

  Walker belonged to the oldest, proudest, and most select Gentleman’s Club in the history of the Nightside: the Londinium Club. Where everything that matters is discussed by everyone who matters, and decisions that affect everyone’s lives are made over dinner. I’ve never been sure the Londinium Club is really as ancient as the old Roman name implies, but I wouldn’t rule it out either. The front entrance is old, old stone, and the designs surrounding the huge oaken door certainly date from the Roman period. The bas-reliefs feature activities that would have made Caligula blush, and a few that might have made him vomit. The Londinium Club represents power, and that has to include the power to do anything.

 

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