Guard Against Dishonor h&f-5

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Guard Against Dishonor h&f-5 Page 18

by Simon R. Green


  it correctly, and you'll live to stand trial. You bought off a lot of people in

  the Guard while setting up this deal, but I'm interested in one name in

  particular. You bought yourself a Guard Captain. You know who I mean; the

  well-respected Captain, the one who no one would suspect. The one who made your

  drugs vanish from Guard Headquarters. I want to know who that Captain is. I want

  to know very badly. So you tell me the name, Morgan, or I swear I'll cut you

  into pieces right here and now."

  "Hawk, you can't do this," said Burns. "It's inhuman."

  "Shut up, Burns."

  "He has to stand trial, Hawk. He'll tell us everything we need to know, under a

  truthspell."

  "I need to know now! Talk to me, Morgan!"

  "Stop it, Hawk! I won't stand for this!"

  Hawk half turned to shout at Burns, and Morgan brought his knee up sharply into

  Hawk's groin. Air whistled in his throat as he fell backwards, momentarily

  paralysed by the pain. Morgan made a dash for the far door, but Mistique put

  herself between him and the door. Mists boiled up off her outstretched hands.

  Morgan produced another knife from somewhere and lunged at her. Burns ran him

  through from behind with his sword. Morgan sank slowly to his knees, still

  holding onto his knife. He coughed painfully, and blood ran thickly from his

  mouth. He fell forward and lay still, and Burns pulled his sword free. He knelt

  down beside the body, tried for a pulse at the neck, and shook his head. He got

  to his feet again, and a hand grabbed his shoulder from behind. He looked round,

  startled, and Hawk punched him in the mouth. Burns stumbled backwards, blood

  spilling down his chin. Hawk went after him, but Mistique grabbed him from

  behind and held him firmly.

  "Stop it, Hawk! That's enough!"

  Hawk struggled fiercely, but he was still weakened by Morgan's attack and he

  couldn't break her grip. His gaze was fixed on Burns. "You stupid bastard! I

  told you we needed him alive! How is he going to answer questions now?"

  "I'm sorry," said Burns indistinctly, wiping blood from his mouth with the back

  of his hand. "I didn't think… I just saw him lunging at Mistique, and I really

  thought he was going to kill her…"

  "I could have handled him," said Mistique.

  "Yes, I'm sure you could have," said Burns, looking at the blood smeared across

  his hand. "I didn't think… I'm sorry."

  "Damn you," said Hawk. "What are we going to do now? He was the only one who

  knew all the names." He shook his head sickly, then took a deep breath and let

  it out slowly. "It's all right, Mistique, you can let me go now. I'm all right."

  She let him go, and stood back. Hawk moved over to Morgan's body and knelt down

  beside it, wincing as pain shot through him. He'd managed to take some of

  Morgan's kneeing on his thigh, but the pain was still bad enough to make him

  move like an old man. He tried for a pulse, but couldn't find one. He searched

  the body slowly and methodically, but didn't come up with anything useful, apart

  from a small bunch of keys. He got to his feet again, with a little help from

  Mistique.

  "At least we've got the drugs back," he said brusquely. "And this time I'll make

  sure they don't go missing, even if I have to feed every damn package to the

  incinerator myself."

  "We ought to search the place before we go," said Burns. "There's always the

  chance he kept records of who was working for him, and who he was paying off."

  Hawk nodded curtly. "He probably had more sense than to leave something like

  that just lying about, but it's worth a look. Don't move anything, though. We'll

  leave the real search to the experts. Place is probably rigged with booby

  traps." A sudden thought struck him and he looked quickly at Mistique. "Or is

  this place going to collapse around our ears like the other one?"

  The sorceress shook her head. "Solid as rock. Whoever set up this place knew

  what he was doing."

  They headed for the far door, Mistique staying close by Hawk in case he needed

  to lean on her again. Burns kept a tactful distance. The sorceress cleared her

  throat uncertainly.

  "Hawk… would you really have used your axe on Morgan?"

  He smiled slightly. "I was bluffing. Mostly. I'm not really as bad as my

  reputation makes out."

  "You convinced me," said Mistique. "I've never seen anyone look so mad."

  "I wanted the name."

  "Hawk," said Mistique gently. "We already know the name."

  "So, did you find anything?" asked Commander Glen, leaning forward over his desk

  and staring intently at Hawk and Burns.

  Hawk shook his head. "Nothing useful. And Morgan didn't strike me as dumb enough

  to commit anything incriminating to paper anyway."

  Glen sniffed, and leaned back in his chair. "You're probably right. At least you

  had enough restraint not to wreck the place, for a change—even if you didn't

  leave anyone alive to answer questions."

  "What about the man-at-arms Mistique put to sleep?" said Burns. "And the woman

  Hawk knocked out?"

  "Hired muscle," said Glen dismissively. "They weren't far enough in to know

  anything useful. And speaking of Mistique, where is she? I want to hear her

  report, too."

  Hawk and Burns stared over Glen's head at the wall behind him. "She said she'd

  look in later," said Hawk. "She's… rather busy at the moment." He lowered his

  gaze abruptly, and fixed Glen with his single, cold eye.

  "Commander, there's something I need to discuss with you."

  "Yes," said Glen. "We have to talk about Captain Fisher. I've been hearing

  stories about her for some time now. As long as they were just stories I could

  afford to ignore them. You and Fisher were a good team; you got results. But I

  can't ignore this, Hawk. She's betrayed the security of the Peace Talks, and

  gone on the run. We have no idea where she is, or what she might be planning.

  And now there's mounting evidence that she's been working for Morgan all along."

  "I don't believe that," said Hawk. "I don't believe any of it."

  Glen looked at him steadily. "She's gone rogue. Hawk. I have issued a warrant

  for her arrest. There's a reward of five thousand ducats for anyone who brings

  her in, dead or alive."

  For a moment Hawk just looked back at him, his scarred face cold and impassive,

  saying nothing. "I'll find her," he said finally. "I'll find her, and bring her

  in. Call off your dogs, Commander."

  "I can't do that, Hawk. It's out of my hands now. And I can't let you go,

  either. You did a good job in recovering the super-chacal, but you upset a great

  many prominent people in the process. If you'd brought Morgan in alive, no one

  would have said anything, but as it is…"

  "That was my fault, Commander," said Burns, but Hawk and Glen didn't even look

  at him.

  "Now that Fisher's gone rogue," said Glen, "you've become suspect too, Hawk,

  through your relationship with her. Too many things have gone wrong around you

  just lately. No one trusts you anymore. I have a warrant for your arrest too,

  Hawk. I'm sorry."

  "You've got to let me find Fisher," said Hawk. "Please. Let me bring her in, and

  we'll prove o
ur innocence."

  "I'm sorry," said Glen. "I have my orders. Give me your axe, please."

  Hawk drew his axe, and the room suddenly became very tense. He hefted the weapon

  in his hand a moment, and then put it down on Glen's desk. The Commander relaxed

  a little, and Hawk hit him with a vicious left uppercut. Glen flew backwards out

  of his chair, slammed into the wall behind his desk, and slid unconscious to the

  floor. Burns opened his mouth to yell something, his hand already reaching for

  his sword. Hawk spun round, grabbed up his axe, and hit Bums across the head

  with the flat of the blade while Burns was still drawing his sword. He fell to

  the floor and lay there motionless, groaning quietly.

  Hawk would have liked to tie them both up, but a quick glance around showed him

  nothing he could use as a rope, and he didn't have the time, anyway. He hauled

  them both into Glen's private washroom, and locked the door on them. He took a

  last quick look round, and then left Glen's office and made his way casually

  through Headquarters to the main entrance. He smiled and nodded to people he

  passed, and they smiled and muttered automatically in return. Hawk kept his face

  calm, but his thoughts were in a turmoil. He had to find Isobel before anyone

  else did. He couldn't trust anyone else with the job.

  Isobel… I'm coming for you.

  Chapter Nine

  Under The Masks

  Fisher moved quietly through the back streets, trudging doggedly through the

  snow and slush, with her head bowed. The tattered grey cloak didn't do much to

  keep out the cold, but with the hood pulled well forward there was no way anyone

  was going to recognize her. After all, who would expect the bold and dashing

  Captain Fisher to be skulking through the worst part of town in rags she

  wouldn't normally have used to polish her boots? She seethed inwardly at the

  indignity, but kept her outer demeanor carefully calm and unobtrusive. Her

  disguise would only hold up as long as no one challenged it, and there were a

  hell of a lot of people who'd be only too happy to turn her in for whatever

  reward was currently on her head.

  Fisher had no doubt there was a reward. The Powers That Be needed a scapegoat,

  and she was tailor-made for the role. She could plead her innocence till she was

  blue in the face, but no one would give a damn. She had to be found guilty so

  that the Outremer delegates would be reassured and the Peace Talks could go on.

  They'd told her right from the beginning that she was expendable. Fisher grinned

  fiercely. That was their opinion. If they wanted her to be a rogue, she'd be

  one. And anyone who got in her way was going to regret it.

  She slowed her pace slightly as two ragged figures appeared out of a dark alley

  mouth and moved casually towards her. She caught brief glimpses of the knives

  half hidden under their cloaks, and turned to face them. She'd obviously

  overdone the unthreatening aspect of her disguise and made herself look an easy

  target. Fisher scowled. She couldn't afford to fight them; at best it would draw

  attention to her, particularly when she won, and at worst it might actually give

  away who she was. But she couldn't hope for any help, either. Not in the

  Northside. She swore under her breath, and let her hand move to her sword under

  cover of the cloak. There was never a bloody Constable around when you needed

  one.

  The two bravos moved to block her path, and she came to a halt. She pushed back

  her cloak to reveal the sword at her side, and lifted her head to give them her

  best glare. She'd put a lot of work and practice into that glare, and it had

  always served her well in the past. It suggested she was one hundred percent

  crazy, barely under control, and violent with it. The two bravos took in the

  glare and the sword, looked at each other, and then made their knives disappear,

  and moved casually off in another direction, as though they'd intended to go

  that way all along. Fisher let her cloak fall back to cover the sword, pulled

  her hood even lower over her face, and continued on her way, trying not to look

  too much in a hurry.

  She had to think of somewhere to go, somewhere she could hole up for a while

  till she could figure some way to get out of the city. She couldn't go home; it

  was the first place they'd think of, and was probably crawling with Guards by

  now, ransacking every room in search of evidence that wasn't there. A slow,

  sullen anger burned in her, at the thought of strangers trampling through her

  house, but she knew there was no point in brooding over it. Or the treasured

  possessions she'd have to leave behind when she finally found a way out of the

  city.

  She had to find somewhere she could stop and think, somewhere safe. And there

  were all sorts of things she'd have to get her hands on, things she'd need just

  to survive out in the wilds of the Low Kingdoms, in the dead of winter. Starting

  with a decent fur cloak. The cold cut right through the thin grey one she had

  now. And she'd need a horse and provisions… and a dozen other things, none of

  which she had the money to buy. Her money was back at the house. What there was

  of it.

  Her pace slowed as her thoughts churned furiously. She wasn't used to having to

  plan ahead. That had always been Hawk's responsibility. Hawk. The name cut at

  her briefly, like a razor drawn against unsuspecting skin. She wanted to go to

  him so badly, but she didn't dare. Everything she'd heard since she hit the

  streets suggested that Hawk had gone berserk, fighting and killing anyone who

  got between him and Morgan. Something bad must have happened, something so awful

  he no longer cared what happened to him as long as he got to Morgan. Her first

  impulse had been to find him and fight at his side, but she couldn't do that. By

  now there had to be a small army of Guards on her tail, and she'd be leading

  them straight to Hawk. And if he really had gone berserk, he'd die rather than

  be stopped.

  She couldn't let that happen.

  There must be somewhere she could go, somewhere they wouldn't think of looking.

  She trudged on, head down, not looking where she was going, as her mind

  floundered from one possibility to another before finally, reluctantly, settling

  on one. The Tolling Bell was a rancid little tavern, tucked away at the back of

  nowhere. The kind of place where they sold illegally strong drinks and the

  bartender had little conversation and even less of a memory for faces. Fisher

  had used the place before, when she needed to get away by herself for a while.

  When she'd had a row with Hawk, or just needed to be alone with her thoughts.

  She'd always taken pains to disguise her identity, so no one could find her till

  she was ready to be found. The Tolling Bell… Yes… she could be there in half an

  hour.

  Her head snapped up, suddenly alert as she heard tramping feet heading towards

  her. Six Guard Constables were moving purposefully in her direction. She quickly

  dropped her head again, and hunched over under her cloak to make herself look

  smaller. Her hand moved unobtrusively to the sword at her side. Six-to-one odds,

  and no one to watch her back. Bad odds, but she'd faced worse
in her time. She

  glanced cautiously around for possible escape routes, and only then realized the

  Guards weren't actually looking at her. Hope flared in her again, and she shrank

  back against the wall as the Guards tramped past, doing her best to look

  insignificant and harmless. The Constables hardly glanced at her as they passed,

  and continued on their way. Fisher waited where she was, listening to the sound

  of the footsteps dying gradually away, and then moved slowly on, careful not to

  look behind her. Her back crawled in anticipation of a sudden sword thrust, but

  it never came. She finally allowed herself to glance back over her shoulder, and

  found the Constables were almost out of sight at the end of the street. Her

  breath began to come a little more easily, and she increased her pace. She'd be

  safe at The Tolling Bell. For a while. She could sit down, and rest, and think.

  And just maybe she'd be able to see a way out of this mess.

  Hawk strode angrily down the main street, pulling his ratty brown cloak tightly

  about him. The cold cut through the ragged cloth as though it weren't there, but

  at least the hood concealed his face, as long as he remembered to keep his head

  bowed. Someone had to have found Glen and Burns by now, which meant word would

  soon be circulating on the streets that Hawk was fair game for anyone who felt

  like going after him. And with the kind of reward the Guard would be offering,

  there'd be no shortage of volunteers. Most of the usual bounty hunters would

  have more sense than to go after Captain Hawk, but there were always some stupid

  enough to take any risk, for a chance at the big money. And if enough of them

  got together, they might just manage it.

  Hawk scowled, and peered unobtrusively about him. They were after Fisher too. He

  had to find her, before anyone else did. Find her, and find out what had

  happened. Why she'd betrayed Haven, and the Guard. And him. There had to be a

  reason, a good reason. He believed that implicitly, because to think anything

  else would drive him insane. He trusted Isobel, but all the evidence pointed to

  her guilt. As a Guard, he'd learned to rely on the evidence before anything

  else, and never to trust his instincts or his feelings until he had hard

  evidence to back them up. But this was different. This was Isobel. He had to

  find her and hear her explanation. And then he'd know what to do next.

 

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