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Swords of Haven: The Adventures of Hawk & Fisher

Page 5

by Green, Simon R.


  “Right,” said Fisher. “If nothing else, our potential murderer must be pretty damn confident. Or crazy. Or both.”

  “Or he knows something we don’t.” Hawk scowled grimly. “Think we should say something to Blackstone?”

  “Not yet,” said Fisher. “What could we tell him that he doesn’t already know? Besides, like you said, who could get to him here?”

  “There’s no place so well-defended that someone determined enough can’t find a way in,” said Hawk firmly. “After all, it might not be a direct attack. It could be something that’s been planned in advance.”

  Fisher nodded slowly. “A prearranged spell, or curse. Or maybe they poisoned the food.”

  “Or the drink,” said Hawk.

  They looked at their empty glasses.

  “Unlikely,” said Fisher. “The witch said someone was planning a death tonight, not several. And anyway, Gaunt would surely be able to detect the presence of anything poisonous. Same for any spells.”

  “I suppose so,” said Hawk. “All right, poison is out. But a direct attack seems even more unlikely. In order to get to Blackstone, an assassin would have to get past all of Gaunt’s defenses, and then fight his way past us. There are assassins that good in the Low Kingdoms, but I don’t really think Blackstone’s important enough to warrant their attentions. No, I think a magical attack of some kind has to be the most likely.”

  “But according to the witch, this house is covered with defensive spells.”

  “Yeah.” Hawk shook his head disgustedly. “Nothing’s ever simple, is it? You know, Isobel, just once I think I’d like to work on a case that was simple and straightforward. Just for a change.”

  “So what are we going to do?” asked Fisher.

  “Stay close to Blackstone, and watch everyone else very closely.”

  “Sounds like an excellent idea,” said Dorimant.

  Hawk and Fisher looked him over coldly, and Dorimant didn’t miss the way their hands fell naturally to the weapons at their sides. He felt a sudden chill run down his spine. As a political adviser, Dorimant had mixed with some hard people in his time, but one look into Hawk’s cold eye was enough to convince him that everything he’d heard about Hawk and Fisher was true. These people were dangerous. He smiled at them calmly, and hoped they’d put the sweat on his brow down to the heat.

  “Allow me to introduce myself. Graham Dorimant, William’s political adviser.”

  Hawk nodded politely. “I’m...”

  “Oh, I know who you two are,” said Dorimant quickly. “Everyone in Haven’s heard of Hawk and Fisher.”

  “Fame at last,” said Fisher dryly.

  Dorimant chuckled. “Honest Guards are as rare as honest politicians. That’s why I particularly asked for you as William’s bodyguards.”

  “The witch says that Blackstone is in danger,” said Fisher bluntly. “She thinks that someone’s going to try and kill him tonight.”

  Dorimant frowned. “I wouldn’t take Visage too seriously, Captain Fisher. She’s good enough at her job, but she sees threats in every shadow.”

  “But Blackstone does have enemies,” said Hawk.

  “Oh, certainly. What politician doesn’t? And William’s policies aren’t exactly aimed at making him popular with the vested interests who make this city the cesspool it is. But when all is said and done, he’s safe here. Gaunt was telling me about some of his defences earlier, and I can assure you that nothing and nobody gets into this house unless Gaunt says so. Believe me, William has absolutely nothing to worry about tonight.”

  “Unless one of his guests turns out to be an assassin,” said Fisher.

  Dorimant looked at her sharply. “Captain Fisher, everyone at this party is a friend of William’s, and has been for years. Not one of them has anything to gain by his death. The only people at this party that I can’t personally vouch for are you and Captain Hawk. And your reputations suggest you lack the taste for assassination work.”

  “Yeah,” said Hawk. “The pay’s good, but the working conditions are lousy.”

  Fisher nodded solemnly. Dorimant looked from one to the other, and then smiled reluctantly.

  “Captain Hawk, Captain Fisher, right now William’s under a lot of pressure. His political opponents are doing their best to sabotage his new bill, and there have been a few death threats. Usual anonymous rubbish. I thought having you two around for the next few days might make him feel a little more secure. All you have to do is stick with him, and don’t let anyone within arm’s reach of him unless I vouch for them. All right?”

  “Sure,” said Hawk. “I’ve done bodyguarding work before.”

  “Good,” said Dorimant. “You do know you’ll be staying the night here, along with the rest of us?”

  “Yeah,” said Fisher. “We didn’t have time to pack a bag, but no doubt Gaunt can provide us with what we need.”

  “Of course,” said Dorimant. “I’ll have a word with him.”

  The doorbell rang, and Gaunt went into the hall to answer it. Hawk frowned slightly.

  “Why does a sorcerer like Gaunt answer his own door? Doesn’t he have any servants?”

  Dorimant smiled. “Gaunt doesn’t trust servants. Afraid they might be after his secrets, I suppose. Industrial espionage is rife among magicians.”

  “Secrets,” said Fisher. “What do you know about Gaunt, sir Dorimant?”

  “Not much. He’s a private man. William knows him better than I do. There are rumours he used to be sorcerer to the King, until they had a falling out. The rumours don’t say what they might have argued about. Gaunt’s a quiet sort, usually. Don’t think I’ve ever known him to raise his voice in anger. On the other hand, you know what he did in the Hook....”

  “Yeah.” Fisher scowled, her hand idly caressing the pommel of her sword. “I don’t trust sorcerers.”

  “Not many people do,” said Dorimant dryly. “But Gaunt is no threat to William. They’ve been friends for years.”

  He broke off as Gaunt came back into the parlour, accompanied by a tall, wiry man in his late twenties. He had a shock of long dark hair and a thick curly beard, so that most of his face was hidden from casual view. He smiled easily, but the smile didn’t reach his eyes. He was dressed in the latest fashion, and wore it well. Considering that the latest fashion included tightly cut trousers and a padded jerkin with a chin-high collar, this was no mean achievement. It would have been easy to dismiss him as a dandy, if it hadn’t been for the sword that hung at his left hip, in a well-worn scabbard. Blackstone and his wife went over to greet the newcomer.

  “Now there’s a man you can distrust,” said Dorimant quietly. “Edward Bowman. William’s right-hand man. A brilliant politician with a first-class mind. Watch him. The man’s a rat.”

  Hawk frowned, and started to ask him more, but Dorimant was already walking away, heading back to the witch Visage. Hawk looked back at Bowman. Gaunt and Blackstone were deep in conversation, leaving Katherine chatting with Bowman. Hawk’s eye narrowed as he watched them. There was nothing specific he could put his finger on, but there was something about the way Katherine and Bowman were talking together.... They were too friendly. They smiled too much, their concentration was too intense, and they touched each other politely but too often.

  “Yeah,” said Fisher. “They’re certainly glad to see each other, aren’t they?”

  “Probably just good friends,” said Hawk.

  “Sure. Sure.”

  The doorbell sounded again, and Gaunt disappeared into the hall. Blackstone moved over to join Bowman and Katherine. Hawk watched closely, but couldn’t see any obvious signs of tension between them. They all smiled a little too brightly and too often, but then, they were politicians.... Hawk sighed, and looked away.

  “I assume the bell means more guests,” he said tiredly. “That’s all we need; more suspects to watch.”

  “You worry too much,” said Fisher, pouring herself more of the fruit cordial. “Look, all we’ve got to do is kee
p the man alive for the next three days until his bill becomes law. After that, the pressure will be off, and he won’t need us anymore. Surely we can keep him out of trouble for three days.”

  Hawk shrugged, unconvinced. “I don’t like coming onto a case unprepared. We don’t know enough about what’s going on here, and we certainly don’t know enough about the people involved. Katherine Blackstone is acting out of character. Visage knows why, but won’t tell us. Instead, she tells us that Councillor Blackstone is in danger, in one of the best-defended houses in the city. Blackstone’s political adviser warns us about Blackstone’s right-hand man, who turns out to be very friendly with the Councillor’s wife. I’ve got a bad feeling about this, Isobel.”

  “You’re always getting bad feelings.”

  “And I’m usually right.”

  Fisher chuckled affectionately. “We’ve had a long hard day, my love. It’s just the tiredness talking, that’s all. Blackstone is perfectly safe here. We’re just window dressing. Now, have a drink, and relax a little. Okay?”

  “Okay.” Hawk smiled fondly at Fisher. “You were always the sensible one. What would I do without you, lass?”

  “Beats the hell out of me,” said Fisher, smiling. “Now, relax. Everything’s going to be fine.”

  Gaunt came back into the parlor, and Hawk’s heart sank. He knew the middle-aged couple with the sorcerer only too well. Lord and Lady Hightower were a prominent part of Haven’s High Society. They moved in all the right circles, and knew all the right people. In a very real sense, they were part of the moneyed and influential elite who controlled Haven. They were also, surprisingly, two of Blackstone’s strongest supporters.

  Lord Roderik Hightower was a stocky, medium-height man in his early fifties. His short-cropped hair was iron grey, and his piercing dark eyes stared unyieldingly from a harsh, weatherbeaten face. Only a few years earlier, he’d been the Chief Commander of the Low Kingdoms’ army, and a legend in his own lifetime. He always led his men into battle, and he was always the last to retreat. His grasp of strategy was second to none, and he had guts of solid steel. A soldier’s soldier. He was still solidly muscled, but signs of wear were finally beginning to show. He was getting slower, and old wounds gnawed at him when it rained. He’d retired from the army rather than accept the desk job they offered him, and had immediately looked for a new challenge with which to occupy himself. He finally settled on politics, and took on the campaign to clean up Haven with the same determination and gusto he’d shown in his army days.

  Hawk knew him from a year or so back. There had been a series of werewolf murders on the lower Northside, and Hawk had been one of the investigating Guards. It had been a complicated, messy case. Hawk had finally identified the shapechanger and destroyed it, but not before three more men had been killed. One of them was Hightower’s only son. Hawk’s superiors had stood by him, but Hightower still blamed him for his son’s death.

  Great, thought Hawk. Just what I needed. More complications.

  He looked curiously at Hightower’s wife, the Lady Elaine. A very well-preserved early fifties, she wore the latest fashion with style and dignity. Her dress was long and flowing, despite the muggy weather, and studded with semiprecious stones. She fanned herself constantly with an intricately painted paper fan, but otherwise seemed unaffected by the heat. She had a long mane of pure white hair and showed it off to advantage. Her face had a strong bone structure, and she was still stunningly good-looking, despite her years. All in all, she looked splendid, and she knew it. She held her husband’s arm protectively, and looked around Gaunt’s parlour with such poise that she seemed to be suggesting that simply by entering such a room she was most definitely slumming.

  Hawk felt an almost overwhelming urge to sneak up behind her and kick her in the bustle.

  Fisher leaned closer to Hawk. “Hightower ...” she said softly. “Wasn’t he the one who...”

  “Yeah,” said Hawk.

  “Maybe he’s forgotten by now.”

  “I doubt it.”

  Hightower looked across the room, saw Hawk and Fisher, and stiffened slightly. He spoke quietly to his wife, who looked at the two Guards as though they’d just crawled out from under a rock. She reluctantly let go of her husband’s arm and moved away to greet Blackstone. Lord Hightower glared at Hawk for a long moment, and then walked slowly across the length of the room to confront him. Hawk and Fisher bowed politely. Hightower didn’t bow in return. He waited for Hawk to straighten up, and then studied him coldly.

  “So. You’re William’s bodyguards.”

  “That’s right, my lord,” said Hawk.

  “I should have had you drummed out of the Guard when I had the chance.”

  “You tried hard enough, my Lord,” said Hawk calmly. “Luckily my superiors knew the facts of the matter. Your son’s death was a tragic accident.”

  “He’d still be alive if you’d done your job properly!”

  “Perhaps. I did my best, my Lord.”

  Hightower sniffed, and looked disparagingly at Fisher. “This is your woman, is it?”

  “This is my partner and my wife,” said Hawk. “Captain Fisher.”

  “And if you raise your voice to my husband again,” said Fisher calmly, “I’ll knock you flat on your arse, right here and now.”

  Hightower flushed angrily, and started to splutter a reply. And then his voice died away as he looked into Fisher’s steady eyes and saw that she meant it. Hightower had a lifetime’s experience of fighting men, and knew without a shadow of a doubt that Fisher would kill him if she thought he was a threat to her husband. He recalled some of the things he’d heard about Hawk and Fisher, and suddenly they didn’t seem quite so impossible after all. He sniffed again, turned his back on the two Guards, and walked back to his wife with as much dignity as he could muster.

  “How to make friends and influence people,” said Hawk.

  “To hell with him,” said Fisher. “Anyone who wants to take you on has to go through me first.”

  Hawk smiled at her fondly. “I knew there had to be some reason why I put up with you.” His smile faded away. “I liked Hightower’s son. He hadn’t been in the Guard long, but he meant well, and he tried so hard. He was just in the wrong place at the wrong time, and he died because of it.”

  “What happened on that werewolf case?” said Fisher. “That’s another one you never told me much about.”

  “Not much to tell. The case started badly and went downhill fast. We didn’t have much to go on, and what little we thought we knew about werewolves turned out to be mostly untrue. According to legend, the werewolf in human shape is excessively hairy, has two fingers the same length, and has a pentacle on his palm. Rubbish, all of it. Also according to the legend, the man takes on his wolf shape when the full moon rises, and only turns back again when the moon goes down. Our shapechanger could turn from man to wolf and back again whenever he felt like it, as long as the full moon was up. That made finding him rather difficult. We got him eventually. Ordinary-looking guy. You could walk right past him in the street and never notice him. I killed him with a silver sword. He lay on the ground with the blood running out of him, and cried, as though he couldn’t understand why any of this was happening to him. He hadn’t wanted to kill anyone; the werewolf curse made him do it. He hadn’t wanted to die either, and at the end he cried like a small child that’s been punished and doesn’t know why.”

  Fisher put an arm across his shoulders and hugged him.

  “How very touching,” said an amused voice. Hawk and Fisher looked round to see Edward Bowman standing to their right, smiling sardonically. Fisher moved unhurriedly away from Hawk. Bowman put out his hand, and Hawk shook it warily. Like Blackstone, Bowman had a politician’s quick and impersonal handshake. He shook Fisher’s hand too.

  “Enjoying the party?” he asked, smiling impartially at Hawk and Fisher.

  “It has its ups and downs,” said Hawk dryly.

  “Ah yes,” said Bowman. “I saw yo
u and Hightower. Unfortunate business about his son. You’d do well to be wary of Hightower, Captain Hawk. The Lord Roderik is well known for his ability to hold a grudge.”

  “What’s his connection with Blackstone?” asked Fisher. “I’d have thought a man like Hightower, old army and High Society, would be conservative by nature, rather than a reformer.”

  Bowman smiled knowingly. “Normally you’d be right; and thereby hangs a tale. Up until a few years ago, Lord Roderik was a devoted advocate of the status quo. Change could only be for the worse, and those who actually lobbied for reforms were nothing but malcontents and traitors. And then the King summoned Lord Hightower to Court, and told him it had been decided by the Assembly that he was too old to lead the army anymore, and he would have to step down to make way for a younger man. According to my spies at Court, Hightower just stood there and looked at the King like he couldn’t believe his ears. Apparently he hadn’t thought the mandatory retirement from the field at fifty would apply to someone as important as him. The King was very polite about it, even offered Hightower a position as his personal military adviser, but Hightower wouldn’t have any of it. If he couldn’t be a real soldier, he’d resign his commission. I don’t think he really believed they’d go that far. Until they did.

  “He was never the same after that. Thirty years of his life given to the army, and he didn’t even get a pension, because he resigned. Not that he needed a pension, of course, but it was the principle of the thing. He came back here, to his home and his family, but couldn’t seem to settle down. Tried to offer his advice and expertise to the Council, but they didn’t want to know. I think he joined up with Blackstone originally just to spite them. Told you he carried grudges. Then he discovered Reform, and he’s been unbearable ever since. There’s no one more fanatical than a convert to a Cause. Still, there’s no denying he’s been very useful to us. His name opens quite a few doors in Haven.”

  “It should,” said Hawk. “His family owns a fair chunk of it. And his wife’s family is one of the oldest in the city.” He looked thoughtfully at Bowman. “How did you get involved with Blackstone?”

 

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