Daniel Polansky - Tomorrow, the Killing

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Once he was a hero of the Great War, and then a member of the dreaded Black House. Now he is the criminal linchpin of Low Town.
His name is Warden.
He thought he had left the war behind him, but a summons from up above brings the past sharply, uncomfortably, back into focus. General Montgomery's daughter is missing somewhere in Low Town, searching for clues about her brother's murder. The General wants her found, before the stinking streets can lay claim to her, too.

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‘Looks pretty heavenly to me.’

I flicked my smoke into the gutter, and the urchin sprinted off.

‘Thoughts?’ Crispin asked.

‘I could get breakfast.’

‘It must be quite a burden, such depth of perception.’

‘I muddle through,’ I said, heading towards a nearby restaurant. We took a seat at a table. Crispin ordered steak and eggs and I did the same.

‘After we finish up here,’ he said, ‘I think I’ll pay a visit to the Veterans’ Association, see if I can’t shake anything loose.’

‘Yes, Montgomery always struck me as a man likely to bend in the face of the wind.’

‘A man was murdered. We find murderers.’

‘Do we? When was the last time we were in Low Town, looking over the corpse of a petty criminal?’

‘I imagine our boy had people. I imagine they’d be interested in bringing his killer to justice.’

‘His mother disowned him when he popped out a cripple, and if he’s got siblings they’re too smart to admit it.’ The server brought over two cups of coffee, black and lukewarm. ‘Three Timorys a day find themselves dead in Low Town.’

‘They aren’t killed by armed rebels, advocating overthrow of the state.’

‘Neither was this one, best as we know.’

‘Best as we can prove.’

‘As you like.’ But I wasn’t happy about it either, and couldn’t stay silent. ‘What do you care if the Association wants to cut up a few drug dealers? It saves us the trouble.’

‘He’ll move on to the syndicates soon enough. Word is, Roland’s been making threats toward the Giroies.’

‘You on their payroll?’ That was a joke, of course, if not a particularly good one. Crispin was honest to a degree that I found quite tiring. Also, he was fabulously rich.

‘I’d prefer if Rigus didn’t descend into open warfare. Besides, you know as well as I do that Roland Montgomery doesn’t give a damn about the mobs. Taking them on just serves to sharpen his blade. Once he’s consolidated his position in Low Town, he’ll start eyeing up the rest of the Empire.’

‘Which makes this above our pay grade, you know that. Montgomery wants to take his shot, there are people out there who’ll return it.’

‘So we stand aside while Special Ops handles it? A knife in the dark or a few drops of Spite’s Bloom in his liquor?’

‘Them or one of the syndicates. I don’t imagine they’ll be pleased to watch Montgomery go after their livelihood indefinitely.’

‘Just let the trash take care of their own?’

‘There are some decent people in Special Ops.’

‘No,’ he said, ‘there aren’t.’

There were a lot of meanings in that last sentence, and I took a slow minute to work through them.

‘You still thinking about trading up?’ Crispin asked.

‘I think about a lot of things.’

‘You can’t trust the Old Man,’ he said. ‘Whatever he’s offering, it’s not worth it.’

‘Not to you.’

At the center there was something that we both knew but never voiced. Crispin was rich, and cultured, and powerful, and I was none of those things. Crispin could walk off the job and spend the rest of his life coursing hare or drinking tea or whatever the hell it is the rich do when they aren’t bleeding the rest of us. He didn’t need to put himself on the block to climb the ladder – he’d slipped out the womb and landed on the highest rung.

Crispin and I were a lot alike, but that was one thing we’d never share. He needed nothing, and I wanted everything.

The meal came and we ate it. Looking at the stringy gray meat we’d have been better off throwing it into the mud. But we didn’t throw it into the mud, we ate it.

Crispin paid the bill. ‘I’m going to visit Montgomery, see if he hasn’t got anything to say. Feel like coming?’

‘I’ve got better ways to waste time.’

‘I’ll see you later, then.’

We parted at the next intersection.

Black House looked the same then as it did now, but I saw it differently. The guard manning the front gave me a quick salute when I walked in, even though he was the same rank. I was a smart man to salute. Things were going my way – I was rising like a cork.

But still I wasn’t there yet, and I hadn’t had much cause to spend time on the second floor. So I went slow, making sure I remembered each turn, that I didn’t get fumbled up by the fact that every hallway and office looked the same. I could have asked directions of course, but getting lost inside headquarters didn’t exactly fit with the image I was trying to present.

His door was open, once I found it. His door was always open, he would often say.

‘Agent, so lovely to see you again.’ He gave a kindly little nod, as if flattered that I’d chosen to honor him with my attention. ‘Have you given any thought to my offer?’

I took the proffered chair across from him. My hands instinctively reached for the pouch of tobacco inside my coat, and I forced them back down onto my lap. The Old Man allowed no one to smoke in his office – one of the prerogatives of owning the country.

‘I’ve been kicking it around,’ I said.

‘And have you come to any conclusions?’

‘I don’t see what good martyring the man does us.’

‘Better a dead saint than a live one.’

‘I’m not sure you fully appreciate the esteem he’s held in amongst his people. If they see our hand in it, we’ll have problems that make the current slate look positively sunny by comparison. There’s no point in extinguishing a fire while lighting a fuse.’

‘I’ve made arrangements to ensure that their future conduct will be more . . . reasonable.’

‘Those arrangements would be?’

His pink lips covered his smile. It returned brighter than ever, and I knew I was pushing too hard. ‘Of no concern to you.’

‘I’m just making sure of the big picture.’

‘You don’t need to be sure of it,’ he said. ‘I’m sure of it. You only need to be sure of your own tiny part. It would behoove you to remember that you aren’t yet a member of Special Operations.’

‘I’ve been an Agent of the Crown for the last two years,’ I said. ‘And served it loyally for a half decade before that,’ I said. I wasn’t really angry at the slight, but I felt it better to pretend.

He leaned back in his chair and settled his hands around the slight round of his belly. ‘But you haven’t served me.’

And therein lay the rub. Special Operations were the elite of Black House, a few dozen men that pulled the strings of Empire, faceless centurions making sure the foundations held together. That was power, real power, to get a peek at the machinery that whirred beneath the surface, bend it as you saw fit. That was power a slum kid from Low Town could only dream about. Had dreamt about, long nights sleeping in the gutter and swearing to get out of it.

Of course, like anything else worth having, it came at a price.

‘Well?’ the Old Man asked after a while, as if the answer was of no concern. ‘What’s it to be?’

16

I spent the first half hour of the next morning in bed, tracing the cracks in the ceiling. One upside to the drought was that it made the spiderweb fracturing of my home solely an aesthetic concern. When the weather broke I’d need to find someone to fix it, or spend the rainy season getting dripped on.

I put that out of my head and pulled on my shirt, then my pants, then my boots. Then I sat back down and removed them again, replacing them with the sweat-stained fabric I’d worn during my last meeting with Edwin Montgomery.

The plants in the general’s garden had gone from wilted to dead since I’d last been there, victims of the unrelenting heat. After forty-five minutes in the sun I thought I might join them, lie down next to the withered rose bush and stop breathing. I had to bang at the door for a long time before a servant opened it, squarely built and about my age, but with a mane stained white as an octogenarian’s.

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