Sweet Silver Blues by Glen Cook


  “How soon can we leave?”

  “You in a hurry, Morley? You need to get out of town fast? That why you’re being so agreeable about going into the Cantard?”

  Dotes shrugged.

  A shrug was answer enough.

  Considering Morley’s talents and reputation, it would take somebody heavy to have enough clout to scare him. In my mind somebodies that heavy narrowed down to a crowd of one. The big guy himself. The kingpin. “Since when is Kolchak into bug racing, Morley?”

  He popped down out of the window. His voice lingered behind him. “You’re too damned smart for your own good, Garrett. It’s going to catch up with you someday. I’ll be in touch. Come on, you lummoxes. Dojango! Put that back. Doris!” He sounded like a muleteer trying to get a wagon started.

  I went back to bed thinking I’d better use some of Tate’s money to get a new window put in. Maybe a flashy piece with my name leaded in colors.

  11

  This old universe hasn’t got one notion of the meaning of the word mercy where I’m concerned. I just got to snoozing when the door began shivering like a drumhead again.

  “Going to have to do something about this,” I muttered as I hit the floor. “Like maybe move and not tell anybody.”

  I opened up and found uncle Lester and the boys outside. “You guys decide to forget the whole thing, I hope?” I noticed that two of the kids had gotten into something rough. They showed plenty of bruises and bandages and one had an arm in a sling. “What happened?”

  “Unfriendly visitors. Willard wants to talk to you about it.”

  “All right. I’m on my way.” I took just long enough to make myself presentable, gulp some water, and pick up the lead-weighted head-thumper.

  Willard Tate was in a state. He waited, wringing his hands. All my life I have heard that expression. Except for a maiden aunt whose every breath was an act of high drama, I’d never seen it before.

  “What happened?” Uncle Lester was a clam. Maybe he was afraid if I knew too much I’d turn around.

  Tate pumped my hand with both of his. “Thank you for coming. Thank you. I didn’t know what else to do.”

  “What happened?” I asked again as he clung to my hand with one of his and dragged me like a stubborn child. Uncle Lester and the boys tagged along. I spotted a pale-faced Rose watching as we crossed the garden, headed for Denny’s apartment.

  Tate did not tell me. He showed me.

  The place was a wreck. The apprentices were still cleaning up. Several of them wore bandages and bruises. Some wise soul had barred entry from the street by nailing boards across the doorframe.

  Tate pointed.

  The body lay in the middle of the room, belly down, one hand stretched toward the door.

  “What happened?” I asked again.

  Third time was a charm.

  “It happened around midnight. I had the boys in watching, just in case, because you made me nervous the way you talked. Five men broke through the street door. The boys were smart. Odie came and woke everybody up. The others hid and let the burglars go downstairs. So we ambushed them when they tried to leave.

  “We just wanted to capture them. But they panicked and started a fight, and they weren’t shy about trying to hurt us. And now we’re stuck with that. ”

  I knelt to look at the dead man’s face. He had started to puff up already. But I could still see the cuts and scrapes he had picked up flying through the window at my place.

  “Did they get away with anything?”

  “I did a count,” Uncle Lester said. “The gold and silver is all there.”

  “They weren’t after gold or silver.”

  “Huh?” All the Tates are brilliant. But they hide their light under a bushel. Maybe it’s a business reflex.

  “They were looking for Denny’s papers. His letters to the woman. I took care of hiding most everything, but there could have been something I overlooked. Those papers might be worth more than any amount of metal they could haul out of here.”

  Old Man Tate looked dumbfounded, so I told him about my little chat with Denny’s partners. He did not want to believe me. “But that’s—”

  “Trading with the enemy when you take the costume off it and look it straight in the face.”

  “I know my son, Mr. Garrett. Denny wouldn’t betray Karenta.”

  “Did you hear me say anything about treason?” I thought it, though. Mainly in the context of what happened to folks foolish enough to get caught trading with the Venageti. I have no moral reservations about that. The war is a struggle between two gangs of nobles and wizards trying to grab control of mines likely to give their possessors near mastery of the world. Their motives are no higher than those displayed in squabbles between street gangs right here in TunFaire.

  Being Karentine, I would prefer the gang running my country to win. I love being with a winner. Everybody does. But it doesn’t hurt my feelings if somebody besides the lords makes a little profit from the squabble. I explained that to Tate.

  “The problem is, the connection is still alive,” I said. “And some pretty tough boys want to keep it that way. Meaning they don’t want you and me meddling. Do you follow me?”

  “And they want Denny’s papers and letters and whatnots so they can keep contact with the woman?”

  “You catch on fast, Pop. They’ll let their claim to the metals go for the papers. And Denny will live on forever in letters he never wrote.”

  He thought about it. There was a part of him that wanted to grab the big score while it was there for the grabbing. But there was a part of him that was crazy stubborn, too. Maybe if he had been a little poorer . . . But somewhere along the way he had made up his mind and set it in concrete. Changed circumstances would not budge him. “Iwill meet this woman, Mr. Garrett.”

  “It’s your neck,” I said. And tried to time a meaningful pause. “And your family’s. That could be one of the boys on the floor, attracting flies.”

  I got to him that time. He puffed up. His face got red. His eyes bugged out, which is a sight in the half elfin. His mouth opened. He began to shake.

  But he did not let it get hold of him. Somehow, he turned it off. After half a minute, he said, “You’re right, Mr. Garrett. And it’s a risk due more consideration than I have given it. If, as you say, those men were army friends of Denny’s who survived the Cantard, it’s damned lucky several of the boys weren’t killed instead of that poor fellow.”

  “Like you said, they panicked. They just wanted to get away. But next time they’ll be looking for trouble.”

  “You’re sure there’ll be a next time? Coming so close to getting caught already?”

  “You don’t seem to understand the stakes, Mr. Tate. In eight years Denny and those guys built a handful of prize money into a hundred thousand marks.” Plus whatever fun they took along the way, but I did not mention that. The old boy did not need all his illusions stripped. “Think what they could have done with another eight years and that kind of capital.”

  Gotten into a crunch, probably. Too much wealth draws attention—though I suppose Denny knew that and planned accordingly.

  “Perhaps I do not, Mr. Garrett. I’m only a shoemaker. My interest is fathers and sons and a family tradition that goes back more generations than can be counted. A tradition that died with Denny.”

  He was an exasperating old coot. I think he understood plenty. He just didn’t give a damn anymore.

  “You’re certain they will return, then?”

  “Breathing fire, Pop.”

  “Then it behooves me to take steps.”

  “The step you ought to take is to come to an accommodation.”

  “Not with those swine. They—and that woman—seduced my son away . . . ”

  I shut him out and gave my whole attention to the basement. As far as I could tell, nothing had changed. It seemed likely, then, that they had found nothing I might have missed. “Huh? I’m sorry. I missed that.”

  He gave me a look
that said he knew why. But you could not get him to talk nasty at spear’s point. “I asked if you knew someone I could retain as a guard for the premises.”

  “No.” I did know someone. Me. But I was up to my nostrils with long cold lonely nights waiting for something that never happened, or that was really lethal when it did. “Wait.” A thought. “Maybe I do. The people who are supposed to make the trip to the Cantard with me. I could do us both a favor by parking them here.” Morley, too, if it put him out of the heat.

  Tate looked startled. “You’re going to go? You sounded so dead set against it.”

  “I’m still against it. I think it’s about as smart as raiding a roc’s nest. I don’t even see any point to it. But I told you I’d look into it. I haven’t really made up my mind yet either way.”

  He smiled. He grinned. I was afraid he would try to slap me on the back and maybe loosen one of my kidneys. But he restrained himself. A very restrained kind of guy, old man Tate.

  He got very serious.

  “What can you do about that man’s body, Mr. Garrett?”

  I figured we were going to get to that. “Nothing.”

  “What?”

  “Nothing. He’s not my problem.”

  The old boy gulped air. Then the sly merchant came tippy-toeing forward. “You want to hold me up for a bonus? All right. How much?”

  “Don’t bother. You don’t have enough. I’m not putting a finger on that stiff. It’s not my responsibility, and I don’t do that kind of work. My advice is, call the magistrates and let them handle it. You’ll be clear. He was killed during a break-in.”

  “No. I don’t want anyone nosing into family business.”

  “Then have your boys take him and dump him in the river or an alley somewhere down the hill.” There are bodies in the river most mornings. In the alleys, too. Unless they were someone important, they caused little comment.

  Tate saw that he could not reach me through my lust for wealth. He gave that up. “You go ahead here, then. Send those men here as soon as you can. I have work to do. Keep me posted.” He ducked out.

  I poked around and wondered if the evil gleam in Tate’s eye meant he thought he could put the corpse off on Morley and the triplets.

  12

  The flooring did its dust drop. I had noticed it several times before Tate left. I figured my sweetheart Rose was eavesdropping again. I ignored her.

  Look as I might, I could not find anything missing. I settled back to give the whole business a think. It was obese with potential trouble. And I was getting near the point where I had to make a real decision.

  The local end of it would take care of itself. There was nothing to investigate at this end. At the other end . . .

  I did not want to think about that end yet. It would be unpleasant no matter how smooth it went. It would be unpleasant just traveling to and revisiting the Cantard.

  A door opened and shut overhead. A moment later women began talking. The one with the quarrelsome voice had to be Rose. I wondered who the other one was.

  A delightful aroma preceded her down the basement stairs. She proved to be a fiery little redhead with long straight hair, jade-green eyes, a few freckles, and high, firm breasts that thrust boldly against a ruffled silk blouse. There was nothing between that blouse and her but my daydreams.

  “Where have they been hiding you?” I asked, jumping up to take the tray she carried. “Who are you?”

  “I’m Tinnie. And you’re Garrett. And the last time you saw me I was just a spindle-legged kid.” She looked me right in the eye and grinned. Her teeth looked sharp and white. I wanted to stick out a hand and let her take a bite.

  “Could still be on spindles for all a guy can tell from that skirt.” It fell to her ankles.

  Her grin got sassy. “You could get lucky and get a look sometime. You never know.”

  My kind of luck came down the stairs right then. “Tinnie! You’ve done your job. Get out.”

  We ignored Rose. I asked, “You’re not Denny’s sister, are you? He never mentioned you.”

  “Cousin. They don’t talk about me. I’m the one who causes trouble.”

  “Oh? I thought Rose took care of that.”

  “Rose is just obnoxious. That doesn’t bother them. I do things that embarrass them. Rose just makes people mad or disgusted. I make the neighbors whisper behind their hands.”

  Rose simmered and reddened. Tinnie winked at me. “See you later, Garrett.”

  Yeah. I wish. That little bit was enough woman to make a man sit up and howl at the moon. She had a sway as she sashayed past Rose and started up the stairs.

  When you got down to it and ignored the personality of a black widow spider, Rose was not something the dogs barked at either. She was another small package with its contents all in the right places, and only prime materials had been used.

  Rose could move with a sway that promised fireworks—if she wanted. But her fireworks were the kind that blow up in a man’s face.

  We eyed each other like a couple of tomcats about to square off. We both decided what she had in mind wouldn’t work any better this time. She got flustered because she didn’t know what else to do.

  “Ought to have a backup plan when you jump in on something,” I told her. “Like Saucerhead Tharpe.”

  “You’re right, Garrett. Damn you, anyhow. How did you get so old being as stubborn as you are?”

  “By guessing right most of the time. You wouldn’t be a bad kid if there was room for anyone else in your world.”

  For a few seconds, there, I got the feeling she wished therewas someone else in her world. Then she said, “Too bad we couldn’t have met under other circumstances.”

  “Yeah,” I said, not feeling it. She would be trouble no matter what the circumstances. That was how she was made.

  “We don’t have any common ground at all, do we?”

  “Not very much. Not unless you had some feeling for your brother. I was fond of Denny. How about you?’

  I had touched something. At last.

  “It isn’t fair. Him dying like that. He was about the nicest guy I ever knew. Even if he was my brother. That Cantard bitch—”

  “Easy!” I snapped it, which gave me away enough to make her gawk and wonder.

  “What’s in this for you, Garrett? Besides a chance to line your pockets? Nobody goes to the Cantard without more reason than money.”

  I thought about Morley Dotes when she said that. I thought about me. I wondered about me. Garrett, tough guy. Can’t reach him. No emotional handles. But I was on the brink of doing something no moron in his right mind would do.

  Like old man Tate, I wanted to see this woman who could put a halter on Denny.

  Rose and I traded stares. She decided I wasn’t going to give her a thing. “Be careful, Garrett. Don’t get yourself hurt. Look me up when this is over.”

  “It wouldn’t work, Rose.”

  “It could be fun giving it a look.”

  She sashayed up the stairs.

  She did look good from that perspective. Maybe . . .

  Seconds after the door slammed, while common sense was fighting for its life, a copper-wreathed face peeped at me from the head of the stairs. “Don’t even think about it, Garrett. I wouldn’t love you anymore.”

  Then Tinnie vanished, too.

  I gulped some air and said “Duh!” a few times, then got my dogs under me and went galumphing off on the trail.

  She was gone when I got upstairs. I was alone with the dead guy. Denny’s friend. There was no sign of Rose or Tinnie when I looked into the garden. I closed the door and took a quick look through the dead guy’s pockets.

  Some vulture had beat me to it. There wasn’t a thing left.

  13

  Old Man Tate got the body out somehow. Dropped it in the river, I guess. I didn’t ask, and didn’t hear a thing about it. A lot of people never heard from again take that one last swim.

  I got Morley and the triplets installed at Denny
’s place. Morley thought it was a great idea. That being the case, I spent the evening hanging around his place, nicked by dagger looks from the breeds, hoping I would catch a flash to illuminate his eagerness to join a fool’s quest.

  I didn’t catch anything brighter than candlelight.

  All I found out was that I wasn’t the only guy watching.

  You get a sixth sense after enough years. Mine pegged two heavyweights in the first fifteen minutes. One was human and looked like he could give Saucerhead a fight. The other was so ugly, and stayed in his shadowed corner so deep, that I couldn’t tell what he was. A breed for sure, probably with some troll and kobold in him, but more than that. He was as wide as he was tall. His face had been rearranged several times, probably for the better.

  The bartender knew I had something going with Morley. He stayed civil. I asked about the men I had picked out.

  “Don’t know them. The ugly one was in here last night. First time. Sat in that corner all night nursing a beer he brought with him. I would’ve thrown him out if he hadn’t bought a meal.”

  “That would’ve been a show to see.” I took a pint of the water that passed for beer there and tipped him to take the sting out of the crack. “Think they’re the kingpin’s boys?”

  “Not unless they’re from out of town.”

  That was what I thought. I didn’t recognize them either, but they looked like trouble on the hoof.

  Well, no skin off my nose. As long as they were not interested in me.

  I gave it up at Morley’s place after the pint. There were better places to put an ear to the ground. I went and hung out in some of them. I didn’t find out a thing.

  Curious.

  I headed for my place wondering if the glazier had gotten started yet. I felt no shame at all charging the replacement window to Tate.

  The new window was in place and lettered as pretty as a blonde in her birthday suit. But I strolled by without admiring it, putting a slouch in my shoulders and a shuffle in my walk.

  Maybe I wouldn’t go home after all.

  There were problems. One was that somebody was waiting in the breezeway beside the ratman’s; even without seeing the glow of his pipe I could smell the weed he was smoking. The other was that there was somebody waiting inside. Whoever that was had all the lamps burning, using up oil at a rate to curdle my liver.

 
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