“Tracking down this Sushana?”
“What about Harald?” said Alexa. “If he gets his network looking for Sushana, she'll turn up. One way or the . . . other.”
“Look, she's undercover,” said Laura. “Once Harald's tame pimps and fortune-tellers start spreading the word, they'll know we're taking a special interest in Sushana. If they think she's a made woman from Selvikin City, like her cover story says, then no harm done. But if they think she's a snitch . . .”
“Or that she's a cop.” Donal shrugged. “She's dead either way.”
“The missed meeting is one day old,” said Alexa, “but it's thirteen days since anyone's seen her.”
Laura said nothing for a moment. Donal knew what he would do, and he'd suggest it if Laura asked.
“Do it,” Laura said then. “Get everything going that you can. Any hint of someone who knows Sushana, if we don't already know the person, we snatch 'em and sweat 'em.”
Alexa whirled away, back to her desk, and ripped the phone from its hook.
“That's a go,” she said, and slammed the handset down. Then she looked up at Laura and gave a bright girlish smile. “I had it all arranged, because I
thought
you'd say that.”
“I hate being predictable.”
“Remind me to introduce you to my pal Levison sometime,” Donal said to Alexa.
But the humor was a coping mechanism, no more. A missing undercover cop, on the first full day that Donal was on the team . . .
Luckily he didn't believe in omens.
Do you hear theâ
Oh, for Death's sake, not now.
T
he task force sent their
contacts, their snitches and sympathizers, their paid informants and the weaklings they threatened, searching the unofficial labyrinths that defined the city for Sergeant Sushana O'Connorâor, rather, Sorceress Shara Conrahl, who had expressed such an interest in exploring the darker sides of her professed art.
That night, Laura remained in the office, coordinating. Donal's eyes were drooping, and she finally said he should go home. There were cots he could have used, but that seemed more conspicuous in terms of staying here all night with Laura.
Finally, he gave up and did what she suggested. He descended to ground level, where he chatted with FenSeven for ten minutes until the purple cab arrived.
The streets were empty and it took little time to reach home. His new home.
Darksan Tower's guardians were eight-foot behemoths with single slit eyes, who stood aside to allow Donal entry. An elevator whisked him up to the apartment, where he wandered around its metallic Gothicâdeco spaces before collapsing into bed.
Dark dreams enveloped him.
Donal woke late, a sign that he was not yet fully recovered. He changed into his old running suit and took the elevator down to the basement levels. A maintenance worker with grease-stained skin and two wraiths hovering behind him showed Donal how to access the deep stairwells that led into the catacombs.
He ran along routes that were unfamiliar to him, the length of twisting long-abandoned ways. Then he was in a cavernous area where newer family mausoleums, some of polished brass and silver, were ringed with pale amber lanterns. Running on, he finally entered a region that he knew, and he grew certain that he was not imagining it.
Something had changed.
Catacombs persisted for centuries or even millennia. If there was a change, it could not be in them. Yet odd whispers began now, falling silent whenever Donal neared a sarcophagus or a mausoleum. It was almost as ifâ
Don't be insane.
As if the dead were afraid of him.
Back at the apartment, Donal's breakfast consisted of cold black-sprout soup and coffee. If this arrangement was going to last longer, he was going to have to see about shopping and cooking. He checked his Magnus load, then dialed down to the concierge and asked him to call a taxi.
“I could get used to this,” Donal muttered after putting down the phone. “Maybe.”
The elevator that he rode down in was like a giant's bullet, very fast. It stopped at the fifty-ninth floor to take on two passengers, a man in a dark suit with a sine-wave weave, and a woman with ballooning features and too much jewelry, all of it real.
The man wore a monocle. Both he and his wife stared at Donal with superior mild curiosity, as though wondering what sort of new servant had been hired by the management.
When the elevator reached the ground floor, Donal pressed his palm against the elevator's steel wall and murmured, “Thanks.”
The couple sniffed and frowned, passing through the doors before Donal. But the elevator wall delivered a cold shiver, and Donal knew he had been right: it was a wraith capsule. He wondered how long the wraith had been in service.
When Donal told the taxi driver where he was going, disappointment descended down the driver's features. Probably he'd figured on a big tip from one of the rich bastards who lived in Darksan Tower, but a hard-faced man headed for police HQ didn't fit the type.
At the corner of Fifth and Avenue of the Basilisks, the traffic was thick with the rush-hour crowd, and the taxi slowed to a halt. The driver frowned, thought for a moment, then turned and said through the partition, “Know what, Mac? It'll be quicker if you walk.”
Donal looked at the sidewalks. The driver was unlikely to pick up another paying fare for a while. It was a fair assessment.
“Right,” he said, and counted ten bills from his wallet and handed them through the gap in the partition. “Keep the change.”
“Really?”
“Yeah.” Donal slid out and slammed the door shut behind him. “ 'Cause I'm a soft touch, really.”
The sky overhead was a medium purple, with no scanbats in sight. The faintest hint of quicksilver was upon the air, but it wasn't raining yet. Donal pulled up the collar of his overcoat and walked fast for five blocks, until he reached the familiar tower that was HQ.
“Hey, FenSeven. Met one of your cousins yesterday.”
“Yes-s-s.” Amber eyes glowed. FenSeven pulled back his upper lip, slobbering. “You are . . . mat-ed.”
“Thanatos, does everybody tell everyone everything in this place?”
“Not the . . . hu-mans.”
“Well. Good.”
Another two deathwolves rounded the nearest pillar and sat down next to FenSeven.
“Loo-ten-ant Riordan.” FenSeven performed the introductions. “FenSevenThree. GrimwalTwo.”
Both deathwolves looked youngâtoo young for this assignment.
“Good to meet you both.” Donal tipped his forefinger against his forehead in salute. “And any daughter of FenSeven has a lot to live up to.”
The smaller wolf, FenSevenThree, ducked her head and gave a low growl of acknowledgment.
“See . . . you.” FenSeven nodded to Donal.
“Later, pal.”
Donal climbed the dark steps, passed through to the hall with the purple-and-white-checkered floor, and skirted a bickering group of young-looking, scarred whores from the dockside. On the granite desk, Eduardoâhis lower body long melded into the graniteâwaved a hand toward Donal.
“You're wanted upstairs,” Eduardo called out.
“The commissioner?”
“That's the upstairs I was thinking of.”
One of the whores raised a finger and said, “Climb upstairs this.” A thin man who might have been her pimp backhanded her across the face. “Dumb pig, shuddup.”
A uniformed cop kicked the pimp in the side of the knee.
“Heyâ”
As Donal turned away, Eduardo called, “Good to see you back.”
This from a man turning into granite. Perhaps Donal's experiences with the dead diva and the hospital could have been worse.
“Thanks, Eduardo. Good to be here.”
From the floor, the pimp called, “Ooh, Edu-
ar
-do. What a lovely name. Are you a man or a statue up in yourâmmmph.”
There was a dull crack, and the whores fell silent, while the pimp uttered a tiny moan.
Donal continued to the elevators without looking back.
Commissioner Vilnar's secretary, the lovely Eyes, turned toward Donal but continued working. Silvery fibers clamped against her eyes joined her to a switchboardlike console filled with tiny levers, which in turn linked her to the citywide network of rooftop surveillance mirrors.
Donal had never seen Eyes any other way. It occurred to him that if he passed by her in the street, he would never recognize her.
“The commissioner will see you right away, Lieutenant.”
“Is he in a good mood?”
Eyes's fingers paused, hooking the air, as though using imaginary controls to parse meaning from Donal's words. Then, saying nothing, she turned back to her console.
The doors to the commissioner's office parted.
Do you feel theâ
No. Never.
It seemed to take an age for Donal to pass through the doorway, as if something were dragging at his skin. This was new.
Or I've changed.
Secure sites sometimes used time-distorting hex fields as one layer of protection. Such fields could slow down intruders long enough for deadlier countermeasures to swing into action, or for the intended targets to make an escape.
But here, inside police HQ? Were such defenses really necessary?
Commissioner Vilnar, fat unlit cigar in hand, pointed toward the black iron visitor's chair.
“Sit.”
“Sir.”
“You're on this task force, Riordan, which I am not fucking happy with, understand?”
“Um. . . okay.”
“What's that supposed to mean?”
“I mean I understand now, but I didn't before . . . Sir, I volunteered.”
“That zombie, what's her nameâ”
Donal felt his voice drop an octave. “Commander Steele.”
“âright, she led the squad that broke you out of the cabin, so I couldn't refuse the request. But . . .” Commissioner Vilnar let the sentence hang there. “I could have shit-canned you. That possibility is still there.”
“Sir? Am I under internal investigation?”
“No.” Vilnar placed his big pale hands flat on the desktop. “You called in IS to check out the gun range, which doesn't mean you're clean yourself, but it helps. Still, you allowed yourself to be ensorcelled in a high-profile assignment that I gave to you.”
“Yes. I remember.”
“There are people who weren't happy how that turned out.” Commissioner Vilnar meant important people, high enough in Tristopolitan society to matter. “Some of them tried to give me a hard time.”
“Oh.”
“Which is why I'm giving you a chance, because I don't like being threatened. By anyone.”
A smile tugged at the muscles around Donal's mouth. Underneath it all, the old man had this kind of iron strength. That was what Donal admired about him.
“If anything strange crops up in your investigation,” Vilnar continued, “anything that might affect the security of our city”âhe meant the safety of his own careerâ“you'll let me know here, in private, as soon as you can.”
“Right, sir. I'll use my judgment on that.”
“Okay, you can go, Riordan.” Vilnar raised his scarcely existent eyebrows. “I gather there's some kind of commotion going on at present. Hammersen's network is causing waves.”
“There's an officer missing.”
“Right. Sushana something? But the street networks are shaking”âVilnar gestured with a fat hand at his officeâ“from what I can gather up here.”
“I don't know anything about Hammersen's snitches,” said Donal. “Only that he has them.”
Harald Hammersen sounded like the most impressive of the team members that Donal had yet to meet. An ex-marine with the most widespread network of underworld contacts that any working police officer had come across: that was Harald's reputation.
“It would be interesting,” said Vilnar, “to learn more about that.”
“Yes,” muttered Donal, getting up from the chair. “I suppose it would.”
And if Vilnar thought that Donal was going to hand over any details he might learn about another cop's private network, then the commissioner was insane. After a moment, a tiny glimmer appeared in Vilnar's eyes: it might have been anger or amusement.
“Go,” said Vilnar. “And keep in touch.”
“Yes, sir.”
He went out, passing Eyes, who was bent over her console, fingers flickering across the tiny levers. Just as well. If Donal had said anything, it might be a bad decision.
You want me to spy on Laura?
Donal really didn't think so.
In Gertie's elevator, Donal muttered, “Take me to the gun range, will you?”
*What's the matter, lover? Need to pull your trigger desperately?*
“Just do it, Gertie.”
*Well.*
She dropped him fast down the shaft. At the subterranean level of the range, she dragged him to a bouncing halt.
*Go play with your bangs.*
The invisible hands that expelled him into the lobby were rougher than usual.
While Donal was blowing targets apart on the range, an army of informants was working the labyrinthine byways of the less-than-legitimate world. The people involved ranged from fruit-stall owners in Mixnatine Market close to the docks, who turned a blind eye to the odd carton that slipped away from the delivery trucks belonging to the large chain stores, to a corrupt enforcer working for Sally the Claw.
This enforcer had been exposed by Harald Hammersen three years before, with photographs taken by city technicians. Harald sent him back to work in Sally C's organization with the understanding that spying on his own boss was preferable to the official Tristopolitan execution pit, where wraiths with ravening, insane minds manifested hard talons and claws and beaks to satiate their hunger on the living.
“Dropping the hammer” was what Harald threatened as the last resort. He looked pale and thin, with dead white hair and strange eyes, and there was a rumor that he had once eaten an informant's eyes when said snitch failed to notify Harald of an arms shipment arriving at Buldown Docks inside crates of herring.
Whether the stories were true or not, Harald made tactical use of their implied threat. That was one of the reasons that Brijak Nelsan, a hard-faced stevedore with hooks for hands, was willing to share a bottle of vodka with Harald in the untidy “office” space at the rear of his warehouse. Nets strung across old boxes formed a kind of swing in which Harald sat, watching Brijak's face grow redder as he drank.
“You?” Brijak offered the vodka bottle.