Authors: Jane Abbott
âNah. Where's the fun in that? And I haven't got where I am coz I'm free and easy with information. Unlike some. But I will tell you this, Jem. We're not blocking every gate because of the Disses.'
There was a long silence, as though he was waiting for me to finally see the light. But I was still as blind as shit. âIf you're that worried, why use the raws? Where's the rest of the Watch?'
His smile was slow, and not happy. âLike I said, see everything â'
âYeah, yeah, you're the see-all-hear-all-big-bad-know-it-all. I get it, you crazy fuck. What I don't get is why.'
âBecause you're one shit stubborn son of a bitch, that's why. You're not asking the right questions, Jem. Never have. Not payin' enough attention to what you should, coz you've been too busy getting your end in and trying to save the world.'
âI don't give a fuck about saving the world.' I was having a hard enough time just trying to save myself.
âNo? Well, guess what, arsehole? Now you're gunna.'
âFuck you!'
âThis is gettin' us nowhere,' Taggart muttered and, pushing himself away from the wall, he came across and squatted down, a barrier between Garrick and me. I looked at them both, expecting his hesitancy and waiting for Garrick to order him back. But expectations are real funny things; nice to have but hard to meet, and neither man did what they should have.
âGarrick's right,' Taggart said at last. âYou are stubborn. It's one of the things I always admired about you, Jem. But now you need to back down, coz we're runnin' out of time. You think you know what's goin' on, but you don't know shit.'
âNot true,' I said. âReckon I knew shit already.'
He didn't smile. âLike I said, lad, back down and listen up. We ain't out to get you.'
âOh, no,' I said. âYou two are all love and â'
â
Listen!
' He shifted on his feet, and I heard his knees crack. Old bones, but a razor-sharp mind. âGarrick's told you, and now I'm tellin' you. You're gunna go up there and face up to what you did. And maybe, if you stop focusin' on the words and start listening to what's being said, you might just get through it.'
âFuck your listening!'
He eyed me calmly. âYou were right all along, Jem. Before your assignment, when you got that report from the Tower, and you
couldn't work out why nothin' was adding up? You were right. You knew it. Garrick knew it. Why d'you think we had no idea about the extent of the Diss operation? We're the Watch. We should've known. Should've been told, right at the start. But we weren't. And we had no idea about Reed, not until after you'd left. He was s'posed to go with you, remember? That was Garrick's idea, coz he was gettin' a real bad feelin' about the whole thing. And he was right, as usual. But Reed never showed, and that should've warned us too. Then it was gunna be Garrick with you, but that was overturned as well and you were on your own. By the time you got back, we'd worked out just enough to get a plan together.'
It was the longest speech I'd ever heard him give and maybe it deserved more attention, but all I said was, âWhat plan?'
âNo, lad. You don't get to know. You lost that right, and we ain't about to fall at the end stroke.'
âSo the Tower's been screwing with everyone. It's not exactly news.'
âTrue enough, but it is when they screw with us. And it's a mistake. What we got, the Citadel and the settlements? It ain't perfect. Not by a long shot. But them messing with it â messing with us? That's the worst thing they could do. Coz if this goes down, a shitload of people are gunna die. And war always attracts the wrong kinda crowd.'
I knew what he meant, but I stared, trying to focus, not on him, but on something else. That picture I thought I'd seen downstairs was fading out and in again, reshaping and reforming right in front of me. Kind of blurred and fuzzy and all dark around the edges, but real funny too, a macabre joke, sick and sorry and just so fucked-up. And, as it became clearer, I heard myself laugh.
âSomething amusing you?' asked Garrick.
I nodded, not trusting myself to speak. And maybe it was hysteria, maybe the futility of it all had finally got to me, but whatever the reason I couldn't stop. Taggart waited, patient and watchful.
âYou two,' I said, when I finally had control. âAh, fuck me. Don't you see? You're Disses.'
âYou little â', growled Garrick, but Taggart held up his hand, stopping him dead. And I was still too busy chuckling to wonder why.
âIn a way,' said Taggart. âOnly we ain't lookin' to break the system. We wanna keep it going. Coz without it, we're all just gunna slide right back to where we were before.'
âSave it, Taggart. The only thing you two give a shit about is the Watch.'
He nodded. âRight again. Coz without us there'd be no system at all. That first wall never would've been finished, and you and me wouldn't be sittin' here talkin' this out. So yeah, the Watch is real important.'
âIf the Tower's such a pain in your arse, why don't you just go up there and deal with it?'
Behind him, Garrick gave one of his fuck-me snorts, but Taggart nodded. âBe the simple solution, wouldn't it? Except for the hundreds of Guards they've got. And the fact that we still have no idea why we've been left out of whatever's going on, or who's with who. We don't even know if Reed's the only plant in the Watch, but we're pretty sure they've got others, in the Guard and with the Disses.'
âReckon I've managed to work that much out myself. So you can stop with the “we”. It's not helping any.'
He cocked his head and eyed me sharp. âThat ain't why I'm saying it, lad. I've been saying it all along.'
There was the longest pause, while I looked from him to Garrick then back again. And I cursed.
Told you, we like things the way they are.
I'd wondered how different things might've been with Taggart in charge, and now I knew. No fucking different at all. And maybe it wasn't such a bad thing, to go out knowing there'd never been
an alternative, that fate only ever deals one hand to everyone. But I was pretty sure I knew why he was finally letting me in on the secret, and that wasn't much of a comfort.
âFor fuck's sake, why can't any of you people play something straight for once?' I said.
He shrugged. âSuited us then, and our reasons are none of your business. And having Garrick take over freed me up for other things.'
âWhat things?'
He gave a grainy half-smile. âNever mind. Reckon it's best you don't know. Safer for all of us that way.'
âNot all of us.' I pointed out the obvious before shooting a glance behind him. âNever figured you for a yes-man, Garrick.'
âYou never figured a lot of things, arsehole,' he shot back. âThat's why you're here.'
Taggart frowned, his brows coming together in a cloud to shade his eyes. Shuffling on the balls of his feet, trying to get more comfortable, he said, âDon't read this wrong, Jem. Garrick runs the Watch. Always has, free rein. And he does a real good job. I just â oversee things.'
I laughed again, though there was nothing funny about what I was hearing. âYeah, Garrick deserves a medal for everything he's done.'
âGarrick has his grounds, and they're not your concern. What he does works and that's all I care about. And it's all you should care about too, coz it means that now we've got eighteen experienced Watchmen ready to do whatever needs doing at his say-so.'
I stared at him. Eighteen? But with Reed out and Jackson dead, that meant â
I was part of something before.
No!
And scrambling, desperate to halt the slide, I clung to the memory of that night, of Alex, her coming to me and giving herself, felt again her liquid heat, remembered my strength, recalled
our passion; but the memory wouldn't stick, wouldn't lodge, and I was slipping, falling back. And Alex wasn't there to make me strong again.
No! I am Jeremiah and I am â I am â oh fuck! I am â
âA true Watchman ain't just made, lad. He's gotta be born to it,' said Taggart, his voice as soft as settled dust. âNow, I ain't askin' why you did what you did. Garrick's real pissed about it, but it's not important any more. Reckon a man's got his reasons, and fuck knows you got more than most. But everything we do stays with us. Good and bad. All the time. So whatever happened up there in the Hills, you ain't finished with us yet, and we ain't done with you. And you gotta own that too. What you did, as well as what you are. Time to bring 'em together and find some kinda balance. Coz if you don't, you won't ever make it through.'
There's no doubt I'd had my share of epiphanies. And there was no doubt I'd pretty much wasted every single one of them. If I hadn't, I wouldn't have been kneeling on hard stone with my nose smashed and my wrists bound, facing Taggart and Garrick and not really giving a shit any more about what was to come. But insight's stubborn too, always ready to find a place in a stupid mind, and when it appeared in mine, squeezed by fear and despair, I understood straight off what Taggart meant. He'd spent his life pretending to be less than he was; I'd spent mine pretending to be more than I deserved. And maybe our reasons for doing it weren't all that different, his disguise as necessary as my shame. But somewhere between the two of us, between what I'd found and what I thought I'd put behind me, there had to be peace, a kind of purgatory where a man might wear his guilt without any need for penitence. I just had to find it.
âAnd the Disses?' I asked. âAlex?'
He shook his head. âNo deals here, lad. You know that. You need to start thinkin' on what we've said, in this room and before. And you need to start askin' yourself some questions. Starting with
why they chose you for that assignment. This is shit-serious now. The Tower wants heads, and plenty of 'em. But we ain't giving 'em ours.'
âNo,' I said, bitterly. âIt's always do unto others, right?'
âThat's right, Jem. And take care of our own.'
Like they'd taken care of Jackson? I laughed, and that was bitter too. âDoesn't help me though, does it?'
âNo, it doesn't. Coz you did break, and you did side with those Disses, and you're gunna have to pay for it. And it ain't like we didn't give you plenty of chances to come clean, so you'll pay for that too.' He cocked his head, and stared at me straight. âYou've taken your shot, lad. Two's stretching it.'
Then, reaching down, feeling along my thigh, he pulled the knife from its hiding place. I stared, not even wondering how he'd known. He was Taggart.
âNot even a fighting chance?' I asked.
âNever said that.' He tapped my head and gave a ghost of a smile. âThis is your weapon now. The only one you got. So make sure you use it, you hear?' Not giving me a chance to reply, he grabbed my arm and helped me up.
âYou should've met Ballard, old man. I reckon the two of you might've had something in common.'
âNot as much as you might think. I remember Ballard. Young. Talked a shitload. A real dreamer. The Watch ain't no place for dreamers, Jem.'
No. No room for dreams when the place was stuffed full of nightmares.
He looked at me, flint-eyed and serious. âReckon I'll say goodbye, lad. Just in case.' That's what I liked about Taggart: never big on the sentiment. A quick nod to Garrick, and he left.
âWell, well. The things you learn, eh, Garrick?' I said, watching him pull on his shirt and tuck it into his trousers, suddenly all business.
âLet's just hope it's not the only thing you've learned.' He sheathed the last of his knives. âC'mon. They're waiting.'
âCan we take the long way, at least? And walk real slow?'
He laughed. âThat's the spirit, Jem. Keep that up and you won't feel a thing.'
But it was going to take more than a few jokes for that to happen. Being an optimist was all well and good, but reality could be the meanest bitch.
âBefore we go,' I said, needing to know. âWhy'd you send Alex straight downstairs?'
âGettin' warmer, but still not right. Now move it.' He slapped a hand to my shoulder, but I shoved back, standing my ground.
âShe told me to kill you, Garrick,' I said. âAnd I will. You and Reed.'
He grinned suddenly. âWell, shit. The cost of a fuck's sure gone up since I last paid.' Then, spinning me, he grabbed my neck, closing one hand around it and squeezing tight while the other curled into my hair, tearing and bending me back. âReed's mine, arsehole. So before you start dreamin' the impossible, you'd better start workin' on the practical. And just to show you I'm not fucking around â'
Ignoring my struggles, he propelled me across the room and into his quarters, jerking me around to face the back wall. He didn't let go, but he didn't need to hold me either. I stilled and stared, not feeling what I thought I would or, maybe, what I should.
âThis is just the start, Jem,' he growled. âThis is what's gunna happen to everyone who thinks they know better than me, or who doesn't have my back and disobeys an order. I fucking told him, but he didn't listen.' He gave me a rough shake. âAnd before you start gettin' any ideas, gettin' all mopey and dopey and thinkin' I did this for you â or that cunt â you'd better think again. I did it coz it needed to be done. For the last time, no one fucks with the Watch.
Ever
.'
I didn't say anything. There was nothing to say. I just kept staring at the body pinned to the wall, stripped naked, arms outstretched, knives driven into both wrists and a third through the throat, pinning flesh and bone; the belly slit crossways, entrails dangling in thick ropy ribbons, all grey and red-brown and stinking of unready shit. Took in the wide-mouthed grimace, that final mark of agony just under the paltry break in his nose where I'd punched him. Looked at what remained of Cobb and felt, not surprise or any kind of regret coz fuck knows he'd had it coming, but a deep, deep coldness in my bones and in my gut, rising to close around my heart and still my blood.