“I don’t know. This stuff just happens. It’s like weather to me anymore.”
“But you have a notion or two, because you’re never as dumb as you make out.”
“I’m thinking maybe it’s time I moved on. To somewhere where everybody don’t think they know what’s going on inside my head.”
“Here’s a thought, old friend. Take a barge upriver and set up shop in Ymber.”
“I don’t get it.”
“Sure, you do. Those guys are all from Ymber.”
Being the villain he thought I was, I volunteered nothing. “Uhm?”
“There are ten of the big, ugly, stupid creeps in green pants, plus two normal-looking management types who run things. We think. We now have nine thugs and one normal clown in custody. It could take time for Deal’s specialists to make them explain themselves, though.”
So. Relway hadn’t turned anybody loose. He’d staked out my place so he could collect some more ugly pants.
Colonel Block’s nondescript face presented an expectant expression.
I saw no reason not to be forthright with the one man able to control Deal Relway. “I’m not real clear on this mess. It’s all Dean’s fault. He brought home this bunch of kittens and the kid who had the cats. I didn’t get a good look at him before he made tracks. Dean has a whole song and dance about priestesses and prophecies. You can squeeze the snot out of him when he turns up, if you want.”
Block grunted.
We have that kind of relationship. Half inarticulate noise.
“You really don’t have any idea? You’ve had part of the herd since yesterday.”
“They haven’t said much. Yet. They’re too stupid to connect their silence with the pain they’re exposed to.”
“You’ve got one of the managers. Officer types don’t usually stand up… oops.”
Block glowered. Being an officer type. “Oops again,” I said. “I get so comfortable with you I forget you aren’t one of my pals from down in the islands.”
“Move to the country, Garrett. You could fertilize a whole county.”
I shrugged. “It’s the times we live in.”
He wasn’t buying what I was selling, even though I was giving it away.
“I don’t get you, Colonel. I’ve always been straight with you. Ever since Prince Rupert made you the top guy at the Al-Khar. But you never believe me.”
“Because you never tell the whole truth, only what you think I’ll work out for myself.”
“So where do we stand?” I asked. “You aren’t half as dumb as you let on, either. You’ve got something on your mind.”
“Of course I do. But it doesn’t have much to do with those lunatics.”
“I love how you work to make me glad I was born when I was, in this time and place, when life was never better.”
“You might fertilize more than one county.”
“Even so.”
“Even so, I admit to a passing curiosity about what happened at Whitefield Hall last night.”
“You and me both, brother. Somebody tried to burn the place down with me inside.” I gave him a mildly edited story. Certain he knew the basics already. I left out unimportant details like pixies, rat-people, Chodo’s health, and people catching fire. “You can ask all the questions you want. I don’t know what it means. I don’t know what was supposed to happen. I can’t explain what did happen. Despite what you may have heard, I was there only in a professional capacity.”
“Save the snow, Garrett. I’m just interested in what you picked up about the kingpin.”
Dirty trick. For sure the man wasn’t as dumb as he looked.
“I saw him one time, right before the fires started. He was in a wheelchair. He didn’t look healthy. I didn’t hear him say anything. Then the situation went all to hell. Bam! Lamps exploded. Burning oil flew everywhere. I ran like hell.”
Block wasn’t happy but had no grounds to challenge me. He would’ve been all over me if he had anything. “Was the fire an attempt to get Chodo?”
“I never thought of that. Let me think about it. Man, it’d have to be somebody who wouldn’t care if he wiped out the whole Combine.”
Westman Block will grab any angle to nab an advantage. He never reveals all he knows despite deploring the identical attitude on my part. He won’t bore in hard. Giving you the benefit of the doubt. Meaning you can’t ever forget that he’s always handing you yards and yards of just enough rope.
“No. Chodo wasn’t the target. Not even Relway would wholesale it that way. I do think the fires were started by sorcery. Or something.”
“There’s no obvious evidence. Experts checked.” Block glared at Eleanor. “There any way I can buy that off you?”
“Eleanor? No. Why?”
“It’s haunted. It gives me the creeps. I know a fireplace I’d like it to meet.”
“Sir, you’re disparaging my first love.” Maybe he didn’t know that story.
“Where is Chodo now?”
“I don’t know. Wherever Belinda is, I imagine.”
“Maybe. And maybe she lost track of him, too.”
“What?” That couldn’t be. That wouldn’t be good. Especially not for Belinda.
But she wouldn’t have rolled Chodo out if she hadn’t been sure she had everything under control. Would she?
“You know where she might be?”
“At home?”
“She flew there if she is. She didn’t leave town through the gates.”
My subversive side urged me to keep him talking. He was letting slip facets of the Watch’s capabilities, both to collect information and to move it. Meaning that Block and Relway had more manpower than was suspected. Which implied that…
Well, every implication suggests something else. This time the indicators pointed to a possible serious outbreak of law and order.
Which would stumble once it inconvenienced our more substantial royal subjects. Privilege means private law.
“You know everything I know, Colonel. Really. I don’t have any interest to protect. Other than my poor front door.”
“There are rumors about you and Belinda Contague.”
“I’ve heard. She started them. They aren’t true.” I cocked my head, listening to a voice only I could hear. Like the Dead Man was giving me the razz without including Block. “Yeah. Good point. I’ve got stuff I need to do. Now that I can get out without being eaten by dragons. Dean! Good. You’re home.”
The old boy had come to the office door. He looked grumpy.
I said, “You need to get hold of the door guy. Those morons bent the hinges.”
Dean scowled at Colonel Block, dragged his haul on toward the kitchen. He doesn’t approve of Westman Block. Simply because Block exists in his peculiar professional niche he guarantees that there’s mischief afoot. Dean would prefer a world where the law and order were fixed in place before he arrived.
Block said, “You’re not going to help me.”
“I gave you everything I’ve got. Including the news that I don’t have any reason to hold out on you. What more do you want?”
“I hope that’s true.” He headed for the front door. I followed. He said, “You’re a likable guy, Garrett. I don’t want you to get in so deep we can’t save your ass when the big changes come.”
“Say what?”
“The wild era is about over, Garrett. We’ve worked hard to do what Prince Rupert wants done. The rule of law is about to dawn.”
I had no idea what that was about. It sounded scary.
I’m a law-and-order guy myself. But I don’t want the people involved interfering in my life.
I did say, “You’re too optimistic. How bleak a season would it be if your hard-liner secret backers get everything they want?”
Block beamed. “Wouldn’t that be marvelous?”
He didn’t get it. And never would. People like him make life inconvenient for the rest of us.
“You’ll let me know what you find out from those guys, won’t you?”
“You don’t make me want to do you a lot of favors.”
“My heart is breaking. Here’s something I really do want to know. How come those idiots wear those stupid green pants?”
Block chuckled as he slipped outside.
I closed the door shut easily enough. Fortress Garrett remained sound and inviolate.