Wicked Bronze Ambition: A Garrett, P.I., Novel

Wicked Bronze Ambition: A Garrett, P.I., Novel by Glen Cook Read Free Book Online Page B

Book: Wicked Bronze Ambition: A Garrett, P.I., Novel by Glen Cook Read Free Book Online
Authors: Glen Cook
Tags: Fiction, General, Fantasy
tin whistles the power to take anything they want from anybody they cared to take it from just by accusing them of being criminals. That had to be too much temptation even for a straight arrow like Deal Relway.
    Target told me, “We didn’t figure you were up for walking.”
    He had a good point there.
    So. He or Helenia, or both, were the thoughtful sort, belying their looks.
    I hoped the coach belied its looks.
    It felt like maybe it used to belong to Shadowslinger’s evil older sister. It was all black, decorated with carvings of critters who would give voodoo priests the heebie-jeebies, and it had no springs. Walking might be less painful if we hit some really bad streets.
    “Let’s get rolling,” Target said. “You get in first, Womble.”
    Helenia opened the door on the left side of the vehicle. There was a crest carved there, but the lighting wasn’t good enough to show it clearly. No doubt I didn’t really want to see it, anyway. It might redouble the kind of nightmares I had already from being around my future in-laws.
    Helenia urged me in behind Preston, then came aboard herself. The interior was nicely appointed in silks and leathers. I hoped the latter was sheepskin, not peopleskin.
    There was room for four people if three were half my size. Womble did not take up much space, but Helenia was wide at the base and came armed with a big leather case. She said, “I’ll be trying to take witness statements.”
    I figured, good luck with that, even if you can write fast enough.
    No two witnesses ever see the same thing.
    I heard some creaking as Target opened the gate.
    The old man said something in Horse, probably offering to feed me to the beasts if they did what he asked. The coach lurched. Preston and I had our backs to the direction of travel. I almost fell into Helenia’s lap.
    The coach stopped after thirty feet. The gates creaked again. The old man clambered up to the driver’s seat, making the vehicle rock and squeak. Meanwhile, moisture began to sneak in through the side windows even though those were supposedly shut against the weather. I peeked. The rain had grown a little more vigorous, though it was still only slightly more enthusiastic than a desultory drizzle. It was very, very cold, however.
    Helenia was chatty. “This coach belonged to somebody off the Hill. One of the necromancer types. His own people turned him in because he was so rotten.”
    “Sounds like my grandmother-in-law.”
    Cynical me, I suspected that there must have been legacies and estates involved that someone had wanted resolved in a manner other than the one outlined in the relevant documents. The Unpublished Committee would not back that kind of play, but Relway’s crew was still only a small faction at the heart of the new law enforcement.
    Helenia continued. “The Director uses it when he wants to keep a low profile.”
    Yes. Of course. Send out the ugly. Nobody would notice that.
    Target cracked the door, poked his mug in. “All set?”
    Nobody declared any serious lack of readiness. How do you answer that kind of dumb question?
    He pushed on the door. A catch clicked. The coach sagged and rocked despite its lack of springs as Target mounted the footman’s backboard.
    The coach lurched ahead.
    I had recovered enough emotionally to realize that I ought to be glad that Target was not allergic to the damp. It would have gotten tight with him inside, too.

15
    There was no immediately obvioussign, in Strafa’s neighborhood, that anything huge had happened. There were people around, naturally, but the rain kept the Lookie Lous away and Barate had gotten the key people moved inside. A brace of forensics sorcerers roamed the street out front, pretending to be something else but not convincingly because they wore their red Guard berets.
    Our driver took us in under the porte cochere. Target manned the door, helped Helenia dismount. Barate came out to greet me with an uncharacteristic hug.
    Algarda said, “Mother is on

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