3
WOLVES IN The Fold
Brimstone Hall stood aloof and alone in the middle of its grounds, surrounded by a high stone wall emblazoned with protective runes. Armed men watched from behind the massive iron gates, and guard dogs patrolled the wide-open grounds. Rumour had it the dogs had been fed human meat just long enough to give them a taste for it. There used to be apple trees in the grounds. Hardcastle had them torn up by the roots; they offered shelter to potential assassins.
Cameron Hardcastle was a very careful man. He trusted nothing and no one, with good cause. He had destroyed many men in his time, one way or another, and helped to ruin many more. It was said he had more enemies than any other man in Haven. Hardcastle believed it, and took pride in the fact. In a city of harsh and ruthless men, he had made himself a legend. Constant death threats were a small price to pay.
The Hall itself was a crumbling stone monstrosity held together by ancient spells and never-ending repair work. It was stiflingly hot in the summer and impossible to heat in the winter, but it had been home to the Hardcastles for years past counting, and Cameron would not give it up. Hardcastles never gave up anything that was theirs. They were supposed to have been instrumental in the founding of Haven, which might have been why so many of them had been convinced they should be running it.
Cameron Hardcastle began his career in the Low Kingdoms army. It was expected of him, his class, and his family, and he hated every minute of it. He left the army after only seven years, retiring in haste before he could be court martialled. It was said the charges would have been extreme cruelty, but no one took that seriously. Extreme cruelty was usually what got you ahead in the Low Kingdoms army. The men fought so well because they were more afraid of their officers than they were of the enemy.
More importantly, there were rumours of blood sacrifice behind locked doors in the officers’ mess, but no one talked about that. It wasn’t considered healthy.
Hardcastle himself was an average-height, stocky man, with a barrel chest and heavily muscled upper arms. He was good-looking in a rough, scowling way, with a shock of dark hair and an unevenly trimmed moustache. He was in his mid-forties, and looked it, but you only had to meet him for a few moments to feel the strength and power that radiated from him. Whatever else people said about him—and there was a lot of talk, most of it unpleasant—they all admitted the man had presence. When he entered a crowded room, the room fell silent.
He had a loud, booming laugh, though his sense of humour wasn’t very pleasant. Most people went to the theatre for their entertainment; Hardcastle’s idea of a good time was a visit to the public hangings. He enjoyed bear-baiting, prizefights, and kept a half-dozen dogs to go ratting with. On a good day he’d nail the rats’ tails to the back door to show his tally.
He was Conservative because his family always had been, and because it suited his business interests to be so. The Hardcastles were of aristocratic stock, and no one was allowed to forget it. Of late, most of their money came from rents and banking, but no one was foolish enough to treat Hardcastle as a merchant or a businessman. Even as a joke. It wouldn’t have been healthy. When he thought about politics at all, which wasn’t often, Hardcastle believed in everyone knowing their place, and keeping to it. He thought universal suffrage was a ghastly mistake, and one he fully intended to rectify at the first opportunity. Reform was nothing more than a disease in the body politic, to be rooted out and destroyed. Starting with James bloody Adamant.
Hardcastle sat in his favorite wing chair, staring out the great bow window in his study and scowling furiously. Adamant was going to be a problem. The man had a great deal of popular support, more than any previous Reform candidate, and taking care of him was going to be difficult and expensive. Hardcastle hated spending money he didn’t have to. Fortunately, there were other alternatives. He turned his gaze away from the window, and looked across at his sorcerer, Wulf.
The sorcerer was a tall, broad-shouldered man, with a fine noble head that was just a little too large for his body. Thick auburn hair fell to his shoulders in a mass of curls and knots. His face was long and narrow, and heavy-boned. His eyes were dark and thoughtful. He dressed always in sorcerer’s black, complete with cape and cowl, and looked the part to perfection.
Wulf was a newcomer to Haven, and as yet hadn’t shown much evidence of his power, but no one doubted he had it. A few weeks back he’d been attacked by four street thugs. It took the city Guard almost a week to find a horse and cart sturdy enough to carry the four stone statues away. They ended up on the Street of Gods. Tourists burn incense sticks before them, but the statues are still silently screaming.
Sitting quietly in a chair in the corner, with head bowed and hands clasped neatly in her lap, was Jillian Hardcastle, Cameron’s wife. She was barely into her mid-twenties, but she looked twenty years older. She had been pretty once, in an unremarkable way, but life with Hardcastle had worn her away until there was no character left in her face; only a shape, and features that faded from memory the moment she was out of sight. She dressed in rich and fashionable clothes because her husband expected it of her, but she still looked like what she was: a poor little country mouse who’d been brought into the city and had every spark of individuality beaten out of her. Those who spent time in Hardcastle’s company had learned not to comment on the occasional bruises and black eyes that marked Jillian’s face, or the mornings she spent lying in bed, resting.
They’d been married seven years. It was an arranged marriage. Hardcastle arranged it.
He glared at Wulf for a long moment, and when he finally spoke his voice was deceptively calm and even. “You told me your magics could break through any barrier Adamant could buy. So why is he still alive?”
Wulf shrugged easily. “He must have found himself a new sorcerer. I’m surprised anyone would work with him after what I did to his last magic-user, but then, that’s Haven for you. There’s always someone, if the money’s right. It won’t make any difference in the long run. It may take a little time to find just the right opening, but I doubt this magic-user will be any more difficult to dispose of than the last one.”
“More delays,” said Hardcastle. “I don’t like delays, sorcerer. I don’t like excuses, either. I want James Adamant dead and out of the way before the people vote. I don’t care what it costs, or what you have to do; I want him dead. Understand, sorcerer?”
“Of course, Cameron. I assure you, there’s no need to worry. I’ll take care of everything. I trust the rest of your campaign is running smoothly?”
“So far,” said Hardcastle grudgingly. “The posterers have been out since dawn, and my mercenaries have been dealing with Adamant’s men quite successfully, in spite of the interfering Guard. If Adamant is foolish enough to try and hold any street gatherings, my men will see they don’t last long. Commoners don’t have the guts to stand and fight. Spill some blood on the cobbles, and they’ll scatter fast enough.”
“Quite right, Cameron. There’s nothing at all to worry about. We’ve thought of everything, planned for every eventuality. Nothing can go wrong.”
“Don’t take me for a fool, sorcerer. Something can always go wrong. Adamant’s no fool, either; he wouldn’t still be investing so much time and money in his campaign if he didn’t think he had a bloody good chance of beating me. He knows something, Wulf. Something we don’t. I can feel it in my bones.”
“Whatever you say, Cameron. I’ll make further enquiries. In the meantime, I have someone waiting to meet you.”
“I hadn’t forgotten,” said Hardcastle. “Your chief of mercenaries. The one you’ve been so mysterious about. Very well; who is it?”
Wulf braced himself. “Roxanne.”
Hardcastle sat up straight in his chair. “Roxanne? You brought that woman into my house? Get her out of here now!”
“It’s perfectly all right, Cameron,” said Wulf quickly. “I brought two of my best men to keep an eye on her. I think you’ll find her reputation is a little exaggerated. She’s the best sword-for-hire I’ve ever come across. Unbeatable with a blade in her hand, and a master strategist. She works well on her own, or in charge of troops. She’s done an excellent job for us so far, with remarkably few fatalities. She’s a genuine phenomenon.”
“She’s also crazy!”
“There is that, yes. But it doesn’t get in the way of her work.”
Hardcastle slowly settled back into his chair, but his scowl remained. “All right, I’ll see her. Where is she?”
“In the library.”
Hardcastle sniffed. “At least there’s not much there she can damage. Jillian, go and get her.”
His wife nodded silently, got to her feet and left the study, being careful to ease the door shut behind her so that it wouldn’t slam.
Hardcastle turned away from the bow window, and stared at the portrait of his father, hanging on the wall opposite. A dark and gloomy picture of a dark and gloomy man. Gideon Hardcastle hadn’t been much of a father, and Cameron had shed no tears at his funeral, but he had been a Councillor in Haven for thirty-four years. Cameron Hardcastle was determined to do better. Being a Councillor was just the beginning. He had plans. He was going to make the name Hardcastle respected and feared throughout the Low Kingdoms.
Whatever it took.
 
Roxanne prowled restlessly back and forth in Hardcastle’s library, her boots sinking soundlessly into the thick pile carpet. The two mercenaries set to guard her watched nervously from the other side of the room. Roxanne smiled at them now and again, just to keep them on their toes. She was tall, six foot three even without her boots, with a lithe, muscular body. She wore a shirt and trousers of bright lime-yellow, topped with a battered leather jacket. She looked like a vicious canary. She wore a long sword on her left hip, in a well-worn scabbard.
At first sight she was not unattractive. She was young, in her early twenties, with a sharp-boned face, blazing dark eyes, and a mass of curly black hair held in place with a leather headband. But there was something about Roxanne, something in her unwavering gaze and disturbing smile that made even the most experienced mercenary uneasy. Besides, everyone knew her reputation.
Roxanne first made a name for herself when she was fifteen, fighting as a sword-for-hire in the Silk Trail vendettas. The rest of her company were wiped out in an ambush, and she had to fight her way back alone through the enemy lines. She killed seventeen men and women that night, and had the ears to prove it. The people who saw her stride back into camp that night, laughing and singing, covered in other people’s blood and wearing a necklace of human ears, swore they’d never seen anything more frightening in their lives.
She went through a dozen mercenary companies in less than three years, and despite her swordsmanship they were always glad to see her go. She was brave and loyal, as long as she was paid regularly, and always the first to lead an attack, but there was no getting away from the fact that Roxanne was stark staring crazy. When there wasn’t an enemy to fight she’d pick quarrels among her own people, just to get a little action. She was even worse when she got drunk. People who knew her learned to recognise the signs early, and head for the nearest exit. Roxanne had a nasty temper and a somewhat strange sense of humour. Her idea of a good night out tended to involve knife fights, terrorising the locals, and burning down inns that expected her to pay her bar bills.
Not that she limited her arson to inns. Quite often she’d set fire to a tent or two in her own camp, for reasons that made sense only to her. Roxanne liked a good fire. She also liked betting everything she had on one roll of the dice, and then refusing to pay up if she lost. She worshipped a god no one had ever heard of, had an entirely unhealthy regard for the truth, and picked fights with nuns. She said they offended her sense of the rightness of things. If Roxanne had a sense of rightness of things, it was news to everyone who’d ever met her.
Everyone agreed that Roxanne would go far, and the sooner the better.
She ended up in Haven after a disagreement with a Captain of the Guard over the prices in a Jaspertown company store. When someone explained to her that she’d just killed the local Mayor’s son, she decided it might be time to start looking for new employment. So she threw the Captain’s head through the Mayor’s front window, set fire to a post office as a distraction, and headed for Haven as fast as her stolen horse could carry her.
Roxanne roamed about Hardcastle’s library, picking things up and putting them down again. She’d never seen so many resolutely ugly pieces of ornamental china in her life. And there wasn’t a damn thing worth stealing. She broke a few ornaments on general principles, and because they made such a pleasant sound as they smashed against the wall. The two mercenaries stirred uneasily, but said nothing. Ostensibly they were there to keep her out of trouble and make sure she didn’t set fire to anything, but Roxanne knew they wouldn’t do anything unless they absolutely had to. They were scared of her. Most people were, particularly when she smiled. Roxanne smiled widely at the two mercenaries. They both paled visibly, and she turned away, satisfied. She started to pace up and down again, tapping her fingertips on her sword belt. She never could stay still for long. She had too much energy in her.
She looked round quickly as the library door swung open, and then took her hand away from her sword as a pale, colorless woman came in. At first Roxanne thought she must be a servant, but a quick glance at the quality of her clothes suggested she had to be very upper-class, even if she didn’t act like it. She ignored the two mercenaries and addressed herself to Roxanne, without raising her eyes from the floor.
“My husband will see you now,” she said quietly, her voice entirely free of inflection. “Please follow me and I’ll take you to him.”
The two mercenaries looked at each other, and one of them cleared his throat diffidently. “Pardon me, ma’am, but we’re supposed to stay with her.”
Jillian Hardcastle glanced at him briefly, and then looked back at the floor. “My husband wants to see Roxanne. He didn’t mention you.”
The mercenary frowned uncertainly. “I don’t really think we should ...”
“You stay put,” said Roxanne flatly. “Don’t touch the booze and don’t break anything. Got it?”
“Got it,” said the mercenary. “We’ll stay right here.” The other mercenary nodded quickly.
Roxanne followed Jillian Hardcastle out of the library and into the hall. It was a large hall, wide and echoing, and Roxanne did her best to look unimpressed. She quickly realised she needn’t bother, as Jillian kept her gaze firmly on the ground at all times. Roxanne stared at her thoughtfully. This beaten-down little mouse was Hardcastle’s wife? Perhaps the rumours about him were true after all.
Jillian opened the study door, and gestured politely for Roxanne to go in first. She did so, swaggering in with her thumbs tucked into her sword belt. Hardcastle and Wulf got to their feet. Hardcastle studied her narrowly. Roxanne smiled at them both, and didn’t miss the little moue of unease that crossed their faces. She knew the effect her smile had on people. That was why she used it. She glanced quickly round the study. Not bad. Quite luxurious in its way. She did her best to look as though she’d seen better, in her time.
“Welcome to my house, Roxanne,” said Hardcastle heavily. “Wulf tells me you’ve done good work for me. As a reward, I have a special assignment for you. You’ll be working mostly alone, but there’s an extra five hundred ducats in it for you.”
“Sounds good,” said Roxanne. “What’s the catch?”
Hardcastle frowned. Out of the corner of her eye, Roxanne saw Jillian wince momentarily, and then her face was blank and empty again. Roxanne dropped insolently into the most comfortable-looking chair and draped one leg over the padded arm. Hardcastle looked at her for a moment, and then drew up a chair opposite her. Wulf and Jillian remained standing. Hardcastle met Roxanne’s gaze for a moment, and then looked away, despite himself.
“James Adamant is standing against me in the election,” he said finally. “I want him stopped. Hurt him, kill him, I don’t care. Spend as much as you need, use whatever tactics you like. If there’s any repercussions I’ll get you out of Haven in plenty of time.”
“The catch,” said Roxanne.
“Adamant has two Captains of the city Guard as bodyguards,” said Hardcastle steadily. “They’re called Hawk and Fisher.”
Roxanne smiled. “I’ve heard of them. They’re supposed to be good. Very good.” She laughed happily. It was an unpleasant, disturbing sound. “Hardcastle, I’d almost do this for free, just for the chance to go up against those two.”
“They’re not the target,” said Hardcastle sharply. “If you have a grudge with them, you deal with it on your own time.”
“Of course,” said Roxanne.
“Even apart from them, Adamant’s going to be hard to reach. He has his own mercenaries, and a new magic-user. I understand you have a special contact of your own among his people, so I’ll leave the details to you. But it has to be done soon.” He picked up his wineglass. “Jillian, get me some wine.”
She moved quickly forward, took the glass from his hand, and went over to the row of decanters on the nearby table.
“Do I get any support on this?” said Roxanne, “Or am I working entirely on my own?”
“Use whatever people you need, but make sure there are no direct links to me. Officially, you’re just another of my mercenaries.”
Jillian brought him a glass of wine. Hardcastle looked at it without touching it. “Jillian, what is this?”
“Your wine, Cameron.”
“What kind of wine?”
“Red wine.”
“And what kind of wine do I normally drink when I have guests?”
“White wine.”
“So why have you brought me red?”
Jillian’s mouth began to tremble slightly, though her face remained blank. “I don’t know.”
“It’s because you’re stupid, isn’t it?”
“Yes, Cameron.”
“Go and get me some white wine.”
Jillian went back to the decanters. Hardcastle looked at Roxanne, who was studying him thoughtfully. “Have you got something to say, mercenary?”
“She’s your wife.”
“Yes. She is.”
Jillian came back with a glass of white wine. Hardcastle took it, and put it down on the desk without tasting it. “I’ll talk with you about this later, Jillian.”
She nodded, and stood silently beside his chair. Her hands were clasped so tightly together that the knuckles showed white.
“It’s time you spoke to your people, Cameron,” said Wulf softly. “We need them out on the streets as quickly as possible, and you need to speak to them before they go.”
Hardcastle nodded ungraciously and got to his feet. He looked at Roxanne. “You’d better come too. You might learn something.”
“Wouldn’t miss it for the world,” said Roxanne.
 
The main hall at Brimstone Hall was uncomfortably large. Two chandeliers of massed candles spread a great pool of light down the middle of the hall, and oil lamps lined the walls. Even so, dark shadows pressed close around the borders of the light. Silence lay heavily across the hall, and the slightest sound seemed to echo on forever. Armed men stood at intervals along the walls, staring blankly straight ahead, somehow all the more menacing for their complete lack of movement. A wide set of stairs led up to a gallery overlooking the hall. Hardcastle stood at ease on the gallery, smiling faintly at some pleasant thought of things to come. Jillian stood at his side—quiet, pliant, head bowed, and eyes far away, as though trying to pretend she wasn’t really there at all.
Roxanne stood back a way, hidden in the shadows of the gallery. Wulf sat on a chair beside her, legs casually crossed, hands folded neatly in his lap. He might have been waiting for a late dessert, or a promised glass of wine, but there was something unsettling in the air of anticipation that hung about him, something ... unhealthy. Roxanne kept a careful watch on him from the corner of her eye. She didn’t trust sorcerers. Not that she trusted anyone, when you got right down to it, but in her experience magic-users were a particularly treacherous breed.
Hardcastle finally nodded to the two armed mercenaries at the end of the hall, and they pulled back the bolts and swung open the heavy main doors. The crowd of Conservative supporters came surging in, herded by polite but firm stewards. There were flags and banners and a steady hum of anticipation, but it had to be said that the crowd didn’t exactly look enthusiastic to be there. Roxanne couldn’t help but wonder whether the armed guards were there to keep people out, or keep them in. The main doors slammed shut behind the last of the crowd. Hardcastle looked out over his supporters, and cleared his throat loudly. The hall fell silent.
Afterwards, Roxanne was never really clear what the speech had been about. It was an excellent speech, no doubt of that, but she couldn’t seem to sort out what exactly had been so enthralling about it. She only knew that the moment Hardcastle began to speak he became magnetic. She couldn’t tear her eyes away from him, and she strained to hear every word. The crowd below were besotted with him, cheering and applauding and waving their banners frantically every time he paused. Even the stewards and mercenaries seemed fascinated by him. The speech finally came to an end, amid rapturous applause. Hardcastle looked out over the ecstatic crowd, smiling slightly, and then gestured for silence. The cheers gradually died away.
“My friends, there is one among you who has proved himself worthy of my special attention. Joshua Steele, step forward.”
There was a pause, and then a young man dressed in the gaudy finery of the minor Quality made his way through the crowd to stand at the foot of the stairs. Even from the back of the gallery Roxanne could tell he was scared. His hands had clenched into fists at his sides, and his face was deathly pale. Hardcastle’s smile widened a little.
“Steele, I set you a task. Nothing too difficult. All you had to do was use your contacts to find out whether James Adamant was still magically protected. You told me he wasn’t. That’s not true, is it, Steele?”
The young man licked his lips quickly, and shifted his weight from one foot to the other. “I did everything I could, Councillor. Honestly! His old sorcerer, Masque, is dead, and Adamant hasn’t made any move to replace him. My informants were very precise.”
Hardcastle shook his head sadly. “You lied to me, Steele. You betrayed me.”
Steele suddenly turned and ran, pushing his way through the crowd. Hardcastle looked back at Wulf, and nodded quickly. The sorcerer frowned, concentrating. Steele screamed shrilly, and the crowd drew back from him in horror as he fell writhing to the floor. Blood spurted from his nose and ears, and then from his eyes. He clawed at his face, and then at his stomach as bloody spots appeared on his tunic. Small fanged mouths burst out of his flesh all over his body, as hundreds of bloodworms chewed their way out of him. One of them ruptured the carotid artery in his neck and blood flew out, soaking the nearest members of the crowd. They moaned in revulsion, but couldn’t tear their eyes away. Steele kicked and struggled feebly for a few moments longer, and then let out his breath in a long, ragged sigh. His body continued to twitch and jerk as the bloodworms ate their way out. Some of the crowd stamped on the horrid things as they left the body, but it quickly became clear the worms were already dying. They couldn’t survive for long once they’d left their host.
Roxanne looked thoughtfully at Hardcastle’s back, and then at the sorcerer Wulf. There was a lesson here worth remembering. If she ever fell out with Hardcastle, she’d better make sure the sorcerer was dead first. She looked back at the crowd. They were silent and shocked, sullen now. Their holiday mood had been ruined. Hardcastle raised his voice to get their attention, and began to speak again.
And once more his marvelous oratory worked its magic. In a matter of moments, the crowd was won over again, and soon they were stamping and cheering and shouting his name, just as they had before. They seemed to have forgotten all about the dead man in their midst. Hardcastle filled their hearts and minds with good cheer, and sent them out into the streets to campaign on his behalf. The crowd filed out of the hall, laughing and chattering animatedly among themselves. Soon the hall was empty, apart from the stewards and the mercenaries. Hardcastle looked down at the body lying alone in the middle of the floor.
“Have someone clean up the mess,” he said coldly, and then turned and left the gallery, followed by Wulf and Jillian. Roxanne looked at the torn and blood-soaked body down below.
 
Hardcastle strode into his study and poured himself a large drink. The speech had gone down well, and that little bastard Steele had got what was coming to him. Maybe there was some justice in the world after all. He was just lowering himself into his favourite chair when the commotion began. Someone was shouting in the corridor, and there was the sound of running feet and general panic. Hardcastle rose quickly from his chair, and his gaze went immediately to the family long-sword hanging on the wall over the fireplace. It had been a good few years since he’d last drawn that in anger, but he’d had a strong feeling he’d need the blade sooner or later during his campaign. And with Wulf’s war on Adamant’s house finally beginning to warm up, it was only to be expected that Adamant would resort in kind. Hardcastle snorted angrily as he put down his glass and pulled the long-sword from its sheath. So much for Adamant’s puerile insistence on playing by the rules. There was only one rule in politics, and that was to win.
It felt good to have a sword in his hands again. He’d spent too long in smoke-filled rooms, arguing with fools for money and support that should have been his by right. The commotion in the hall was growing louder. Hardcastle nodded grimly. Let them come. Let them all come. He’d show them he was a force to be reckoned with. He shot a quick glance at Jillian, who was standing uncertainly by the door, one hand raised to her mouth. Useless damned mouse of a wife. He’d tried to knock some backbone into her, and little good it had done him. He gestured curtly for her to get away from the door, and she fled to the nearest chair and stood behind it. The sorcerer Wulf stayed by the door, making hurried gestures with his hands and muttering under his breath.
“Well?” said Hardcastle impatiently. “What’s out there? Are we under attack?”
“Not by magic, Cameron. My wards are still holding. The attack must be on the physical plane. Mercenaries, perhaps.” He stopped suddenly, and sniffed at the air. “Can you smell smoke?”
They looked at each other as the same thought struck them both at the same time. They didn’t need to say her name. Hardcastle hurried out into the hall, sword in hand, followed by Wulf. Roxanne had her back to the wall and her sword at the ready as she faced off against two of Hardcastle’s mercenaries. She was grinning broadly. The mercenaries looked scared but determined. A little further down the hall, a huge wall tapestry was going up in flames. Several servants were trying to put it out with pans of water.
Hardcastle’s face purpled dangerously. “Roxanne! What’s the meaning of this?”
“Just having a little fun,” said Roxanne easily. “I was doing all right till these two spoilsports interfered. I’ll be with you in a minute, as soon as I’ve dealt with them.”
“Roxanne,” said Wulf quickly, before Hardcastle could say something unwise, “please put away your sword. These men belong to your employer, Councillor Hardcastle. They are under his protection.”
Roxanne sniffed ungraciously, and sheathed her sword. The mercenaries put away their swords, looking more than a little relieved. Wulf gestured for them to leave, and they did so quickly, before he could change his mind. Wulf looked at Roxanne reproachfully.
“When you signed the contract to work for Councillor Hardcastle, there was a specific clause stating that you wouldn’t start any fires except those we asked you to.”
Roxanne shrugged. “You know I can’t read.”
“I read it aloud to you.”
“It was an ugly tapestry anyway.”
“That’s as may be. But as long as you work for the Councillor you will abide by your contract. Or are you saying your word is worthless?”
Roxanne glared at him. Wulf’s stomach lurched, but he stood his ground. He knew any number of spells that would stop her in her tracks, but he had a sneaking suspicion she’d still survive long enough to kill him, no matter what he did to her. Confronting her this early was a definite risk, but it had to be done. Either her word was binding or it wasn’t. And if it wasn’t, then she was too dangerous a weapon to be used. He’d have to let her go, and hope he could kill her safely from a distance.
Roxanne scowled suddenly, and leaned against the wall with her arms folded. “All right, no more fires. You people have no sense of fun.”
“Of course not,” said Wulf. “We’re in politics.”
“If you’ve quite finished,” said Hardcastle acidly, “perhaps you’d care to accompany me back to my study. I’m expecting some very important guests, and I want both of you present. If you can spare the time.”
“Of course,” said Roxanne cheerfully. “You’re the boss.”
Hardcastle gave her a hard look, and then led the way back to his study. The DeWitt brothers were already there, waiting for him. Hardcastle silently promised his butler a slow and painful death for not warning him, and then smiled courteously at the DeWitts and walked forward to shake hands with them. At the last moment he realised he was still holding his sword, and handed it quickly to Wulf to replace on the wall. At least Jillian had had the sense to get the DeWitts a glass of wine. Perhaps the situation could still be saved.
Marcus and David DeWitt were both in their late forties, and on first impression looked much the same: tall, slender, elegant, and arrogant. Dark hair and eyes made their faces appear pale and washed out, giving their impassive features the look of a mummer’s mask. There was a quiet, understated menace in their unwavering self-possession, as though nothing in the world would dare disturb them. They’d left their swords at the front door, along with their bodyguards, as a sign of trust, but Hardcastle wasn’t fool enough to believe them unarmed. The DeWitts had many enemies and took no chances. Even with a supposed ally.
Between them, Marcus and David DeWitt ran a third of the docks in Haven, on the age-old principle of the minimum investment for the maximum gain. Their docks were notorious for being the worst maintained and the most dangerous work areas in Haven. If the DeWitts gave a damn, they hid it remarkably well. Life was cheap in Haven, and labour even cheaper. And the DeWitts’ charges were attractively low, so they never wanted for traffic. But now the dock strike was crippling them, despite the zombie scab labour. The dead men were cheap enough to run and never got tired, but they weren’t very bright and needed constant supervision. They were also easy targets for dock-worker guerrilla units armed with salt and fire.
A Conservative-backed Council would support the DeWitts against the Dock-workers Guild, even if it came down to open violence and intimidation. Reform would back the Guild. So the DeWitts were making the rounds before the election, buying themselves Councillors. Unfortunately for them, they needed Hardcastle more then he needed them. So if they wanted his support, they were going to have to pay through the nose for it.
Wulf leaned back in his chair and quietly studied the DeWitt brothers. They were an unpleasant pair, by all accounts, but he’d worked with worse in his time. Like Hardcastle, for example. A brute and a bully and not nearly as clever as he thought he was. Wulf had done a great many unpleasant things himself, down the years; his style of magic demanded it. But he did them in a businesslike way, because they were necessary. Hardcastle did unpleasant things because he enjoyed it. He was one of those people who can only prove how important they are by showing how unimportant everyone else is. Wulf frowned slightly. Such men are dangerous—to themselves, and those around them.
But for the moment, he was a man with power, a rising star; a man on the way up. Wulf could go far, riding the coattails of such a man. And when Hardcastle’s star began to wane, Wulf would move on. He had ambitions of his own. Hardcastle was just a means to an end.
“Twenty thousand ducats,” said Marcus DeWitt in his cold, flat voice. He took a folded bank draft from his coat pocket and laid it carefully on the table before him. “I trust that will be sufficient?”
“For the moment,” said Hardcastle. He gestured easily to Wulf, who leaned forward and picked up the bank draft.
“James Adamant has a hell of a lot of followers out on the streets,” said David DeWitt, opening a small silver snuff box and taking out a pinch of white powder. He sniffed delicately, and then sighed slowly as the dust hit his system. He smiled, and looked steadily at Hardcastle. “Just how do you intend to deal with this very popular Reformer, sir Hardcastle?”
“The traditional way,” said Hardcastle. “Money, and force of arms. The carrot and the stick. It never fails, providing it’s applied properly. My people are already out on the streets.”
“Adamant has money,” said Marcus. “He also has Hawk and Fisher.”
“They’re not infallible,” said Hardcastle. “They couldn’t keep Blackstone from being killed.”
“They caught his killer,” said David DeWitt. “And made sure he didn’t live to stand trial.”
“There’s no need to worry,” said Wulf. “We have our own wild card. Gentlemen, may I present the legendary Roxanne.”
She smiled at the DeWitt brothers, and they both flinched a little.
“Ah, yes,” said Marcus. “I thought I smelt something burning as we came in.”
“I always thought she’d be taller,” said David. “Taller, and covered with fresh blood.”
Wulf smiled. “She’s everything the legends say she is, and more.”
Marcus DeWitt frowned. “Does Adamant know she’s working for you?”
“No,” said Hardcastle. “Not yet. We’re saving that for a surprise.”
The sorcerer known as the Grey Veil huddled in a comer of the deserted church, shivering with the cold. He’d been there for several hours, gathering together what was left of his magic. He couldn’t believe how fast everything had fallen apart. One moment he had been a force to be reckoned with, a sorcerer with hundreds of lesser minds under his command; and then suddenly his control was broken by an interfering Guard, and he’d had to run for his life like a thief in the night. His slaves were free again, and he was a wanted man with a price on his head.
It had all seemed so simple in the beginning. Enter the election as a candidate, and then possess enough people to raise an army of voters. Once on the Council, all kinds of powerful men would have been vulnerable to his possession. A simple plan; so simple it seemed foolproof. He should have known something would go wrong. Something always went wrong. Veil hugged his knees to his chest and rocked back and forth on his haunches. He had no idea how the Guards had found him out. It didn’t really matter. He’d staked everything he had on one roll of the dice and had nothing left with which to start again. He’d be lucky to get out of Haven alive.
He pulled his thin cloak tightly about him. He should have known it would come to this. All his life everything he’d turned his hand to had failed him. He’d been born into a debt-ridden family, which, as time went on, only slid further and further into poverty. He was put to work as soon as he was able, at the age of seven. He spent his childhood in the sweatshops of the Devil’s Hook, and in his adolescence moved restlessly from one lousy job to another, searching always for the one lucky break that would change his life. Whatever money he made went on plans and schemes and desperate gambles, but none of them ever came to anything. Even the girl he loved went to another man.
 
And then he met the old man, who found in Veil a gift for magic. He worked himself to exhaustion to pay for the old man’s lessons in sorcery, and when that wasn’t enough he stole what he needed from his friends. When he was powerful enough he killed the old man, and took his gri moires and objects of power. He became the Grey Veil, and swore an oath on his own blood that whatever happened, whatever he had to do, he would never be poor again.
Veil smiled bitterly. He should have known better. A loser was still a loser, no matter what fancy new name he took. He breathed heavily on his hands, trying to coax some warmth into his numb fingers. It was very cold in the Temple of the Abomination.
There were many abandoned churches on the Street of Gods. A Being’s power would wane, or its followers prove fickle, or perhaps simply the fashion would change, and overnight a church whose walls had once rung to the sound of hymns of adoration and the dropping of coins into offertory bowls would find itself suddenly deserted and abandoned. Eventually another congregation would take over the building, worshipping another god, and business would go on as usual. But some abandoned churches were left strictly alone, for fear of what might linger in the silence.
The Temple of the Abomination had stood empty and alone for centuries; a simple, square stone building on the lower end of the Street of Gods. It wasn’t very large, and from the outside it looked more like a downmarket mausoleum than a church. It had no windows, and only the one door. It wasn’t locked or bolted. The Temple of the Abomination had a bad reputation, even for the Street of Gods. People who went in tended not to come out again. Veil didn’t give a damn. He needed a place to hide where no one else would think to look. Nothing else mattered.
It slowly occurred to him that the church didn’t seem as dark as it had been. When he’d first crept inside the church, he’d pulled the door shut behind him, closing out the light. The pitch darkness had been a comfort to him then, an endless night that would hide him from prying eyes. But now he could clearly make out the interior of the church, such as it was. There wasn’t much to see, just plain stone walls and a broken stone altar set roughly in the centre of the room. Veil frowned. Where the hell was the light coming from?
Curiosity finally stirred him from his hiding place in the comer, and he rose slowly to his feet. He moved forward, wincing as his stiff joints creaked protestingly. The small sounds seemed very loud on the quiet. Outside on the Street of Gods the clamour of a hundred priests filled the air from dawn to dusk, augmented by the hymns and howls of the faithful, but not a whisper of that turmoil passed through the thick stone walls.
Veil peered about him, but there seemed no obvious source to the dim blue light that filled the church. He glanced down at his feet to see which way his shadow was pointing, and his heart missed a beat. He didn’t have a shadow. A cold hand clutched at his heart, and for a moment his breath caught in his throat. There had to be a shadow; there were other shadows all around him. Some of them were moving. Veil stumbled back a step and looked quickly about him, but there was nothing and no one in the church with him, and the quiet remained unbroken. He took a deep breath and made himself hold it for a long moment before letting go. This was no time to be letting his imagination get the better of him. The light was nothing to worry about. There were bound to be stray vestiges of magic in a place like this.
He made himself walk over to the stone altar. It didn’t look like much, up close. Just a great slab of stone, roughly the shape and size of an average coffin. He winced mentally at the comparison, and walked slowly round the altar. It was cracked from end to end, and someone had cut runes of power into the stone with a chisel. Veil’s lips moved slowly as he worked out the meaning. The runes were part of a restraining spell, meant to hold something in the stone.
Veil frowned. All he knew about the Temple of the Abomination was what everybody knew. Hundreds of years ago, when the city was still young, a cult of death and worse than death had flourished on the Street of Gods, until the other Beings had joined together to destroy the Abomination and all its worshippers. It all happened so long ago that no one even remembered what the Abomination was anymore. On an impulse, Veil placed his hands on the altar and called up his magic, trying to draw out whatever impressions still remained in the stone.
Power rushed through him like a tidal wave, awful and magnificent, blinding and deafening him with its intensity. He staggered drunkenly back and forth as strange thoughts and feelings swept through him, none of them his own. Memories of priests and carriers swept through him and were gone, blazing up and disappearing like so many candles snuffed by an unforgiving darkness. There were too many to count, but all of them had served the Abomination, and it had granted them power over the earth and everything that moved upon it.
Veil slowly lifted his head and looked about him. The church was lit as bright as day. He could feel the power surging within him, impatient to be released. He would use that power to gather followers, and bring them to what moved within him. And the thing that men had once called the Abomination would thrive and grow strong again.
That was not its true name, of course. Veil knew what the Abomination really was. He’d known it all his life. He laughed aloud, and the horrid sound echoed on and on in the silence.