I must be getting old,
she thought sourly,
getting caught like that. Ten-to-one odds never used to bother me, either. Maybe I should get out of this business while I’m
still
ahead.
She cut down one Stalker, gutted a second, and blinded a third. Blood flew on the air, and she grinned nastily.
Forget it; I’d be bored in a week.
The Stalker before her paused suddenly, his mouth gaping with surprise, and then his head exploded. Blood and brains spattered the tunnel roof and walls as Fisher jumped back, startled. There was a series of brisk popping sounds, and within the space of a few moments the tunnel floor was littered with headless bodies. Hawk and Fisher lowered their weapons, looked at each other, and then turned to stare at Tomb.
“Sorry it took so long,” said the sorcerer calmly, “but that kind of spell is rather tricky to work out. You have to be very careful where you put the decimal point.” He stopped suddenly, his head cocked to one side, listening to something only he could hear. “I think it might be wise to press on. There are more Stalkers on their way. Rather more than I can handle, I’m afraid.”
“Then what the hell are we standing around here for?” snapped Hawk. “Move it!”
He pushed Tomb ahead of him, and the three of them ran swiftly through the brick tunnels, heading for the outside world. They hadn’t gone far when they heard the sound of running feet behind them. Hawk and Fisher ran faster, urging Tomb on. He led them through the maze of tunnels with unwavering confidence, and suddenly they were through the doorway and out on the Street of Gods, blinking dazedly in the bright summer sun. Tomb turned to face the door, gestured sharply, and the door disappeared, leaving a blank wall behind it.
“That should hold them,” said Tomb. “Long enough for us to make ourselves scarce, anyway. I trust you found the visit useful?”
“Sure,” said Hawk, his breathing slowly getting back to normal. “Nothing like being chased by an army of murderous fanatics to give you a good workout.”
“Good,” said Tomb. “Because I’m afraid I have to leave you now. I do have other work to attend to, you know.” He produced a folded piece of paper from a hidden pocket, and handed it to Hawk. “This is a list of Beings who may agree to speak to you. It would help you to have an overview of what’s happening on the Street of Gods at the moment. Beyond that, I’m afraid I really don’t know what else to suggest. Tracking down murderers is a little outside my experience.”
“We’ll cope,” said Fisher. “We’re Captains of the Guard; we don’t need our hands held. Right, Hawk?”
“Right,” said Hawk.
“I’m relieved to hear it,” said Tomb. “If you need me again, or any other member of the Squad, just ask around. Someone will always know where we are. It’s part of our job to have a high profile. Good day.”
He bowed politely to them both, and then set off down the Street at a pace obviously calculated to prevent any further discussion. Hawk looked at Fisher.
“He knows something. Something he doesn’t want us asking him about. I wonder what.”
Fisher shrugged. “On the Street of Gods, that could cover a whole lot of territory.”
Charles Buchan sat on the edge of his chair, and waited impatiently for them to bring Annette to him. The Sisters of Joy were officially classed as a religion, and had one of the largest establishments on the Street of Gods, but when you got right down to it, their lounge looked like nothing more than an upmarket brothel. Which wasn’t really that far from the mark, if you thought about it.
The Sisters of Joy were an old established religion. Older than Haven itself, some said. It had branches all across the Low Kingdoms, to the impotent fury of equally old and established, but more conservative, religions. The Sisters had started out as temple prostitutes for a now forgotten fertility Goddess, probably not unlike the Bright Lady, and had somehow evolved through their discovery of tantric magic into something far more powerful. Not to mention sinister.
Tantric magic is based on sex, or to be more exact, sexuality. Basically, the Sisters of Joy drained people’s strength and vitality through sex, leeching at their very life force. The stolen energy gave them greatly extended life spans, and made them powerful magicians, but only as long as the energy level was maintained. They needed a lot of people to maintain their power and their long lives, but human nature being what it was, the Sisters were never short of visitors. Or victims, depending on how you looked at it.
Tantric magic wasn’t strictly speaking part of the High Magic at all, having its roots squarely in the older, less reputable Wild Magic, which was partly why most modem sorcerers would have nothing to do with it. The other reason was that women were a hell of a lot better at tantric magic than men, and the High Magic was still largely a male province. So the High Magic was socially acceptable, while tantric magic very definitely was not. The Sisters of Joy didn’t give a damn. They went their own way, as they always had. Their door were always open, day and night, to those who came to them in need or despair. The Sisters offered care and comfort and affection, and in return bound all who came to them in a tightening web of emotional dependency and obligation. There were those who said the Sisters of Joy were addictive, and that those who fell under their influence became little more than slaves. No one said it too loudly, or too publicly, of course. It wouldn’t have been wise.
Buchan got up out of his chair, and began to pace up and down. They would bring Annette to him soon.
The lounge was almost indecently luxurious. A thick pile carpet covered the floor, and the walls had disappeared behind a profusion of paintings and hanging tapestries, most of them obscene. Perfumes sweetened the air. There were comfortable chairs and settees and love seats, and delicately crafted tables bearing wines and spirits and cordials, and every kind of drug or potion. Nothing was forbidden here, and it was all free. To begin with. The Sisters of Joy had amassed a considerable fortune over the many centuries, and they still received very generous donations from their grateful clients. No one ever mentioned blackmail, of course. It wouldn’t have been wise.
With an effort, Buchan stopped himself pacing. It was a sign of weakness, and he couldn’t afford to be weak. He looked again at the brass-bound clock on the mantelpiece, and frowned. He couldn’t stay long, or Tomb and Rowan might wonder where he was. They might ask questions. So might Hawk and Fisher. He would have to be careful around the two Guards. They had a reputation for sniffing out secrets and getting to the bottom of things. Buchan was always careful to go disguised when he made his visits to the Sisters of Joy, but no disguise was perfect, especially on the Street of Gods. Still, only the Quality knew for sure of his connection with the Sisters, and they didn’t know as much as they thought they did. And when you got right down to it, the chances of the city aristocracy deigning to discuss such matters with the likes of Hawk and Fisher were pretty damned remote.
The Quality wouldn’t discuss one of their own with outsiders. Even if they had disowned him.
He smiled slightly. It wasn’t that long ago he’d been an important figure in the Quality, a member in good standing and much in demand. No one cared about his reputation then; it just gave them something juicy to gossip about. The Quality do so love their gossip. But even the most sybaritic, most debauched member of the Quality had drawn the line at his associating with the Sisters of Joy. The Sisters were beyond the pale, utterly forbidden. First his friends talked to him about it, and then his enemies. His Family forbade him to visit the Sisters, on pain of disowning him. But he couldn’t stay away, and he wouldn’t tell them why, so in the end the Quality had turned their back on him, and his Family had cut him off without a penny.
He didn’t care. Not really. He had a new life in the God Squad, and he had his Annette.
And then the door opened, and she came in. His breath caught in his throat as it always did, and he stood there for a long moment, just drinking in the sight of her. She was tall and slender and graceful and very lovely. Long blond hair curled down around her shoulders, and her eyes were the same. blue as his own. She smiled at him, the special smile she saved for him and him alone, and ran forward into his waiting arms.
Tomb slowly climbed the stairs to Rowan’s room, a silver tray floating on the air beside him, bearing a cup of steaming tea. The sorcerer was worried about Rowan. She’d been ill on and off for months now, and she still wouldn’t let anyone call in a doctor to see her. She didn’t believe in doctors, preferring to dose herself with her own foul mixtures. Tomb didn’t know what went into them, but every time Rowan prepared a fresh batch in the kitchen, the cook threatened to quit. Having smelt the fumes himself on more than one occasion, Tomb didn’t blame her. If the smell had been any stronger, you could have used it to pebble-dash walls. Tomb’s mouth twitched, but he was too worried to smile. Rowan had been taking her vile doses for weeks, and she was still no better. If her condition didn’t improve soon, he’d bring in a doctor, no matter what she said. He couldn’t stand to see her looking so drawn and tired.
He moved quietly along the landing and stopped outside Rowan’s door. He knocked politely, and glared at the tea tray when it showed signs of wavering.
There was no reply,
and he knocked again. He looked round vaguely as he waited. Rowan rarely answered the first few knocks. She liked her privacy, and often she didn’t care for company. Rowan had never been what you’d call sociable. Tomb sighed quietly, and shifted his weight from one foot to the other.
The house seemed very quiet. Buchan was out, and it was the servants’ day off. Tomb had been a member of the God Squad for almost eleven years now, and he knew the house and its moods well. Of late, however, the quiet seemed to have an almost sinister nature; a quiet of unspoken words and too many secrets. Of course, the house was used to secrets. No one came to the God Squad with an entirely clean past. Which was probably why so few of them stayed long. It wasn’t everyone who could cope with the eccentric realities of the Street of Gods. Tomb had seen many warriors and mystics come and go down the years. He hoped Rowan would stay. She was special. He knocked on the door again, a little louder.
“Rowan? It’s me, Tomb. I thought you might like a nice cup of tea. Can I come in?”
There was still no reply. Tomb opened the door and entered quietly, the tea tray floating uncertainly behind him. Rowan was fast asleep, looking small and helpless and wor risomely frail in the oversized bed. Rowan stirred slowly without waking, and then settled again. She’d disarrayed the bedclothes in her sleep, like a fretful child, and Tomb moved quietly forward to straighten them. He stood back, looked round the room, and then looked at Rowan again. She seemed to be sleeping peacefully now. There didn’t seem to be anything else he could do. There was no reason for him to stay.
He sat down on the chair beside the bed. The room was the same featureless square as his own, but she’d done more to personalize hers in the short time she’d been there than he had in all his eleven years. There were oil paintings on the walls that she’d executed herself. They showed promise. A cuddly toy with a stitched-on smile lay on the floor beside the bed. Rowan liked to take it to bed with her when the others were away on cases and she was left alone in the house at night. Tomb could understand that. There are times we all need something to cling to in the night. The rug on the floor was a new addition. Tomb had spent a whole afternoon in the markets with her, trying to find one just the right shade to complement the bedclothes.
She stirred again in her sleep, and Tomb looked at her quickly, but she didn’t waken. Tomb sat and watched her for a while. He liked to watch her. He could quite happily have sat where he was all day and all night, watching over her, caring for her. Loving her. He smiled slightly. He never used the word love except in his thoughts. He’d told her once how he felt about her, after an hour or so of talking around the subject while he worked up his nerve, and the best he could say of the outcome was that at least she hadn’t laughed at him. She just told him that she didn’t care for him, and seemed to think that was the end of it. Tomb smiled tiredly. If only it was that easy. He hadn’t asked to fall in love with her. She wasn’t especially bright or pretty. But she owned his heart and always would, and there wasn’t a damn thing he could do about it.
Reluctantly he got to his feet. Rowan could wake up anytime now, and he’d better not be here when she did. He didn’t want to upset her. He left the room quietly, and eased the door shut behind him. He made his way back down the stairs, frowning slightly as he tried to work out what he ought to do next. There was a hell of a lot of paperwork that needed seeing to, but then there always was. It could wait a little longer. He supposed he could take a walk down the Street, talk to people, get a feel of how the Street was reacting to Hawk and Fisher’s arrival.