Hawk approached Sinclair and nodded familiarly to him. Sinclair smiled back. He was used to being treated as a friend by people he didn’t recognise or remember. There’s no one so popular as a drunk with money.
“Good party,” said Hawk.
“Marvelous,” said Sinclair. “Dear Louis never stints on these affairs. Would you like a drink?”
Hawk nodded, and Sinclair poured him a generous glass of pink champagne from one of the bottles in a nearby ice bucket. Hawk sipped at it cautiously, and refrained from pulling a face. Far too sweet for his taste, but that was the Quality for you. With their taste for sugar in everything, it was a wonder they had any teeth left at all.
“So, when does the excitement start?” said Hawk, trying not to sound too vague.
“Soon,” said Sinclair. “Do I know you?”
“We’ve met briefly, in the past.”
Sinclair smiled sadly. “That covers rather a lot of ground, I’m afraid.” He emptied his glass, and filled it again. “You’re new here, aren’t you?”
“That’s right,” said Hawk. “I’m here about the Club. The Hellfire Club.”
“Aren’t we all. My little fancy seems to have caught on. I had no idea it would prove so popular.”
“This was your idea, originally?”
“Indeed. My one and only good idea. Would you like to hear about it? I do so love to talk about it, and everyone else has heard the story by now. You know about me, of course. Everyone does. My parents’ generation never tire of holding me up as a Bad Example. Not that I care. I never wanted to be head of the Family. I was happy with my parties and my poetry. I used to write poetry, you know. Some of it was quite passable. But I don’t do that anymore. I couldn’t see the point. When they all died and left me alone, I couldn’t see the point in anything anymore. I mean, they weren’t always very nice to me, but they were my Family, and one or other of them was always there, making sure I didn’t hurt myself too badly. I do miss them.
“I don’t believe in anything much anymore, but I keep looking. There has to be something; something
real
to believe in, apart from just chance. Only sometimes, I think there isn’t. I think that rather a lot, actually, but a few drinks usually helps. I tried religion for a while. I really thought I was on to something there. But there were so many religions, and I couldn’t choose between them. They couldn’t all be right, but they all seemed so sure of themselves. I’ve never been sure of anything. Then I met this fellow on the Street of Gods. Marvelous young sorcerer chappie; Bode, his name was. He gave me the idea for the Hellfire Club. He was very interested in the power you could get from tapping the darkness within you. Of course, the idea seems to have got a bit muddled since all these other people got involved in the Club....
“I liked Bode. He was always good company. Bit too intelligent for his own good, but then, that’s sorcerers for you. Had this very intense girlfriend, all sarcasm and deep insights. I was ever so upset when I heard he died just recently.”
He drained his glass, and looked thoughtfully at another bottle in the ice bucket. Hawk’s thoughts were racing furiously. He’d come here looking for a connection between the Hellfire Club and the God murders, but he seemed to have stumbled across a connection to a completely different case. Sinclair must have met Bode while the sorcerer was carrying out his mysterious commission on the Street of Gods. But who was this girlfriend Sinclair met? Hawk frowned as another thought came to him. Given the appearance of the second Dark Man on the Street of Gods, maybe the two cases weren’t separate after all. Maybe everything was connected....
Hawk had just decided he’d better press Sinclair for more details, when someone tapped him hard on the shoulder from behind. He turned round to find himself facing three large and openly menacing members of the Quality. They were all taller than he, and they all looked as though they worked out regularly with heavy weights.
“Can you smell something?” asked the leader of the group loudly. He sniffed at the air and grinned nastily. “I smell a Guard. No mistaking that stench. But what’s a dirty little Guard doing at a private party? A private Quality party?”
“I’m here on official business,” said Hawk, careful to keep his voice calm and unthreatening. It was obvious the three Quality were looking for trouble. Anywhere else he might have obliged them, but not here. The ballroom was full of hundreds of their friends, all of them Quality. They could cripple him or kill him, and nothing would be done. And he daren’t lift a finger to defend himself. You could, under very rare circumstances, arrest a member of the Quality, even put them on trial, but it still had to be kid gloves all the way. The Quality were under no such restrictions. At best, they’d give him a good kicking and put him in hospital, just for the fun of it. He didn’t want to think what they might do to Fisher.
“An official investigation,” said the group’s spokesman. “Did you hear that? Doesn’t it just make you shiver in your boots? I don’t give a damn about your investigation, Captain. No one here does. We don’t have to. This is our place. We don’t allow your sort in here. Is that clear?”
Hawk started to reply, and the leader hit him open-handed across the face. Hawk saw the blow coming and rode most of it, but he took a step backwards despite himself. His cheek flared red from the impact, and a thin trickle of blood ran down his chin from a split lip.
“You’re going to have to talk louder, Captain. I can’t hear you if you whisper.”
Hawk smiled suddenly, and a fresh rill of blood ran down from his split lip. The leader of the three Quality hesitated, suddenly uncertain. The Guard’s smile was cold and unpleasant, and far too confident for his liking. He glanced quickly about him to check his two friends were still there. His confidence quickly returned. The Guard wouldn’t dare try anything. The first sign of violence, everyone would turn on him. He opened his mouth to say so, and the Guard’s hand shot forward and fastened onto his trouser belt. The Guard took a good hold, and then twisted it suddenly and jerked upwards. The leader’s voice disappeared as his throat clamped shut. Tears sprang to his eyes as his trouser crotch rammed up into his groin. He tried to stand on tip-toe to ease the pain, but it was all he could do to get his breath. He grabbed desperately at the Guard’s arm, but the thick cords of muscle didn’t give an inch. The Guard twisted again, crushing his groin, and a fresh wave of pain welled up through his belly, sickening him.
Hawk brought his scarred face in very close to the Quality leader’s. “You don’t talk like that to a Guard. Not now, not ever. Is that clear?”
The leader nodded, and tried to force out an answer. Hawk twisted his hold viciously, and the man’s face went white.
“Is that clear?”
The leader nodded frantically, and Hawk let him go. He collapsed into the supporting arms of his friends, who looked just as scared and confused as he did. Hawk fixed each of them in turn with his single cold eye.
“Take your friend and get out of here,” he said calmly. “I don’t want to see your faces again. Is that clear?”
They nodded quickly, and half led, half carried their friend away. Hawk watched them go. The trick to situations like that was to take out the leader as quickly and as painfully as possible. It’s not a question of what you do, as what you make them think you’re prepared to do. Take control of the situation away from them. Make them sweat. Make them afraid. You learn things like that in Haven. He looked casually around him, but the incident had passed so quickly that no one seemed to have noticed anything. He turned back to Sinclair, who was studying him thoughtfully.
“You know, that really was very impressive,” said Sinclair. “I wish I could do things like that.”
“You could learn,” said Hawk.
“No, I don’t think so. It probably involves a lot of things like practice and discipline and hard work. Not really me, I’m afraid. Did you know you have blood on your chin?”
Hawk took out his handkerchief and wiped carefully at his mouth and chin. “You have to be able to stand up for yourself. It helps keep the flies off.”
Sinclair smiled. “Like I said, not really me. It’s not important. You see, I don’t matter. Not to anyone. Never have and never will.” He stopped, and looked at Hawk. “Is something wrong, Captain?”
“No. You just reminded me of someone I used to know. Someone who felt like that.”
“What happened to him?”
Hawk looked across at Fisher, on the other side of the room. “He found someone who believed in him.”
Fisher had found herself to be very popular. Young men gathered around her, plying her with drinks and sweets and smiles, and vying with each other for her attention. The young rakes and blades were always on the lookout for a new pretty face, the more exotic the better. And compared to the carefully groomed and painted flowers of the Quality, the six-foot muscular blonde in the Guard’s cloak seemed very exotic indeed. The female members of the Quality seemed caught between ostentatiously ignoring her and glaring at her when her back was turned.
Fisher didn’t care much for the Quality, singly or en masse. More money than they knew what to do with, and nothing to give their lives meaning except an endless round of love affairs, duels, and Family vendettas. The ones with any guts went into the army; these here at the party were the ones who’d stayed behind. Which was why they joined the Hellfire Club. Their lives were so empty that there was nothing left but to play at being bad in the hopes of shocking each other, or at least their parents.
Fisher pumped the young men unobtrusively with leading questions, but didn’t get much in the way of answers. The Quality were too busy making fools of themselves trying to impress her. They began to get on her nerves after a while, and when hints that she’d prefer to be left alone fell on deaf ears, she started to wonder if punching out one or two of them might help to get her message across. She’d just selected her first target, when a loud confident voice cut across the young men’s babble, and quickly sent them all packing.
Fisher looked her rescuer over carefully. He was a little taller than she, elegantly slender, and dressed in well-cut, sombre clothes. He was in his late twenties at most, and good-looking in a dark, traditional way, though there was a self-satisfied look to his eyes and mouth that Fisher didn’t like.
“Lord Graham Brunel, at your service,” he said smoothly. “I do hope those boys weren’t bothering you too much. I’m afraid the Club has grown so popular now that we seem to be letting just anyone in. I’ll have to speak to Louis about it. Now, may I know your name, dear lady?”
“Isobel,” said Fisher carefully. “This is my first time here.”
“Yes, I thought it must be,” said Brunel. “I’m sure I’d have remembered so distinctive a beauty as yourself if we’d met before. That is a Guard’s cloak you’re wearing, isn’t it? Is it the real thing, by any chance?”
“Oh, yes,” said Fisher. “It’s real.”
“You really must tell me how you came by it. I’m sure it’s a fascinating story.”
“You wouldn’t believe how fascinating,” said Fisher. “Have you been with the Hellfire Club long?”
“Almost from the beginning, my dear. Arthur Sinclair came up with the idea originally, bless his booze-rotted brain, but it was Louis Hightower and I who brought the Club together and made it what it is.”
“But have you achieved any results?” said Fisher.
“You’d be surprised,” said Brunel. “We’re getting close to something very powerful, Isobel. I can feel it. Something so awful and magnificent it’ll tear this dreary little city apart. But there’s nothing to be worried about, my dear, I promise you. You just stay close to me, and I’ll keep you safe.”
“That’s very kind of you,” said Fisher, “But I already have an escort.”
“Drop him. You’re with me now.”
Fisher smiled at him. “Fancy yourself, don’t you?”
Brunel looked at her uncertainly. “I beg your pardon?”
“You haven’t achieved anything, have you, Brunel? In all the time you’ve been running this Club, have you raised a single demon, contacted a Power, or even managed to make the lights flicker a little?” She paused a moment while Brunel went red in the face and struggled for words. “I thought not. The Hellfire Club, when you get right down to it, is just another game. Another excuse to get dressed up, drink too much, and have a good time jumping at shadows. Just a bunch of overgrown kids. I don’t think I’ll be staying.”
Brunel reached out quickly and took her by the arm. “Oh, but I really must insist, my dear. You’ve been asking a lot of questions, but you haven’t told, us anything about yourself. I think it’s time you told me who you really are.”
Fisher slowly raised her arm despite his hold, and showed him the silver torc at her wrist. “Isobel Fisher, Captain of the city Guard. Now get your hand off me or I’ll break your fingers.”
Brunel’s face was suddenly harsh and ugly, all charm fled. His fingers dug into her arm muscle, trying to hurt her. “A spy. A dirty stinking Council spy. You’re not going anywhere, Captain. We can use you, in the Hellfire Club. Some of us have been wondering if a human sacrifice might not be just what we need, to make the breakthrough we’ve been looking for. We were going to use one of the servants, someone who wouldn’t be missed, but you’ll do nicely. No one’s going to miss you; no one even knows you’re here, right?”