The Traders' War (Merchant Princes Omnibus 2) (58 page)

BOOK: The Traders' War (Merchant Princes Omnibus 2)
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I don’t like the sound of this.
‘Such as . . . ?’

‘That’s for me to know and you to find out.’ She relented slightly: ‘I can’t do business with you if I can’t trust you. But I won’t ask you to do
anything illegal – unlike your superiors.’

Mike shivered.
She’s got my number.
‘What makes you think they’d issue illegal orders?’

‘Come now, Mr. Fleming, how stupid do I look? How did you get here? If your superiors could move more than one or two people at a time they’d have sent the 82nd Airborne Division.
They sent you because their transport capacity is tiny; they’re using captured world-walkers.’ Her expression shifted into one of outright distaste. ‘Honor is a luxury when you
reach the top of the dung heap. Everybody wants it, but it’s in short supply. That’s even more true in Washington, D. C. than over on this side, because aristocrats have at least to
keep up the appearance of nobility. Let me give you a tip to pass on to your bosses: if you mistreat your Clan prisoners, their relatives will avenge them. The political is taken
very
personally, here.’

‘That’s –’ he swallowed ‘– it may be true, but that’s not how things work right now. Not since 9/11.’

‘Then they’re going to learn to regret it bitterly.’ Her gaze was level. ‘You
must
warn your superiors of this – the political is personal. If the
conservatives think your government is mistreating their prisoners, they’ll take revenge, horrible revenge. Timothy McVeigh and Mohamed Atta were rank amateurs compared to these people, and
Clan security probably can’t prevent an atrocity from happening if you provoke them. You need to warn your bosses, Mr. Fleming. They’re playing with fire: or would you like to see a
suicide bomber invite himself to the next White House reception?’

Whoops.
Mike cringed at the images that sprang to mind. ‘They’re that crazy?’

‘They’re not crazy!’ Her vehemence startled him. ‘They just don’t think about things the same way as you people. Your organization is trying to wage war on the
Clan: all right, we understand that. But it is a point of honor to avenge blood debts, and that suicide bomber – that’s the
least
of your worries.’ She paused for breath.
When she continued, she was much less strident: ‘That’s one of the things Miriam thought she could change, with her reform program. I tend to agree with her. That’s one of the
things we
need
to change – it’s one of the reasons I reintroduced her to her relatives in the first place. I knew she’d react that way.’

‘But she’s your daughter!’ It was out before he could stop himself.

‘Hah. I told you, but you didn’t listen, did you? We don’t work the way you think we do – and it’s not just all about blood debts and honor. There’s also a
perpetual intergenerational conflict going on, mother against daughter, grandmother for grandchild.
My
mother is a pillar of the conservative faction: by raising Miriam where Hilde-garde
couldn’t get her claws into her, I temporarily gained the upper hand. And –’ she leaned forward again ‘– I would do anything to keep my granddaughter out of this
mess.’

‘You don’t have a granddaughter,’ Olga commented from the sidelines, ‘do you?’

Iris glanced sideways. ‘Miriam has not married a world-walker, so I do not have a granddaughter,’ she said coldly. ‘Is that understood?’

Olga swallowed. ‘Yes, my lady.’

What was that about?
The carriage bounced again, throwing Mike against the side of the seat and jarring his leg painfully. When he could focus again, he realized Iris had been talking
for some time.

‘ – stopping soon, and we will have to lock you in the carriage overnight. I hope you understand. When we get to the waypoint Olga will carry you across, put you somewhere safe, call
for an ambulance, then leave. I hope you understand the need for this? Olga, if you would be so good . . .’

The Russian princess was holding a syringe. ‘No!’ Mike tried to protest, but in his current state he was too weak to fight her off. And whatever was in the needle was strong enough
that it stopped mattering very shortly afterwards.

*

Miriam had just been through two months under house arrest, preceded by three months in carefully cosseted isolation. Then she’d managed a fraught escape and then been
imprisoned yet again, albeit for a matter of days. Walking the streets of New York again – even a strangely low-rise New York wrapped around the imperial palace and inner city of New London
– felt like freedom. The sight of aircraft and streetcars and steam-powered automobiles and primitive flickering neon signs left her gaping at the sheer urban beauty of it all. As they moved
closer to the center of the city the bustle of the crowds and the bright synthetic colors of the women’s clothing caught her attention more than the gray-faced beggars in the suburbs.
I’m in civilization again,
she realized, half-dazed.
Even if I’m not part of it
. Erasmus paused, looking at a news vendor’s stand displaying the stamp of the
censor’s office. ‘Buy me a newspaper, dear?’ she asked, touching his arm.

Erasmus jerked slightly, then recovered. ‘Certainly. A copy of the
Register
, please.’

‘Aye, sorr. An’ here you is.’

He passed her the rolled-up newssheet as they moved up the high street. ‘What bit you?’ he asked quietly.

‘I’ve been out of touch for a long time. I just need to –’
I need to connect,
she thought, but before she could articulate it he nodded, grinning ironically.

‘You were out of touch? Did your family have you on a tight leash?’

‘I had nothing to read but a grammar book for two months. And that wasn’t the worst of it.’ Now that she had company to talk to she could feel a mass of words bubbling up,
ideas seeking torrential release.

‘You’ll have to tell me about it later. I was told there was a public salon here – ah, that’s it. Your hair, Miriam. You can see to it yourself?’

He’d stopped again, opposite a diamond-paned window. Through it she could just about make out the seats and basins of a hairdresser: some things seemed to evolve towards convergence,
however distinct they’d been at the start. ‘I think I can just about manage that.’ She tried to smile, but the knot of tension had gotten a toehold back and wouldn’t let go.
‘This will probably take a couple of hours. Then I need to buy clothes. Why don’t you just tell me where the hotel is, and I’ll meet you there at six o’clock? How does that
sound?’

‘That sounds fine.’ He nodded, then pulled out a pocket book and scribbled an address in it. ‘Here. Take care.’

She smiled at him, and he ducked his head briefly, then turned his back. Miriam took a deep breath. A bell rattled on a chain as she pushed the door open; at the desk behind the window, a young
woman looked up in surprise from the hardcover she’d been reading. ‘Can I help you?’

‘I hope so.’ Miriam managed a smile. ‘I need a new hairstyle, and I need it now.’

*

Six hours later, footsore and exhausted from the constant bombardment of strangeness that the city kept hurling at her, Miriam clambered down from the back of a cab outside the
Great Northern Hotel, clutching her parcels in both hands. The new shoes pinched at toe and heel, and she was sweating from the summer weather; but she was more presentable than she’d have
been in the shabby outfit they’d passed off on her at Hogarth Villas, and the footman leapt to open the doors for her. ‘Thank you!’ She nodded at him. ‘The front desk,
I’m meeting my husband – ’

‘This way, ma’am.’

Miriam was halfway to the desk when a newspaper rattled behind her. She glanced round to see Burgeson unfolding himself from a heavily padded chair. ‘Susan! My dear. Let me help you with
those parcels.’ He deftly extricated her from the footman, guided her past the front desk towards an elevator, and relieved her of the most troublesome parcel. ‘I almost didn’t
recognize you,’ he murmured. ‘You’ve done a good job.’

‘It feels really strange, being a blonde. People look at you differently. And it’s so heavily lacquered it feels like my head’s embedded in a wicker basket. It’ll
probably crack and fall off when I go to bed.’

‘Come on inside.’ He held the door for her, then dialed the sixth floor. As the door closed, he added: ‘That’s a nice outfit. Almost too smart to be seen with the likes
of me.’

She pursed her lips. ‘Looking like a million dollars tends to get you treated better by the kind of people those million dollars hire.’ She’d ended up in something not unlike a
department store, buying a conservatively cut black two-piece outfit. It was a lot less strange than some of the stuff she’d seen in the shops: New London’s fashion, at least for those
who still had money to spend, was more experimental than Boston’s. The lift bell chimed. ‘Where are we staying?’

‘This way.’ He led her along a corridor like any other hotel corridor back home (except for the flickering tungsten bulbs), then used an old-fashioned key to unlock a bedroom
door.

‘There’s, uh, only one bed, Erasmus.’

‘We’re supposed to be married, Miriam. I’ll take the chaise.’

‘I didn’t mean it like that.’

‘I’m sorry.’ He rubbed his forehead. ‘Blame Margaret’s sense of humor.’ He looked at her again: ‘With hair that color, and curly, and –
you’ve been using paints, haven’t you? Yes, looking like that, I don’t think anyone’ll recognize you at first sight.’

‘I think it’s ugly. But Mrs. Christobell – she ran the salon – seemed to think it was the height of fashion.’ She carefully hung her hat and jacket on the coat-rail
then touched her hair gingerly. ‘That feels really odd. Better keep me away from candle flames for a while.’

‘I think I can manage that.’ He laid his hat and newspaper on the occasional table. ‘You did very well at making yourself look completely unlike yourself – it’s
going to take some getting used to.’

‘That goes for me, too. I’m not sure I like it.’ She headed for the table, but before she could reach it he ducked in and pulled a chair out for her. ‘Thanks, I
think.’ She sat down, bent forward to get closer to her shoes, and sighed. ‘I need to get these off for a bit – my feet are killing me.’

‘Did you spend everything, or do you have some money left?’

‘Not much.’ She focused on his expression. ‘Did you think I can keep up appearances by looting your shop?’

‘No, but I –’ He rubbed his forehead wearily. ‘Forget it.’

‘I had to do something about my appearance, make myself less recognizable. And I had to get hold of a respectable outfit, if I want to pass for your . . . spouse. And I had to buy shoes
that fit, and a couple of changes of underwear, and some other stuff. It costs money, and takes time, but it’s necessary. Are you still taking your medicine?’

He frowned at her effusion: ‘Yes, every day, as you said.’

‘Good. One less problem to solve.’ She crossed her legs. ‘Now, what have you been up to?’

‘Getting the job done.’ He looked in her direction, not focusing, and she shivered.
Who is he seeing?
‘I’m not planning on staying in Boston for long –
I’m needed in Fort Petrograd, out west.’ He looked her in the eye. ‘You don’t have to come with me – you can stay in my apartment if you prefer.’

‘And do what, precisely? Sit down, pacing like that is making me itch.’

‘I don’t know.’ He pulled out the chair opposite and sat down. ‘I’ve got a job to do, and you turned up right in the middle of it.’

‘I could keep the shop open.’ She sounded doubtful, even to herself.
Do I want to be on my own in Boston? What if Angbard sends someone to look for me?
It would be the first
place they checked.
Best not to wait until they start looking, then.

‘That’s not practical.’ He frowned. ‘I trust you to do it – that’s not in question – but there are too many problems. Business is very poor, and
I’m already under observation. If I take a wife that’s one thing, but employing a shop assistant while I take off to the wilds of California is something else: the local thief-takers
aren’t
completely
stupid. I’m supposed to be a pawnbroker, not a well-off storeholder. Unless you’ve got any better ideas?’

‘I think . . . well, there’s some stuff I need to pick up in Boston. And then I need to get back in touch with my relatives, but carefully. How about if I went with you? How long
will you be gone?’

‘At least a week; it’s three days each way by train, and flying would attract the wrong kind of attention. Frankly, I’d be grateful if you’d accompany me. It’d
strengthen my cover on the way out – we could be traveling on our honeymoon – and if we arrived back together I could introduce you to the neighbors as someone from out west. Wife,
sister, brother’s widow, whatever. And, to be truthful, the three days out – one gets tired of traveling alone.’

‘Oh yes,’ she said fervently. ‘Don’t I know it.’
It was traveling alone that got me into this mess
– ‘Before we skip town, though. There are
some things I left in my office, at the works. I really need to get my hands on them. Do you think there’s any way I could retrieve them?’

‘You left your relatives running the business, didn’t you? Do you know if it’s still going? Or if you’d be welcome there if it is?’

‘No.’ She was shaking slightly. ‘No to both questions. I don’t know anything. I might not be welcome. But it’s important.’ She’d left a small notebook
PC locked in a drawer in her office, and a portable printer, and a bunch of CD-ROMs with a complete archive of U. S. Patent Office filings going up to the 1960s. In this world, that was worth more
than diamonds. But there was something on the computer that was even more valuable to her. In a moment of spare time, she’d scanned her locket using the computer’s web cam, meaning to
mess around with it later. If it was still there, if she could get her hands on it, and if it worked –
I’m free.
She could go anywhere and do anything, and she’d had a
lot of time to think about Mike’s offer of help, back in the basement of Hogarth Villas. It wasn’t the only option, but just being able to get back to her own world would be a vast
improvement on her current situation. ‘I need to get my stuff.’

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