The Traders' War (Merchant Princes Omnibus 2) (61 page)

BOOK: The Traders' War (Merchant Princes Omnibus 2)
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‘I’m bored too,’ snarked Hulius, from his nest in the front passenger seat. He took an orange from the glove box and began to peel it with his dagger. Citrus droplets swirled
in the air-con breeze.

‘We’re all bored,’ Huw said affably. ‘Are you suggesting I should break the speed limit?’

Hulius paled. ‘No – ’

‘Good.’ The white duke took a dim view of traffic infractions, and supplemented the official fines with additional punishments of his own choice: ten strokes of the lash for a first
offense.
Don’t ever, ever draw attention to yourselves
was the first rule they drilled into everyone before letting them out the door. Which was why couriers on Post duty dressed
like lawyers, and why the three of them were driving down the interstate at a sober two miles under the speed limit, in a shiny new Hummer, with every
i
dotted and
t
crossed on
the paperwork that proved them to be a trio of MIT graduate students with rich parents, off on a field trip.

The green dot on the map inched south along Route 95, slowly converging on Baltimore and the afternoon traffic. The air-con fans hissed steadily, but Huw could still feel the heat beating down
on the back of his hand through the tinted glass. Concrete rumbled under the magically smooth suspension of the truck. The scrubby grass outside was parched, burned almost brown by the summer heat.
He’d made a journey part of the distance down this way once before on horseback, in a place with no air-conditioning or cars: it had been a fair approximation of hell. Doing the journey in a
luxury SUV was heaven – albeit a particularly boring corner of it. ‘Have you checked the charge on the goggles yet?’

‘They’re in the trunk. They’ll be fine.’ Hulius pulled off a slice of orange and offered it to Huw. ‘You worry too much.’

‘It’s your neck I’m worrying over. Would you rather I didn’t worry, bro?’

‘If you put it that way . . .’

The last half hour of any journey was always the longest, but Huw caught the exit for Bel Air and parts east in time: then a couple more turns took them onto dusty roads linking faceless tracts
of suburb with open countryside. The distance on the GPS counted down steadily. Finally he reached a stretch of trees and a driveway led up to an unprepossessing house. He brought the truck to a
halt in front of the dayroom windows and killed the engine.

‘You’re sure this is the place?’ Elena pushed herself upright then stretched, yawning.

‘Got to be.’ Huw rooted around in the dash for the bunch of house keys and the letter from the realtor. Then he opened the door and jumped out, taking a deep breath as the oppressive
summer humidity washed over him. ‘Number 344. Yup, that’s right.’

Sneakers crunched on gravel as he walked towards the front door. Behind him, a clattering: Elena unloading the flat Pelican case from the trunk. Huw glanced up at the peeling white paint under
the guttering, the patina of dust. Then he rang the doorbell and waited for a long minute, until Elena, holding the case behind him as if it was a guitar, began tapping her toes and whistling a
tuneless melody of impatience. ‘It pays to be cautious,’ he finally explained, before he stuck the key in the lock. ‘People hereabouts take a dim view of unexpected
visitors.’

The key turned. Inside, the hallway was hot and close, smelling of dust and old regrets. Huw breathed in deeply, sniffing, secretly relieved. He’d set this up by remote control, one of ten
test sites running down the coastline and across the continent all the way to the west coast, spaced five hundred kilometers apart. The realtor had been only too glad to rent it to him for a year,
money paid up front: it had been unsalable ever since its former owner, a retired widower, had died of a heart attack in the living room one bleak winter evening. You could remove the carpet and
the furniture, and even do something about the smell, but you couldn’t remove the reputation.

Huw hunted around for the fuseboard for a while, then flipped the circuit breaker. A distant whir spoke of long-dormant air-conditioning. He checked that the hall lights worked, then nodded to
himself. ‘Okay, let’s get moved in.’

It took the three of them half an hour to unload the Hummer. Besides backpacks full of clothing, they brought in a number of wheeled equipment cases, a laptop computer, and a couple of expensive
digital camcorders. Finally, the air mattresses. ‘Elena? You take the back bedroom. Yul, you and I are roughing it up front in the master room.’

Huw dragged his mattress into the front room and plugged the electric pump in. Some of the houses were still furnished, but not this one.
Be prepared
wasn’t just for scouts. Her
Grace Helge had done pretty much this same job, on a smaller, much less organized scale – but Huw had been thinking about it for the week since the white duke had called him in, and he
thought he had some new twists on it. He mopped at his forehead. ‘Listen, we’re about done here and it’s half past lunchtime, so why don’t we head into town and grab a pizza
while the air-conditioning makes this place habitable?’

‘Works for me.’ Hulius grimaced. ‘Where’s Lady Elena?’

‘Here.’ Elena leaned against the banister rail outside the door. ‘Food would be good.’ Her grin was impish: ‘How about a couple of bottles of wine?’ Like all
Clan members, her attitude to wine was very un-American – tempered only by the duke’s iron rule about attracting unwanted attention in public.

Huw nodded – slowly, for he was still getting used to playing the role of responsible adult around the other two. ‘We’ll pick something up if we pass a liquor store. But no
drinking in public, okay?’

‘Sure, dude.’

‘Let’s go, then.’

An hour later they were back in the under-furnished living room with pizza boxes, a stack of six-packs of Pepsi, and a discreet brown paper bag. ‘Okay,’ said Huw, licking his
fingers. ‘Taken your pills yet?’

‘Um, ’scuse me.’ Elena darted upstairs, returning with a toilet bag. ‘Hate these things,’ she mumbled resentfully. ‘Make me feel woozy.’ She threw back
her head when she swallowed.
What fine bones she has,
thought Huw, watching her with unprofessional enthusiasm. That was one of the reasons she was along on this trip: because she weighed
only sixty kilograms, the stocky Hulius could carry her piggyback with ease.

‘Where were we?’ asked Hulius, pausing with a slice of Hawaiian halfway to his mouth.

Huw checked his wristwatch. ‘About an hour and a half short of time zero. You guys eat, I’ll repeat the plan, interrupt if you want me to explain anything.’

‘Okay,’ said Hulius. Elena nodded, rolling her eyes as she chewed.

‘First, we assemble the stage one kit. Clothing, boots, cameras, guns, telemetry belts. We triple-test the belt batteries and set them running at five minutes to zero hour. There’s
no post on this trip, even if we get some results. Elena piggybacks on Yul, on the first attempt. If you fail, we call it a wash today, switch off the telemetry, and break open the wine. If you
succeed, you evaluate your surroundings and proceed to Plan Alpha or Plan Bravo, depending. Now.’ He tore off a wedge of cooling pizza: ‘It’s your turn to tell me what
you’re supposed to do as soon as you find yourself wherever the hell you’re going. Hoping to go. Plan Alpha first. Elena, if you could take me through your checklist . . . ?’

*

The carvery in the hotel wasn’t anything Miriam would have described as a classy restaurant, but after being locked in a brothel for most of a week it felt like the Ritz.
She was ravenous from a day pounding the sidewalks; but Erasmus, she noticed over the soup, ate slowly but methodically, clearing his plate with grim determination. ‘Hungry?’ she asked,
lowering her spoon.

‘I try never to leave my food.’ He nodded, then tore off another piece of bread to mop his soup bowl clean. ‘Old habit. Bad manners, I’m afraid: I apologize.’

‘No offense taken. You need to put on weight, anyway. I haven’t heard you coughing today, but you’re so thin!’

‘Really?’ He made as if to raise his napkin to cover his mouth. ‘When you start you know about it, but when something goes away . . . it’s an unnoticed miracle.’ A
waiter arrived, silently, and removed their bowls. ‘I don’t feel ancient and drained anymore. But you’re right, I need to eat. I wasn’t always a sack of bones.’ He
shook his head ruefully.

‘It was your time in the north, wasn’t it?’ The statement slipped out before Miriam could stop it.

Erasmus stared at her. ‘Yes, it was,’ he said quietly.

‘Sorry. Didn’t mean to say that.’

‘Yes you did.’ He glanced sidelong at the other occupants of the room: no one was paying them any obvious attention. ‘But it’s all right, I don’t mind.’

‘I don’t mean to pry.’ The waiter was returning, bearing two plates. She leaned back while he deftly slid her entrée in front of her. When he’d gone, she looked
back at Burgeson. ‘But I’d be crazy not to be curious. Months ago, when I said I didn’t care what your connections were . . . I didn’t expect things to go this
way.’

He shrugged, then picked up his knife and fork. ‘Neither did I,’ he said. ‘You are curious as to the nature of what you’ve gotten yourself into?’

She took a sip of wine, then began to methodically slice into the overcooked lamb chops on her plate. ‘This probably isn’t the right place for this conversation.’

‘I’m glad you agree.’

He wasn’t making this easy. ‘So. Tomorrow . . . train back home? Then what?’

‘It’ll be a flying visit. Overnight, perhaps.’ He shoveled a potato onto his fork, holding it in place with a fatty piece of mutton: ‘I need to pick up my post, make
arrangements for the shop, and notify the Polis.’ His cheek twitched. ‘I’ve reserved a suite on the night mail express, leaving tomorrow evening. It joins up with the Northern
Continental at Dunedin, we won’t have to change carriages.’

‘A suite? Isn’t that expensive?’

Erasmus paused, another forkful of food halfway to his mouth: ‘Of course it is. But the extra expense, on top of a transcontinental ticket, is minor. You seem to expect travel to be
cheaper than it is. It can be – if you don’t mind sleeping on a blanket roll with the steerage for a week.’

‘Yes, but . . .’ Miriam paused for long enough to eat some more food: ‘I’m sorry. So we’re going straight through Dunedin and stopping in Fort Petrograd? How many
days away?’

‘We’ll stop halfway for a few hours. The Northern Continental runs from Florida up to New London, cuts northwest to Dunedin, stops to take on extra carriages, nonstop to New Glasgow
where it stops to split up, then down the coast to Fort Petrograd. We should arrive in just under four days. If we were really going the long way, we could change onto the Southern Continental at
Western Station, keep going south to Mexico City, then cross the Isthmus of Panama and keep going all the way to Land’s End on the Cape. But that’s a horrendous journey, seven thousand
miles or more, and the lines aren’t fast – it takes nearly three weeks.’

‘Hang on. The Cape – you mean, you have trains that run all the way to the bottom of South America?’

‘Of course. Don’t your people, where you come from?’

They ate in silence for a few minutes. ‘I’d better write that letter to Roger right now and mail it this evening.’

‘That would be prudent.’ Burgeson lowered his knife and fork, having polished his plate. ‘You’ll probably want to go through my bookcases before we embark, too –
it’s going to be a long ride.’

After the final cup of coffee, Burgeson sighed. ‘Let us go upstairs,’ he suggested.

‘Okay – yes.’ Miriam managed to stand up. She was, she realized, exhausted, even though the night was still young. ‘I’m tired.’

‘Really?’ Erasmus led the way to the elevator. ‘Maybe you should avail yourself of the bathroom, then catch an early night. I have some business to attend to in town. I promise
to let myself in quietly.’

He slid the elevator gate open and as she stepped inside she noticed the heavily built doorman just inside the entrance. ‘If it’s safe, that works for me.’

‘Why would it be unsafe? To a hotel like this, any whiff of insecurity for the guests is pure poison.’

‘Good.’

Back in the room, Miriam jotted down a quick note to her sometime chief research assistant, using hotel stationery. ‘Can you mail this tonight?’ she asked Erasmus. ‘I’m
going to have that bath now . . .’

The bathroom turned out to be down the corridor from the bedroom, the bath a contraption of cold porcelain fed by gleaming copper pipework. There was, however, hot water in unlimited quantities
– something that Miriam had missed for so long that its availability came as an almost incomprehensible luxury.

The things we take for granted,
she thought, relaxing into the tub: the comforts of a middle-class existence in New Britain seemed exotic and advanced after months of detention in a
Clan holding in Niejwein.
I could fit in here.
She tried the thought on for size.
Okay, so domestic radios are the size of a photocopier, and there’s no Internet, and they use
trains where we’d use airliners. So what? They’ve got hot and cold running water, and gas and electricity. Indoor plumbing.
The jail Baron Henryk had confined her to had a closet
with a drafty hole in a wooden seat.
I could live here.
The thought was tempting for a moment – until she remembered the thin, pinched faces in the soup queue, the outstretched
upturned hats. Erasmus’s hacking cough, now banished by medicines that she’d brought over from Boston – her own Boston. No antibiotics: back before they’d been discovered, a
quarter to a third of the population had died of bacterial diseases. She lay back carefully to avoid soaking her brittle-bleached hair.
It’s better than the Clan, but still . . .

She tried to gather her scattered thoughts. New Britain wasn’t some kind of nostalgic throwback to a gaslight age: it was dirty, smelly, polluted, and dangerous. Clothing was expensive and
conservative because foreign sweatshops weren’t readily available: the cost of transporting their produce was too high even in peacetime – and with a wartime blockade in force, things
were even worse. Politics was dangerous, in ways she’d barely begun to understand: there was participatory democracy for a price, for a very limited franchise of rich land-owning white males
who thought themselves the guardians of the people and the rulers of the populace, shepherding the masses they did not consider to be responsible enough for self-determination.

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