The Traders' War (Merchant Princes Omnibus 2) (72 page)

BOOK: The Traders' War (Merchant Princes Omnibus 2)
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‘I was busy throwing up. What happened?’

‘Stakeout,’ he said. ‘About ten minutes after your break-in they surrounded the place. If you’d come out the front door –’ The brisk two-fingered gesture
across his throat made the message all too clear. ‘I don’t know what you’ve stirred up, but the Polis are
very
upset about something. So I decided to call in some favors
and arrange a rescue chariot.’

‘Albert’ nodded. ‘A good thing too,’ he added darkly. ‘You’ll excuse me, ma’am.’ He doffed his cap and began to knead it with his fingers, turning
it inside out to reveal a differently patterned lining. ‘I’ll be off at the next crossroads.’ Erasmus turned and knocked sharply on the wooden partition behind the chauffeur: the
car began to slow from its headlong rush.

‘Where are we –’ Miriam swallowed, then paused to avoid gagging on the taste of bile ‘– where are we going?’

The car slowed to a near halt, just short of a streetcar stop. ‘Wait,’ said Erasmus. To ‘Albert’ he added: ‘The movement thanks you for your assistance today. Good
luck.’ ‘Albert’ nodded, then stepped onto the sidewalk and marched briskly away without a backward glance. The car picked up speed again, then wheeled in a fast turn onto a
twisting side street. ‘We’re going to make the train,’ said Erasmus. ‘The driver doesn’t know which one. Or even which station. I hope you can walk.’

‘My head’s sore. But my feet . . .’ She tried to shrug, then winced. Only minutes had passed, but she was having difficulty focussing. ‘They were trying to kill me. No
warnings.’

‘Yes.’ He raised an eyebrow. ‘Maybe your friend was under closer surveillance than he realized.’

Miriam shuddered. ‘Let’s get out of here.’

It took them a while to make their connection. The car dropped them off near a suburban railway platform, from which they made their way to a streetcar stop and then via a circuitous route
Erasmus had evidently planned to throw off any curious followers. But an hour later they were waiting on a railway platform in downtown Boston, not too far from the site of Back Bay Station in
Miriam’s home world.
Geography dictates railroads,
she told herself as another smoky locomotive wheezed and puffed through the station, belching steam towards the arched cast-iron
ceiling trusses.
I wonder what else it dictates?
The answer wasn’t hard to guess: she’d seen the beggars waiting outside the ticket hall, hoping for a ride out west. Erasmus
nodded to himself beside her, then tensed. ‘Look,’ he said, ‘I do believe that’s ours.’

Miriam glanced towards the end of the long, curving platform, through the thin haze of steam. ‘Really?’ The ant column of carriages approaching the platform seemed to vanish into the
infinite distance. It was certainly long enough to be a transcontinental express train.

‘Carriage eleven, upper deck.’ He squinted towards it. ‘We’ve got a bit of a walk . . .’

The Northern Continental was a city on wheels – wheels six French feet apart, the track gauge nearly half as wide again as the ordinary trains. The huge double-deck carriages loomed
overhead, brass handrails gleaming around the doors at either end. Burgeson’s expensive passes did more than open doors: uniformed porters took their suitcases and carried them upstairs,
holding the second- and third-class passengers at bay while they boarded. Miriam looked around in astonishment. ‘This is ridiculous!’

‘You don’t like it?’

‘It’s not that –’ Miriam walked across to the sofa facing the wall of windows and sat down. The walls of the compartment were paneled in polished oak as good as anything
Duke Angbard had in his aerie at Fort Lofstrom, and if the floor wasn’t carpeted in hand-woven Persian rugs, she was no judge of weaving. It reminded her of the expensive hotels she’d
stayed at in Boston, when she’d been trying to set up a successful technology transfer business and impress the local captains of industry. ‘Does this convert into a bed, or . . .
?’

‘The bedrooms are through there.’ Erasmus pointed at the other end of the lounge. ‘The bathroom is just past the servants’ quarters – ’

‘Servants’ quarters?’

Erasmus looked at her oddly. ‘Yes, I keep forgetting. Labor is expensive where you come from, isn’t it?’

Miriam looked around again. ‘Wow. We’re here for the next three or four days?’

A distant whistle cut through the window glass, and with a nearly undetectable jerk the carriage began to move.

‘Yes.’ He nodded. ‘Plenty of time to take your shoes off.’

‘Okay.’ She bent down automatically, then blinked stupidly. ‘This doesn’t come cheap, does it?’

‘No.’ She heard a scrape of chair legs across carpet and looked up, catching Erasmus in the process of sitting down in a spindly Queen Anne reproduction. He watched her with wide,
dark eyes, his bearing curiously bird-like. Behind him, Empire Station slid past in ranks of cast-iron pillars. ‘But one tends to be interfered with less if one is seen to be able to support
expensive tastes.’

‘Right . . . so you’re doing this, spending however much, just to go and see a man about a book?’

A brief pause. ‘Yes.’

Miriam stared.
And you gave me a gun to carry? Either you’re mad, or you trust me, or . . .
She couldn’t complete the sentence: it was too preposterous. ‘That must be
some book.’

‘Yes, it is. It has already shaken empires and slain princes.’ His cheek twitched at some unspoken unpleasantness. ‘I have a copy of it in my luggage, if you’d like to
read it.’

‘Huh?’ She blinked, feeling stupid. ‘I thought you said you were going to see a man about a book? As in, you were going to buy or sell one?’

‘Not exactly: perhaps I should have said, I’m going to see a man about
his
book. And if all goes well, he’s going to come back east with us.’ He glanced down at
his feet. ‘Does Sir Adam Burroughs mean anything to you?’

Miriam shook her head.

‘Probably just as well. I think you ought to at least look at the book, after dinner. Just so you understand what you’re getting into.’

‘All right.’ She stood up. ‘Is there an electrical light in the bedroom? I need to plug my machine in to charge . . .’

*

The fridge was half empty, the half-and-half was half past yogurt, and Oscar clearly thought he was a burglar. That was the downside of coming home. On the upside: Mike could
finally look forward to sleeping in his own bed without fear of disturbances, he had a crate of antibiotics to munch on, and Oscar hadn’t thrown up on the carpet again.
Home. Funny place,
where are the coworkers and security guards? Out on the street, obviously.
Mike stood on the porch and watched as Herz drove off, then closed the door and went inside. The crutches got in the
way, and the light bulb in the hallway had blown, but at least Oscar wasn’t trying to wrap his furry body around the fiberglass cast in a friendly feline attempt to trip up the food ape.
Yet.
Mike shuffled through into the living room and lowered himself into the sofa, struggled inconclusively with his shoe, and flicked on the TV. The comforting babble of CNN washed over
him.
I need some time out,
he decided.
This hospitalization shit is hard work.
Spending half an hour as a couch potato was a seductive prospect: a few minutes later, his eyelids
were drooping shut.

Perhaps it was the lack of hospital-supplied Valium, but Mike – who didn’t normally remember his dreams – found himself in a memorable but chaotic confabulatory realm. One
moment he was running a three-legged race through a minefield, a sense of dread choking him as Sergeant Hastert’s corpse flopped drunkenly against him, one limp arm around his shoulders; the
next, he was lying on a leather bench seat, unable to move, opposite Dr. James, the spook from head office. ‘It’s important that you find the bomb,’ James was saying, but the
cranky old lady on the limousine’s parcel shelf was pointing a pistol at the back of his head. ‘Matthias is a traitor; I want to know who he was working for.’

He tried to open his mouth to warn the colonel about the madwoman with the gun, but it was Miriam crouching on the shelf now, holding a dictaphone and making notes. ‘It’s all about
manipulating the interdimensional currency exchange rates,’ she explained: then she launched into an enthusiastic description of an esoteric trading scam she was investigating, one that
involved taking greenbacks into a parallel universe, swapping them for pieces of eight, and melting them down into Swiss watches. Mike tried to sit up and pull Pete out of the line of fire, but
someone was holding him down. Then he woke up, and Oscar, who’d been sitting on his chest, head-butted him on the underside of his chin.

‘Thanks, buddy.’ Oscar head-butted him again, then made a noise like a dying electric shaver. Mike figured his bowl was empty. He took stock: his head ached, he had pins and needles
in one arm, the exposed toes of his left foot were cold to the point of numbness, and the daylight outside his window was in short supply. ‘Come here, you.’ He reached up to stroke the
tomcat, who was clearly intent on exercising his feline right to bear a grudge against his human whenever it suited him. For a moment he felt a bleak wave of depression. The TV was still on,
quietly babbling inanities from the corner of the room.
How long is this going to take?
Mrs. Beckstein had said it could be weeks, and with Colonel Smith tasking him with being her
contact, that could leave him stuck indoors here for the duration.

He pushed himself upright and hobbled dizzily over to the kitchen phone – the cordless handset had succumbed to a flat battery – and dialed the local pizza delivery shop from memory.
Working out what the hell to do with this surfeit of time (which he couldn’t even use for a fishing trip or a visit to his cousins) could wait ’til tomorrow.

The next morning, the long habit of keeping office hours – despite a week of disrupted sleep patterns – dragged Mike into unwilling consciousness. He took his antibiotics, then spent
a fruitless half-hour trying to figure out how to shower without getting water in his cast, which made his leg itch abominably.
This is hopeless,
he told himself, when the effort of trying
to lift an old wooden stool into the shower left him so tired he had to sit down:
I really am ill
. The infection – thankfully under control – had taken out of him what little
energy the torn-up and broken leg had left behind. The difficulty of accomplishing even minor tasks was galling, and sitting at home on full pay, knowing that serious, diligent people like Agent
Herz were out there busting their guts to get the job done made it even worse. But there was just about nothing he could do that would contribute to the mission, beyond what he was already doing:
sitting at ground zero of a stakeout.

Mike had never been a loafer, and while he was used to taking vacations, enforced home rest was an unaccustomed and unwelcome imposition. For a while he thought about going out and picking up
some groceries, but the prospect of getting into the wagon and driving with his left leg embedded in a mass of blue fiberglass was just too daunting.
Better wait for Helen,
he decided. His
regular cleaner would be in like clockwork tomorrow – he could work on a shopping list in the meantime.
There’s got to be a better way.
Then he shook his head.
You’re
sick, son. Take five
.

Just after lunchtime (a cardboard-tasting microwave lasagna that had spent too long at the bottom of the chest freezer), the front doorbell rang. Cursing, Mike stumbled into the hall, pushing
off the walls in a hurry, hoping whoever it was wouldn’t get impatient and leave before he made it. He paused just inside the vestibule and checked the spy hole, then opened the door.
‘Come in!’ He tried to take a step back and ended up leaning against the wall.

‘No need to put on a song and dance, Mike, I know you feel like shit.’ Smith nodded stiffly. ‘Go on, take your time. I’ll shut the door. We need to talk about
stuff.’ He was carrying a pair of brown paper grocery bags.

‘Uh, okay.’ Mike pushed himself off from the wall and half-hopped back towards the living room. The crutch would have come in handy, but he knew his way around well enough to use the
furniture and door frames for support. ‘What brings you here?’ he called over his shoulder. ‘I thought I was meant to be taking it easy.’

‘You . . . are.’ Smith glanced around as he came into the main room.
Not used to visiting employees at home
, Mike realized. ‘But there’s some stuff we need to
talk about.’

I do not need this
. Mike lowered himself onto the sofa. ‘You couldn’t tell me in the hospital?’ he asked.

‘You were still kind of crinkle-cut, son. And there were medics about.’

‘Gotcha.’ Mike waved at the door to the kitchen. ‘I’d offer you a coffee or something but I’m having a hard time getting about . . .’

‘That’s all right.’ Smith put one of the grocery bags down on the side table, then walked over to the kitchen door and put the other on the worktop inside. Then he made a
circuit of the living room. He held his hands tightly behind his back, as if forcibly restraining himself from checking for dust on top of the picture rail. ‘I won’t be long.’

‘Are we being monitored?’

Smith glanced at him. ‘I sure hope so.’ He gestured at the walls. ‘Not on audio, but there’s a real expensive infrared camera out there, and a couple of guys in a van
just to keep an eye on you.’

‘There are?’ Mike knew better than to get angry. ‘What are they expecting to see?’

‘Visitors who don’t arrive through the front door.’ Smith slung one leg over the arm of the recliner and leaned on it, inspecting Mike pensively.

‘Oh, right.’ For a second, Mike felt the urge to kick his earlier self for passing on absolutely everything he’d learned. The impulse faded: he’d been fever-ridden, and
anyway it was what he was supposed to do. But still, if he hadn’t done so, he wouldn’t be stuck out here under virtual house arrest. He might be back in hospital, with no worries about
groceries. And besides, Smith had a point. ‘You might want to warn them I’m expecting a housekeeper to show tomorrow – she drops by a couple of times a week.’

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