Page 46
By the time Bewelcome’s wounded and dead had been seen to, Ixchel’s conjured floodwaters had subsided and the soldiers of the Thirteenth had hacked exit passages out through the Weed-walls which the Chess-Enemy had (oh so thoughtfully) left intact around the town, it was well past midnight. Ill-lit darkness and roads flooded fetlock-deep in mud cost their horses near an hour getting back to the camp — Morrow wound up tying a drink-exhausted Asbury to his mount, letting him sleep most of the way.
They passed the sentries at Camp Pink, many of whom still glared at Ed with suspicion, and found the plain canvas tent Pinkerton had assigned him near the camp’s south edge. Morrow tipped the Professor into one of the empty cots without waking him, only pausing to strip off his own mud-caked boots before collapsing onto another. Before he closed his eyes, he realized the storm’s dregs had finally cleared enough he could see the smoky lights of New Aztectlan’s pyramid-temple glowing dimly through the open entry flap, far to the west — a dim line of arcane flame fringing the sky, just above its guard-woods’ contorted shadows.
Sleep was fitful, broken by dreadful flashes of memory: Sophy Love vanishing in a burst of light, the Manifold exploding in Catlin’s hand, Rook’s stunned look as Morrow’s shots went through his shields. The gleeful laughter of the thing wearing Chess Pargeter’s flesh. Which last vision led, sure as rainfall, to other memories, and an uncomfortable state of half-arousal that had him longing for Yancey to visit his dreams once more — as much simply to see her as anything else, though whatever approximation of the other they might be able to manage long distance would’ve also been dearly appreciated.
But that particular benefice was not to be. Instead, the hand that fell on his shoulder next, shaking him awake, turned out to be broad, brown, callused — to belong to Private Jonas Carver. Who, to give him his due, looked profoundly ill-inclined to disturb Morrow’s repose, though he obviously wasn’t one to refuse orders.
“Sorry to roust you so soon, boss.”
“Any man who guards my back ’gainst hexation gets to call me Ed, Private.” Morrow pushed himself up and shoved his feet back into his boots, wincing as they squelched. “Pinkerton, is it? Command post?”
Carver shook his head. “Not right away — says we gotta meet somebody comin’ in at the east perimeter, escort him to Command.” As Morrow buttoned his duster up, Carver’s eyes turned thoughtful. “Captain don’t like him, but Mister Pink do sure seem to know how to run a unit. He ever serve on a front line?”
“Chief Union intelligencer, ’61 and ’62,” Morrow confirmed, while Carver picked up the lantern he’d brought. They ducked back out into the chill night air, making their way past cookfire pits, tents and bivouacs toward the camp’s east edge. “Helped guard Lincoln back in Baltimore, gettin’ him to his inauguration — there was a hex involved, I hear. Which would explain a fair bit.” He grimaced. “As for Captain Washford’s opinion of the man . . . well, I’ll tell you, Private — ”
“Jonas, sir.”
“ — Jonas — ” Morrow lowered his voice, prudently. “ — I’d think him a damn sight bigger fool than any of us should be if he found himself liking Pinkerton, right now. But long as our boss’s still giving sensible orders and the Captain knows how to take ’em, ain’t nothing we have to worry on.” Field dressing stations and triage tents had been put up on the camp’s east side, right where the dawnward edge of the plain on which Hex City sat rose into scrubby foothills, to give them enough room from the rest of Camp Pink that those uninvolved in surgery and the like could ignore — if never entirely escape — its near-constant racket. Just beyond, at the end of a trail leading out of those hills, two horses stood; Morrow squinted up at their riders’ faces as Carver lifted his lamp, and felt his squint become a scowl.
“Mister Ludlow,” he said, without enthusiasm. “What exactly got you to ditch your comfy hotel bed in favour of a trip out here?”
Fitz Hugh Ludlow grinned, shrugging off lingering rain dampness by flapping his overcoat like a leathery set of wings. “Why, the story, Agent Morrow — the story, always! Your employer tells me we hover on the verge of victory and calls on me to scribe this history from an altogether new perspective, an opportunity I couldn’t possibly pass up, not and still call myself a journalist. For as you’re already well aware, we are making history here, are we not?” He turned that grin of his upon Carver, who did not return it. “Perhaps you’d also be persuaded to grant me an interview at some later date, Private? Tell my readers the day-to-day tale from behind the scene of freedom’s ongoing struggle, on the lines of battle drawn between new world and old?”
Carver cast Morrow a narrow look, possibly unsure if he was being insulted, to which Morrow simply shrugged. To Ludlow Morrow said, coolly: “If you’re here to see Pinkerton we might as well save ourselves any further jaw; I’m headed that way already, anyhow. But one way or t’other, I’ll need identification from your friend here, ’fore he gets my safe-conduct — ”
He broke off as the other man leaned into the lamplight, and it took all his effort to turn his initial surge of shocked delight into a mere one-cough throat-clearing.
“James Grey,” Frank Geyer renamed himself, expressionlessly. He’d darkened his fair hair with some sort of medicamental slickum, combed it back and shaved off his moustache, which wouldn’t fool anyone who knew him that took more than a second’s look. But simple lack of expectation would probably keep anyone from actually doing so, long as Geyer avoided Pinkerton himself. “Mister Ludlow hired me as a guard, to see him safe ’cross the field. I’ll render up my weapons, if that’s obligatory. . . .”
Morrow hesitated, aware it would look suspicious not to accept. Then again, he didn’t especially want to leave Geyer weaponless — not here, in what was now (to him) enemy territory.
Before a decision was forced either way, however, the silence broke: that ever-present low moan from the triage tents suddenly spiralled upward, without warning, into an agonized yowl — and a shirtless man (another of Washford’s, Morrow could only assume, given his complexion) came staggering out into the night, eerie luminescence coating his high-yellow chest and back like paint but concentrating most brightly on the stumps of his arms, where the very skin bubbled alchemically. Some Paddy hex pressed into palliative care
chased after him, arrayed in an oil-coat bloodstained near black that almost hid his collar’s dim shine and yelling, as he did: “Come quick as ye can, for all love — we got ourselves another one!”
Hard upon both their heels came two more men dressed in the blue serge uniforms of Pinkerton’s vaunted “hex-handlers” — themselves hexacious, similarly collared, who’d opted to serve out their process capturing, collaring and policing other magickals. They grabbed the escapee and wrestled him to his knees, but not before his force-grown scar-tissue had already begun to split like seeding fungus, thrusting out tendrils of whitish-green muscle which twined ’round one another, fused, and grew molluscine suckers all along their lengths.
Gaping at the sight of two uncontrollably flailing tentacles where his arms had once been, the first man twisted his head back to spit at his “doctor,” snarling: “Now look what you gone an’ done, you Goddamn potato-eater! Call yourself a medico? I ain’t signed up for this!”
The triagist bridled. “Yeah?” he shouted back. “Well, I ain’t signed up at all, nigger — so if yeh think yez can do any better, I go on and invite yez, yeh ungrateful black bastard!”
Carver had his gun out, automatically taking up stance in front of Ludlow, who had his pad out and pen already a-scribble, eagerly filing it all away. Morrow wasn’t completely sure who Carver’d start shooting at first, it came down to that, but the distraction itself posed an all-but-perfect opportunity to give Geyer what he no doubt wanted most, right now.
“Tell me what you’re here for, so I can let you get to it,” Morrow ordered him, low, out the corner of his mouth.
“Asbury,” was all Geyer replied, voice pitched at the self-same range.
Morrow gave the most minimal twitch of a nod and jerked his jaw sidelong. “My tent, back there, past the fire pit — got a big All-Seeing Eye on the flap, marked ‘25.’ Hunker down when you get there; walk quick, but not too quick. Don’t stop.”
Geyer nodded, already in motion. “Agent,” he said, and was gone, as the shouting match between the squabbling hexes — collared and new-flowered — erupted into the heat-shimmer flare of power battening on power. Even as Morrow recoiled, the monstrously warped Negro soldier grabbed both handlers with one tentacle each and began slamming them together, each impact producing a burst of St. Elmo’s Fire and acrid lightning-smell. The ersatz medico tried to haul him off and got a vicious backlash ’cross the face for it, sending him spinning to the mud, magic-drawing metal collar he’d hauled from a pocket gone flying.
Carver swore with the despairing viciousness men used to mask grief, and shot his fellow soldier in the back of the knee; the man crumpled, howling, joint ruined. Before he could rise again the medico was on him, snapping the collar home. The new-made hex went limp, tentacles splayed out to either side like severed lengths of ship-cable.
Ludlow stared, agape, for once seeming to have completely forgotten his notes. “Good . . . God,” he said presently. “Is this kind of happenstance typical of procedures, here?”
“Typical ain’t a word we use much, hereabouts,” Morrow replied. “Let’s go, Mister Ludlow. Mister Pinkerton’s got no love for waiting.”
Trudging on toward the camp’s centre, it belatedly occurred to Morrow how Geyer’s mission here might be to poach Doctor Asbury’s services and person completely; according to intelligence, his new partner Thiel had made no great secret of wanting to spoke Pinkerton’s wheels however he could. But with so many Pinks (real and honorary) all crowded around — not to mention that brutal hangover the Professor had been assiduously courting, the last few days — he saw no possible way for Geyer to accomplish that goal, at least not now.
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46 (Reading here)
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53
- Page 54
- Page 55
- Page 56
- Page 57
- Page 58
- Page 59
- Page 60
- Page 61
- Page 62
- Page 63
- Page 64
- Page 65
- Page 66
- Page 67
- Page 68
- Page 69
- Page 70
- Page 71
- Page 72
- Page 73
- Page 74
- Page 75
- Page 76
- Page 77
- Page 78
- Page 79
- Page 80
- Page 81
- Page 82
- Page 83
- Page 84
- Page 85
- Page 86
- Page 87
- Page 88
- Page 89
- Page 90
- Page 91
- Page 92
- Page 93
- Page 94
- Page 95
- Page 96
- Page 97
- Page 98
- Page 99
- Page 100
- Page 101
- Page 102
- Page 103
- Page 104
- Page 105
- Page 106
- Page 107
- Page 108
- Page 109
- Page 110
- Page 111
- Page 112
- Page 113
- Page 114
- Page 115
- Page 116
- Page 117
- Page 118
- Page 119
- Page 120
- Page 121
- Page 122
- Page 123
- Page 124