A Hard Day's Knight n-11 Read online

Page 3


  “This ... is going to take a lot of tidying up.”

  “We’ll have to get a man in,” said Suzie.

  “I had hoped the crowd was going to wipe itself out,” I said, “but a discouragingly large number have survived. Somehow.”

  “I think we’re going to have to talk to them,” said Suzie.

  “Oh God, has it come to that? Oh well, if we must.”

  I strode down the garden to confront the crowd, with Suzie striding ominously along at my side. The thinned-out crowd immediately stopped arguing and threatening each other and moved instinctively to stand closer together. Suzie has that effect on people. There was a brief period of them all trying to hide behind each other, then they turned every weapon they had on Suzie and me. I made a point of walking quite casually, as though I didn’t have a care in the world. I didn’t need to look round to know that Suzie was carrying her double-barrelled, pump-action shotgun at the ready, in a really quite distressingly casual manner. Those at the front of the crowd tried edging backwards, but those behind them were having none of it. And that was when some poor damned fools decided to launch a surprise attack from above, presumably in the hope that we might be caught off guard.

  An armoured knight came swooping down on a huge winged horse, waving a massive glowing sword. Suzie shot him right out of the saddle, and the horse kept on going, disappearing into the night. A distressingly hairy bat-winged harpy plummeted down towards me, her clawed feet thrust out before her. I waited until the very last minute, then grabbed both her ankles, swung her round, and slammed her face-first into the ground. All the fight went out of her as she lay trembling and shuddering in the churned-up mud, struggling to get some breath back into her lungs. I put her out of her misery with a good solid kick to the head. Never let it be said I don’t know how to treat a lady. The harpy decided to have a little nap, and I looked round for someone else to vent a little spleen on.

  (A part of me was already considering the fact that I never used to be that fast, and that efficient, in a fight. In fact, I usually avoid the hand-to-hand stuff because I’m crap at it. I had to wonder whether just owning the mighty Excalibur was ... upgrading me.)

  A pack of futuristic knights in space-age armour appeared suddenly over the roof, borne aloft on anti-grav backpack units. They assumed a very professional-looking formation and came swooping down with glowing energy blades held out before them. Suzie took up a comfortable stance and shot them out of the sky, one after the other. Her specially adapted ammunition blew great holes through the space-age armour and punched right through their steel helms. The futuristic knights blew apart like so many clay pigeons. Suzie didn’t miss one. Dead knights drifted slowly away across the night sky, impelled on by their sputtering anti-grav units. Some bodies had heads; some didn’t.

  I decided enough was enough. I had no problem with watching murderous religious fanatics carve each other up or come to nasty ends through invading my privacy; but after a while, even justified homicide starts wearing you down. So I stepped forward, raised my hand, and addressed the crowd.

  “I am John Taylor. And this ... is Excalibur.”

  I reached over my shoulder, took a firm grasp on the invisible hilt, and drew the sword from its sheath with one graceful movement. Immediately, the sword became visible again, the long, golden blade shining with supernatural brilliance. It drove back the night, filling my property with light bright as day. Excalibur’s presence filled the air, dominating the scene. And everyone in the crowd before me knelt and bowed their heads to Excalibur. Their respect was entirely for the sword, not the sword-bearer, but still, the sight of so many kneeling before me raised all the hackles on the back of my neck. I was in the presence of history and legend, of a sword that had shaped my country and my culture.

  “Anyone here think they can take Excalibur from me, by force?” I said finally. “I bear Excalibur because the sword chose me to do so. Now, for those of you who haven’t heard, being a bit obsessed at the moment; Walker is dead. I killed him. I am now the Voice of the new Authorities. So get the hell off my property, every one of you, before I use the Voice to make you do terrible things to yourselves.”

  The crowd got up off their knees and quietly dispersed. None of them felt like arguing. I put the sword away, and its light snapped off. Night fell over my non-lawn again. Suzie stood beside me, her shotgun still ostentatiously at the ready.

  “You don’t have the Voice,” she said quietly.

  “No,” I said. “But they don’t know that.”

  “They’re bound to find out. Eventually.”

  “By then, I plan to be safely distant, in London Proper.”

  My mobile phone rang. I’m still using the Twilight Zone ring tone. Some things feel right and natural. When I answered, Julien Advent was on the other end.

  “John, you’re needed. Right now. Very urgently.”

  “This really isn’t a good time, Julien,” I said. “I’m a bit busy at the moment.”

  “No, you’re not. The Authorities have a mission for you. Did I mention how urgent this is?”

  “You want to put me to work already?” I said. “Walker’s only been dead a few hours! I haven’t even officially accepted the position yet.”

  “Yes, you have, as of right now. Don’t argue with me. This is the kind of problem only Walker could deal with; and since you’ve made that impossible, it’s your duty to take over. There’s trouble at the Mammon Emporium. Someone’s threatening to blow it up with a soulbomb. And that could threaten the whole existence of the Nightside. So stop arguing with me and get here fast. While there’s still a here to get to!”

  Julien Advent, the legendary Victorian Adventurer, editor of the Night Times, and leader of the new Authorities, doesn’t often lose his temper.

  “I’m on my way,” I said. I put the phone away and smiled uncertainly at Suzie. “I’m afraid I’m going to have to put everything on hold for a while. Sweetie. Big trouble in the Nightside. Now, I really would love to stop and help you clear up all this mess, but you know how it is when duty calls.”

  She looked at me dangerously. “I do not do housework!”

  But I’d already taken out the old gold pocket-watch that used to belong to Walker. I opened the lid and activated the Portable Timeslip inside, and just like that I was off and travelling through the void, on my way to save the Nightside, one more time.

  TWO

  You’ve Either Got or You Haven’t Got Soul

  The pocket-watch locked onto Julien Advent’s location and took me straight to him. I have no idea how it does that, but I’m growing increasingly convinced that there’s something else inside the gold pocket-watch, apart from the Portable Timeslip. And one of these days I’m going to dig it out with a butter-knife. Walker did so love to keep his little secrets. I arrived in the main bar of the Adventurers Club, where heroes from all over the worlds gather, to test themselves against the challenges of the Nightside. I have never been invited to become a member.

  I spent a few moments shaking my head gently until all the bits settled back into place again. Travelling through the Portable Timeslip’s interdimensional short cut is never easy. It’s dark in there, darker than any night, and cold enough to chill the soul. There are voices in that dark, voices not in any way human, calling out to be freed, promising anything, pleading, threatening terrible things. But then, you can get that walking down any street in the Nightside. A bad trip, though, in every sense. How did Walker stand it? He always appeared out of nowhere, looking cool and calm and collected, as though he were out for a stroll. I had a strong feeling I’d arrived looking like someone who’d just been thrown out of the drunk tank.

  I shook the last of the darkness out of my head and looked round. It had been a while since I’d been allowed into the Adventurers Club bar, and I was already rehearsing how many terribly expensive drinks I could demand before I was asked to leave. The place was exhaustingly spectacular and downright lousy with luxury, and the bar itself
was a work of art fashioned from gleaming mahogany and brightly polished glass and crystal. Stacked in obsessively neat rows behind the bar was every kind of booze you’ve ever dreamed of and a few that would haunt your nightmares.

  But what really caught my attention was how empty the place was. Normally, you couldn’t move for heroes and warriors and would-be legends, fighting for a place at the bar and complaining bitterly over the bartender’s inflexible rules when it came to extending credit. This time there was no crowd, no bartender; only a whole lot of silence. You could almost hear the wine aging. And half-way down the bar, Julien Advent sat perfectly poised on a tall bar-stool, drinking pink champagne. With his little finger properly extended, of course.

  Julien Advent: tall, dark, and handsome in the old style, the great Victorian Adventurer who fell through a Timeslip in the nineteenth century and emerged in the Nightside in the nineteen sixties. And didn’t appear to have aged a day since. Julien is the real deal, a real hero and a complete gentleman. He tends not to approve of me, or my methods—except when he needs me to do something no-one else can. We’re friends, sometimes despite ourselves. I walked over to him, looked briefly but longingly at the bottles behind the bar, so near and yet so far, and nodded to Julien.

  “You could offer me a drink, you know. I could be persuaded.”

  “No, you couldn’t,” he said calmly. “You don’t have time.”

  “Oh hell,” I said. “It’s one of those cases, is it? And where is everybody, anyway?”

  “Out and about,” said Julien. “Doing their best to keep a lid on things. Since Walker died, so very suddenly and unexpectedly, the news has shot round the Nightside. And a great many not-at-all-nice people have been running wild, taking advantage. Seeing what they can get away with until Walker’s replacement steps up to dispense law and justice and general beatings. That’s you, by the way. But since you weren’t immediately available, I deputised everyone in the Club and sent them out into the streets to restore order, by any means necessary, and slap down anyone who looked like getting ambitious.”

  “I would have got round to it,” I said. “I’ve been a bit ... distracted.”

  Julien studied me thoughtfully over the rim of his champagne glass. “There’s something different about you though I can’t put my finger on it.... Either way, it will have to wait. There’s trouble down at the Mammon Emporium. The biggest mall in the Nightside is in very great danger of going off bang. But first, John, I have to ask you ... Did you really have to kill Walker?”

  “Yes,” I said. “It was necessary. He’d gone too far into the dark.”

  Julien clearly heard something in my voice because he put his glass down on the bar and leaned forward on his bar-stool. “I never did understand what he saw in you, or you in him. You seemed to work well enough together, when you weren’t trying to kill each other. He respected you. I know that.”

  “I respected him,” I said. “Best enemy I ever had.”

  “He was more than that.”

  “Of course. He was Walker.”

  “Well,” said Julien, “he was dying, after all, and not in a good way. I suppose you could call his death a mercy killing.”

  “No,” I said. “I don’t think you could call it that.”

  He waited expectantly, but I had nothing more to say. Let Walker take his secrets with him, the good and the bad. In the end, Julien nodded and picked up his glass again, which had mysteriously refilled itself with more pink champagne. One of the perks of Club membership.

  “I’ll send some of my people to collect the body.”

  “There is no body,” I said.

  Julien raised an elegant eyebrow. “Hard core, John.”

  “Where are the rest of the new Authorities?” I said. Not because I gave a damn but because I felt like changing the subject.

  “They’re ... not entirely comfortable with you yet,” said Julien. “My colleagues are currently upstairs, arguing over whether or not to accept you as our new representative. Walker wanted you, and I recommended you, but ...”

  “Yes,” I said. “But.”

  I remembered meeting these people before, in a devastated future Nightside, where they were the last human survivors, and my devoted Enemies. Doing their best to kill me in their past before I could bring about the terrible future they were living in. Time travel can really mess with your head. Just say no.

  Julien suddenly recognised the gold pocket-watch I was still holding in my hand. “How did you get that?”

  “Walker left it to me in his will.”

  “We haven’t even found his will yet!”

  I shrugged. “Details, details ...”

  Julien sighed. “And you wonder why nobody trusts you ...”

  “No, I don’t. I don’t give a damn. However,” I said, changing the subject again by brute force, “if I’m going to work for the Authorities, shouldn’t I have an official job title? Something big and dramatic, to strike terror into the hearts of evildoers?”

  “You do have a title,” said Julien. “Walker.”

  “What?”

  “You didn’t really think that was his name, did you? I don’t think anyone ever knew what his real name was, the one he used in the outside world, when he went home to his family. Henry was real enough, I think. He always looked like a Henry to me. He used it often enough, and he seemed comfortable with it. Especially with his closest friends, like the Collector, and your father. But I couldn’t even say for sure whether they ever knew his real surname. To know the true name of a thing is to have power over it, and Henry would never have allowed that. No; he was Walker, like all his predecessors in the job.”

  “Then Hadleigh Oblivion was a Walker, too?” I said, trying to get my head round the idea.

  “Before he went so thoroughly off message, and disappeared into the Deep School, in search of mysteries, and ended up the Detective Inspectre. Whatever the hell that is, and I have a horrible suspicion I’m not going to like it when I find out ... There have been any number of Walkers, down the years, representing the Authorities as their Voice in the Nightside.”

  I scowled at Julien. “Why didn’t I know this?”

  “You could have asked. It wasn’t exactly a state secret.”

  I decided to change the subject again. “Where’s Hadleigh now?”

  “I’d feel a lot more secure if I knew the answer to that one. No doubt he’s out and about in the Nightside, walking up and down in it and disapproving of things in horrible ways. I keep waiting for the other incendiary to drop. Whatever mysteries people learn in the Deep School, it doesn’t do much for their sense of tolerance.”

  “So,” I said, “Walker is a title ... like the Walking Man?”

  “Might be a coincidence; might not. That’s the Nightside for you. Either way; you’re Walker now. Whether you like it or not. But let me be blunt, John ... The case I’m about to send you on is your first official mission for the Authorities. If you should prove to be ... not up to the job, the others will ignore my recommendations and appoint someone else.”

  “Never wanted the job anyway,” I said.

  “That’s why I wanted you,” Julien said dryly. “But think on this: you got away with a lot because Walker let you. For his various reasons. You might not do as well with some of the names I’ve heard proposed.”

  I smiled briefly. “I handled Walker. And if I could handle him, I can handle anyone.”

  “That is exactly the attitude that’s going to get you killed one of these days. There are ... things out there that even the mighty John Taylor can’t handle. You’d do well to arrange a support team, of people you can trust, to be your backup. Walker had all kinds of useful people on his payroll, to be his eyes and ears in the Nightside, or help him deal with the more specialised problems, and naturally you’ll inherit them ... but there are going to be times when only brute force and massed fire-power will do. Walker had the support of the Army and the Church, when necessary, and he also had the Reasonable
Men. You do remember the Reasonable Men, don’t you, John? You should; you killed them.”

  “They annoyed me,” I said. “Bunch of stuck-up pricks and bully-boys. I can do better than them. How about Suzie Shooter, Dead Boy, Razor Eddie ...”

  “I meant people my fellow Authorities could approve of! Though admittedly, those appalling friends of yours would scare the crap out of all the right people ...”

  “I think we should talk about the mission,” I said determinedly. “What’s up with the Mammon Emporium that it might go boom? Someone finally realised how unfair and extortionate the prices are? Profit margins down there are so appalling the business owners have to hire transcendental mathematicians just to do their tax returns. And their returns policy sucks like a hooker when the rent’s due.”

  “You always did have an elegant turn of phrase, John. Some three hours ago, a man walked into the Mammon Emporium and announced that he was there to blow the whole place up. He gave every impression of being full-on crazy, and perhaps even industrial-strength Looney Tunes; but it only took one scan by the mall’s security people to reveal he was quite serious. He’d made himself into, or allowed himself to be made into, a soulbomb. I can tell from your expression that you have never heard of a soulbomb. I have, which is probably why I don’t sleep as well as I used to.

  “When you blow something apart, you get energy, yes? Blow an atom apart, and you get a lot of energy. Blow a soul apart, and you get the kind of energy, the kind of explosion, that can blow holes in reality itself. It has happened in the past. There are those who see it as the ultimate form of suicide. Destroy your soul, and you get to cheat Heaven and Hell.”

 

    The House on Widows Hill Read onlineThe House on Widows HillNight Train to Murder Read onlineNight Train to MurderThe Best Thing You Can Steal Read onlineThe Best Thing You Can StealTill Sudden Death Do Us Part Read onlineTill Sudden Death Do Us PartHawk & Fisher Read onlineHawk & FisherDrinking Midnight Wine Read onlineDrinking Midnight WineMistworld (Deathstalker Prelude) Read onlineMistworld (Deathstalker Prelude)Something From the Nightside Read onlineSomething From the NightsideHawk and Fisher Read onlineHawk and FisherTales From the Nightside Read onlineTales From the NightsideBlue Moon Rising (Darkwood) Read onlineBlue Moon Rising (Darkwood)Just Another Judgement Day Read onlineJust Another Judgement DayBlood and Honor (Forest Kingdom Novels) Read onlineBlood and Honor (Forest Kingdom Novels)Secret Histories 10: Dr. DOA Read onlineSecret Histories 10: Dr. DOAThe Spy Who Haunted Me Read onlineThe Spy Who Haunted MeHellworld Read onlineHellworldNight Fall Read onlineNight FallHellworld (Deathstalker Prelude) Read onlineHellworld (Deathstalker Prelude)Once In a Blue Moon Read onlineOnce In a Blue MoonDeathstalker Honor Read onlineDeathstalker HonorWolf in the Fold h&f-4 Read onlineWolf in the Fold h&f-4Winner Takes All Read onlineWinner Takes AllGuards of Haven Read onlineGuards of HavenCasino Infernale Read onlineCasino InfernaleGuard Against Dishonor Read onlineGuard Against DishonorThe Bride Wore Black Leather Read onlineThe Bride Wore Black LeatherDeathstalker War Read onlineDeathstalker WarFor Heaven's Eyes Only sh-5 Read onlineFor Heaven's Eyes Only sh-5From Hell With Love: A Secret Histories Novel Read onlineFrom Hell With Love: A Secret Histories NovelInto the Thinnest of Air Read onlineInto the Thinnest of AirThe Spy Who Haunted Me sh-3 Read onlineThe Spy Who Haunted Me sh-3For Heaven's Eyes Only Read onlineFor Heaven's Eyes OnlyForces from Beyond Read onlineForces from BeyondDeathstalker Rebellion d-2 Read onlineDeathstalker Rebellion d-2Death Shall Come Read onlineDeath Shall ComeThe Man with the Golden Torc sh-1 Read onlineThe Man with the Golden Torc sh-1Hell to Pay Read onlineHell to PayVery Important Corpses Read onlineVery Important CorpsesGhost of a Chance Read onlineGhost of a ChanceDaemons Are Forever Read onlineDaemons Are ForeverBeyond the Blue Moon (Forest Kingdom Novels) Read onlineBeyond the Blue Moon (Forest Kingdom Novels)Deathstalker Destiny Read onlineDeathstalker DestinySwords of Haven: The Adventures of Hawk & Fisher Read onlineSwords of Haven: The Adventures of Hawk & FisherHawk & Fisher h&f-1 Read onlineHawk & Fisher h&f-1Paths Not Taken Read onlinePaths Not TakenShadows Fall Read onlineShadows FallNightingale's Lament Read onlineNightingale's LamentDead Man Walking Read onlineDead Man WalkingWolf in the Fold Read onlineWolf in the FoldMistworld Read onlineMistworldLive and Let Drood: A Secret Histories Novel Read onlineLive and Let Drood: A Secret Histories NovelVoices From Beyond (A Ghost Finders Novel) Read onlineVoices From Beyond (A Ghost Finders Novel)Agents of Light and Darkness Read onlineAgents of Light and DarknessDeathstalker Rebellion Read onlineDeathstalker RebellionThe Good,the Bad and the Uncanny n-10 Read onlineThe Good,the Bad and the Uncanny n-10Ghost of a Smile g-2 Read onlineGhost of a Smile g-2Property of a Lady Faire: A Secret Histories Novel Read onlineProperty of a Lady Faire: A Secret Histories NovelSpirits from Beyond Read onlineSpirits from BeyondFrom a Drood to A Kill: A Secret Histories Novel Read onlineFrom a Drood to A Kill: A Secret Histories NovelBeyond The Blue Moon Read onlineBeyond The Blue MoonDown Among the Dead Men (Forest Kingdom Novels) Read onlineDown Among the Dead Men (Forest Kingdom Novels)Bones of Haven Read onlineBones of HavenCasino Infernale sh-6 Read onlineCasino Infernale sh-6The Bride Wore Black Leather n-12 Read onlineThe Bride Wore Black Leather n-12From Hell with love sh-4 Read onlineFrom Hell with love sh-4Magic City: Recent Spells Read onlineMagic City: Recent SpellsDaemons Are Forever sh-2 Read onlineDaemons Are Forever sh-2A Hard Day's Knight Read onlineA Hard Day's KnightGuards of Haven: The Adventures of Hawk and Fisher (Hawk & Fisher) Read onlineGuards of Haven: The Adventures of Hawk and Fisher (Hawk & Fisher)Tales of the Hidden World Read onlineTales of the Hidden WorldGhostworld Read onlineGhostworldAgents of Light and Darkness n-2 Read onlineAgents of Light and Darkness n-2Ghost of a Dream Read onlineGhost of a DreamDeathstalker Coda Read onlineDeathstalker CodaThe Good, the Bad, and the Uncanny (Nightside) Read onlineThe Good, the Bad, and the Uncanny (Nightside)Deathstalker Honor d-4 Read onlineDeathstalker Honor d-4Just Another Judgement Day n-9 Read onlineJust Another Judgement Day n-9Blue Moon Rising Read onlineBlue Moon RisingGod Killer h&f-3 Read onlineGod Killer h&f-3Deathstalker Read onlineDeathstalkerDeathstalker War d-3 Read onlineDeathstalker War d-3Ghostworld (Deathstalker Prelude) Read onlineGhostworld (Deathstalker Prelude)Deathstalker Legacy Read onlineDeathstalker LegacySomething from the Nightside n-1 Read onlineSomething from the Nightside n-1The Unnatural Inquirer n-8 Read onlineThe Unnatural Inquirer n-8Deathstalker d-1 Read onlineDeathstalker d-1The Unnatural Inquirer Read onlineThe Unnatural InquirerLive and let Drood sh-6 Read onlineLive and let Drood sh-6Hex and the City Read onlineHex and the CityNightingale lament n-3 Read onlineNightingale lament n-3Guard Against Dishonor h&f-5 Read onlineGuard Against Dishonor h&f-5Moonbreaker Read onlineMoonbreakerSharper Than a Serpent's Tooth Read onlineSharper Than a Serpent's ToothDeathstalker Return Read onlineDeathstalker ReturnAngels of Light and Darkness Read onlineAngels of Light and DarknessGhost of a Dream g-3 Read onlineGhost of a Dream g-3Winner Takes All h&f-1 Read onlineWinner Takes All h&f-1Ghost of a Chance g-1 Read onlineGhost of a Chance g-1The Good, the Bad, and the Uncanny Read onlineThe Good, the Bad, and the UncannyA Hard Day's Knight n-11 Read onlineA Hard Day's Knight n-11Hell To Pay n-7 Read onlineHell To Pay n-7Hex In The City n-4 Read onlineHex In The City n-4Paths Not Taken n-5 Read onlinePaths Not Taken n-5Spirits from Beyond g-4 Read onlineSpirits from Beyond g-4Sharper Than A Serpent's Tooth n-6 Read onlineSharper Than A Serpent's Tooth n-6