something in his voice, and in his face ...
'You know! All this time, you've known who my mother is and kept it from me!'
'Yes,' said Walker, unmoved by the clear anger and accusation in my voice. 'I never told you because I wanted to protect you. Your father and I were ... close, once.'
'So where were you when he was drinking himself to death?'
My voice must have been cold as ice, but Walker didn't flinch. He met my gaze squarely, and his voice was calm. 'There was nothing I could have done for him. He'd stopped listening to me a long time before. And we all have the right to go to Hell in our own way. Sometimes I think that's what the Nightside is all about.'
'Tell me,' I said, and it wasn't a request. 'Tell me the name of my mother.'
'I can't,' said Walker. 'There are ... reasons. I'm one of only two people who know, and God willing we'll take the knowledge to our graves with us.'
'The other being the Collector.'
'Yes. Poor Mark. And he won't tell you either. So let it go, John. Knowing who your mother was won't make you happy or wise. It killed your father.'
'What if she comes back?' I said.
'She won't. She can't.'
'You're sure of that?'
'I have to be.' Walker leaned back in his chair. He looked smaller, diminished. 'Give up this case, John. No good will come of it. The origins of the Nightside are best left lost and forgotten.'
'Even to the Authorities?'
'Quite possibly. There are things they don't tell me. For my own protection. Let the past stay in the past. Where it can't hurt anyone.'
I did consider it, for a moment. I'd never known Walker to be this open, this concerned, about anything before. But in the end, I shook my head.
'I can't, Walker. I have to do this. I have to
Walker sat up straight, his old commanding arrogance suddenly back in place. He fixed me with a cold gaze, and said,
And then everything on the table between us began to tremble and clatter. The cutlery and the plates jumped and bounced on the immaculate tablecloth. The table rocked back and forth, its legs slamming up and down with increasing force. The floor lurched, and the whole Dining Room shook and shuddered. People cried out and clung to their juddering tables. And then it all died slowly away, and the reverberations in my head disappeared with it. I rose easily to my feet and smiled down at the openly astonished Walker.
'How about that?' I said. 'So much for His Master's Voice. Perhaps I am my mother's son after all.'
I walked away, and no-one wanted to look at me. I carefully chose my path to take me past Julien Advent's table, and when I was sure there was a wide marble pillar between me and Walker's table, I dropped suddenly into a chair beside Julien, and sank down, so that his body helped to hide me. I put a finger to my lips to hush him, and he nodded agreeably. By leaning back just right, I could see Walker at his table in the corner. He was so taken up with his own thoughts it was clear he hadn't noticed I never actually left the room. I'd thought that last parting shot would distract him. I wanted to see what he would do, who he would talk to, now he knew he didn't have his Reasonable Men to hold over me.
In the end, he called for a footman to clear away the mess on his table, then looked sharply to one side and nodded, A beautiful woman appeared suddenly from behind a concealing glamour, right beside the table. I cursed quietly. I'd been so focussed on Walker, and what he was saying, that I hadn't even sensed someone else was listening, unobserved. I must be getting old. I didn't used to make mistakes like that. And it didn't help at all that I recognised the stunning woman smiling at Walker.
Bad Penny was a freelance operative for hire, always turning up when least expected. Vicious, deadly, seductive, and entirely treacherous. An agent
We knew each other. A bit. Ships that passed in the night and kept on going. We didn't approve of each other, but we had been known to work together, occasionally. When no-one else would do.
Walker invited her to sit down at his table, and immediately the footman was there to pull her chair out for her, then push it back in again. Bad Penny accepted the attention as her due, but did deign to favour him with a flashing smile; and the footman did everything but wriggle like a puppy.
'You needn't bother with a menu,' Walker said calmly to the footman. 'The lady isn't stopping.'
Bad Penny pouted. 'Wouldn't eat here if you paid me, darling. I do have my standards.'
Walker waved the footman away, and he disappeared reluctantly. I leaned out a little way from Julien's table, to hear them more clearly. Bad Penny worried me; but then, she always did, even when she was supposedly on my side. Julien watched me, amused, but continued with his dinner. As editor of the Nightside's only daily newspaper, the
I was just a bit surprised that Bad Penny was working for Walker. He was usually more subtle than that. Bad Penny, on the other hand, would work for anyone with enough money, on anything from espionage to assassination. Whether she was working on the side of Good or Evil had honestly never mattered to her; as she was only too happy to point out, gold has no provenance. She had no personal preference either way, nor any ethics worth the mentioning. She was utterly amoral and quite cheerful about it. I knew she'd occasionally done the Authorities' dirty work in the past, when they felt the need for a little distance or deniability. (Strictly pro bono, in return for which they agreed to turn a blind eye to some of her more notorious activities. Business as usual, in the Nightside.)
'I do hope this isn't about a honey trap, darling, because I don't do those any more,' she said flatly to Walker. 'They're just too easy, my dear; there's no challenge in it. Been there, done that, starred in the video. These days I prefer to specialise in cunning thefts, daring exploits, and just a touch of the good old-fashioned ultraviolence now and again, to keep the blood flowing.'
'And a little discreet blackmail,' said Walker. 'To keep your coffers full.'
Bad Penny batted her long eyelashes at him. 'A girl has to live. And I never was very good at investments. All I have to do is mention that I'm thinking of finally writing my memoirs, and you'd be surprised how fast the cheques come flooding in. Now, what is it you want me to do, Walker? Something frightfully nasty, no doubt.'
'You were listening to my little chat with John Taylor.'
'Well yes, but I can't honestly say it made much sense to me.'
'I want you to take care of Taylor.'
Bad Penny looked at him sharply. 'Now you're going to have to be just a little more specific than that, darling.'
'I want you to do whatever it takes to prevent him from completing his mission. I want him off his present case, and I don't care how you do it.'
'So ... dear John is no longer under your protection?'
'No,' said Walker. 'Can you take him?'
'Of course, darling! He's just a man.'