'Indeed.' The engine stopped. 'It's on my research list. A way down.' He swallowed. 'I suppose you're going to say, because I'm young.'
'No, it's more like I was thinking, it might tell us something about the family talent,' Miriam replied. She dabbed at a stray wisp of hair in the mirror, split ends mocking her. 'I knew it was a problem. I didn't realize it was this big a problem, though. There's too much to do, isn't there?'
'I'm working on it,' Huw said soberly. 'It's just that my to-do list is eight years long.'
'I beg your pardon, Miriam.' Brill sounded as tense as she felt. 'Visitors hours…'
'Alright.' Miriam opened her door and carefully climbed down from the van. She pulled a face as she caught her reflection in the mirror: Appearances counted for a lot when dealing with the elders and the formal Clan hierarchy. 'I look a mess. Let's get on with this.'
Behind her, Yul and Elena were dismounting. 'With your permission, I'll take point, my lady.' Elena winked at her as she swung a sports bag over her shoulder. 'I think you look just fine.'
Miriam looked at Brill in mute appeal. 'Let her do it, it's what she does best,' Brill replied. 'Yul, rear guard. Huw? Lock up and let's go.' All of them, Miriam realized, were armed-but Elena was the one with the serious firepower in her bag.
Getting into the small and very exclusive hospital that the Clan maintained for their brainstruck was not a simple matter of walking up to the reception desk and saying, 'Hello, I've come to visit Angbard Lofstrom.' Even leaving aside the small matter of the DEA's most wanted list and the question of his place on it, Angbard had enemies, many of whom might well consider hospital visiting hours to be the perfect time to even up old scores. So Miriam was unsurprised when her introductory statement of intent, 'Hello, I've come to visit Angbard Lofstrom,' resulted in the ornamental receptionist staring vacuously up at her as if she'd demanded money with threats. A serious-faced young man whose dark suit was cut to conceal his sidearm bounced out from behind a glass screen off to one side, sized them up, then relaxed momentarily. 'Wer' isht?' he demanded.
Brill replied in machine-gun hochsprache, too fast for Miriam to catch. The young man looked surprised, but mildly relieved as he replied. Then he turned to Miriam. 'My lady, if you please'-he pointed at a seating area off to one side-'to wait there in?' His English was heavily accented.
'Ja-' Brill replied at length. 'Bertil says he needs to check our identities before he can let us in,' she explained to Miriam. 'He knows who we are.'
'Good.' Miriam allowed herself to be led to the waiting area. 'Any idea how long?…'
'Not long.' Brill didn't bother sitting down. 'They'll just need time to make sure we didn't bring any unwanted company.' Her posture was relaxed, but Miriam couldn't help noticing the way her eyeballs flickered from doors to windows.
A minute passed before another of the dark-suited security guards came in through a door behind the receptionist's desk.
'My lady?' The new guy walked straight over to Miriam and half bowed to her. 'If you would come this way, please?'
'I'm bringing my companions,' she said.
'Ah.' His eyes focused on Elena's shoulder bag. 'I would like to see that, please.'
Elena looked as if she was about to object. Miriam shook her head. 'Show him.'
Elena opened her bag reluctantly and the guard looked inside. He blinked. 'Haim. You may come, but please unload and safe your arm.' He shrugged at Miriam apologetically. 'I am sorry but it is a matter of policy-no armor- piercing loads are allowed. The rest of you, pistols only? No concealed shotguns?' His lips quirked. 'Good. If you would follow me…'
Elena trailed behind them, her hands buried in her bag, from which muffled clicking noises were emerging.
Another hospital corridor leading to another hospital room, like a hotel with oxygen lines and diagnostic machines in place of the Internet hub and minibar.
'Yes.' Brilliana seemed reluctant to say more, so she dropped the topic.
They passed a set of fire doors, then a nursing station, and finally came to a door where a pair of machine-gun missionaries were standing easy. Their guide knocked twice, then opened the door. 'More visitors,' he said quietly.
The first thing Miriam saw in the small hospital room was a bed with a body in it and people gathered around, their backs turned to her. Then one of them looked round: 'Olga!'
Olga's expression of startled relief emboldened Miriam to take a step forward.
'Miriam-'
Then the woman beside Olga looked up. 'Miriam?' And her heart fluttered and skipped a beat.
'Mom?'
'Ach,
Iris stared up at her. She looked tired, and apprehensive-guilty, perhaps-and worried. Miriam looked past her at the figure in the bed. 'Maybe not, Mom, but let me be the judge of that.' There was an ache in her throat as she looked at Olga. 'How is he?'
Olga shook her head. 'He is not good,' she said. 'Earlier, he could speak, he spoke of you-but not since we moved him. He is barely conscious.'
'Then why
Iris cut in. 'They were under siege, kid. You know, bad guys with machine guns shooting at them? They wouldn't have relocated him if staying was an option. You can ask Dr. MacDonald later if you want to know more.' She nodded at Brilliana. 'Who are your companions?'
Brill gestured. 'They're mine.
'Everyone and their dog.' Iris addressed Miriam: 'I'm expecting that little shitweasel Julius Arnesen to turn up any minute now. Oliver Hjorth is making himself surprisingly useful, all things considered-I think he finally worked out how unreliable mother-dearest is'-the dowager Hildegarde, who seemed to take Miriam's mere existence as a personal insult-'and Mors Hjalmar is running interference for me. The silver lining on this particular shit sandwich is that most of the conservative tribal elders attended your betrothal, Miriam. They were in the Summer Palace when Egon staged his little divertissement-we came out much better. Also, they're on the back foot now because of the troubles at home. But once they get a grip on how ill my half brother is, they're going to jump us. You can be sure of it.'
'Good!' said Miriam, surprising herself-and, from their reactions, everybody else. 'Let them.' She sidestepped around Brill and got her first good look at the duke.
Last time she'd seen him, months ago, Angbard had seemed implacable and unstoppable: a mafia don at the height of his power, self-assured and calculating, a healthy sixty-something executive whose polished exterior masked the ruthless drive and cynical outlook within. Lying half-asleep in a hospital bed, an intravenous drip in his left arm and the cables of an EEG taped to his patchily shaved head, he looked pathetic and broken. His skin was translucent, stretched thin across ancient muscles, the outline of bones showing through at elbows and shoulders; his closed eyes were half-sunk in their sockets. His breathing was shallow and slow.
Iris cleared her throat. 'Are you sure you don't want to reconsider that?'
Miriam looked her mother in the eye. 'Can you think of a better time?'
'Ladies-' Heads turned. The Clan security officer who'd brought them here paused. 'Perhaps you would like to
