“I had no idea,” Moonlight said.
Marasi sighed. At least the locals knew to surround the Sequence and his flunky—a pack of at least twenty constables were holding weapons on him. They might not know about the Set, but they understood things like smuggling and gangsters. The rest of the newly arrived constables were rounding up thugs who had wisely decided not to shoot, as they were far outnumbered. They reluctantly dropped their weapons.
Marasi kicked open her door and hopped down. Immediately, several of the advancing constables turned weapons on her. She sighed and raised her hands. “I’m Elendel Constabulary!” she shouted at them. “Special Detective Marasi Colms!”
“What’s this?” a voice demanded. A tall woman with short blonde hair—wearing a Bilming uniform—pushed through the constables. Marasi thought she knew the woman.
“Captain Blantach?” Marasi said. “We met at the intercity training event last year.”
The woman looked Marasi up and down, then groaned. Nearby, someof Marasi’s people were hesitantly climbing out of the backs of trucks—showing their credentials.
Captain Blantach put her palm to her forehead. “You’rekiddingme,” she said. “You’re running a stinginsidemy city?”
“I have jurisdiction in the entire Basin,” Marasi said, fishing for the paperwork. “Constable-General Reddi authorized it under the oversight of the governor.”
“Youclaimjurisdiction in the entire Basin!” Blantach said, waving the authorizations away. “Rusting Elenders.Of courseyou would pull an operation in my city and not evensend word.”
Marasi felt a little bad for the woman. Still, the Set had the Outer Cities under its thumb. Sending advance word to the local constables would have been far too risky; there were almost certainly Set agents within Blantach’s organization.
Though… the fact that the constables were here seemed to disprove that theory.
“You’re going to need to turn them over to us,” Marasi said, waving at the gangsters.
“Like hell we are,” Blantach said, folding her arms across her uniform jacket, stiff and buttoned tight.
“This is part of a much bigger network,” Marasi said.
“Then we’ll discover that during interrogation.”
Marasi sighed, but took a deep breath. “Blantach,” she said, “do wehaveto fight this fight?”
The taller woman eyed her, but said nothing.
“The politicians don’t get along,” Marasi said, “but that’s their business.Ourbusiness is protecting the cities—all of them. Just a couple of conners with our hands full. Let’s work together rather than squabble.”
“Perhaps I can agree to that… if we do it onmyterms.”
“This thing I’m hunting,” Marasi said, “it goes deep. Dangerously deep. And it has little tendrils of mist wrapping around all parts of society. Your city’s leaders arealmost certainlycompromised.”
“You said this wasn’t about politics.”
“I said we shouldn’t worry about how divisive the politicians are being,” Marasi said. “But everything touches on politics these days. The group I’m pursuing are deliberately stoking war between Elendel and the Outer Cities.
“If we get close to them, there are elements inbothgovernments who are going to try to stop us. Which is why I couldn’t warn you we werecoming. I apologize for that, but most in myowngovernment don’t know about this operation.”
Blantach waved away an aide who came trotting up, perhaps to deliver a count of enemies taken captive, and continued to regard Marasi. This situation was a bit like a political negotiation—but Marasi had an advantage over Steris and Wax. You never really could tell what senators wanted. But fellow constables?
You didn’t take up this job for glory—or at least you didn’tstayin this job for glory. Anyone who wanted glory quickly moved on to judgeships or attorney positions, promoted away from actual detective work as soon as possible. But Blantach was a career constable. She’dbeen in her job longer than Reddi.
“You’re making me worried, Colms,” Blantach said.
“How hard was this operation to organize?” Marasi asked. “Were those in your own government—higher members of the constabulary—working against you?”
“That’s how everything is.” Blantach shrugged. “You know red tape. It…” She trailed off, frowning. “There might have been atadmore on this mission.”
“So why didn’t they quash it entirely?” Marasi whispered. “Why’dthey let you continue?”
“I was determined.”