II. The Breaking Point
As Jackie DeCoeur’s train rolled up to the platform in downtown Aureg, steam billowed in great gouts from between the slowly-turning iron wheels, and the engine’s whistle let loose a high, reedy wail. It blew four times – once short, once long, twice short.
Staring out at the bustling platform through the window of her dining car, the red-eyed woman reflected that the code wasn’t strictly necessary. Hush-Hush always had an uncanny ability to sense her presence; there was no question of the husher twins boarding the wrong train by mistake.
And there they were, standing together on the platform, their faces placid as they watched Jackie’s train pull to a stop. Their four blue eyes caught Jackie’s two red ones through the window glass, and the twins’ heads moved up and down, almost imperceptibly, in a small, perfectly-synchronized nod of acknowledgement.
Looking at Hush-Hush, Jackie had to smile.
It was the height of the day, and Aureg’s Grand Station was teeming with activity. Crowds of foxes, humans, centaurs, minotaurs, and noggles jostled for position along the thronged platforms, craning their heads to get a glimpse up at the arrival boards, or using their elbows to clear a path as they struggled against the current of moving bodies to make their way to this train or that. The packed station seemed ready to burst at its seams.
There was just one exception to this crowded state of affairs: Where the husher twins stood together on the platform, a small circle of open space had formed all around the white-haired, white-robed, pale-skinned human twins. Both women stood silently with their arms crossed in front of their chests and their hands tucked into the sleeves of their robes, each’s posture a perfect mirror of the other’s. Had they wanted to, the sisters could have extended their arms out in any direction and touched only empty air. The otherwise chaotic throng of people throughout the station appeared united by one single, shared thought: that it would be prudent to leave some space between themselves and the otherworldly pair of mages waiting together on the platform, silent and still.
So, when Hush-Hush walked across the platform and climbed aboard the waiting train, people in the crowd around them started, as though they had just seen statues spring to life.
Jackie waited until both sisters were aboard the train, then she held her arms out wide and hugged the twins collectively. She had once tried to shake their hands individually – the experience seemed to make both twins profoundly uncomfortable.
“Where’s Lucy?” the red-eyed woman asked. “I figured she’d be here with you.”
The demoness had appeared briefly several days earlier, just long enough to announce that she’d found Hush-Hush, that Jackie ought to go to Aureg to collect the twins, and that she would keep an eye on them in the meantime. Then the black-eyed woman had disappeared as quickly as she had appeared.
It had been a strange encounter, Jackie thought – totally devoid of Lucy’s usual variety of predatory playfulness. It had been much more like the curt, abbreviated interactions she usually had with Mal. That had set her wondering whether the demons had taken a collective decision to change the way they dealt with her.
After all, she reckoned, her last playful exchange with Lucy had ended with her threatening to kill the black-eyed woman. The demoness had laughed the threat off. But she would also have told Mal about it. And Mal, Jackie suspected, had a less indulgent sense of humor than Lucy.
In the meantime, Hush-Hush shook their heads.
“The demon in question merely told us that you were coming, and to await your arrival,” the twins said. “We have not seen her for several days.”
Jackie frowned. “Did she say where she was going?”
Again, the twins shook their heads.
“Merely that she had matters to attend to.” The twins seemed to reflect for a moment. “Our encounter with the demon you have called Lucy was somewhat unpleasant. We were initially unaware that she was in your employ, so we took certain steps to subdue her, which she did not appreciate. It is possible that she did not wish to remain in our presence.” The twins each inclined their heads slightly, and Jackie saw something flash across their four eyes. “We were not sorry to see her go. The demon made a hurtful comment about us.”
Jackie had to suppress the urge to laugh. “What did Lucy say?”
“She stated that we were strange,” Hush-Hush said. Their voices remained flat and without intonation, but Jackie could sense that their feelings had been hurt.
“Well, that wasn’t very nice,” Jackie said. “But demons tend not to be very nice.” She sighed. “Anyway, I’m sorry that I sent Lucy to find you, but I needed to see you, make sure you were okay. When you up and disappeared, it didn’t worry me at the time, but I’ve been given reason to worry of late. Would it be rude of me to ask where you got yourselves off to?”
The twins shook their heads.
“There were certain questions which occurred to us,” they said. They spoke in perfect unison, giving an eerie stereo quality to their words. “Since you appeared to have no need of us at the time, we took our leave and attempted to seek answers.”
“And did you find them? Answers, I mean?”
Hush-Hush’s brows furrowed ever-so-slightly.
“We did not,” they said. Their cool, blue eyes held Jackie’s gaze in a way that few other living souls were brave enough to. “In fact, we acquired yet more questions.”
Jackie gave the twins an apologetic look.
“Just send me a postcard next time, okay? I know you two can take care of yourselves, but you know how I am,” she said. “You’re my people, and I care about my people.”
The ghost of a frown crossed the twins’ faces. “Communication by postcard would have been impractical from the places we traveled to,” they said.
Jackie shook her head. The twins sometimes struggled to grasp figurative speech.
Jackie’s next thoughts were interrupted when she heard heavy, uneven hoofbeats coming up behind her. She turned to see Dazie walking over from the rear of the dining car. Arriving at where the other women stood, the big minotaur rested a hand on Jackie’s shoulder.
It was partly a gesture of affection, Jackie thought. But Dazie also lowered some of her substantial weight onto the red-eyed woman’s shoulder, and Jackie knew that her hobbled deputy was leaning on her for support as much as for solidarity.
“Not that this reunion isn’t touching, or anything,” the minotaur said. “But maybe we ought to get down to brass tacks?”
Jackie’s smile disappeared. “Such as the person or persons unknown who are trying to kill us?” she said.
Dazie snorted. “Does it get any brassier than that?”
“It does not,” Jackie said. She motioned towards the interior of the dining car, which she and Dazie had reorganized into a makeshift command center. “Why don’t we all sit down and put our heads together, see if we can’t figure out just what in blazes is going on.”
The husher twins stepped into the interior of the car, seeming to glide as much as walk. Jackie moved to follow them. Dazie was just about to bring up the rear of the procession when there was a small knock at the door to the platform.
Jackie stopped walking. The husher twins stopped and turned as well.
“I wasn’t expecting any other visitors,” Jackie said. “Were you?”
“No,” Hush-Hush said. “We were not.”
“Want me to see who it is?” Dazie asked. There was a gun in the minotaur’s hand.
“Why don’t you let me do that,” Jackie said. Her own gun was out as well.
Dazie snorted. “I’m closer,” she said.
“I’m healthier,” Jackie said. She had to turn sideways to sidle past the big minotaur.
“I can still shoot straight,” Dazie said, an indignant note in her voice.
“Of that I have no doubt,” Jackie said. “But you’ve already been plugged four times on my account. Any more, and I worry you’ll start to question the value of our friendship.”
Holding her revolver casually down at her side, but with her finger curled around the trigger, Jackie DeCoeur slid the door open.
Whoever or whatever she might have been expecting, it was not the small centaur boy who looked up at her from the platform. His face was smudged with dirt, and the hair on his flanks was knotty and matted. He wore a pair of heavily-patched overalls, and he stared up at her with unconcealed, wide-eyed amazement. He couldn’t have been a day older than ten, she figured.
“You’re Red Jackie,” he said, his voice a kind of awed whisper.
Jackie slid her revolver back into its holster.
“In the flesh,” she said. “Question is, who are you?”
That seemed to startle the boy out of his reverie.
“I’m supposed to give this to you.” He fished around in the pocket of his overalls and came back out with a small, sealed envelope. There was no name or address on it.
Jackie did not reach down to take the envelope. Instead, she kept her eyes on the boy. “Who told you to give it to me?” she asked.
“A lady,” the boy said.
“There’s all sorts of ladies,” Jackie said. “What sort of lady was this?”
“A funny one,” the boy said. “She smelled kinda funny, and she wore dark glasses.”
“She still around?” Jackie asked. “In case I wanted to thank her personally?”
The centaur shook his head. “It was three days ago I met her. She told me you was coming to town, and asked me if I’d like to meet you. And I said I sure would. So she gives me this letter,” and again he offered the envelope to Jackie, “and she tells me to give it to you. She tells me when you’ll be coming, and she tells me which sort of train to look for. And she weren’t lying, neither, because it’s really you, isn’t it?” The boy was practically beaming up at her. “Are you here to rob a bank?” Then he hastened to add: “You can trust me. I won’t tell.”
“I wasn’t planning on it,” Jackie said, “although I guess you never know. But tell me more about this lady friend of yours. What else do you know about her?”
“Nothing,” the boy said, “except that she gave me two bits to give you this letter, and she said you’d give me two more bits when I did.” He gave the envelope he was holding an impatient shake.
Jackie took a second to look up and down the length of the platform. She wasn’t really expecting to see a woman in dark glasses watching her furtively from behind a three-day-old newspaper. Sure enough, she didn’t.
Finally, she reached out and took the envelope from the boy. Digging around in her own pocket, she found a coin which was worth substantially more than two bits, which she dropped into the boy’s outstretched hand.
“Can you keep a secret?” she asked, dropping her voice down to an urgent whisper.
“Sure can,” the boy said.
Jackie nodded at him. “Good,” she said. “If anybody else asks you about this, you never saw me, okay?”
The boy nodded back. “I won’t tell a soul,” he said, and he held a pair of crossed fingers over his heart.
Jackie smiled down at the boy. “I know you won’t,” she said. Then she winked at him before closing the door.
Once the door was closed, though, her smile evaporated.
“Besides the people in this room,” she said to Dazie and Hush-Hush, “who all knew I was going to be in Aureg today?”
Dazie held up her good arm and started counting off on her fingers. “Besides the three of us? Your crew, my crew, and the soul-suckers.”
“That’s no good,” Jackie said. “I rule all of them out.”
“You vouch for the soul-suckers?” Dazie asked, sounding skeptical.
“No,” Jackie said. “But I know the man who does. I don’t believe they’d cross him up, and I don’t believe he’d cross me up.” She walked across the dining car to sit next to the minotaur and the husher twins. The envelope the boy had given to her was still in her hand.
“So what’s this all about anyway?” Dazie asked. She pointed at the envelope.
“Only one way to find out,” Jackie said. She tore open the envelope’s flap and extracted its contents.
As she did, her blood ran cold.
It was a single sheet of paper. It had been folded into thirds. It had once been sealed with wax. Years ago, she herself had written a single word on its cover: “Trotter.”
Jackie DeCoeur’s heart felt as though it would burst out from inside her chest. Her mouth went dry as the Waste, yet she felt a cold sweat beading on her forehead.
Slowly, with shaking hands, she unfolded the sheet of paper. As she read, her mouth silently formed the words which she herself had written inside:
Quote:
My dearest Trotter,
I will be brief. For that, I apologize. After all these years, you’ve got the right to expect more from me. I certainly feel like I have a lot to say.
Trouble is, I don’t know how to say it.
Besides, you know that I’m no writer. It takes so much effort for me to get the letters onto the page. And I have to look up the long words in that lexicon you gave me, just to be sure I’m spelling them right. So I hope you’ll understand.
Anyway, I haven’t ever figured myself for a coward. But I figure I’ve done two cowardly things in my life. The first was leaving you. The second was letting you leave me. Not a day goes by that I don’t look back on those moments with regret. I wish that I had found the courage to fight for us.
Regret is a strange thing. As a rule, I don’t put much stock in regret. I’ve lied. I’ve cheated. I’ve stolen. I’ve killed. I don’t regret a one of those things. Giving up on us? That’s what I regret. That’s what I think about when I lie awake nights.
Some nights you come to me in my dreams. I wake up, and I half expect to find you there, sleeping next to me. When I realize I’m alone, I feel an emptiness in my heart that I don’t have the words to describe.
I don’t know that this matters much. But, for what it’s worth, you were my one and only. You were the only person I ever let into my heart. Not that I had much choice. You danced your way in there the day I met you. You stole my heart, plain and simple. I’m a thief, so I ought to know.
You were the best thing about me. Please never forget that.
I don’t claim to know what happens to our souls after our bodies turn to dust. Maybe there are seven heavens and seven hells. Maybe there aren’t. Just know that, wherever I am, I will wait for you. Maybe I can get right in death what I got wrong in life.
Just don’t be in any hurry to come join me. I want you to live enough for the both of us. I want you to have all the happiness that I didn’t know how to give you.
When you’re done with all that, maybe then you can come see about me. But there’s no rush. I’m yours forever.
-Jackie
At the bottom of the page, another hand had left the following note, written in a florid, looping script:
“Forever is shorter than you think.”
Next to those words, tied together with black string and stuck to the note with what looked like dried blood, there was a small lock of white fur.
As carefully as her shaking hands would permit, Jackie folded the note back into thirds and set it down on the table. She felt like her head was being squeezed in a vice. She could barely see straight.
She looked up at the husher twins, whose faces bore what by their standards amounted to a concerned expression.
“Hush-Hush,” Jackie said, “what’s the fastest we can get to Mainstrike?” She could barely hear her own voice over the sound of the blood pounding behind her ears.
“We do not currently have any beacons in that vicinity,” the husher twins said. “Travel by rail is likely to afford the fastest journey.” Jackie strained to understand them through the pounding in her head. She had to read their lips as much as she listened to their words.
“Then go up to the engine,” Jackie said. “Get us rolling.”
Hush-Hush nodded their assent and made for the locomotive.
“Jackie, what’s going on?” Dazie asked. The concern on the minotaur’s face was much simpler to read.
Jackie couldn’t speak. It was taking every ounce of concentration she possessed just to keep from screaming.
She put her arm in front of her mouth, and she bit down on her sleeve.
Then, without saying a word, she slid the note across the table to Dazie.
* * *
Jackie DeCoeur burst through the front doors of the Mainstrike Casino like a rampaging baloth. With her head down, her red eyes blazing, and her un-holstered revolvers gripped in white-knuckled hands, she stormed across the lobby to the front desk, with Hush-Hush and Dazie trailing behind in her wake.
The finely-dressed fox behind the desk stumbled backward as she approached, until he bumped up against the wall behind him. As the sight of Red Jackie, guns drawn, bearing down on him like a woman possessed, his knees seemed to buckle, and he held his paws up in front of his eyes as he cowered under her gaze.
“Trotter,” Jackie said to the fox. Her voice was almost a growl, and her body was tense, like a spring ready to snap. “Which room is his?”
“He’s not here,” the fox stammered. “He disappeared last week. These people came and—”
“Which room?” Jackie thundered. She pointed both her pistols at the fox’s head.
“Top floor!” the fox shouted. He slid down the wall until he was sitting on the floor, and he wrapped his arms around his head. “Top floor, last door on your right! It’s broken off at the hinges – you can’t miss it!”
Jackie was halfway to the stairs when she looked over her shoulder and barked out orders.
“Hush-Hush, you come with me,” she said. “Dazie, you get every last piece of information out of that fox, and I don’t care how you do it.”
Then, without waiting for any reply, she was flying up the stairs, taking them two at a time.
When she got to Trotter’s room, she found that the door had been broken off, just as the terrified manager had said. The door itself was on lying on the floor across the hallway, propped-up against the wall by whoever had left it there. The wooden doorframe was splintered into jagged shards around where the hinges had once been.
Stepping across the open threshold, Jackie found the inside of the room in a similar state of disarray. Tables had been overturned, and all the drawers had been pulled out from the dresser and the bureau, with their contents emptied out onto the floor.
It looked less like the aftermath of a struggle, and more as though the room had been rifled.
Jackie knelt down on the floor and started sifting through piles of Trotter’s clothes. She didn’t know what she was looking for, or if she was really looking for anything at all. It would be impossible to tell if anything had been taken. She hadn’t seen him for years – she had no idea what he owned in the first place, let alone what might be missing.
Finally, with nothing better to do, she started picking up his clothes and folding them, putting them back into drawers, and sliding the drawers back into the furniture. She felt herself getting angry that no one else had already done so, that Trotter’s things had just been left lying there on the floor, as though he wouldn’t be needing them again.
The husher twins stood unobtrusively off to one side and watched her silently. She was immensely grateful for their silence.
After a few minutes, Dazie hobbled into the room. Jackie stood and turned to look at her.
“Manager didn’t know much,” Dazie said, scratching beneath the bandages around her waist. “Says he wasn’t here when it happened, and I believe him. The way he tells it, the only person who saw anything was this girl, name of Priscilla, who runs errands around the place. She’s the one who brought them up here. The kidnappers, I mean.”
“Then get her up here,” Jackie said, “and let’s have a word.”
“Manager says she’s been locked inside her room for days, refuses to come out for anything.”
“You’re a big girl,” Jackie said. “Break the door down.”
“He says she’s cracked, that she hasn’t talked any sense at all since it happened.”
“Then let me deal with that,” Jackie said, anger creeping into her voice. “I can be very persuasive.”
Dazie regarded Jackie in silence for a moment. Then she trudged back off downstairs. A few minutes later she returned with a blonde human in tow. The human woman looked gaunt and disheveled. There were deep, dark bags beneath her eyes, as though she hadn’t slept for days, and she shook like a leaf as Dazie prodded her forward into the room.
Jackie DeCoeur walked across the room to stand in front of the quivering girl. She put her hand beneath the other woman’s chin and lifted it up, so that the blonde had no choice but to look her in her red eyes.
“Do you know who I am?” the red-eyed woman asked.
“Yes,” the blonde said in a kind of terrified whisper.
“Good,” Jackie said, her voice low but pointed. “So you’ll believe me when I tell you that, if you don’t tell me exactly what happened to my friend, it will be the last mistake you ever make. Understand?”
The blonde gulped. Her eyes were wide with panic. “But I don’t know anything!” she said.
“That would be very unfortunate for you,” Jackie said. She slid one of her pistols out of its holster and pulled the hammer back. As it clicked, the blonde practically jumped out of her skin. “So how about you tell me what you do know, and we’ll go from there?”
The blonde appeared to be fighting back tears. “These two people came to the hotel,” she said. “They had a bouquet of flowers. They told me to take the flowers up to Mister Trotter, and to take them up with me.” The woman’s voice shook. “They said that, if I didn’t do what they told me, they would do terrible things to me. There are worse things than dying – that’s what the woman said. She said, there are worse things than dying, and that I’d get to experience every single one of them if I didn’t do what she wanted.”
“One of them was a woman?” Jackie asked. Her eyes narrowed.
The blonde gave her head a short, sharp nod. “One man, one woman,” she said. “And there was something else, except that no one believes me about that part.”
“Try me,” Jackie said, her voice dropping lower.
“You’ll think I’m crazy,” the woman said.
“Try me,” Jackie repeated.
The blonde was silent for a long moment. Then, finally, she spoke.
“At first, they had on dark glasses,” she said. “Then they took them off, and their eyes were black.”
Again, Jackie felt anger forming like a haze inside her mind. It clouded her vision. It tried to strangle her thoughts.
“What happened next?” she asked.
“I don’t know,” the blonde said, choking back fresh tears. “That’s the last thing I remember.” She looked terrified. “But I think they did something to me, because I have this terrible pain inside me now,” she said, pressing her hands against her temples, “and it won’t go away. I can’t make it go away.” She gave Jackie a desperate look. “They had black eyes, I swear. Black eyes.”
Jackie turned away from the blonde.
“Get out,” she said.
“What did they do to me?” the blonde said, her voice trembling. “I can’t sleep. What did they do to me?”
Jackie spun back around. She leveled her gun at the blonde.
“I said, get out.’’
“But—”
“Out!” Jackie shouted.
With a startled cry, the blonde woman turned and ran out of the room.
After she was gone, Dazie started to walk towards Jackie.
“Was that really—” the minotaur started to say.
“They set me up,” Jackie interrupted.
“Mal and Lucy?” Dazie asked.
“They set me up,” Jackie said again. “They sent me to Aureg, just to make sure I was out of the way. They set me up.”
“But why?” Dazie said. “What could they possibly get out of this?”
“I don’t know!” Jackie said, the anger plain in her voice. “Maybe Smokey told them to do it. Or maybe this is just all some sick game to them – a chance to have some real fun, to find out just how far they can push me before I’ll break, or what will happen when I do.”
“That doesn’t make any sense,” Dazie said.
“No, it doesn’t,” Jackie said.
The red-eyed woman was quiet for a moment.
Then, she screamed.
She screamed a long, high, piercing scream that made the hairs on the back of her neck stand on end. It was a scream that had been building inside of her for days, and, as she let it out, she felt her inhibitions fall away, and she felt her anger take hold.
It was a pure, powerful anger, and she welcomed it into her body with open arms.
She was standing next to Trotter’s bed. Suddenly, she bent down, hooked her arms beneath the bedframe, and pulled up as hard as she could, flipping the bed over with a loud crash and sending the mattress tumbling to the floor. Then she picked up a nearby table, which had been lying on the floor, and she carried it across the room to the mirror above the dresser. Screaming again, she smashed the table into the mirror, sending wood splinters and glass shards flying in all directions. She kept screaming as she bashed the table into the wall again. The wooden tabletop broke off and went crashing to the floor, leaving her holding one the table’s broken legs in her hands. Her breath came in great, heaving gasps as she slammed the table leg into the wall again and again, until blood poured out from her split knuckles, and her mashed fingers throbbed with pain. Even then, she kept swinging her fist at the wall again and again and again until the last bit of shattered wood slipped out of her hand and fell to the floor with a dull, echoing clatter.
Then, slowly, Jackie DeCoeur lowered herself down onto the floor amidst the bits of broken furniture and shards of broken glass. She stared down at her hands for a second. She flexed her bleeding knuckles, then stuck the one which stung worst into her mouth and sucked on it for a moment.
She closed her eyes.
Gradually, her breathing became less audible, and the heaving of her chest subsided.
Finally, without opening her eyes, she spoke.
"Hush-Hush, how many demons you figure there are out there, all told?" Her voice had grown eerily calm.
The husher twins blinked in unison.
"We do not know the answer to that question," they said.
"Take a guess," Jackie said. "You two notice practically everything that happens in the Waste. You must have a guess."
"We have not made any particular study of the issue at hand," the twins said. But they turned to face each other slightly, and they appeared to be considering the question. "Based on our knowledge of reported demonic activity, we would place the number in the low hundreds," they said.
Jackie opened her eyes. "A couple hundred, then?" she asked.
Hush-Hush hesitated for a moment, then the twins nodded. "We believe that to be a reasonable estimate, yes. Bearing in mind, of course, that we have a significant margin for error."
"A couple hundred," Jackie said. Then she nodded back at the twins. "Good. I should have enough bullets for that."
Dazie snorted.
"That's your plan?" the big minotaur asked. "You're going to kill every demon in the Waste?"
Jackie nodded. "It’s a start."
Dazie scraped a hoof across the floor. "You'll forgive me for saying this, but that doesn't seem like much of a plan."
"I don't know," Jackie said. "I thought it had an elegant simplicity to it." Her voice was flat and affectless, like she was discussing the weather, or asking the time. "Besides, if it puts your mind at ease, I have two very specific soul-suckers at the top of my list, and I'm hoping that I can get what I want from them."
"And if not?" Dazie asked.
"Then I start piling up black-eyed bodies," Jackie said, "and I'll see where that gets me."
Dazie limped towards where Jackie was sitting. Her nostrils flared, and her eyes were wide.
"Jackie, do you have any idea how crazy you sound right now?" the big minotaur asked. "Can you even hear yourself?"
Jackie fixed the minotaur with her red eyes. "I don't recall putting this up for a vote," she said. The edge reappeared in her voice. "If you don't like my plan, your participation is not required. You can walk at any time."
Dazie flinched, and drew herself up straighter. "Don't you put words in my mouth," she said. "I'm not saying we don't go after these fiends, and I'm not saying we don't take them apart, piece-by-piece. I'm saying we slow down for a second, take some time to think about this, make sure that, when we make our move, it's the right move. Walking into a trap and getting ourselves killed won't get Trotter back."
Jackie shot to her feet. "Take some time?" she said. Her hands balled into fists, and she was shaking. She stepped over to where Dazie was standing, and got as close to the tall minotaur's face as she could. "How much time, Dazie? They've got Trotter, and I don't know how long I have to get him back. How much time do I have before they kill him, or worse? How much?"
"I don't know."
"Neither do I. Which means I have to act, and I have to act now. So the only question is, can I count on you?"
There was a long moment of silence. Jackie and Dazie stood inches apart, staring at each other. The minotaur's breathing was heavy. Jackie could feel it on her face, wet and warm.
"You can always count on me, Jackie," Dazie eventually said. "You know that."
The red-eyed woman ignored the hurt in her old friend's voice.
"Good," she said. She turned to look at the husher twins, who had been watching the confrontation between Jackie and her old deputy in silence, with their arms crossed and their faces blank. "What about you, Hush-Hush? Can I still count on you, too?"
"We will endeavor to assist in any way possible," the twins said.
"Good." Jackie turned back to Dazie. "You're in no shape for a shootout, so here's what I need you to do. I need you to round up everyone we trust, everyone we're close enough to for them to be a target. You sweep them all up, and you take them all north to New Progress. Open up the old boarding house, keep everyone there. Until this is over, you all stay together in the same place. No one else gets caught alone and picked-off. Anybody wants to take a run at us, they have to come at all of us at once. Understood?"
"Sure, boss," Dazie said. Her voice was quiet. Her eyes avoided Jackie’s.
Jackie turned and pointed at the husher twins. "Everyone except for you two, that is. I have work that needs doing, and I need you two to do it."
"What would you have us do?"
"Remember that old fixer-upper I picked up in Verkell a couple years back? The one we discussed doing some renovation work on?"
The twins nodded.
"Well, how fast could you do it?"
"We could complete the work in as little as a day," Hush-Hush said. "Provided we had the requisite materials."
"Gold is no concern, and we should still have plenty of crystal left."
"We will proceed at once," the twins said.
"Good," Jackie said. Her red eyes seemed to smolder. “Do the place up right. If things go my way, I'm going to be bringing company home with me."