Chapter Seven - "What We're Calling 'Penancewear'"
I wish that anytime I took a case that all the rest of the daily shit that goes on in day-to-day living would simply drop by the wayside and I could just focus on whatever it was I was working on exclusively. Sadly, life, as always, had different plans in mind for me, and nobody ever lets me just concentrate when there's rough shit on my plate I'm trying to work through.
This is all to point out that when my cell phone rang and Bad Penny's name popped up on my caller ID, I should've been expecting some kind of chaos to have dropped in my life before this, but BP's just the sort of usual nonsense that comes with everyday work weeks.
I get a call from BP about once or twice a season, so often so that she has me on retainer, but I offered her that retainer rate with one very specific caveat in place. If the problem is of BP's own making, I charge her an additional day's work, quite often in addition to hazard pay. That's
slowed
the amount of calls she makes to me every year, but certainly hasn't
stopped
them any. And I end up collecting on those surcharges about half the time my phone rang with her name on it.
Penny Crowley (yes, unfortunately, of
that
lineage) was one of San Francisco's best known necromancers, a particular stripe of magic I was never keen to get entangled with, but she certainly had her uses, and I'd been known to knock a season or so off her retainer any time I had to enlist her skills, but the relationship was far more in her favor than it was mine. You'd think it hard for someone who spends most of their professional time talking to the dead to accumulate seriously threatening enemies, but BP was simply
that
good (or that
bad
, depending on how you looked at it) at selecting her clients.
I'd told her time and time again that the slightest amount of research would've probably cut down her problem intake by half, but she insisted that it would also slow her income by sizably more, and that wasn't something she could afford to do, mainly because BP also had a gambling addiction and was known to run up the ledgers of any bookie daring enough to take her bets.
(When bookies came to collect on BP, I'd buy her more time, but I'd never once allowed her to skip out on a marker. Debts that were owed would be paid, one way or another, otherwise how could I expect her to pay her debts to
me?
To date, she'd always made good on her ledgers...eventually. I wasn't particularly keen to find out
how.
)
"Penny, I hope whatever you're calling about is serious, because this isn't exactly a great time," I said into my cellphone, praying like hell it was just a butt dial.
"Dale, dear boy, I never call for anything less than the most vital of crises," she says to me, her voice that of a schoolmarm disliking the line of questioning from one of her pupils. "Besides, you'll at least find this one interesting. I think I'm being followed by a pirate."
"Oh come
on
, Pen," I grumbled. "Who am I, Benjamin Hornigold? It's 2012. How the hell are you being followed by a pirate?"
"I don't think it's a
living
pirate, Sexton," she hissed at me. "I think it's a ghast, a ghostly pirate tied to some gig I did a few years ago."
"A few years ago?" I said to her. "Why the hell would it be after you
now
then?"
"I don't know! I can't think of anything I've done that would've incurred a pirate's wrath! But I'm being followed by something undead in a conquistador's outfit!"
"Is it a conquistador or is it a pirate, Penny? They're two entirely different things."
"I don't know the difference, Sexton, but in either case, I've got you on retainer to keep me safe from these sorts of things."
"Fine, fine," I grumbled. "Where are you?"
"Downtown, just about a block away from The Punch Line."
"The hell are you doing out in the financial district this time of night?"
"I was on a consult! Completely unrelated! Now get your ass over here!"
"Alright, alright, I'm about twenty minutes out."
"
Twenty minutes?
" she shrieked at me.
"I'm over at Ocean Beach, Penny," I told her as I started walking in from the sand, kicking loose bits of grit from between my toes. "Besides, you don't sound like you're under immediate threat."
"Isn't the park closed this late at night?"
"Who's lecturing who now?" I asked her, stepping over to the public footwash station, running my feet under the water to get them clean before sitting down and pulling on my socks and boots. "You've got to have more than this for me to go on. A ghostly pirate or conquistador that
might
be related to a case you worked on years ago? Sounds so flimsy you couldn't put a sticker on it."
"Just come and cover my ass, Gunslinger! That's what I pay you for!"
She hung up on me before I could gift her with one of my witty repartees, which meant Penny was genuinely quite nervous about what was going on, and that I needed to find her relatively quickly. I'd taken the Kawasaki over to the beach, so at least that was in my favor, although I was starting to reconsider the validity to my sister's idea that I should have a griffon on call in case I needed to move across the city even faster than this.
I hopped on my bike and started tearing through the streets of San Francisco like a screaming demon cutting through the foggy night air. One of the reasons I loved San Francisco was the fog, which the Bay Area had affectionately named Karl a few years back. It provided the perfect cover for people like me to move about at night without prying eyes causing all sorts of problems. People can
think
they saw all sorts of things happening within the visual obscurity of the fog, but nobody really knows for certain. Also, late at night San Francisco is something of a ghost town, with literally nobody in it.
See, San Francisco's a commuter town, so when the sun goes down, the population of the city plummets like you wouldn't believe. That means it's much easier to get away without being spotted, because the buildings you see all around you are mostly empty, or at least they are in stark contrast to how they are during the day.
Because of this, my bike can go a lot faster than it's supposed to, although it does have a tendency to leave a single flaming tire streak in its wake when I deploy the hellfire thrusts. I don't mind. It makes me look much more badass than I really am. It's another trick I picked up from my father. The appearance of being threatening is just as important as actually
being
threatening. It wasn't enough just to be
capable
in a position like ours - you had to remind people of what you could do (and
would
do) every now and then. You had to make sure people were
scared
of you when you wanted them to be.
I cut across the city, leaping off one hill when I crested it, leaving an arc of fire behind me as I ripped through the night fog, sending denizens of the night scattered like terrified cockroaches. Nobody wanted to get in my way. They all knew better.
When I get into the Financial District, the whole place is deader than any graveyard or a policeman's birthday party. The ground floors of the buildings were lit up, but everything's closed, and all of the buildings are actually empty, nary a soul to disturb me in my work. There's something eerie about a highly lit area with nobody around.
I say 'nobody,' but that clearly wasn't the case because I could see a handful of shadows sprinting away in different directions. Now, I knew most of these weren't problems, but it still could've been any of these people who were in the pursuit of my client.
I keep a tracking spell on all my regular clients, but they aren't long range, so I just need to get close enough and I can figure out where the hell they're hiding. This particular spot had a couple of second floor pedestrian bridges around with walkways beneath them and that meant they were premiere hiding spots for Penny, who always seemed to think elevation ensured security. There was a gossamer trail of silver faerie dust, the kind I use to indicate my clients' location.
For a few seconds, I let my eyes sweep the area, making sure there wasn't anything I was missing, then I used a LiftFoot spell to let me quickly climb through the air, stepping on invisible platforms that sparked beneath my feet as I moved to stand on the bridge.
The area looked empty.
I knew all too well that it wasn't.
My hand passed through the air and the veil Penny had thrown up in a hurry stripped away like so much useless magic, revealing her form bundled up in a tiny ball, looking up at me with an intense sense of relief on her face. "Jesus, Gunslinger!" Penny said to me. "It fucking took you long enough!"
Penny Crowley had never had the best sense of fashion, looking more like a Victorian era schoolmarm than someone who lived in modern San Francisco. She appeared to be in her sixties, but I knew far better than anyone how appearances could be utterly deceiving. Her hair was mostly grey with black streaks in it, her makeup overdone and excessive by any stretch of the imagination. Her outfit was layers upon layers, and I was more than a little certain that there were petticoats in some of them. She had rings on all her fingers and enough necklaces hanging around her neck to weigh down a small horse. She reeked of bad taste in magic and even worse judgment.
"Penny, shut the hell up a minute," I said to her, glancing around her, my hand reaching to pull one of the SoulEnders from its holster, feeling its familiar weight in my hand once more.