A Small Room in Koboldtown - Michael Swanwick - E-Book

A Small Room in Koboldtown E-Book

Michael Swanwick

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Beschreibung

Crime, corruption, and detection in the Big City—only this is a city of ghosts, ogres, and demons!



Das E-Book A Small Room in Koboldtown wird angeboten von Wildside Press und wurde mit folgenden Begriffen kategorisiert:
fantasy;monsters;ghosts;urban;city;mystery;crime

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Table of Contents

COPYRIGHT INFORMATION

A SMALL ROOM IN KOBOLDTOWN by Michael Swanwick

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

COPYRIGHT INFORMATION

Copyright © 2207 by Michael Swanwick.

Originally published in Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine, April-May 2007.

Published by Wildside Press, LLC.

wildsidepress.com | bcmystery.com

A SMALL ROOM IN KOBOLDTOWNby Michael Swanwick

That winter, Will le Fey held down a job working for a haint politician named Salem Toussaint. Chiefly, his function was to run errands while looking conspicuously solid. He fetched tax forms for the alderman’s constituents, delivered stacks of documents to trollish functionaries, fixed L&I violations, presented boxes of candied John-the-Conqueror root to retiring secretaries, absent-mindedly dropped slim envelopes containing twenty-dollar bills on desks. When somebody important died, he brought a white goat to the back door of the Fane of Darkness to be sacrificed to the Nameless One. When somebody else’s son was drafted or went to prison, he hammered a nail in the nkisi nkonde that Toussaint kept in the office to ensure his safe return. He canvassed voters in haint neighborhoods like Ginny Gall, Beluthahatchie, and Diddy-Wah-Diddy, where the bars were smoky, the music was good, and it was dangerous to smile at the whores. He negotiated the labyrinthine bureaucracies of City Hall. Not everything he did was strictly legal, but none of it was actually criminal. Salem Toussaint didn’t trust him enough for that.

One evening, Will was stuffing envelopes with Ghostface while Jimi Begood went over a list of ward-heelers with the alderman, checking those who could be trusted to turn out the troops in the upcoming election and crossing out those who had a history of pocketing the walking-around money and standing idle on election day or, worse, steering the vote the wrong way because they were double-dipping from the opposition. The door between Toussaint’s office and the anteroom was open a crack and Will could eavesdrop on their conversation.

“Grandfather Domovoy was turned to stone last August,” Jimi Begood said, “so we’re going to have to find somebody new to bring out the Slovaks. There’s a vila named—”

Ghostface snapped a rubber band around a bundle of envelopes and lofted them into the mail cart on the far side of the room. “Three points!” he said. Then, “You want to know what burns my ass?”

“No,” Will said.

“What burns my ass is how you and me are doing the exact same job, but you’re headed straight for the top while I’m going to be stuck here licking envelopes forever. And you know why? Because you’re solid.”

“That’s just racist bullshit,” Will said. “Toussaint is never going to promote me any higher than I am now. Haints like seeing a fey truckle to the Big Guy, but they’d never accept me as one of his advisors. You know that as well as I do.”