Midnight Read online




  MIDNIGHT

  The Walking Shadows series

  Night Call

  Midnight

  A Walking Shadows Novel

  MIDNIGHT

  Brenden Carlson

  Copyright © Brenden Carlson, 2021

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise (except for brief passages for purpose of review) without the prior permission of Dundurn Press. Permission to photocopy should be requested from Access Copyright.

  All characters in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  Publisher: Scott Fraser | Acquiring editor: Rachel Spence | Editor: Catharine Chen

  Cover design and illustration: Sophie Paas-Lang

  Printer: Marquis Book Printing Inc.

  Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

  Title: Midnight / Brenden Carlson.

  Names: Carlson, Brenden, author.

  Description: Series statement: A walking shadows novel ; 2

  Identifiers: Canadiana (print) 20210155124 | Canadiana (ebook) 20210155205 | ISBN 9781459745827 (softcover) | ISBN 9781459745834 (PDF) | ISBN 9781459745841 (EPUB)

  Classification: LCC PS8605.A7547 M53 2021 | DDC C813/.6—dc23

  We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council for our publishing program. We also acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Ontario, through the Ontario Book Publishing Tax Credit and Ontario Creates, and the Government of Canada.

  Care has been taken to trace the ownership of copyright material used in this book. The author and the publisher welcome any information enabling them to rectify any references or credits in subsequent editions.

  The publisher is not responsible for websites or their content unless they are owned by the publisher.

  Dundurn Press

  1382 Queen Street East

  Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4L 1C9

  dundurn.com, @dundurnpress

  For Cindy and Brian:

  I’m sorry you two didn’t get to read this.

  We are what we pretend to be,

  so we must be careful about what we pretend to be.

  — Kurt Vonnegut, Mother Night

  CONTENTS

  CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  CHAPTER 12

  CHAPTER 13

  CHAPTER 14

  CHAPTER 15

  CHAPTER 16

  CHAPTER 17

  CHAPTER 18

  CHAPTER 19

  CHAPTER 20

  CHAPTER 21

  CHAPTER 22

  CHAPTER 23

  CHAPTER 24

  CHAPTER 25

  CHAPTER 26

  CHAPTER 27

  CHAPTER 28

  EPILOGUE

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  CHAPTER 1

  GODDAMN IT. NOT AGAIN.

  I was outside the warehouse in the Meatpacking District. A bunch of boys in blue were stacked up beside the main entrance. Paddy Sinclair, my first partner, my old war buddy, the closest thing I’ve got to a best friend, led the pack with rifle in hand. Even before a raid he had to side-sweep his hair.

  “Ready, El?”

  I groaned. “No.”

  “All right, moving in on your go.”

  I shut my eyes, trying with all my might to melt the scene, willing something else to appear instead.

  Opening the metal double doors onto the warehouse floor revealed a battlefield of mud and blood and shit. Hell on earth, eliciting whistles from NCOs and artillery alike.

  No. Something else, anything else. A change for once.

  Then I saw my old police cruiser and the Lower East Side Diner behind me.

  Yeah, this one will do. Better times. Well, as good as they’ll get.

  I had just popped into the diner to grab a Stuffed Pig: a breakfast sausage wrapped in a pancake, a new favourite snack of mine after seeing Commissioner Robins order one a few weeks back. An hour after the six o’clock shut-off, the Plate above me was calm, with the last rays of daylight gleaming off its eastern towers. The diner was just at the edge of the Plate, which granted some of the buildings here a few hundred yards of sunlight and fresh air without the monolithic turd looming over them. A penny slammed against the hood of my cruiser, leaving a dent as large as my thumb and reminding me of the assholes living up top. Goddamn Upper City folk.

  As I got behind the wheel of my police cruiser, the motion shook a glob of syrup loose from my treat, flinging it onto the seat.

  “Ah, shit.” I grabbed a napkin out of my glovebox, moving the spare .38 in there, to clean the stain.

  “Really?” the rusty Automatic next to me remarked. Glowing blue eyes, a gutted, wire-filled left arm, and shaggy plain clothes. My last partner.

  “Hey, if you were human, you’d love eating these.” I bit into the Stuffed Pig, looking at the machine as it groaned.

  “If I were human, I would enjoy much better things than eating one of those.”

  “Oh yeah?” I swallowed the mouthful of dough and pork, feeling my energy shoot through the roof. “What would you rather do?”

  “Honestly?” My partner looked out the window and smirked, at least as much as a machine could. “I’d want to ride around in a Manual. Give me a big ol’ robot, some 20mm ammunition, and let me have a day of it. The Lower City would be clean in a few hours.”

  I laughed as I bit into the snack again. “You sound like a friend of mine.”

  “A pretty sensible friend, sounds like. Who is he?”

  “Paddy’s brother, Eddy. He’s not around anymore.”

  “What was he like?”

  “He was a man who liked his cars and his giant fucking robots.”

  “No wonder me and Paddy get along so well. And me and you. I must be a half-decent replacement.”

  Finished my snack, I got the car started up. “Don’t tell him that, he might get upset.”

  “And why aren’t you upset?”

  “Because, like you said, you’re a half-decent replacement.” I smirked. “It’s like I get to ride with Paddy’s brother every day.”

  “Har har. Let’s get a move on. Don’t want to be late for the car show. I heard they’ve got some of those European models” — the Blue-eye raised its rudimentary eyebrows suggestively — “if you get what I’m saying.”

  “You don’t even know what you’re insinuating,” I responded, pulling the car out of the parking spot. “You just like giving the eyebrows because Paddy taught you that.”

  “Yeah, fair, I got no idea what it means.” My partner laughed and shrugged. “Anyway, get a move on, Roche! I’ll kill you if I miss this.”

  I turned the car over and did as he said. “No problem, James. Fucking Blue-eyes …”

  Back to the land of the living. I woke up in a city that can’t sleep. On a Tuesday.

  It was definitely past shut-off time; the regular lamp-based Platelight had been replaced by blinking warning lights, indicating that the turbines above were open, revealing starlight and the full moon through their semicircular openings. A warm draft drifted down into the Lower City, and the lights reflected off my window, alerting me to my own tardiness. My watch told me it was nine at night. Staying under the Plate mixed up night and day too much. A Rotorbird screamed past my apartment, the noise rattling the walls and windows enough to fully shake the sleep off of me. Sleep was
a commodity I enjoyed in short bursts, so I’d forced the habit of taking every moment I could in my bed.

  As I sat up, my body went through its automatic motions: I grasped a cigarette and clenched it between my lips. I looked at the lighter in my hands as I lit the dart. My last one had broken, but thankfully my “employer” had gotten me a new one, no charge. The engraved eye on the base of the lighter looked right through me. I placed it face down on the table. I didn’t need to be more creeped out than I already was.

  Outside my bedroom window the Plate was hanging low, the snow that drifted through the turbines caressing the buildings and street below. My building creaked, bearing the weight of the world on its shoulders as one of the Control Points leading right up to the Upper City above. Down below, traffic was congested all over, judging by the horns and sirens, but otherwise it was a night like any other in the Lower City. I stood, put on some slacks, and walked to the bathroom to begin my ritual: I shaved as best I could, splashed water on my face, then went to the kitchen for coffee.

  The calendar on the wall said December 6, 1933. A month before my birthday. And nearly a month after the Cop Killer case, with nothing to show for it besides the Lower City precincts being hounded daily for any information on the person responsible for cracking FBI Agent Edgar Masters’s head in. Who knows whether they were actually in the dark or if they were trying to give off false ignorance. If it was the latter, they must have been as pissed as they were scared after Masters showed up as a bloody smear. That was what you got for trying to muscle in on the Iron Hands.

  With the coffee done, I got the rest of my outfit on, along with my coat, and went downstairs to get some breakfast. The elevator, I was surprised to see, was manned by a Blue-eye liftbot in a red bellboy outfit. I snickered, leaned against the back wall, and called for the ground floor. The machine unenthusiastically depressed the bottom-left button.

  I cleared my throat. “So, they’re hiring Blue-eyes again, huh? I thought with Second Prohibition …”

  “Last Greenie kept breaking the buttons. After all, not like they can think for themselves,” it said in a flanging voice, shifting uncomfortably in its restrictive and, quite frankly, ridiculous clothing. “Seems people are starting to remember that there’s a reason Blue-eyes are Blue-eyed: they can actually do their jobs.”

  “Ah, you must be happy, then.” I gave a stiff smile. “More job opportunities than just GE or garbage collection, eh? Do you get to press the buttons in the executive elevator to the Upper City?”

  The machine gave a deadpan stare, as only a mouthless, seemingly emotionless machine could. “Any more questions?”

  “‘Sir’?” I finished for it.

  “Don’t push me.”

  I exited the elevator and went through the lobby. Outside, the old Cossack Yuri was at his cart plopping new hot dogs on the grill for the nightshift crews as they came by for their hand-held dinners. He broke into a little dance when he saw me approach.

  “Detective!” he said, getting a dog ready for me. “Another late night?”

  “Yeah, I run best at this time.”

  “Ah, and you need fuel for adventures!” He handed me the dog, and I dropped him a tip.

  “Do you have anywhere warm to go to, Yuri? I hope you’re not out here all night.” He was a short, chubby man, but I thought maybe his cheeks looked a little less full than usual.

  “Nyet, I stay in lobby of building at night. Security guard is nice, let me rest on couches. Good people. Like you!”

  “I’m not good people,” I chuckled. “You ever need a place to stay, let me know. I owe you that much.”

  “You give me business. I owe you much more! Good evening, Mr. Roche!”

  I concluded our interaction with a wave and was soon leaning against the black Packard, a rental from a friend of mine who was looking after my car. I didn’t want to be spotted driving a vehicle with a broken window and dozens of bullet holes in it. Plus, I still needed to lie low after my last endeavour, and my Talbot wasn’t exactly subtle.

  I lit a fresh cigarette and gazed up at the Plate, the enormous steel slab separating the elites of the Upper City from the rest of us down below. It blocked out natural light twenty-two hours a day and literally sat on the Lower City — on top of the all-powerful and well-protected Control Point buildings, of which my apartment building was one — a constant reminder that we were the have-nots. For now the plate’s borders ended at the edge of Midtown, but expansion plans would have it stretch from Battery Park to Yorkville. That was the plan, anyway. The prospect of covering Central Park would probably ruffle too many feathers.

  I spotted an Automatic clad in black approaching, looking quite chipper despite the horrible temperature. I couldn’t believe it still walked here every night from Stuyvesant, crazy bastard. I needed to get it a car.

  “Detective,” my partner, Allen Erzly, greeted me.

  “Constable.” I grinned saying that. “Looking sharp, as always.”

  “I do try, Detective.”

  Hard to believe it had caught on so quickly to idioms and metaphors and slang. A month ago, when we’d first met, it had been serious as hell and had a head as thick as concrete. Now it’d smartened up. I still got goosebumps sometimes, seeing its realistic facial movements.

  “You haven’t come by the precinct in a while,” Allen noted.

  “No, I have not.” Oh boy, it’s started.

  “I suspect that is because you’ve been busy screening the many calls you’ve been receiving. You screen them every night we’re together. And you always hang up unless it’s Sergeant Sinclair or Commissioner Robins.”

  Perceptive as ever, Al. “Well, some of the cops who can’t be bothered to do their jobs have been giving away my phone number to civilians, expecting me to be their magic cure-all.”

  “Have they done this before?”

  “It happens every few months, until I tell them to cut it out. Then it starts back up again.”

  “That does explain your terse tone when answering the phone …” It was getting more observant, and snarkier. “Nevertheless, the 5th Precinct hasn’t asked for your assistance with anything for the past month or so now, yes?”

  “Yes …”

  “Therefore, you should be free tonight to fulfill a civilian Night Call. Seeing as the other precincts currently have no need for you.”

  I groaned. “Allen …”

  “I believe you need to work on your people skills.”

  I tried to keep my focus on the Plate above me. “Is that a fact?”

  “And it might help you feel you’re making a difference in this city.”

  “I am making a difference,” I snapped back. “And saving a kitten out of a tree isn’t going to help save this city.”

  “But it could instill hope.”

  “People don’t need hope, people need a solution.”

  Allen paused for a moment before responding. “People need hope to inspire them to find solutions of their own. And they won’t feel hopeful if the only thing they get from your end of the line is a dial tone.”

  Dealing with this machine would be the end of me. How many nights had I been parading around with Allen, zooming to different bars under the guise of doing work? No doubt it had caught on by now … which left me in a bind. What other work could I do that didn’t relate to making bodies? The Eye had been uncharacteristically quiet recently. Then again, that might have something to do with my not returning her calls.

  “Fine.” Hearing me say this, Allen perked up, no doubt thinking it had broken through my tough exterior. “One.”

  “One call, and then another if you’re feeling it.”

  “One call. I choose which.”

  It looked at me doubtfully. “I hope this isn’t an excuse for you to screen calls and run out my clock. You know I don’t tire easily.”

  Smart bastard. Too smart for its own good. That would get it killed one day. Or me. Or the both of us.

  I snickered. “You sa
id it yourself, you ain’t a regular Automatic. You’ll get tired eventually.”

  “Don’t call me that!”

  I slammed the phone down. I was sitting in my favourite chair next to the phone, and Allen sat on the couch across from me like a therapist. It gave me a look that had a near-permanent home on its face: disappointment.

  “What?” I spat out.

  “That is the sixth call you’ve declined, Detective. If I didn’t know any better, I would say you were trying to avoid holding up your end of the bargain.”

  “It isn’t like that. These folks call for every reason: cat in a tree, son out too late, husband won’t stop hanging with his buddies at the speakeasy. I’m not here to be an errand boy, I’m here to solve issues. City-sized issues. If you want to be an errand boy, go out and be my guest. Until I get a call worth my time, I’m staying here.”

  Allen stood up and paced around my apartment, looking out the window at the street below. The floodlights on the Plate had begun to shine, making up for the extreme loss of visibility thanks to the heavy snowfall coming in. Hell, I might end up celebrating New Year’s holed up in this place, stuck under ten feet of snow by January.

  “What do they call you that you dislike so much?” Allen asked.

  “Something stupid. ‘Nightcaller’ or something.” The last five people had called me that.

  “Fitting name, you must admit.”

  But the Eye, leader of the Iron Hands, had already given me a nickname. I was no Nightcaller — I was the Iron Hand, though that wasn’t something I’d call myself in public. Given the stories they spread about themselves, I wasn’t sure how many people outside the 5th Precinct and the other crime families considered the Iron Hands a real organization, as opposed to the bogeyman.

  “Do you dislike people so much?” Allen asked, when I didn’t respond.

  “No, no, I want to help protect people,” I said, and Allen’s face relaxed. “But it’s best if the things I do stay under the radar, and if only cops hire me to deal with Night Calls. I don’t want every Tom, Dick, and Harry begging me for help.”