Dead Men's Boots

Dead Men's Boots by Mike Carey

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Authors: Mike Carey
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to fortify me against
     the night chill. “And if the someone else turns out to have been the ghost of an American serial killer, then we’re in business.”

    Walking home, I got a repeat of the prickling premonitions—the sense of being watched that had dogged me all the way back
     from Stoke Newington. But this time I was out in the open on a busy street. I looked around. Plenty of people walking by,
     plenty of traffic passing on the road. The feeling was oddly directionless, and there was no way to narrow it down. Reluctantly,
     I gave it up. I’d have to pick a better time and a better place.
    The Breathers’ van was still parked in the same place: two men sitting in it now, both older than the kid who’d been minding
     the shop earlier but not by much. No prickle or itch or tingling spider sense: Whatever I was feeling, whatever was watching
     me, it had nothing to do with these tosspots. I shot them a wave as I walked past, which they stoically ignored. I was almost
     sorry they didn’t get out and try for a rumble. I would have welcomed the release of tension.
    Back at the flat, I dumped my coat over the back of a chair, poured myself a whiskey, and then left it to stand while I picked
     out some bluesy chords on my whistle.
    The couple next door were no longer coupling, which was good news. But though I’d missed the climax, I hadn’t missed the epilogue,
     which as usual was taking the form of a stand-up fight. Sex and violence, always in the same order: They seemed to have a
     stripped-down, back-to-basics sort of lifestyle.
    I gave up on the music practice after ten minutes or so because the bellowed profanities and the crash of breakables breaking
     were throwing me off tempo. I put on one of Ropey’s death-metal CDs instead, not because I like Internal Bleeding—with or
     without the capital letters—but out of sheer self-defense.
    But the noises of destruction put me in mind of John Gittings’s ghost, and my mood wobbled again. Thinking about John brought
     the pocket watch to mind. I went across to my coat and fished it out to check that it was okay. It was a beautiful thing,
     all right; you could see even through the black oxidation stains that the filigree work on the silver—a motif of fleurs-de-lys—was
     very fine. By a natural extension, I decided to wind it and see if it still worked. That meant taking it out of the outer
     case, since with a Savonnette watch, you can’t always get enough of a purchase on the winding stem with the watch nestled
     inside its two separate shells.
    As I took the watch out of the case, a small piece of paper fell to the floor. I picked it up and turned it over in my hand.
     It was the kind of very light, thin blue paper people used for airmail before there was e-mail. It had handwriting on it in
     a flowing, cursive script, and it had been folded over on itself several times.
    I opened it out, three folds, four, five. When I had it fully open, I found that it was a complete page from a letter—from
     the middle of a letter, because there was no superscription and it started in midsentence. I read it with growing and slightly
     uneasy fascination.
    could get along a bit faster, but its not a good idea to take risks. If they know youve got an idea about whats really happening,
     theyll take you out one way or another.
    Youll just get the one pass, and its got to be on INSCRIPTION night, so you can get them all together. Take backup; take lots
     of backup, and warn them that as soon as there names in the frame there a target. It ends with you dead or them dead, that’s
     the only way.
    Dont make the mistake of reconasance: the wall isnt a wall, if you take my point. Not really. They can get out further than
     that, so they could attack you even when youre a long way out and you think theres nobody anywere near you.
    If you go in through the building, you better expect there’ll be heavy security. That may seem like the least of your problems
     but dont

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