two more stepsâ
Coolie food sellers donât wear slouch hats with topknots ⦠theyâre one of the badges of the highbinder â¦
The sudden realization caused him to break stride and turn awkwardly under Scarlettâs weight, his hand groping beneath his coat for the holstered Navy Colt. The Chinese assassin was already on his feet. From inside one sleeve he had drawn a long-barreled revolver; he aimed and fired before Quincannon could free his weapon.
The bullet struck the flaccid form of James Scarlett, made it jerk and slide free. The gunman fired twice more, loud reports in the close confines of the alley, but Quincannon was already falling sideways, his feet torn from under him by the attorneyâs toppling weight. Both slugs missed in the darkness, one whining in ricochet off the cobbles.
Quincannon struggled out from under the tangle of Scarlettâs arms and legs. As he lurched to one knee he heard the retreating beat of the highbinderâs footfalls. Heard, too, the rattle and slap of harness leather and bit chains, the staccato pound of the horseâs hooves as the hansom driver whipped out of harmâs way. The gunman was a dim figure racing diagonally across Jackson. By the time Quincannon gained his feet, he had vanished into the black maw of Ragpickersâ Alley.
Fury drove Quincannon into giving chase, even though he knew it was futile. Other narrow passages opened off RagpickersââBull Run, Butchersâ Alley with its clotted smells of poultry and fish. It was a maze made for the boo how doy; if he tried to navigate it in the dark, he was liable to become lostâor worse, leave himself wide open for ambush.
The wisdom of this slowed him to a halt ten rods into the lightless alleyway. He stood listening, breathing through his mouth. He could no longer hear the highbinderâs footsteps now. Not that it mattered; even if they had been still audible, they would have been directionless here.
Quickly he returned to Jackson Street. The thoroughfare was empty, the driver and his rig long away. Ross Alley appeared deserted, too, but he could feel eyes peering at him from behind curtains and darkened glass. The hatchet manâs brazier still burned; in its orange glow James Scarlett was a motionless hulk on the cobbles where heâd fallen.
Quincannon went to one knee beside him, probed with fingers that came away wet with blood. His words to Scarlett a short time ago echoed in his mind: This is the last section of the city you shouldâve ventured into this night. Itâs a wonder youâre not dead already. Well, the attorney was dead now, dead as the proverbial doornail. The first bullet had entered the middle of his back, shattering the spine and no doubt killing him instantly.
But three shots had been fired. Either the highbinder had been unsure of his marksmanship in the darkness, which was not generally the case with one of the boo how doy assassins, or Quincannon had been a target along with Scarlett. The second prospect both added to his anger and puzzled him. There was no sensible reason why the Kwong Dock tong, if in fact they were responsible for this outrage, would want him dead. For that matter, how could they have known he was on the hunt for the attorney tonight? Scarlettâs wife had only just today retained the services of Carpenter and Quincannon, Professional Detective Services, and she would hardly have told anyone in the Quarter of her decision, as frightened as she was for his safety.
One thing was certain: An already tense situation had now become that much more volatile. A tong war between the Kwong Dock and the Hip Sing could erupt at any time. The theft of venerable Hip Sing president Bing Ah Keeâs corpse four nights ago, assuming the Kwong Dock proved responsible for that as well, was fuel enough to fire hostilities. The murder of a Caucasian shyster and attempted murder of a Caucasian detective not only