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1
For a long time it always started with a beautiful woman at the door, sometimes in the middle of the night. That had ended. Good things do. I wasn't in that racket anymore. There was only one beautiful woman for me. She was on my side of the door already.
Tinnie Tate. Tinnie had wreaked all sorts of changes in my life.
Tinnie had the word out. Garrett, that most marvelous specimen of former Marine, was no longer one of TunFaire's serious players, however you cared to define that term. Mama Garrett's boy was now devoutly monogamous. He reserved his vast professional acumen for the benefit of the Weider brewing empire and, more importantly, for that of the Amalgamated Manufacturing Combine. The man hadn't hit the mean streets in a rat's age. Which was pleasing to many and unpopular with a much smaller crowd.
Bottom feeders and parasites really liked the new Garrett. He was out of their lives. The reverse was true for workmen at the breweries and Amalgamated. Garrett had this habit of turning up just when some underpaid and underappreciated genius was about to enhance his income by reassigning ownership of company property.
My wondrous new life.
2
It did begin with a beautiful woman, in the middle of the night, a stunning redhead bereft of any perspective other than her own. She gouged me in the ribs with a specially sharpened fingernail. "Wake up, Malsquando."
"Again? What are you, trying to set a new record?"
"We'll work on that tomorrow night. We have another problem, now. There's somebody downstairs."
We lived in two story quarters we had carved out of a little-used part of the Amalgamated manufactory Annex. Something rattled down below, followed by a vague, exasperated curse.
I was awake, now, my head filling with subjects I might offer for discussion once we got out of whatever this was. Like maybe the fact that this situation could not have come up had we made our nest at my house.
I was like liquid getting out of bed. Silently flowing. Not even a gurgle. I armed myself with an oaken head knocker that no amount of fussing or whining had compelled me to divorce.
Just in time.
The bedroom door opened with a faint creak. I was behind it, wound up. The villain entering carried a damped-down lantern. That cast just enough light for someone whose night vision had fully adapted. It revealed Tinnie lying there mostly uncovered and wearing nothing, apparently asleep. An impressive sight, I got to admit.
Lucky me, I'd seen it enough not to be distracted. Much.
"There's something wrong here, Butch." The whisperer leaned in just far enough to offer the back of his mostly bald head.
I seized the day, whacked that mole. Down he went. I spun around the edge of the door…; To stare down the length of twelve pounds of razor-edged steel. I couldn't imagine anybody having forged a sword that big. The eyes behind that monster did not belong to somebody in a merciful mood, nor even somebody truly sane.
Tinnie uncovered the goods, arrogantly showing off how lucky Garrett was. The eyes that knew no mercy did recognize those marvels when they saw them.
Clang! That blade brushed aside. Thump! A solid whack to the temple. Half a minute to make sure the villains didn't come back on us. Then, "Trollop."
"How's your health, big boy?" She had some clothes on, now. She had become the promise, not the literal truth.
"I had him."
"Sure, you did. Just a little insurance."
"Something to tell the grandkids about."
"Garrett. What the hell is going on? Are you into something? You promised. What are you into?"
"Nothing. When would I have the chance?" That was one of the costs of our monogamy. I had no life that didn't include Tinnie, nor should I want one as she interpreted monogamy.
Tinnie is a natural-born redhead, long on emotion and not so long on reason. Yet she did recall that our arrangement had not left me time to get involved in the sort of adventures I used to enjoy. "I'm not sure I believe you but I'll go out on a limb and take your word."
"Bless you. I just had a marvelous idea. How about, instead of you sparking arguments by letting your imagination run wild, we ask our guests what brings them here?"
Tinnie grunted.
She can be reasonable. It just doesn't happen all that often.
3
Neither nocturnal adventurer wanted to share. Neither said a word. Tinnie set limits to how vigorously I could ask questions. She wouldn't let me get loud or messy.
She could be stubborn about stuff like that. This time she insisted on drafting a night shift nephew to run to down the Al-Khar to collect a squad of TunFaire's self-proclaimed finest.
They responded to the Tate name.
If the boy had used mine the tin whistles might have taken weeks. The Tates have friends in that community of people who think law and order is good for commerce. They have the kind of money that rears up on its hind legs and howls for immediate attention. The red tops nearly beat themselves to the AMC Annex, where Tinnie had us keeping house.
That was her idea of a compromise. She did not want to live in my house. I was dead set against being pulled in and converted into another drone in the Tate family hive.
"This would not have happened on Macunado Street," I observed. "They wouldn't have gotten through the door. Unless Old Bones wanted to play with them. And we'd know what it was all about already."
They say women change once they get their talons in and locked. I wouldn't presume to enter an opinion. But I am willing to admit that spending time at my place, even with the Dead Man wide awake, had been no problem for Tinnie back when we were just real good friends.
She ignored me. She was working herself up to make a deal with the minions of the law. She ignored our captives, too.
Those two would have a tale to tell their grandkids. If they got lucky, a miracle happened, lightning struck, and they evaded the labor gang that was their certain fate at the moment.
A tin whistle named Scithe led the red tops. Scithe was a little too appreciative of a certain redhead. Not a friend, by any means. Most lawmen don't even trust each other. But he was decent and reasonable outside his weakness for ginger.
Scithe said, "I don't understand, Miss Tate. You're still associating with this known anti-social type."
"He's like a wart. Hard to get rid of. And he does have entertainment value. For now, though, I'd be ever so grateful if you could take these two men somewhere and ask them why they interrupted my rest."
Scithe made an unhappy noise. He considered the villains. They, only now, were getting a grasp on the bleakness of their prospects.
They hadn't struck me as drunk. Maybe they smoked something before they got what seemed like a good idea at the time.
They had to be brothers. The older one muttered, "We're screwed." The only thing either had said yet. They hadn't tried to talk their way out using ridiculous logic and excuses, which is what these morons usually do.
"Not necessarily true, my friend," Scithe said. "As a Civil Guard officer I'm permitted a certain amount of discretion. You could walk away from this with nothing but your bruises. If you're the stubborn sort, though, it's a safe bet you'll spend time in the Bledsoe healing up so you can put in a few years helping reclaim the Little Dismal Swamp."
"Shit," the younger one opined, without heat. "Just kill us now."
"There ain't no easy way out, boys. You done a bad thing. What you got to decide now is, how do you want to pay your debt to society?"
Scithe was having fun.
His question was not meant to be answered. Neither villain tried. Both were, now, lost souls wandering a desert of despair.
Tinnie said, "They could probably get some cooperation points if they came clean right now, couldn't they, Senior Lieutenant?"
I took a closer look at Scithe. Sure enough, he was sporting senior lieutenant's pips. He was bounding up the law and order ladder.
The man had a knack for something besides mooning after redheads. He could get villains to keep him happy by confiding in him, urged along by his implying that he could provide something they wanted badly: a way out.
"Gentlemen, you have to give me something. I know you aren't stupid." Which was a bald-face lie. "You know how the system works. You'll go to the Al-Khar because I can't not take you in. We have to see if you're on the wanted book for something ugly. If you have no majors there, you could walk out under your own power." In chains, headed for the swamp. "You know we do let folks go to encourage the rest of you to cooperate. So far, here, all we've got is a jimmied lock and some folks who aren't happy about getting waked up in the middle of the night. So why not tell me? What's the story?"
The elder brother thought he'd give cooperation a chance. Condemnation to the Little Dismal Swamp project amounted to a death sentence. Though some prisoners might complete their sentences, someday. None have yet but the project isn't all that old.
"We was supposed to catch the woman and take her someplace. The guy wasn't supposed to be here. If he was, we was supposed to bop him on the head and get out. With her."
That sparked interest all round. None of us would expect Tinnie to be a target.
Scithe can be blisteringly obvious. "Why?"
Shrug. "We didn't get paid to ask questions."
"You did get paid?"
Tin whistles look...
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Most helpful customer reviews
0 of 2 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Gilded Latten Bones,
By
This review is from: Gilded Latten Bones: A Garrett, P.I., Novel (Mass Market Paperback)
I love this Glen Cook series, always have but have to admit this one was a little bitter sweet. The characters are getting older and time is passing. The conclusion to the story seemed like a leap but it was still a good read.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
4.4 out of 5 stars (34 customer reviews) 23 of 23 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Garrett retired?,
By John Middleton - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Gilded Latten Bones: A Garrett, P.I., Novel (Mass Market Paperback)
Well, not right now, I think. There are enough tantalising clues and loose ends in Gilded Latten Bones to stand another few stories. But the book opens with Garrett retired for about 18 months, living with Tinnie Tate, and someone trying to kill him (or maybe Tinnie) - and Morley Dotes too. The story is then about how Garrett gets his groove back and comes out of retirement. The veneer of calm that has been creeping over TunFaire of late is suddenly revealed as very thin.To be uncharitable, not a lot happens for the first 200 pages of the book - its sleuthing all the way, although Garrett is not pounding the streets himself. At page 200, there is a little action and the Dead Man goes to sleep. Then another 130 pages of investigation and problem solving, and the last 20 pages tie it all up. There is very little dénouement, and a number of loose threads are left hanging at the end of the story. But every single word has meaning - either in this book, for a past story, or presumably some future one. There is plenty of tension even if the blades aren't flickering. Bones continues the theme of the last several books of growing up and getting older - noticeably, on seeing all his old friends Garrett notes how they all look a bit more chased by Father Time. Presumably they could say the same about Garrett, but no one does. This is beautifully handled - of all things, this is a lovely character piece, about love and companionship, friendship and adulthood. There a lot of litle clues about the past and future scattered through the story - and if I had to guess, I would say that Pular Singe is writing all these Garrett tales down with help from the Dead Man: some shades of the literary method of the Black Company's Annals there. Lastly, the book is chock full of surprises: without giving too much away, Bones is not a gentle continuation of where the last few books (especially Cruel Zinc Melodies) were heading. It's not a reboot, or anything of the sort, but Garrett has been set up for a whole new suite of adventures in a whole new sort of TunFaire. 10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Has Garrett jumped the shark? Hardly!,
By R. Horky "not Burt" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Gilded Latten Bones: A Garrett, P.I., Novel (Mass Market Paperback)
The thirteen books in Glen Cook's Garrett series each share three elements in varying proportions: the adventure (usually a mystery) that provides the basic plot of the story, the constantly-changing environment of Tunfaire (the city in which most of the stories take place), and Garrett's personal affairs and growth (particularly his love life). The changes make it difficult to begin reading with a later title--fortunately, the books remain easily available and should be read in order--but they provide much of the series' appeal. This is not an old-style TV series in which nothing changes from episode to episode.Each story's adventure is self-contained; introduced, investigated, and resolved in a single book. The adventure usually takes center stage, but in this work, it's a secondary consideration. In fact, Garrett spends much of the time cooped up in one place or another, solving the mystery vicariously by getting others to do his legwork for him (which is usually the Dead Man's role, which Garrett himself realizes near the end). He's homebound because he must watch over a nearly-dead Morley Dotes, an attack on whom is the macguffin for this installment's mystery. A bit of a pity, almost, because "Bones's" plot is a pretty good one. What is easy to forget about the series is that Tunfaire, Garrett's home town, is a major character in its own right (my favorite fantasy novels are those in which the location is so well described I imagine I could get around there on my own). In the first book, the city was heavily engaged in a costly and generations-long war. Glen Cook daringly chose to change the series' environment by ending the war a few books later, and should be commended for exploring what happens when the troops return home (the evolution provides the basis for a number of the novels). The city has evolved from a lawless and dangerous town into a place where law and order rule. No longer are gangsters Dotes and Contague the major powers of the streets of Tunfaire (the noble and wizardly classes stay aloof); law officers Block and Relway have taken over. Garrett, fortunately, knows all four players well. He begrudgingly adapts to the new arrangement; his role in the city has changed and he knows it (although he may not sure of how to proceed). However, this leads to the question: how much mileage can Glen Cook get out of a PI--a character requiring conflict--in a town that is becoming increasingly pacific? Garrett is becoming domesticated as well. "Bones" is more about changes in Garrett's personal arrangements than the mystery. Do not think it's not a good book--it is, but it is a bit of a departure that may leave some old fans feeling disappointed. Making readers feel for his characters is one of Glen Cook's strengths, so they shouldn't mind a one-time Garrett-sorts-out-his-life episode. He's got a lot of loose ends to clean up--countless current- and ex-girlfriends, a huge network of friends, and connections in places both high and low. Garrett's getting older, and Cook is acknowledging that he can't be the irresponsible semi-adolescent no-attachments adventurer any more. This book shifts the balance between the three elements of a Garrett title. I would not be surprised if this book turns out to set up a transition from one form of Garrett book to another. It feels like Cook is taking inventory of characters, settings, and plots, and weeding out some of the top-heaviness that has crept in over thirteen titles and twenty years. He kills off a minor character in typical Cook fashion (randomly, and offstage--in his Dread Empire series he wrote out characters left and right with little warning) and gives another cancer. The old team--the Dead Man, Marley Dotes, and Belinda Contague--are fading away and a new cast, led by Pular Singe, is taking on greater and greater prominence. The "new girlfriend every book" element is tentatively addressed as well, although by bringing a bit player from a past adventure to the fore, an odd choice, given that so many good candidates already exist (I always thought he should hook up with Maya--how about it, GC?). I have been a Cook fan for decades and will continue to be, but I understand how other long-time aficionados might be a bit put off by this entry. I am looking forward to seeing where Glen Cook goes with the series. This is not a good book for Garrett newbies or Cook fans who want only the original film-noir-detective-in-a-fantasy-world concept. Depending on what later titles bring, the latter might consider this as the book where Cook and Garrett jumped the shark. But for those who want to see how an established character and his environment can grow and change (themselves and each other), this is an excellent choice. Isn't that what makes good literature good? There are still plenty of metal and metal alloys names available--I can't wait for the aluminum, invar, electrum, and pinchbeck installments. Go to, go to, Mr Cook! 8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Hopefully, not a penultimate book.,
By steamkitty "steamkitty" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Gilded Latten Bones: A Garrett, P.I., Novel (Mass Market Paperback)
WARNING...!!! SOME SPOILERS!!!Since I first found "Sweet Silver Blues" over twenty years ago, I have fallen for Garrett, P.I. The alternate universe settings of supernaturally surrounded hard-boiled detectives have come a long way. We have Jim Butcher's excellent urban wizard, Harry Dresden; we have Simon R. Green's really cool John Taylor and his truly weird and creepy, Nightside; and another favorite of mine, P. N. Elrod's great vampire P.I., Jack Fleming. I adore all of these. But, Glen Cook and Garrett got me started on this genre and I am forever glad. The latest Garrett adventure has, however, undertones of so many loose ends being tidied up that is has a tint of "end of series". Maybe not. Maybe Garrett's hot and cold love-life with his stormy red-head, the deathly attack on his best friend, and the more than hints of a real law and order society that would make a loose canon such as Garrett unnecessary, are not indications of the winding up of a great adventure. Gilded Latten Bones certainly brings the ghastly secrets of TunFaire's society into powerful and violent confrontations with Garrett and most all of his friends, employees (?), lovers (?) and enemies, and doesn't really have to mean a summing up, a finale. To anyone who has read all, or any, of the previous Garrett, P. I. novels, this is, I think, one of the best. Maybe Garrett has grown (up?), but he is still loyal, confused, loving, and brave for all the right people and all the right reasons. This is one reader who is already waiting for the next great adventure. Hopefully, soon. (One final note: I don't know who his cover artist is, but I believe the same one has been creating the clever and striking covers since Sweet Silver Blues. Excellent covers. They really interpret Garrett's reality.) |
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