Chapter One
  I could not see the street or much of the estate. We were enclosed  by dirt-coloured blocks, from windows out of which leaned vested men and women with  morning hair and mugs of drink, eating breakfast and watching us. This open ground  between the buildings had once been sculpted. It pitched like a golf course—a child’ s mimicking of geography. Maybe they had been going to wood it and put in a pond.  There was a copse but the saplings were dead.
 The grass was weedy, threaded with  paths footwalked between rubbish, rutted by wheel tracks. There were police at various  tasks. I wasn’t the first detective there—I saw Bardo Naustin and a couple of others—  but I was the most senior. I followed the sergeant to where most of my colleagues  clustered, between a low derelict tower and a skateboard park ringed by big drum-shaped  trash bins. Just beyond it we could hear the docks. A bunch of kids sat on a wall  before standing officers. The gulls coiled over the gathering.
 “Inspector.” I nodded  at whomever that was. Someone offered a coffee but I shook my head and looked at  the woman I had come to see.
 She lay near the skate ramps. Nothing is still like  the dead are still. The wind moves their hair, as it moved hers, and they don’t respond  at all. She was in an ugly pose, with legs crooked as if about to get up, her arms  in a strange bend. Her face was to the ground.
 A young woman, brown hair pulled  into pigtails poking up like plants. She was almost naked, and it was sad to see  her skin smooth that cold morning, unbroken by gooseflesh. She wore only laddered  stockings, one high heel on. Seeing me look for it, a sergeant waved at me from a  way off, from where she guarded the dropped shoe.
 It was a couple of hours since  the body had been discovered. I looked her over. I held my breath and bent down toward  the dirt, to look at her face, but I could only see one open eye.
 “Where’s Shukman?”
 “Not here yet, Inspector…”
 “Someone call him, tell him to get a move on.” I smacked  my watch. I was in charge of what we called the mise-en-crime. No one would move  her until Shukman the patho had come, but there were other things to do. I checked  sightlines. We were out of the way and the garbage containers obscured us, but I  could feel attention on us like insects, from all over the estate. We milled.
 There  was a wet mattress on its edge between two of the bins, by a spread of rusting iron  pieces interwoven with discarded chains. “That was on her.” The constable who spoke  was Lizbyet Corwi, a smart young woman I’d worked with a couple of times. “Couldn’ t exactly say she was well hidden, but it sort of made her look like a pile of rubbish,  I guess.” I could see a rough rectangle of darker earth surrounding the dead woman—the  remains of the ?mattress-?sheltered dew. Naustin was squatting by it, staring at  the earth.
 “The kids who found her tipped it half off,” Corwi said.
 “How did they  find her?”
 Corwi pointed at the earth, at little scuffs of animal paws.
 “Stopped  her getting mauled. Ran like hell when they saw what it was, made the call. Our lot,  when they arrived?.?.?.?” She glanced at two patrolmen I ?didn’t know.
 “They moved  it?”
 She nodded. “See if she was still alive, they said.”
 “What are their names?”
 “Shushkil and Briamiv.”
 “And these are the finders?” I nodded at the guarded kids.  There were two girls, two guys. Midteens, cold, looking down.
 “Yeah. Chewers.”
 “Early morning pick-you-up?”
 “That’s dedication, hm?” she said. “Maybe they’re up  for junkies of the month or some shit. They got here a bit before seven. The skate  pit’s organised that way, apparently. It’s only been built a couple of years, used  to be nothing, but the locals’ve got their shift patterns down. Midnight to nine  a.m., chewers only; nine to eleven, local gang plans the day; eleven to midnight,  skateboards and rollerblades.”
 “They carrying?”
 “One of the boys has a little shiv,  but really little. Couldn’t mug a milkrat with it—it’s a toy. And a chew each. That’ s it.” She shrugged. “The dope wasn’t on them; we found it by the wall, but”— shrug—“they  were the only ones around.”
 She motioned over one of our colleagues and opened the  bag he carried. Little bundles of resin-slathered grass. Feld is its street name—a  tough crossbreed of Catha edulis spiked with tobacco and caffeine and stronger stuff,  and fibreglass threads or similar to abrade the gums and get it into the blood. Its  name is a trilingual pun: it’s khat where it’s grown, and the animal called “cat”  in En- glish is feld in our own language. I sniffed it and it was pretty low-grade  stuff. I walked over to where the four teenagers shivered in their puffy jackets.
 “’Sup, policeman?” said one boy in a Bes-accented approximation of hip-hop English.  He looked up and met my eye, but he was pale. Neither he nor any of his companions  looked well. From where they sat they could not have seen the dead woman, but they  did not even look in her direction.
 They must have known we’d find the feld, and  that we’d know it was theirs. They could have said nothing, just run.
 “I’m Inspector  Borlú,” I said. “Extreme Crime Squad.”
 I did not say I’m Tyador. A difficult age  to question, this—too old for first names, euphemisms and toys, not yet old enough  to be straightforward opponents in interviews, when at least the rules were clear.  “What’s your name?” The boy hesitated, considered using whatever slang handle he’ d granted himself, did not.
 “Vilyem Barichi.”
 “You found her?” He nodded, and his  friends nodded after him. “Tell me.”
 “We come here because, ’cause, and…” Vilyem  waited, but I said nothing about his drugs. He looked down. “And we seen something  under that mattress and we pulled it off.”
 “There was some…” His friends looked  up as Vilyem hesitated, obviously superstitious.
 “Wolves?” I said. They glanced  at each other.
 “Yeah man, some scabby little pack was nosing around there and…”
 “So we thought it…”
 “How long after you got here?” I said.
 Vilyem shrugged. “Don’ t know. Couple hours?”
 “Anyone else around?”
 “Saw some guys over there a while  back.”
 “Dealers?” A shrug.
 “And there was a van came up on the grass and come over  here and went off again after a bit. We ?didn’t speak to no one.”
 “When was the  van?”
 “Don’t know.”
 “It was still dark.” That was one of the girls.
 “Okay. Vilyem,  you guys, we’re going to get you some breakfast, something to drink, if you want.”  I motioned to their guards. “Have we spoken to the parents?” I asked.
 “On their  way, boss; except hers”—pointing to one of the girls—“we can’t reach.”
 “So keep  trying. Get them to the centre now.”
 The four teens looked at each other. “This  is bullshit, man,” the boy who was not Vilyem said, uncertainly. He knew that according  to some politics he should oppose my instruction, but he wanted to go with my subordinate.  Black tea and bread and paperwork, the boredom and striplights, all so much not like  the peeling back of that wet heavy, cumbersome mattress, in the yard, in the dark.
 Stepen Shukman and his assistant Hamd Hamzinic had arrived. I looked at my watch.  Shukman ignored me. When he bent to the body he wheezed. He certified death. He made  observations that Hamzinic wrote down.
 “Time?” I said.
 “Twelve hours-ish,” Shukman  said. He pressed down on one of the woman’s limbs. She rocked. In rigor, and unstable  on the ground as she was, she probably assumed the position of her death lying on  other contours. “She ?wasn’t killed here.” I had heard it said many times he was  good at his job but had seen no evidence that he was anything but competent.
 “Done?”  he said to one of the scene techs. She took two more shots from different angles  and nodded. Shukman rolled the woman over with Hamzinic’s help. She seemed to fight  him with her cramped motionlessness. Turned, she was absurd, like someone playing  at dead insect, her limbs crooked, rocking on her spine.
 She looked up at us from  below a fluttering fringe. Her face was set in a startled strain: she was endlessly  surprised by herself. She was young. She was heavily made up, and it was smeared  across a badly battered face. It was impossible to say what she looked like, what  face those who knew her would see if they heard her name. We might know better later,  when she relaxed into her death. Blood marked her front, dark as dirt. Flash flash  of cameras.
 “Well, hello cause of death,” Shukman said to the wounds in her chest.
 On her left cheek, curving under the jaw, a long red split. She had been cut half  the length of her face.
 The wound was smooth for several centimetres, tracking precisely  along her flesh like the sweep of a paintbrush. Where it went below her jaw, under  the overhang of her mouth, it jagged ugly and ended or began with a deep torn hole  in the soft tissue behind her bone. She looked unseeingly at me.
 “Take some without  the flash, too,” I said.
 Like several others I looked away while Shukman murmured—it  felt prurient to watch. Uniformed mise-en-crime technical investigators, mectecs  in our slang, searched in an expanding circle. They overturned rubbish and foraged  among the grooves where vehicles had driven. They lay down reference marks, and photographed.
 “Alright then.” Shukman rose. “Let’s get her out of here.” A couple of the men hauled  her onto a stretcher.
 “Jesus Christ,” I said, “cover her.” Someone found a blanket  I don’t know from where, and they started again towards Shukman’s vehicle.
 “I’ll  get going this afternoon,” he said. “Will I see you?” I wagged my head noncommittally.  I walked towards Corwi.
 “Naustin,” I called, when I was positioned so that Corwi  would be at the edge of our conversation. She glanced up and came slightly closer.
 “Inspector,” said Naustin.
 “Go through it.”
 He sipped his coffee and looked at  me nervously.
 “Hooker?” he said. “First impressions, Inspector. This area,
 beat-?up,  naked? And…” He pointed at his face, her exaggerated makeup. “Hooker.”
 “Fight with  a client?”
 “Yeah but…If it was just the body wounds, you know, you’d, then you’re  looking at, maybe she won’t do what he wants, whatever. He lashes out. But this.”  He touched his cheek again uneasily. “That’s different.”
 “A sicko?”
 He shrugged.  “Maybe. He cuts her, kills her, dumps her. Cocky bastard too, doesn’t give a shit  that we’re going to find her.”
 “Cocky or stupid.”
 “Or cocky and stupid.”
 “So a  cocky, stupid sadist,” I said. He raised his eyes, Maybe.
 “Alright,” I said. “Could  be. Do the rounds of the local girls. Ask a uniform who knows the area. Ask if they’ ve had trouble with anyone recently. Let’s get a photo circulated, put a name to  Fulana Detail.” I used the generic name for woman-unknown. “First off I want you  to question Barichi and his mates, there. Be nice, Bardo, they ?didn’t have to call  this in. I mean that. And get Yaszek in with you.” Ramira Yaszek was an excellent  questioner. “Call me this afternoon?” When he was out of earshot I said to Corwi,  “A few years ago we’d not have had half as many guys on the murder of a working girl.”
 “We’ve come a long way,” she said. She wasn’t much older than the dead woman.
 “I  doubt Naustin’s delighted to be on streetwalker duty, but you’ll notice he’s not  complaining,” I said.
 “We’ve come a long way,” she said.
 “So?” I raised an eyebrow.  Glanced in Naustin’s direction. I waited. I remembered Corwi’s work on the Shulban  disappearance, a case considerably more Byzantine than it had initially appeared.
 “It’s just, I guess, you know, we should keep in mind other possibilities,” she  said.
 “Tell me.”
 “Her makeup,” she said. “It’s all, you know, earths and browns.  It’s been put on thick, but it’s not—” She vamp-pouted. “And did you notice her hair?”  I had. “Not dyed. Take a drive with me up GunterStrász, around by the arena, any  of the girls’ hangouts. Two-thirds blonde, I reckon. And the rest are black or bloodred  or some shit. And…” She fingered the air as if it were hair. “It’s dirty, but it’ s a lot better than mine.” She ran her hand through her own split ends.
 For many  of the streetwalkers in Bes´zel, especially in areas like this, food and clothes  for their kids came first; feld or crack for themselves; food for themselves; then  sundries, in which list conditioner would come low. I glanced at the rest of the  officers, at Naustin gathering himself to go.
 “Okay,” I said. “Do you know this  area?”
 “Well,” she said, “it’s a bit off the track, you know? This is hardly even  Bes´zel, really. My beat’s Lestov. They called a few of us in when they got the bell.  But I did a tour here a couple years ago—I know it a bit.”
 Lestov itself was already  almost a suburb, six or so k out of the city centre, and we were south of that, over  the Yovic Bridge on a bit of land between Bulkya Sound and, nearly, the mouth where  the river joined the sea. Technically an island, though so close and conjoined to  the mainland by ruins of industry you would never think of it as such, Kordvenna  was estates, warehouses, low-rent bodegas scribble-linked by endless graffiti. It  was far enough from Bes ´zel’s heart that it was easy to forget, unlike more inner-city  slums.
 “How long were you here?” I said.
 “Six months, standard. What you’d expect:  street theft, high kids smacking shit out of each other, drugs, hooking.”
 “Murder?”
 “Two or three in my time. Drugs stuff. Mostly stops short of that, though: the gangs  are pretty smart at punishing each other without bringing in ECS.”
 “Someone’s fucked  up then.”
 “Yeah. Or doesn’t care.”
 “Okay,” I said. “I want you on this. What are  you doing at the moment?”
 “Nothing that can’t wait.”
 “I want you to relocate for  a bit. Got any contacts here still?” She pursed her lips. “Track them down if you  can; if not, have a word with some of the local guys, see who their singers are.  I want you on the ground. Listen out, go round the estate—what’s this place called  again?”								
									 Copyright © 2009 by China Mieville. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.