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Authors: Barnes-Jonathan

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“I know what’ll cheer you up,” Mr. Streater said.  “This’ll put a bit of lead in your pencil.”  His hands retreated into his jacket pockets to re-emerge, predictably, with the sickening accoutrements of addiction — the tourniquet, the vial, the syringe.

“No,” Arthur muttered.  “Put that stuff away.  There’s been too much today.”

Streater’s voice took on a wheedling tone.  “Come on, Arthur.  Just a little hit.  You must’ve missed it.”

The prince managed a final, token piece of objection:  “Under the circumstances, I’m not sure it’s appropriate—”

“Shh.”  Streater put his finger to his lips.  “Not another word, chief.  Not another peep.  Just gimme your arm.”

Arthur began to fiddle with the cuffs on his left sleeve.

“The other one.  Wanna fresh vein.”

He did as he was told.

“There you go!  Now, lie back…”

The prince stretched out on the bed and let Streater do it to him again, savoring the tingly sense of anticipation, the needle’s teasing bite, the soothing warmth as the ampersand flowed into his system.  He closed his eyes and slipped away — and as he slept he had the dream again, about the little boy and the small gray cat.

 

 

He woke to find sweat cooling unpleasantly on his body, Streater gone and the telephone by his bed ringing loudly.

The prince rubbed his eyes and struggled toward the receiver.

“Who the bloody hell is this?”

The voice was deep, gruff and filled with oddly mirthless laughter.  “Hello, guv.”

“To whom am I speaking?”

“The name’s Detective Chief Inspector Virtue, guv.  You’re on speakerphone with DS Mercy.  We met earlier today.”

Arthur wondered how on earth they had got hold of his private number.

“You all right?” one of them asked.

“Thank you, Detective.  I am perfectly well.”

“It’s just that I’ve been thinking.  Well, we’ve been thinking.  About your missus.  Course we seen her on the telly.  Succulent piece.  Nice tush.”

Another voice chipped in now and Arthur could picture all too easily his bloated jowls and sunken chin, his fat lips smeared with animal grease.

“We’ve been thinking about all the things she lets him do to her.  About his hairy arse in her face.”

The other one again:  “We’ve been picturing their screws, guv.  Their quickies.  Their tumbles.  Their knee tremblers.”

“We’ve been imagining the mucky bits on your behalf, guv.  Been wondering who likes it dirty.  Who likes it rough.  Who puts what in where.”

“I hope you appreciate this, guv.  We’re looking out for you here.  We’re watching yer back.”

The conversation which followed was a long one, endlessly, inventively upsetting, and by the time detectives Virtue and Mercy had finished speaking, the prince’s eyes were red and raw from weeping.

 

 

 

Chapter 21

 

We were waiting at the Directorate in expectation of a miracle.  That was what the odious Mr. Jasper had called her — “a genuine, irrefutable, copper-bottomed miracle.”

Dedlock’s squad of killers had found nothing.  Hawker and Boon were still at large and the air seemed to crackle with a perplexing combination of urgency and exhaustion.

I stood apart from the others, staring out of the pod, past the illusory tourists and toward the real world, where, beyond the mirage of camera wielders and guidebook flourishers, I could see the snake of real punters waiting patiently in line.  Past them — the lights of the South Bank, the neon and halogen of real life.

A hand on my shoulder.  “You look tired, Henry.”

It was Miss Morning, more battle weary than ever.

“I am,” I said.  “And I’m starting to wonder whether this miracle of Jasper’s is ever going to show up.”

Mr. Jasper strolled over to us, a look of smug self-satisfaction uncurling itself across his face.  “Trust me,” he said, “she’ll be worth the wait.”

In this, if in nothing else, Jasper was right.  As we watched, the queue of tourists began to part in wonder and envy as a woman, a stranger, strode through the crowd and stepped smartly into the pod like she belonged there.  The door hissed shut and we began to move, but with a judder, as though even the Eye itself had been thrown off kilter by the newcomer.

Straightaway we knew that she was what we’d been waiting for, that she was Jasper’s miracle.

She was tapered, statuesque, with a mane of jet-black hair, and the curves of her exquisite figure were encased in a tightly belted trench coat which flapped about her like a cape.  She was flawlessly complexioned and what light make-up she had applied served only to accentuate the splendor of her cheekbones, the imperious curve of her nose, the glacial sensuality of her lips.  Most striking of all were her eyes.  Once they had been turned upon you, it was impossible to imagine denying her anything she might desire.

There was something terrible about this woman.  Hers was the bleak beauty of nature, the desolate grandeur of an ice field, the awful grace of a tiger stalking its prey.

But the most surprising thing of all was that I thought I recognized her from somewhere.

“Barbara?” I asked.

I looked closer and I was certain.  It was her.  A stretched, plucked, distended parody of her, perhaps, but unquestionably the girl from the office all the same.  She favored me briefly with a condescending glance but did not offer a reply.

“Gentlemen.”  Jasper was wearing the look of the cardsharp who knows he can never lose a game.  “This is our hunter.”

The woman did not smile or bow or in any way acknowledge the introduction but gazed at us in much the same way that the first Cro-Magnon may have surveyed a gathering of Neanderthals.

“Remarkable,” Miss Morning murmured.  “Repugnantly immoral, of course, but still — remarkable.”

“Barbara?” I asked again.  “It is you, isn’t it?”

She turned her head in my direction with a motion that was strangely mechanical.  I noticed that she already wore the same earpiece as the rest of us and I wondered if I might not be able to hear the whir of motors, the clank of gears.

“Hello, Henry,” she said, and I could tell from her voice that it was still her.  Changed, alchemized, transformed, but somehow still Barbara.  Her perfect lips formed words as though they were still learning how.  “Barbara’s in her somewhere.  Buried very deep.  She says hello.”  The word ‘hello’ was spoken as though it was barely familiar to her, alien and slightly dirty, like a judge struggling with the patois of some young offender brought before him in the dock.

I turned to Jasper.  “What the hell have you done to her?”

He giggled.  “I’ve made her better.  This is Estella come back to us.  This is victory.”

“Enough,” Dedlock snapped.  “I want proof.”

Barbara sashayed past and walked as close to the tank as she could.  “The first Estella is inside me.  And she knows you, Mr. Dedlock.”  Why, at this, I was put in mind of Marilyn singing “Happy Birthday” to the president, I really couldn’t fathom.

“Estella…,” the old man stuttered.  “You’ve come back to me.”

“It’s good to be back, sir,” she said, although her voice was wholly without conviction.

The man in the tank squirmed.  If it had been possible for us to see, I have no doubt that Dedlock’s upper lip would have been coated in sweat, in the shifty rime of mendacity and betrayal.  “How much do you remember?”

“I remember almost everything.”


Almost
everything?”

“I can recollect some of the smallest details of Estella’s life.  I can remember a great deal of the existence of poor Barbara.  But I am more than either of them.”

The head of the Directorate looked afraid.

“Gentlemen, we’re wasting time.”  Barbara paced briskly back to the center of the pod.  “The Directorate had frittered away the last twenty-four hours.  We should have the Prefects in custody by now.”

“Tell me,” Dedlock said in a little boy’s voice.  “How do we find them?”

“The answer’s been staring you in the face.  Any one of you could have worked it out for yourself.”

Most of us could no longer stand to look at her so we gazed dolefully at the floor or stared shamefacedly out of the window, like a line-up of new arrivals at the kind of penitentiary where they favor throwing away the key.

“Dedlock,” snapped Barbara.  “Bring up a heat map of the city.”

“I don’t know what you mean.”

“We don’t have time for your game playing.  Just do it.  Say a ten-mile circumference from Whitehall.”

Dedlock’s fingers twitched in the water and behind him, miraculously, we saw the lines of London shimmer into existence, the streets and roads form themselves out of the fluid in some impossible liquid cartography.  Overlaid upon the familiar landmarks were splashes of yellow and orange.

“A heat map’s no good,” Dedlock protested.  “Everything has a signature.”

Barbara raised a hand to silence him.  “The Prefects are creatures of fire and sulphur.  Watch the screen.  They will reveal themselves.”

Amidst the blurs of oranges and yellows, there appeared two jets of red.

Others in her position might have found it hard not to sound triumphant, but Barbara’s voice held no trace of vanity or conceit.  “There.  We have our men.”

“Somewhere in Islington,” Dedlock muttered.  “I’ll get an exact grid reference.”

Barbara turned away from the tank and started dispensing orders.  “Jasper — get Barnaby to meet us.  I want to drive directly to the site.  Henry and I are going in together.”

“Me?” I said, my guts clenching like a fist at the prospect of another confrontation with the Domino Men.  “What on earth do you want me for?  You look pretty capable yourself.”

“Oh, I’m immensely capable, Mr. Lamb, but for some reason these creatures have taken a shine to you.”

For a moment, Jasper looked at his creation almost doubtfully.  “I’ll organize the jackboots.  Get the place surrounded.  We’ll take them by force.”

“Hawker and Boon cannot be stopped by conventional weaponry,” Barbara said.  “How much more blood do you want on your hands before you learn that simple lesson?”

“Then what can stop them?”

The ghost of a smile appeared on Barbara’s impossibly perfect lips.  “Miss Morning.  How pleasant it is to be working alongside you again.”

The old lady squinted at Barbara.  “I’m not sure precisely what you are, young lady.  But you’re not Estella.  You’re something new.”

“You know what I need.  Get me the weapon.”

“I thought it was lost.”

“Then you were misinformed.  The old man hid it in the safe house.”

Miss Morning smiled faintly.  “Such a clever fellow in his own way.”

“Find it and bring it to me.”

Miss Morning nodded.

Starved of attention, the man in the tank beckoned Barbara back across the room.  “I have the address.  It’s somewhere on Upper Street.  But where on earth could a couple of grown men dressed as schoolboys hide in Islington?”

“There’s a little place I know.”

“Is that so?”

“Yes, sir.”

“It’s good to have you back, Estella.”

“It’s good to be back, sir.”

“And so wonderful to see that everything’s been forgiven and forgotten.”

Barbara peered into the tank and the head of the Directorate shrank from her gaze.  “That’s all in the past, sir.”  She bared an unnaturally bright white set of teeth.  “That’s water under the bridge.”

Mercifully, at that moment, the pod’s revolution was complete, and we were pushed back out into the freezing night air.

 

 

Barnaby was waiting.  Barbara had climbed into the passenger seat and Jasper was clambering in the back when Miss Morning tapped me lightly on the shoulder.

“You need to call home.  Tell Abbey I’m coming round.”

Exhausted from the battering of the past few days, my brain couldn’t really compute this information.  “What?”

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