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Authors: Christopher Fowler

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BOOK: The Memory of Blood
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‘That goes particularly for you, Janet,’ said Bryant, noticing the editor of
Hard News
, who looked furious.

‘In order to encourage a spirit of openness and to make sure that no-one is tempted to mention what passed here this evening, we’ll be keeping the main doors locked until midnight. After that, you are all free to go.’

Everyone started talking at once. If nothing else, it seemed like an outrageous and somewhat morbid offer from the police.

Bryant and May stepped out into the crowd and waited as the first tentative guests came forward. Within moments, everyone was asking them questions. Was it true that Robert Kramer had been staked through the heart? And that Mona Williams had been treated as if she were a witch? Was witchcraft involved? Had necromantic rituals been performed at the theatre? Had the show
been cursed? And what about their producer, had he taken his own life or had someone made his death look like suicide?

After the first barrage of questions, Bryant noticed a fresh element creeping into the conversation—veiled accusations. Someone had heard that Maltby was a little too fond of her dolls. Someone said the killer was probably the playwright, because he had a creepy turn of mind. Someone had spotted Russell Haddon having a huge argument with Mona Williams about her overacting the day before she was found dead. Someone suggested that Judith Kramer was more cunning than she appeared to be.

‘This is going to get ugly very quickly,’ Longbright warned. ‘How are we going to stop them from fighting?’

‘Between you and me, I think that’s what Arthur wants to encourage,’ said May.

‘How’s it going?’ asked Ray, coming over. May had noticed that the actors were shunning the writer now that it was clear he was helping the police. ‘They all seem to have a lot to get off their chests.’

‘They’ll have more when they see this.’ May unfolded a large spreadsheet Longbright had printed out. ‘It’s the cross-referenced time line of everyone’s movements at the party. We’re going to show it to them. Give me a hand.’ He shook out some drawing pins and together they hung it along the nearest wall.

‘How does this work?’ asked Ray, pulling out his glasses and perusing the colour-coded graphs.

‘What happened to your spectacles?’ May pointed to the tape holding one of the arms in place.

‘Oh, I had to repair these. Mona sat on them at the Kramers’ party. I’m having another pair made. She was always doing things like that.’

‘Was she now?’ said Bryant. He turned to the spreadsheet. ‘Well, there you are, you’re the red stripe here, two trips from
the main lounge in the course of the evening, one for a smoke and one for the bathroom, both witnessed, and by two different people, Mona Williams and Marcus Sigler, which clears you. But take someone else—Neil Crofting, say, two trips from the room also, only one witnessed, by Ella Maltby—or Russell Haddon, two trips, neither remembered by anyone at all.’

‘Does that make Russell more of a suspect?’

‘Only in terms of opportunity. He has no motive I can think of. And that’s the trouble: Nobody here really has a proper motive for killing the child except Robert Kramer, and in his case we would have to assume that he would only have done it if he’d known then that the baby belonged to his wife’s lover.’

Gradually, the crowd shifted over to examine the huge spreadsheet, their sense of curiosity mingled with outright suspicion.

‘What do we do now?’ asked May in desperation.

‘I don’t know about you, but I’m going out for a pipe,’ said Bryant cheerfully.

‘I thought you weren’t letting anyone out.’

‘I’m not. There’s a small bricked-in area at the back of the building. It opens into a courtyard with sheer walls. Nobody’s leaving that way.

‘Ladies and gentlemen,’ he announced, ‘if the smokers amongst you would care to follow me, we can grab a quick drag and a gasp on the patio.’

The release of tension in the room was palpable as the crowd split in two, one half heading for the patio.

‘Bloody hell, I need a drink,’ groaned Renfield, wiping his forehead.

‘Not until after midnight,’ said May. ‘You’re on duty.’

‘Do you honestly think anything’s going to come of this? Let me tell you, I’m putting in for a transfer after this shambles is over. At least the Met officers were professionals. You lot are like
a bunch of bloody children. Men and women are dying out there on the London streets and we’re all in here playing some elaborate version of Cluedo, looking for Colonel Mustard in the sodding library with the lead pipe. I’ve had it. Actually, why wait? I wish to tender my resignation, right now.’

‘I don’t think you want to do that, old stick,’ said Bryant, wandering past with his unlit pipe in his mouth.

‘You can’t stop me,’ Renfield warned.

‘Maybe not,’ Bryant agreed, ‘but I’d give it a few minutes yet, just to watch the fireworks.’

‘What fireworks?’

‘The metaphorical ones that will go off when I do my Hercule Poirot impersonation and announce who the murderer really is.’

‘Wait a minute.’ May stopped him. ‘You mean you know who it is?’

‘I have a most definite suspicion. Have had for quite a while. But now I need proof.’

Raymond Land grabbed Bryant’s arm as he led the smoking pack through the room. ‘On the dot of midnight the street doors of this place will be opened and it will be over,’ he hissed. ‘That’s it, investigation suspended, all files get packed up and shipped off to Islington CID.’

‘There’s still another twenty minutes to go,’ said Bryant, flicking the brim of his trilby. ‘Care to join me for a pipe?’

B
ryant stood in the centre of the patio, watching everyone with a raven eye. He was smiling cheerfully, as rumpled as a mariner’s map, the battered ringmaster of a duplicitous circus revolving around him in a sinister carousel, and he missed nothing. He strained to hear all of the conversations at once, watched every gesture, every nuance, every flicker of the eye. When anyone glanced at him he returned their gaze and held it questioningly. When anyone brushed his sleeve he flinched theatrically and stared back. He spoke but was processing information. He was determined to keep all of his senses aware.

Questions crowded his brain: Why dress the dummy in the barn in women’s clothes? Was it meant to represent Judith Kramer? Why had Mona Williams been threatened? And how the hell did Noah Kramer fall to his death? Bryant had all the answers, but none of the proof. He needed the admission of guilt—one tiny movement that would lock the wheels of justice into place.

We saw what we thought happened, not what happened. We saw
what someone else wanted us to see
. Bryant made a silent bet with himself.
If you can’t solve this by midnight, you have to retire, it’s not fair on the others. Let somebody fitter, fresher and younger take the reins
. He checked his watch. Just twelve minutes left to go.

‘By Godfrey, he’s cutting it fine,’ grumbled Land. ‘Isn’t there anything you can do?’

‘I’ve done everything within my power,’ said May. ‘I don’t understand it. I keep asking myself the same questions over and over. The whole thing should have been wrapped up within minutes of Noah Kramer being found dead. The guilty party must have been on-site, watching us and calmly carrying on as normal, as if it was just an acting exercise, a mannerism copied from TV footage of a serial killer. Do you know what I thought? When I heard that Marcus Sigler was the boy’s father, I became convinced that Robert Kramer had killed his own son. But then what? The killer knows that the elements of the case don’t make sense, which is why he’s safe.’

‘It is galling,’ Land agreed. ‘Someone has been telling us lies and there’s nothing we could do to stop them.’

‘Unfortunately the electronic equipment hasn’t been invented that can properly prove a falsehood. The fundamental flaw in policing is its reliance on public information. If that information is corrupt, so is the entire case. It looks like the criminals have finally learned to outrun us.’

‘Well, we had a good run. I must say, I’m very disappointed by your partner. He spent part of the day asking actors about their stage performances. What good could that do? Honestly, if Arthur had come up with something utterly outrageous right at the last second, I’d have forgiven him so long as it put this lunatic behind bars.’

‘Oh, it’s no lunatic, that’s the problem,’ May told him. ‘He set
out to destroy Kramer and did so. And now he’s walking away happy in the knowledge that there’s nothing any of us can do to stop him.’

‘Did you know, Gail Strong was sent away on Home Office instructions?’ said Land. ‘Her father got her off the hook. What a scumbag.’

‘There are so many different levels of guilt. Arthur was right, this entire city is complicit. Nobody is innocent.’

Janice Longbright glanced at the watch Bryant had bought her for her thirtieth birthday. The date dial ran backwards for some reason, but the time was accurate. Seven minutes to midnight. Her nerve endings were buzzing.
If we have to close the Unit for good
, she thought,
at least I’ll be able to place an accurate time on the moment when the decision was made
.

When she couldn’t take it any longer, she headed for the bar and ordered herself a large gin and tonic.

‘You’re not supposed to drink before midnight,’ said Renfield, leaning next to her.

‘Jack, I’m watching my career collapse here, and so are you.’ Ignoring his protestations, she ordered him a beer. She raised her glass to his. ‘This should be a relief, but I just feel terrible. I can’t believe we failed. In the past we always managed to come up with something at the last minute.’

‘Hey.’ He stooped and lightly kissed her bruised cheek. ‘I’ve been wanting to do that for ages. Slap my face if you want, I don’t care. We won’t be working together anymore after this. I just tendered my resignation.’

‘Hey, did you just see that?’ said Colin Bimsley. ‘Renfield just got a snog in with Janice. What’s going on?’

‘It’s four minutes to midnight,’ said Meera. ‘We’re under orders to open the doors at twelve. The old man’s given up and gone outside with his pipe. And you were convinced he was going to crack it. I should have put money on this.’

BOOK: The Memory of Blood
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