The Victoria Vanishes (5 page)

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Authors: Christopher Fowler

Tags: #Crime, #Mystery

BOOK: The Victoria Vanishes
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'You can show me a little more respect, young man,' warned Land.
'I know how you landed your new job.'

'What do you mean?' asked Kershaw, genuinely surprised.

'Come off it, sunshine. You're married to the Home Secretary's sister-in-law, or something like that. Bryant told me ages ago.'

'I once went out with a girl who worked in PR at the Home Office, but I certainly never married her. I'm afraid Mr Bryant was playing a trick on you.'

Land wearily passed a hand over his sweating face. 'Well, there'll be no more tricks now that Renfield is joining them. We'll finally get a little order around here.'

The wake was starting to break up. Two of the duty officers from the Albany Street cop shop were bombarding each other with the remains of a party-sized Swiss roll, and even Finch's farewell cake had been reduced
to a controlled explosion of ic
ing and sultanas.

Bryant set his glass down on the beer-stained paper table-cloth and rebuttoned his overcoat.'I have to go home, my head is swimming,' he told his partner.

'We haven't finished discussing your resignation yet.'

'Don't be angry with me, John. Leave it to sink in for a few days. You'll see I was right in the end.' Bryant settled a squashed navy homburg onto his head so that the hat pressed down on the tips of his ears, knotted his mauve scarf under his chin so that his neck disappeared, and turned up the collar of
his voluminous overcoat. He looked like a music hall comic preparing for an Arctic trek.

'Do you want to share a cab
?' May called as the elderly de
tective tapped his walking stick to his hat brim in a farewell gesture and stumped off toward the exit.

'No thanks, the walk will do me good. I need a blast of whatever passes for clean air around here.'

All the way to Chalk Farm? It's uphill, you know.'

'Don't worry, I have my good shoes on and I'm quite capable of finding a taxi when I get tired. You have to learn to stop worrying about me.' Bryant pushed out of the door and was gone.

I've got one week to make him change his mind,
May told himself.
It's not an unfeasible task.
But he knew it was almost impos
sible to alter Bryant's course once it was set.

6

OBSERVATION

A

rthur Bryant cursed himself.
I should have handled the matter of my resignation better,
he thought.
After all these years of working with John, I should at least have taken him into my confidence first.

But John May had always been able to talk him out of
mak
ing sudden foolhardy decisions. His was the healing voice of reason, a counterbalance to the maddening pandemonium of Bryant's mind. John might protest, but he could survive per-fectly well on his own. People enjoyed his company and opened up to him because he didn't do anything that made them nervous. Right from the outset of their partnership, when the pair had launched a murder investigation at the Palace Theatre and solved the Shepherd's Market diamond robbery, Bryant had been up
setting applecarts and overturn
ing the status quo while his partner followed behind, smooth-ing raised hackles and restoring order. Across the years, from the tracking of the Deptford Demon to the final unmasking of the Leicester Square Vampire, this out-of-kilter relationship had allowed them to resolve a thousand cases great and small.

But everything came to an end, and knowing when to leave was crucial.

Now Oswald Finch was gone, and soon they too would pass into oblivion, to be faintly recalled as members of the old school of police work, a pair of
characters,
representatives of a classic style of investigation tha
t had since passed into obsoles
cence. Would anything about them be remembered, other than a few oft-told anecdotes, funny stories to be trotted out wherever old men gathered in pubs? Had they really achieved anything at all, changed any laws, improved the lot of Londoners? Or would they soon be as forgotten as old music hall stars, the pair of them described as the Flanagan & Allan of the Met?

Bryant raised his head from his scarf and looked about. He was passing along the cream stucco edge of Coram's Fields, the seven-acre park on the site of the old Foundling Hospital in Bloomsbury which no adul
t could enter unless in the com
pany of a child. The wind was rising, to clatter the leaves of the high oaks and plane trees above him. At 10:40
p.m
. Bloomsbury was almost deserted, but even during the day there was hardly anyone around. The area between Gower Street and Gray's Inn Road remained reticent and dignified, seemingly trapped in an earlier era between world wars. There were still a few indifferent secondhand bookshops housed in its mansion buildings, barber shops and fish bars left over from the 1930s, corner pubs that faded back from the street in a deliberate attempt to shun passing trade.

He crossed the top of Marchmont Street into Tavistock Place, feeling his legs twinge in protest as he climbed the kerb. There would be plenty of cabs on Euston Road. Cutting across the pavement in the direction of Judd Street, he found himself in a road he did not know, little more than an alley that opened out into a dog-leg. The sound of traffic had all but disappeared. There was only the
wind in the trees, and the dis
tant twitter of birds who had mistaken
the perpetually sul
phurous skies for dawn.

The effect of the alcohol in
his system was starting to evap
orate. Untangling his distance spectacles from the other pairs that rattled loose in his pocket, he wrapped the flexible metal arms around his ears and examined the street ahead.

So Raymond Land thought
he had failing powers of obser
vation, did he? He squinted at the narrow pavement with its high redbrick wall, the rustling cherry trees, the old-fashioned gas lamps that had been wired to hold electric bulbs. The jaundiced lighting gave the street an air of melancholy neglect, like a yellowing newspaper photograph found beneath the floorboards of a derelict house.

Note what you see,
he told himself.
Remember how you used to do it when you were a young man.

Okay, the street had been severed at the far end by a grim granite office building, the other side of which presumably faced the hellish traffic of Euston Road. Several houses had been torn down—they had probably survived wartime bomb damage to last for another two or three decades—and replaced with council flats. Their windows clumsily referenced the design of the surrounding Victorian terraces, but every-thing about the newer properties was cheaper and smaller.

A single original house, number 6A, had been left behind. Tall and narrow, gapped on either side, it had been stranded alone in the present day like an elderly aunt at a funeral.

A slender street to the left: Argyle Walk. An alleyway lead-ing off to the right, with black traffic barriers raised through its centre, copies of a traditional design; once, the city had found new lives for its naval gun barrels, upending them in the streets and inserting red cannonballs in the mouths to form bollards.

Above and behind the buildings, the sallow, ghostly clock on the Gothic tower of St Pan
cras Station floated like a sec
ond moon.

What else could he discern?

A pale keystone over a door, initials entwined in a county badge, a concave shell-hood above another entrance, a feature used by early Georgians to provide protection from inclement weather, although this one was an Edwardian copy.

A carved blind window, created to provide balance for other openings in the side wall of the terrace. Or perhaps it had been bricked in because of William III's window tax.

A black-painted fresh air inlet with a grating on its top, like a ship's periscope, designed to prevent vacuums occurring in the sewage system below the street.

The fragile lacework of a wrought-iron ornamental balcony, complete with a curving zinc hood.

A square iron lid recessed into the flagstones that read
Patent Air-Tight-Flap,
the cover plate for a coal-hole which would have been converted into a basement after the arrival of central heating.

A cast-iron railing of daisies and ivy leaves, one which had survived the mass removal of ironwork during the Second World War. Britons had been told that their railings, along with their saucepans, would be melted down
'for the war effort' in what was largely a propaganda exercise.

What else?

A door-knocker consisting of a hand holding a wreath, painted over so many times that the form had been all but lost. Carpenters, metalworkers and battalions of servants would have ensured that these domestic items remained in perfect restoration. Now no-one had the skills, and so they were scoured into oblivion by successive tenants.

A pair of small stone lions stood on a balustrade. Once, the lion could have been regarded as the architectural symbol of London, the leonine essence distorted into decorative devices throughout the metropolis, sprawled in sunlight on the Embankment side of Somerset House, winged and majestic at Holborn Viaduct.

A corner pub, The Victoria
Cross, with a sign above it de
picting its namesake, the highest recognition for bravery in the face of the enemy that could be awarded to any member of the British and Commonwealth armed forces. The decoration took the form of a cross pattee, bearing a crown surmounted by a lion, and the inscription 'FOR VALOUR.' Beneath the sign were opaque lower windows
, gold letters in a spotted mir
ror panel establishing the typ
es of beers served and the foun
dation date. A deserted bar unit, mirrored and shelved, where bottles of whisky and gin remained in places they had doubt-less occupied for decades. Above, an old clock was set at the wrong time, seven-fifteen.

One expected to find untouched areas like this in Kensington and Chelsea, where old money had preserved past features that the poor were resigned to lose, but Bryant was surprised to see that parts of Bloomsbury, the West End's shabbily genteel cousin, were still so complete.
That's my trouble,
he thought.
I al-ways see things, not people.

A single pedestrian coasted the corner ahead of him. Bryant narrowed his eyes and condu
cted the same observational sur
vey on her. She was between forty-five and fifty, and would once have seemed old, branded invisible and treated brusquely by the inhabitants of the Victorian buildings around them. 'She could very well pass for forty-three in the dusk with the light behind her,' W.S. Gilbert had written of an attorney's daughter in
Trial by Jury.
An unmemorable face, rounded and fattened by time, lined a little by care, or what was now termed stress. Mousey hair cropped close to her jaw-line, makeup a little too thick, small eyes downcast, head lost in thought. Her raincoat had seen better days, but her shoes were polished and of good quality. The heels suggested that she was conscious of her height, for she was small and broad-hipped. She looked like a council official. A bag on her shoulder, brown and shapeless, bulging with—what did women take with them these days? Documents, most likely, if she was returning from working late in an office. A drink after work, or rather drinks, for she appeared a little unsteady on those heels. Somebody's going-away party, a birthday ce
lebration. A mother, a wife, go
ing home late and alone after a hard day, heading in the wrong direction for King's Cross station.

Bryant watched as she stopped and looked up at the pub sign, then negotiated the kerb to the entrance. He slowed to watch through the window as she headed to the counter, and a barman emerged to greet her, appearing like an actor catching his cue on a stage set.

There was nothing more to be noted here. It crossed his mind that he was becoming less observant because there was less of interest to see in London these days. He needed the lights and noise of the station, where one could witness meet-ings and farewells, the discovered, the lost and the con-founded. That was the best way to check whether his powers were truly waning. But he was tired, and as he passed into the covered alley that led out onto Euston Road, he decided to find a cab. It had been a long, exhausting day, one that marked an end, and a new beginning that would not involve him. Appointments, resignations, speeches and arguments. And on

top of all this, he had been entrusted with the ashes of his old colleague.

The ashes. Only now did he realise that he had no idea what had happened to the
aluminium urn containing the re
mains of Oswald Finch.

7

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