all to meet and discuss in more depth exactly how we wish to remedy our collective problem, yes?”
“We’re going to kill the bastard,” offered the biker. “You OK with that, sorcerer?”
“Are we all talking about Robert Bakker?” I asked.
There was a series of grunts and nods around the room which I took to be yeses, along with Dorie’s cry of “Gotta dig the bottom of the bag!”
“And what do you all have against him?”
“What do
“My reasons for getting involved,” I replied quickly, “are my own. I’d like to know yours.”
“So we tell you about ourselves, and you tell us nothing?”
I glared at the warlock. “Yep. Pretty much.”
“Gentlemen, gentlemen,” crooned Sinclair. “This is a matter we can easily sort out. Mr Swift – you largely know my interest – I am concerned because I suspect Mr Bakker of being involved in a number of deaths, including, I believe, yours. Such things concern me, as a man who may be involved, yes? I’m sure you understand.”
“Are you police?” I asked.
“Good heavens, no, no, no, that wouldn’t do at all. I am, shall we say… affiliated to certain aspects of government, who are keen that, at all costs, order should be maintained. And here, I fear, I must say no more.”
“A spook,” added the biker dryly. “
“And you?” I looked round the room. “Are you all enemies of Bakker?”
“You must understand,” soothed Sinclair, “things have changed.”
“How have they changed?”
“The Tower runs things now.”
I rolled my eyes, impatient. “Great. What is the Tower, what has changed, and what is Bakker’s role?”
“The Tower,” the fortune-teller cut in, “is an organisation of magicians, wizards, warlocks, witches and other practitioners of the art, and Bakker is their leader.”
“A union? Sounds like balls to me.”
“Oh, it’s very real,” sighed Mr Sinclair. “I believe they even have AGMs.”
“Why do you sound like you don’t like it?”
“Because what they cannot get, they take,” snapped the fortune-teller, “and they kill when they are not obeyed.”
“The magicians who are dead,” explained Sinclair gently, “all in some way crossed the Tower. As I think you did.”
“I’ve never heard of the Tower.”
“It grew up shortly after your death. They are gathering things – books, knowledge, ability, magicians, items, artefacts – they are accumulating power. I think you knew Bakker had this interest… perhaps was dabbling in certain things that shouldn’t be handled. I think that’s why you quarrelled.”
“You can think what you want,” I replied. “What is he dabbling in specifically?”
“Rumours,” said the warlock.
“Too many rumours for them all to be false,” corrected Sinclair. “Too many, in too close proximity. Experiments, Mr Swift. We believe Bakker is experimenting on magicians, on civilians, searching, that he is looking for something powerful – presumably, something dangerous, since he keeps its nature so secret from his staff, his servants and the community at large.”
“If that’s so, why aren’t you doing something?”
“Because Bakker’s a fucking sorcerer with enough money to buy Mayfair,
“You’re a charmer, aren’t you?”
“Look,” he said, angry now rather than just annoying. “Getting to him is like trying to get into Fort Knox with a fucking tin-opener!”
“There are other sorcerers…”
“No,” said Sinclair sharply. “There aren’t.”
“Don’t give me that.”
“You know that Dhawan is dead, and Akute. I didn’t mention deMaurier, MacKinnon, Samuels, Zheng…”
“I don’t believe this.”
“… and if they’re not dead, they’ve fled. Do you understand this, Matthew Swift? They’ve hidden, run away – people who oppose Bakker die. Do you think the litterbug just happened to turn up in Dulwich this morning? You must have been seen. It takes power to summon a creature like that; it was looking for
I looked round the room. Embarrassed faces avoided my eyes. Even Dorie sat perfectly still on her chair, studying her bowl of peanuts. Finally I said, “All right. Let’s say, just for the moment, that I believe you. What exactly do you propose to do?”
There was an almost audible relaxation of breath. In her corner Dorie muttered, “Bug bug bug bug bug blue bug…”
The man with a horselike face stumbled, “We had a plan…”
“Fucking idiotic plan!” the warlock contributed.
“Moron,” snapped the fortune-teller.
“Fight!” said the motorbiker with a happy smile. “Go on, fight!”
The woman in the jeans said nothing, but looked more angry than ever before.
“Ladies, gentlemen,” soothed Sinclair. “Charlie, please?”
The one addressed as Charlie turned out to be Sinclair’s loyal shadow, he with his dark eyes and straight black hair. At the mention of his name, he produced from behind a sofa a slim black briefcase. He entered a pair of combination codes on the clasps, snapping them back with a press of a brass button, and carefully put the whole contents of the briefcase onto the table.
Pictures, words, columns, figures, diagrams, maps – all sprawled out at Sinclair’s fingertips as he arranged them across the table. “This,” he said, spreading his hands above it like it was spider’s silk that might drift away on a breeze, “is everything we know about the Tower: who runs it, how it works, how it stays alive.”
I waited for something more.
“Anyone who tries to approach Bakker directly – assuming they can find him – fails.” For a moment, his eyes were on the lady in jeans, whose scowl, if possible, deepened. “You must understand – he is not merely a dangerous practitioner of magic. He has wealth: his lawyers can protect him from the law, and should they fail to do so, he has a plane ready to take him out of the country, and money overseas. His reach is international, his friends are in the highest circles and can operate in the lowest gutter.”
“He’s always had power.”
“Yes, yes, of course,” murmured Sinclair. “But only recently has he exploited it so flagrantly. What we propose, then, is to remove as much as possible of the source of his power before we strike against him. We are not merely talking the odd curse here or there. We are talking about undermining his wealth, his reputation, his influence, removing his friends one at a time until there is nothing left, merely him, alone. Then, perhaps, he will be vulnerable, if such a thing is even possible any more.”
“You have a plan?”
“Everything,” he said, waving his hands over the documents, “everything is here. We will tear the Tower apart piece by piece.”
I studied the papers he’d spread in front of me. The room waited. I said, “Sounds like a shitty plan to me.”
“Sinclair, do we have to have shit-for-brains here?” growled the warlock. We felt flickering sapphire-blue anger.
“Mr Swift, you have an alternative? You think you can find Bakker by yourself, you think you can… undo whatever has happened here… without our help?” Mr Sinclair was still smiling, but his voice was the incantation of the bored priest administering funeral rites.
I shifted uncomfortably, looking down at the tumble of papers. “I will help you. But I will not kill Bakker unless