I’ve seen it before. We all have.’
‘When was the last time you spoke to Brian Shaw?’ asked Gwen.
Grace didn’t even have to think about it. ‘Yesterday evening. Seven o’clock. When we closed the office.’
Gwen glanced at Jack. He knew it, too: Grace was lying.
‘He had already been drinking,’ Grace continued. ‘I could smell it on his breath. I know how it goes with Brian. I like him, otherwise I would have sacked him a long time ago. But he’ll be on a bender for a couple of days, he’ll get it all out of his system, and then he’ll start selling like the devil’s on his tail.’
Jack got out of the chair and moved across the office to a picture on the wall – it was SkyPoint. ‘That’s kind of interesting, Mr Grace. You see we’ve got a report that Brian Shaw disappeared in the middle of showing a couple around an apartment here.’
Jack cocked a thumb at the picture of SkyPoint.
‘And when I say disappeared, I mean the way a magician does it. Now you see him, now you don’t.’
Gwen noticed Grace shift in his seat.
‘I don’t follow you,’ he said.
Gwen decided to show him the way. ‘He walked into a bathroom, and then he wasn’t there any more. There was no way he could have got out without being seen.’
‘Maybe we should go and talk to Brian ourselves,’ Jack said from over by the SkyPoint picture. ‘Maybe that’s the easiest way of clearing this up. You’ve got an address for him, haven’t you, Mr Grace?’
Gwen was nodding. ‘That’s a good idea. We can ask him how he managed to be here at seven last night when that was just about the time I saw him walk into the bathroom in apartment thirty-two and disappear.’
Grace shot her a look. ‘You were there?’
‘Want to change your story, Mr Grace?’ she asked.
His eyes snapped from Gwen to Jack, and back. He shook his head. His skin had turned to something like the colour of his whiskers. Gwen had seen this look before, as well. It was the look of a frightened man.
‘You’re mistaken,’ Grace said, his voice now little more than a whisper.
Jack strode across the room. ‘Thank you, Mr Grace. You’ve told us everything we needed to know.’
And Jack yanked the office door open and left. As Gwen followed him, she saw Grace’s eyes moving towards the telephone on his desk. He was going to have to ring someone, she thought, someone he didn’t want to talk to. She was going to have a job for Toshiko when she got back to the Hub.
As she followed Jack across the front office towards the street, she noticed that the ginger-haired guy was missing from his seat.
‘
‘Well, we found out that he wasn’t going to talk. That tells us something. Whatever happened to Brian Shaw, this is about more than just a disappearing estate agent.’
They rounded a corner and found the black SUV where Jack had left it, parked outside the Hilton. Jack gave the young doorman a familiar smile. ‘Everything OK, Simon?’
The doorman smiled back. ‘I know you, Jack Harkness, you only want me for my parking facility.’
Jack grinned. ‘Well, you’re handy when I’m carrying a heavy load. I know you’ll take care of it for me.’
Gwen tuned out of Jack’s flirting, and spotted the ginger-headed office junior watching them. He was still looking anxious. More than ever. Gwen started to move towards him, treading carefully like he was a small animal ready to run for cover.
‘Hello,’ she said. ‘Do you want to talk?’
The office junior had one last second thought – she could actually see it pass through his mind, as his eyes flashed past her, charting an escape route – then he asked her, ‘What did the old man tell you about Brian?’
‘Well, I don’t think he told us the truth.’
‘He isn’t off on a bender. I’d know if he was. The old man, he doesn’t know, but me and Brian we’re… friends. I’d know if he was feeling the strain, he’d have told me. The old man is covering up.’
‘Covering what up?’ Gwen asked. Behind her, Jack had seen her with the office junior and was joining them.
The office junior hesitated.
‘It’s OK, you can trust us,’ Jack told him. ‘Whatever it is, just spit it out.’
‘It’s that place. SkyPoint.’
‘What about it?’ asked Gwen.
‘They’re trying to keep it quiet. The place cost millions and it’s still more than three-quarters empty. If word got out about the people disappearing there-’
‘People?’ Jack snapped. ‘Brian Shaw isn’t the first? This has happened before?’
The office junior flashed an uneasy look around him, scanned the street for faces that he knew, anyone from work. ‘Christ, if anyone finds out I talked to you…’
‘I understand you’re worried about your job,’ Gwen told him, ‘but you have to tell us what you know.’
The junior shook his head. ‘My job? There’s plenty of jobs. It’s my neck I’m worried about. You don’t know the kind of people that have got money in SkyPoint.’
Gwen remembered the man that lived in the penthouse. ‘Besnik Lucca?’
‘Yeah, well then, you know what I’m talking about. Men like that want to see a return on their investment. It doesn’t matter to them that there’s something
‘So how many people are we talking about?’ Jack wanted to know. ‘How many have disappeared?’
‘Four that I know of. Not counting Brian. At first we thought it was just people running out on their payments, but not one of them was caught by the security cameras leaving. And those cameras spot everyone going into SkyPoint and coming out. The only way you can get out of that place without being picked up on video is jumping off the roof.’
‘Well, if they’d done that, you’d know about it,’ said Jack, dry as sand.
The office junior looked from Jack to Gwen, confused and scared. ‘Where do they go? Where’s Brian gone?’
Gwen touched his shoulder gently. ‘We’re going to find out. I promise you.’
EIGHT
Ianto Jones took his coffee black, and seriously.
When Torchwood One had been destroyed in the Battle of Canary Wharf, Ianto had been one of the few survivors, and he had returned to Wales looking for a job with the Cardiff operation. Jack had never had much time for Torchwood One, he didn’t like the way they did things and thought their disastrous handling of the Dalek- Cyberman situation had proved him right. So he was never going to have much interest in Ianto Jones, despite the cut of his suit, never mind how cute he might have been. But Ianto was determined, and he campaigned hard, though to Jack it felt like he’d got himself a stalker. And Ianto was ready to do anything to get himself a place in the Hub. He was an intelligent man with Honours in English Literature and History – but he’d just make the coffee and run the hoover around if that was what it took to get back into Torchwood.
So, in the end, Jack had given him a break as the tea boy and the guy who rang for the pizzas. He had earned his stripes since then and no one really thought of him as the office boy any more. He was a lot more than that, especially to Jack. But no one else could make coffee like Ianto. And, truth was, Ianto liked to make coffee. There was more to it than pouring hot water over ground beans.
The philosopher Sir James Mackintosh had said that the powers of a man’s mind were proportionate to the quantity of coffee he drank, and Voltaire had knocked back fifty cups of it a day, so Ianto reckoned there had to be something in it. And saving Cardiff from the kinds of things that came through the Rift called for quick, inspired thinking, so Ianto took it upon himself to make sure the coffee was good.
And that was what he set down on the conference room table now. A tray of four mugs. Dark Java.
He handed the drinks around as people talked, worked out how they were going to handle SkyPoint, how they