applications for extradition.
Jack walked up the creaky steps to the upstairs landing. He had just raised his hand to knock on the door opposite Humpty’s when a deep male voice, preempting his knock, boomed, “One moment!”
Jack, puzzled, lowered his hand. There was a sound of movement from within, and presently the door opened six inches. A youthful-looking, darkly tanned man with tightly curled black hair answered the door. He had deep black eyes and a strong Grecian nose that was so straight you could have laid a set-square on it. He looked as though he had just got out of the shower, as he had a grubby towel wrapped around his waist. On his muscular abdomen were so many crisscrossed scars on top of one another that his midriff was a solid mass of scar tissue. He was so cleanly shaven that Jack wondered whether he had any facial hair at all, and his eyes bored into Jack with the look of a man used to physical hardship.
“Yes?” he asked in a voice that seemed to rumble on after he had spoken.
“Mr. Prometheus?”
“Just Prometheus.”
“I’m Detective Inspector Spratt, Nursery Crime Division. We’re investigating Mr. Dumpty’s death. I wondered if I might talk to you?”
Prometheus looked relieved and invited him in, his voice losing its rumble as he no longer took Jack to be a threat.
The room was similar to Humpty’s in levels of shabbiness, but Prometheus had tried to make it look a little more like home by pinning up holiday posters of the Greek islands. Stuffed in the frame of the mirror was an assortment of postcards from other Titans and minor demigods, wishing him well with his ongoing asylum application. A mattress covered with rumpled sheets lay on the floor, and on the bedside table, next to a copy of Plato’s
“A bit fanciful,” remarked the Titan. “He took a few liberties with the truth. I had only ever met Asia and Panthea once at a party and I certainly was
“Yes,” agreed Jack, knowing that to an immortal such as Prometheus, death really
“I was sorry to hear about Humpty,” said the Titan, thumping the vibrating pipes with a wooden mallet to get the water flowing out of the rusty tap and onto his toothbrush.
“You knew him well?”
Prometheus squeezed the remains of a toothpaste tube onto the brush. “Not really, but well enough to know he was a good man, Inspector. Good and evil are subjects I know quite a lot about. He had righteousness in spades, despite his criminal past.”
Prometheus rinsed his mouth, popped the toothbrush back in its glass, immodestly dispensed with the towel and wrapped himself in a dressing gown that had once belonged to the Majestic Hotel.
“We chatted quite a lot when we bumped into each other,” continued the Titan. “He was always busy but made the effort.”
“When did you last see him?”
“Last night at about six. He called me over to help him tie his cummerbund.”
“Cummerbund?”
“Or cravat. It’s difficult to tell with him. He’d had an argument with his girlfriend. Did Mrs. Hubbard tell you?”
“She mentioned it. Do you know her name?”
“Bessie, I think,” replied the Titan.
“No surname?”
“I’m sure she has one, but I don’t know it. I don’t think she was a serious girlfriend, but she was the most regular.”
“There was more than one?”
“Humpty was probably the least monogamous person I’ve ever met. I couldn’t agree with his lifestyle, but despite it I think he had a good heart. I can’t imagine Grimm’s Road was a great place to bring women, but, knowing him, he enjoyed the sport of sneaking them past Mrs. Hubbard.”
“What else did you and Humpty talk about last night?”
“Not a lot, but he seemed upset, or annoyed, or unwell. Put it this way: He looked pretty pasty. When it was time for him to go, he thanked me for my companionship and shook my hand. He didn’t usually do that, and, looking back on it, I suppose he might have been saying… good-bye.”
“Did he seem depressed or anything recently?”
The Titan thought for a moment. “Less talkative. Preoccupied, perhaps.”
“When did you see him again?”
“I didn’t. I heard him go into his room about ten-thirty, and the next thing I knew, Mrs. Hubbard was banging on my door and asking if I wanted Humpty’s room for an extra fifty quid a week.”
There didn’t seem to be anything more Jack could learn, at present.
“Thanks for your help. I can usually find you here?”
Prometheus sighed. “Humpty was paying half of my rent. I can’t afford this dive any longer. You could always leave me a message at Zorba’s — I wait tables there three times a week.”
Jack had an idea.
“We need a lodger. Come around to this address and meet my wife tonight at about seven.”
Prometheus took the proffered scrap of paper.
“Thank you,” he said. “I think I might just do that.”
Mary had been speaking to the neighbors. They were suspicious at first but soon became keen to help when they found out it was Humpty who had died. He had, it seemed, been very generous in the neighborhood.
“What have you got?”
“Couple of people thought they heard dustbins, though no one can put a time on it. I got a statement from Mr. Winkie. I think he’s narcoleptic or something; he fell asleep as I was talking to him. SOCO didn’t come up with much. No prints on the shotgun, but some unusual traces on the carpet — and a single human hair.”
“Brunette? Like the woman in the Vienna photograph?”
“No, red — and twenty-eight feet long.”
She passed him an evidence bag with a long piece of auburn hair wrapped carefully around itself like a fishing line.
“Now, that
“Not really the grieving widow. In fact, technically speaking, not a widow at all — they divorced over a year ago. She said to drop in at any time.”
“Then we’ll do just that. We
“What about?”
“We’ll ask her when we find her. Her name’s Bessie.”
“I’ll get the office onto it,” said Mary. “Was that Prometheus upstairs?”
“Yes. Creator of mankind to Mrs. Hubbard’s lodger. Make’s Humpty’s fall look like a stumble, doesn’t it?”
Jack unlocked the car and pushed some papers off the passenger seat so that Mary could get in. She looked at the baby seat in the back.
“You have children, sir?”
“Lots of people do. I have five.”
“Five?”