As everyone was talking at once, May called for quiet by blowing the sports whistle he had strung around his neck, and pointed at Isobel Whitstable. “You have a question?”
“Being cooped up like this is making me sick. The food is frightful, and we’re having to share bathrooms. How much longer do we have to stay here?” There was an immediate hubbub of assent.
“Until the danger to all of you has passed,” replied May. “You saw what happened when Pippa ventured outside.”
The noise level rose sharply, and he was forced to shout. “It’s come to my attention that some of you have been trying to speak to the press about your treatment here.” The family had been giving bitter, sarcastic interviews about their treatment at the hands of the incompetent police. Several secret phone calls had been logged by the security team. “I’m afraid we’re going to have to stop that.”
This was followed by a barrage of angry demands.
“It sounds like you’re frightened of the papers putting their own investigators on the case,” said Edith Whitstable, who was still being guarded by her twin grandsons. “We want whoever’s doing this run to earth. It’s irrelevant who catches him, just so long as someone does before there’s another death.” Everyone seemed to agree on that point.
“I feel the same way as you,” said May, “but some of the journalists are showing a lack of responsibility in their hunt for a new angle. They might inadvertently reveal something to your enemies.”
Before May could field any further questions, Sergeant Longbright entered the room. “Alison Hatfield is on the telephone for you. Do you want to take it?”
May looked over at the unruly assembly of mothers, fathers, sons, grandmothers, daughters, and babies, all arguing across each other. “I’ll call her back. No, on second thoughts, let me take it.”
The hallway outside was relatively quiet. He lifted the handset. “Alison, how are you?”
“I’m fine. I hope I haven’t disturbed you, but you did say to call if anything – ”
“You did the right thing. What’s on your mind?”
“I was going through the basement papers I brought home with me, and found some correspondence between James Makepeace Whitstable and one of the other members of the alliance. It’s mostly shipping arrangements, but he makes reference to the night of the signing, and states that a full account of the event was subsequently written up. He doesn’t say what in, unfortunately.”
“You think he kept minutes?”
“That’s what I wondered. All papers and personal effects pertaining to the guild eventually revert to the hall, many of them through bequests and donations. I was thinking of going to the office later. Do you want me to look for it while I’m there?”
“Yes, if you don’t mind. I mean, it is a public holiday. You should be enjoying yourself.”
“Oh, this
“I have to go,” said May. “Please, Alison, call me if you find anything.”
One of the Whitstable children was tugging at his trouser leg. “Come on, Mister Policeman,” he said with a grin. “The mummies are trying to hit each other.” Clenching his teeth and his fists, May strode back into the tantrum therapy centre formerly known as the front parlour.
¦
Alison Hatfield had fidgeted about in her apartment, unable to settle, before deciding to return to the lift in the foyer of the Watchmakers’ Company. It was exciting to know that the police were relying on her assistance. She was looking forward to seeing John May again. There was something intriguing and rather sad about him.
The basement file rooms had been closed for so many years that those in charge of maintaining their order had now retired. She pulled the trellis door shut and as the lift descended she thought about the boxes stored beneath her.
The Victorians were great note-takers, letter-writers, and diarists. It was likely that their documents were kept here, within the guild, and had simply been forgotten. Dead files were rarely examined, and mundane artefacts like balance sheets fell beyond the scope of interested historians.
Her breath clouded across the beam of her pocket torch as she opened the lift door. The corridor ahead was in darkness. She had not asked for the emergency lighting to be turned on again, for fear of arousing suspicion.
Any further documentary proof would lie in the room she had begun to explore with May. As she reached the door, she was surprised to find it partially open. She distinctly remembered locking it. She pushed it wide and shone her torch inside.
Someone had definitely been down here. Chairs and boxes had been moved. Frowning, she crossed the floor and shone her torch into the first carton. This morning it had contained three tied packets of correspondence; now there were only two. Her shoes slipped on sheets of paper. She looked down to find that a number of letters had been dropped or tossed aside. She lifted the sheets and held them to the light.
Apart from the caretaker, no one else knew she had been sifting through the documents. Who had been here?
Her thoughts were interrupted by a light scuffling sound in the corridor outside. She scanned the torch beam across to the door, but saw nothing. She knew about the rats that came up from the river; she didn’t want to consider how many might have bred in the ancient cellars. She was about to resume her search when a feeling of unease prickled at the back of her neck.
Alison was a practical woman, not given to easy fears, but she suddenly knew she was not alone. She lowered the torch beam to the floor and quietly made her way back across the room. As she did so, she sensed another human body.
The darkness in the corridor was palpable. A slight breeze brushed her face. She began to walk slowly towards the goods lift, keeping the torchlight trained at her shoes.
There was someone within feet of her, of that she was sure. She stared at the beam. A chill cloud was dissipating in the cone of light, the remnants of someone’s shallow breath. She took another step toward the lift, and another. The metal door stood less than three yards from her. Far below, the river drains faintly pounded, rushing through darkness.
A scrape behind her as someone or something divorced itself from the wall. Unable to contain her panic for another moment, she ran to the lift with her arm outstretched, grabbing the brass handle and twisting it back, slamming the trellis open and forcing herself inside.
As she pulled it shut she saw the bulky shape of a running man. A hand thrust itself through the diamondshaped gap in the bars, grabbing at her sweater. She screamed as she jabbed at it with the torch, but the fingers, groping for a purchase, seized her flesh and pulled. The torch case was lightweight and plastic, and the batteries fell out as she thrashed at the invading limb.
She hammered the floor buttons, and the lift jerked into life, slowly rising. The fist remained locked around her arm, gripping tightly. Her attacker was being raised from the floor, and had braced himself against the lowering ceiling. Far above, the lift mechanism began to whine as it strained to raise the cage.
It was a stalemate: the lift could ascend no further, but her attacker could not recall it. Bending her knees abruptly, Allison lifted her legs from the floor. The move caught her assailant by surprise as the deadweight hit his arm. With a sickly crack his hand lost purchase on her sweater and the lift suddenly shot up.
She slammed to the back of the lift, staying there until she reached the ground floor. The foyer was deserted. If he knew where the basement staircase was, he could be here in seconds. The porter wasn’t due back until tomorrow. Until then, the main door keys were in her purse, inside her desk. She had planned to double-lock the entrance upon leaving.
Her heels clicked rapidly across the marble floor, echoing in the dark stairways above. She was scared to look back. She could feel her heart bellowing in her chest. Behind her, the staircase door slammed open. She knew better than to waste another moment in the building. Without detouring to collect her coat or purse she ran from the entrance.
The city streets were utterly deserted. This was Boxing Day, and there was not a soul to be seen.
Her car was parked in the darkened narrow street behind the Goldsmiths’ Hall. There was no point in heading back there without her keys. She ran along the empty pavement in the direction of St Paul’s Cathedral.
Behind her, a dark man dressed in an ankle-length raincoat emerged from the hall. She increased her speed, searching for traffic as she crossed the road. Behind, the figure gained speed, his unbuttoned coat beating about