‘If I bring the laptop to you, you’ll be in danger too.’
‘Perhaps.’ Buchanan’s languid poshness seemed more brittle than sinister now. ‘But you’re forgetting I’ve dealt with Simon’s creditors before. They belong to a small world, smaller since the advance of the sweats, no doubt, and unlike you I’m a known quantity. People can’t go around killing respected research chemists without some questions being asked.’
‘They managed it with Simon.’
‘Simon crossed the line. I haven’t. I’m not compromised and I’ve got nothing to hide. I’ll make it clear that I’m going along with things in order to get them off your back, but that if they harm either of us, the full force of the law will come down on them.’
‘Assuming there’s any law left.’
‘That’s something we can only pray for.’ Buchanan no longer sounded smug.
‘Aren’t you afraid I will give you the sweats?’
‘My granddad flew Spitfires in World War Two. Fighter pilots used to say, If your number’s on it . . . I’ve adopted that as my motto for this particular conflict. The priority now is to try and find a cure. Scientists all over the world are online, pooling ideas and information.’ Buchanan sounded resolute. Perhaps he was still thinking about his grandfather, a young man running across the airfield towards his Spitfire, ready to embark on another mission that might be his last. ‘I can’t leave the lab, but I took the precaution of holding on to the contact numbers of the people I dealt with last time Simon was in trouble. They’re probably out of date, but it’s a place to start.’
Stevie wondered at his willingness to interrupt his research to help her, but then Buchanan asked, ‘Are you still healthy? No reoccurrence of symptoms?’ And she decided that he was more confident of saving her from Simon’s creditors than of finding a cure for the sweats.
‘Yes,’ she said. ‘I’ve had lot of exposure to people with the virus and so far I’m fine.’
‘Good,’ he said. ‘That’s extremely good news. I heard it’s getting a little hairy outside. Tell me where you are and I’ll send my son William to collect you.’
‘I’ve managed on my own so far.’
‘That’s the kind of thing Hope would have said.’
‘I’m not Hope.’
‘No, she’s dead.’
‘And I’ve no intention of joining her. There’s someone I need to check on. As soon as I’m through I’ll deliver the laptop to you.’
‘It would make more sense to let William . . .’
Buchanan started to make some objection but Stevie killed the conversation and ignored the melody of his return call. She recognised the streets now, she was only a block or two from Iqbal’s apartment, but she turned on the robot voice of the satnav and let it guide her. The sound of a familiar voice, even a recorded one, was a comfort.
Thirty-Six
It was like going back to the beginning again, the smell of decay, the silent apartment, the slow patrol through empty rooms, except this time there was music softly playing, a repetitive not-quite melody she had never heard before, notes criss-crossing, as haphazard as colours on a harlequin’s costume. Everything in Iqbal’s flat looked as it had on her previous visit, its contents tidy and tastefully arranged, but the air was tainted. Stevie took Hope’s gun from her bag. The weight of it unnerved her, but she kept it in her hand, the barrel pointing away from her.
‘Iqbal?’
Stevie had meant to shout his name, but it came out barely above a whisper and was lost in a tide of notes.
The screens of the computers ranked along the desk beneath the stairs were dead. Stevie noticed Simon’s laptop amongst them, a small pile of printouts stacked neatly by its side. She ignored it.
‘Iqbal?’
The room was almost white with light, the brightness of the day cutting through the picture windows. She lowered the blind and saw that the reading lamp beside the couch was on, although the couch itself was empty, its cushions plumped as if no one had sat there for a while.
‘Iqbal?’
Stevie ran the tips of her fingers along the surface of the breakfast bar, raising a thin coating of dust. She brushed a hand along the wall as she climbed the stairs, though she had never been afraid of heights.
‘Iqbal?’
The music was fainter upstairs. Years ago she had gone on impulse to a boyfriend’s house and found him in bed with a woman she had never seen before. For some reason the moment came back to her, the feeling she had got when she had walked into his hallway, the sense that something was out of balance, the world not as it should be.
Iqbal’s bed was hidden behind a Japanese screen, white paper stretched on a cherry wood frame. A lamp glowed softly behind it. She said his name again softly, ‘Iqbal?’ The music rose in a wave and shattered, notes splashing around her, but nothing broke the gleam of light beyond the screen.
‘Jesus.’ Stevie ran a hand over her hair, still surprised to find it shorn. She could go downstairs, collect the laptop, bundle the papers Iqbal had left into her bag and head for Buchanan’s lab. If she went now, she might be able to convince herself that Iqbal was waiting out the sweats in comfort somewhere else. Stevie took a deep breath and stepped behind the screen.
In life, Iqbal had been lean, with features clean enough to be carved in stone. Death had robbed him of his beauty. Stevie saw the empty pill bottles on the bedside table and whispered, ‘Stupid. Stupid, stupid, stupid.’ She had an urge to kick the bed, to shake his body back to life and slap some sense into it. ‘Why would you do this?’ She felt a pain in the palms of her hands and realised that she had clenched her fists so tightly her nails were digging into them. ‘Stupid.’ She had thought the sweats senseless, but to submit to the dark rather than taste even the first tide of suffering was worse.
Stevie pulled the sheet over the face that was no longer his and went downstairs. The music was coming from an iPad resting on one of the bookcases. She tried to close it down but the small screen confused her and the music rattled on, unbearable and pointless. Stevie took the tablet out on to the balcony, looked at the empty street below and then cast it down on to the concrete. She went back indoors and sank on to the couch. The gun was still in her hand. She stowed it in her bag, took out her mobile and phoned Derek. An automated voice informed her that the number she was calling was no longer available. He had gone to Norfolk, she told herself, to be with Francesca, the woman who had stolen him away from Joanie.
Somewhere on the other side of the city a pyre of black smoke was reaching into the sky. She watched it for a while and then went to Iqbal’s kitchen and searched through his cupboards. Although they were packed with enough tins and dried goods to keep a family for several weeks, there was no alcohol.
‘Stupid.’ She wondered why she hadn’t taken a bottle of malt from Simon’s flat. Why hadn’t it occurred to her that at some point she would need to get drunk? ‘Stupid, stupid, stupid.’ It was becoming a mantra. She went to the desk and looked at the printouts piled next to Simon’s laptop. An envelope neatly labelled with her name lay on top. There was déjà vu in that too. Stevie ripped it open and took out the letter inside.
Dear Stevie
Please don’t go upstairs. I have the sweats. I knew from the start that I wanted to have some control over the way I die, and so tea and biscuits weren’t the only things I stockpiled. Meeting you has made these last days better. It also makes leaving harder, but I’ve read how the final stages go. I hope you’ll mourn me a little, but please don’t be too sad. You gave me a wonderful gift. My gift to you is beside the laptop. I think Simon and his team made a genuine mistake, the kind that might happen to anyone. They tried to do something good. I feel jealous of Simon, but you can be proud of him, even though he got some things wrong. It’s the intention behind the act that counts, right?