Foxglove showed me an air freshener and gave me a quizzical look.
‘Later,’ I said, and made her put it back.
Guleed arrived three minutes later, coming through the front door with her extendable baton in her hand – at which point the manager ran off and locked herself in the staff loos.
Guleed put it away when she saw us, and looked me up and down, then peered around me to smile at Foxglove, who was using me as a shield.
‘Nightingale’s setting up a perimeter,’ she said. ‘And who’s this?’
‘This is Foxglove,’ I said. ‘Foxglove, this is Sahra – a friend of mine.’
Foxglove reached around me to shake Guleed’s hand.
‘Nightingale wants to know if it’s safe to breach,’ said Guleed.
I said I didn’t know, but anyway we had to put Foxglove somewhere before we could raid my former prison. Since the only safe place I could think of was the Folly, that meant Nightingale had to tool over to the Nisa Local to inspect her first. He arrived just before the area manager did and Sahra had to escort him to see the manager.
When the cop cars come screaming to a halt outside a bank robbery, the bit the films don’t show is the two hours of us milling about as we all sort out who’s going to do what to who and under what legislation.
And that’s not counting the risk assessment.
I felt Foxglove tremble at Nightingale’s approach, but he was careful and patient and we all got through the introductions without anyone biting anyone. I briefed him on what I knew about the layout of what had indeed turned out to be a former factory and on my best guess of the likelihood of booby traps (high) or minions (low). We had two options – raid the premises immediately or wait to see if Chorley and Lesley returned.
‘I definitely heard them moving a second bell,’ I said.
‘The longer we wait, the greater the risk of squandering this advantage you’ve bought us,’ said Nightingale immediately. ‘I’ll lead the raid in now to deal with any booby traps. Sahra will come in behind me with her team to make any necessary arrests and secure for a search.’ He looked at me and then at Foxglove – tilting his head slightly to the side. ‘You can accompany Foxglove back to the Folly and stay with her.’
We couldn’t risk leaving a former associate of Chorley unsupervised – not least because we didn’t know how Molly would react.
‘Dr Walid will meet you there,’ said Nightingale. ‘Any questions?’
‘Sahra has a team now?’ I asked, and glared at Guleed, who gave me a smug smile.
Nightingale shook his head. ‘Off you go, Peter. I’ll let you know as soon as the area’s secure.’
Me and Foxglove rode home to the Folly in the back of a pool car. Foxglove spent the journey staring excitedly out the window although she flat out refused to put on her seatbelt.
For obvious reasons, I didn’t want Foxglove’s arrival at the Folly to be through the tradesman’s entrance. So I had the pool car drop us off at the Russell Square entrance. Then I took her hand and led her inside. I hesitated in the lobby to see whether the famous ‘defences’ had any objection to Foxglove, who had immediately been drawn to the statue of Isaac Newton.
Nothing zapped anybody, so obviously the ‘defences’ weren’t against the likes of Foxglove. What had those, justifiably paranoid, wartime wizards been worried about?
There was nobody in the visitors’ lounge or even the atrium. The police staff would have headed home so I supposed everyone one else was out raiding chez captivity.
I called out for Molly.
‘I’ve brought someone to see you,’ I said.
There was a terrible crash and I turned to see Molly sweeping towards us, having dropped her tray on the tiles behind her – a milk jug on its second bounce and leaving a spray of white behind it.
Before I could move, Foxglove ducked around me and rushed to meet Molly. They both stopped suddenly, facing each other, centimetres apart. Molly’s hand rose as if to touch Foxglove’s face and hesitated. But Foxglove seized it with her own and pressed it to her cheek. Molly’s face crumpled into an agonised shape and I thought I saw tears before she buried it in Foxglove’s shoulder.
Then, with astonishing speed, they swept away out through the servants’ door by the east staircase.
That’s one problem down, I thought. Time to call Bev.
Only then Dr Walid arrived and did, fairly unobtrusively, medical things to me right there in the atrium before declaring that I seemed fine. But if I felt dizzy, fatigued or nauseous I was to let him know immediately. I said, while guiding him firmly towards the front door, that of course I would. But what I was really looking forward to was my bed. Thank you for your concern.
‘And likewise if you have any psychological symptoms,’ he said, which made me pause.
‘What kind of symptoms?’ I asked.
‘Recurrent memories, flashbacks, upsetting dreams, avoidance, negative feelings, emotional numbness and memory problems,’ he said.
I informed him that if any of that happened he’d be the first person I’d call, which mollified him enough to get him out the door.
‘Don’t forget to call your parents,’ he said, as I practically closed the door in his face.
So I called my parents on the Folly landline and got my mum’s voicemail, thank God. I left a brief reassuring message and was about to finally call Beverley when I heard Toby bark and found him sitting beside me with his lead in his mouth.
‘Five minutes tops,’ I said, but in the end the walk was more like fifteen.
Then I phoned Beverley.
‘Where are you?’ she asked.
I told her and asked where she was.
‘Outside the back door,’ she said.
‘Why didn’t you come in?’
‘You know why,’ she said.
So I ran to the back and found her waiting for me in her emergency work jeans and the purple sweatshirt she wears when everything else is in the wash. She grabbed me and kissed me and we snogged on the doorstop like we were both fifteen and had disapproving parents. She tasted of liquorice and seawater and that first ever rum and Coke I’d sneaked, courtesy of an older cousin, at a christening.
‘Are you sure you can’t come in?’ I asked during a break.
‘No,’ she said. ‘But I’ve been camping in your Tech Cave since you went missing.’
So I followed her up the spiral staircase to find that she hadn’t been so distressed that she hadn’t brought in an inflatable mattress and nicked bedding from Molly to cover it. Any of my stuff that had got in the way had been pushed to the sides and then covered with a layer of discarded underwear.
I didn’t care. I was so pleased to see her I didn’t even think of tidying up until the next morning.
30
Skulking for Cheese Puffs
There was no sign of Molly, or breakfast, the next morning. So me and Guleed picked up something on the drive down to Coldharbour Lane. Nightingale had stayed overnight to supervise the POLSA team and to step in, in the event of demon traps or vengeful spirits – and to deal with the curious foxes.
‘Abigail’s big talking ones,’ said Guleed.
The ‘factory’ as we were now calling it was, like most of London’s vestigial industrial capacity, built beside railway tracks. It had been put up in the 1930s complete with its own goods sidings to supply raw materials. Once freight had shifted firmly to motor vehicles in the 1950s the sidings went derelict before being redeveloped as an industrial park in the 1980s.
Since London’s railway tracks have long served as conduits for its urban wildlife, it didn’t surprise me the foxes were taking an interest. I asked if Nightingale had taken a statement.
‘They might have spotted something,’ I said.