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Christ. The concourse at King’s Cross underground was minuscule compared to the one at St Pancras. A sinking sickness invaded Nikos’s stomach. He had instructed 11,353 people to meet there. Maybe some of them had figured it out and had made their way to the right meeting point, but what if the rest were trying to cram themselves into the small underground ticket hall beneath the main station? The result could be a massacre, like the ones that occurred at Mecca or the Heisel football stadium; people could be crushed to death in the ensuing chaos.

Sweating violently now, he killed the video and wiped his trail, removing the online instructions, shutting down the website, clearing the computer’s history. He was using his backup laptop, the one he had stored in his UCH locker, the one the police didn’t know existed. If there was any comeback, at least he had bought himself some time – until someone ran a trace from the host.

He knew that he would have to go and see for himself. It would be like rubbernecking at a traffic accident, but he had to make sure that his conscience was clear. Slipping the laptop into his rucksack, he zipped up his jacket and ran out into the rain.

∨ Off the Rails ∧

48

Maelstrom

The scene in the station was becoming nightmarish. The crowd had started dancing but there was no space to move, and their synchronised movements had quickly fallen apart. A party of schoolchildren was disgorging from the Victoria Line escalator, but the hall was so crowded that they could not pass through the barriers, and had become trapped halfway. Children were screaming and crying. The staircases were clogged with passengers unable to move in any direction. A sense of barely controlled hysteria was breaking out in the claustrophobic hell of the ticket hall.

John May could do nothing but watch. Longbright and McCarthy were nearest the barriers, and he could still see Ruby Cates fighting her way toward the tube escalators. Had she seen Theo Fontvieille nearby? And had either of them identified Meera or Colin? We’re all in trouble here if anything bad happens, he realised. He called Bimsley.

“There’s no way of getting anyone out, Colin, so they’ll have to force people down onto the platforms and get them to board outbound trains. Try to connect with the others. I want you all on this floor. If you go to a lower level I’ll lose radio contact with you.”

“Okay, boss.”

Arthur Bryant and Fraternity DuCaine made their entrance into the station via a staff elevator that delivered them into the ticket office. Anjam Dutta was there to meet them. The security officer looked stressed but in control.

“We’ve got crowds backed around the exterior of the station,” he explained, ushering them through an unmarked door and walking them to the surveillance room. “I’m trying to clear the exits but I can’t close them, because I need to get people up first. We’ve never had a situation like this before. Usually only a tenth of the population should be travelling at one time. But we think we found the source.”

“What is it?”

“Somebody arranged the staging of a flash mob in the station, but the induction site was pulled a few minutes ago.” He got a sweetly blank look from Bryant. “It was a passing fad some while back. People click on a site that reroutes them to a different destination, and that destination sends instructions to laptops, mobiles and PDAs, telling them to meet in a certain public place and dance to music played out as MP3s. The craze died out after companies copied it to use as sales tools. We’ve got all our staff and the LTP trying to move the crowd. In general people have lived through enough terrorist alerts not to panic, but they’re getting pretty close to the edge right now.”

“We have PCU members out there tracking suspects,” Bryant explained. “Our leads may be connected with the situation you’ve got on your hands here.”

“You’re telling me there’s a murderer crowded in there with the general public? You’re supposed to be helping us, Mr Bryant, not making matters worse.”

Bryant looked up at the staff roster of security guards. Photographs of Anjam, Rasheed, Sandwich, Marianne, Bitter and Stone were arranged in a row on corkboard, their weekly duty roster marked beneath them in black felt-tip pen. “They’re all out on the floor right now?”

“Yeah, you can see Marianne near the District & Circle tunnel, and there’s Sandwich, by the lift. Stone’s over at the barrier.”

Bryant glanced back at the ID of the man the others had nicknamed Stone. He found himself looking at an earlier incarnation of Mr Fox. “When was that taken?”

“Two weeks ago.”

Bryant checked the fine print beneath the photobooth shot. Jonas Ketch. “He sat in on my briefing session with the security staff,” said Bryant. “Inattentional blindness. You have got to be kidding. He’s been here under our noses all the time?”

“And now he’s out there,” said May, who had caught the conversation. “Come on.”

The detectives pushed themselves into the crushing chaos of the crowd. “Janice,” May called on his radio, “brown leather jacket and glasses, to your right; Mr Fox is less than three metres away from McCarthy. You have to move that boy out of there.”

“I can’t, John, we’re stuck here.”

“Then we’ll come to you.”

The flash mob song had come to a rowdy, ragged end, and the disappointed crowd was looking lost, not yet ready to disperse. Loudspeaker announcements were proving ineffectual in easing the constrictions.

Anjam Dutta could see the pressure points reaching maximum density. His mobile showed an incoming call from John May.

“We have to clear the hall fast,” May told him. “Can you open all the ticket barriers and leave them up?”

“There’s an electronic override, but it’ll lose the network a fortune. I have to have authority – ”

“Someone could get killed if you don’t. Just do it, Anjam. I’ll take full responsibility.”

Dutta released the safety guards and punched in the code that released all of the barriers simultaneously. The crowd surged forward, pouring through to the Victoria, Piccadilly and Northern Line escalators. At once, the pressure in the ticket hall began to ease.

Longbright saw Mr Fox standing on the other side of Tony McCarthy, elbowing his way between tightly packed bodies. “Mac,” she called, “he’s right behind you. Run.”

McCarthy panicked, and instead of going up to street level, he fled down in the direction of the escalators. Mr Fox broke his cover and ran after him.

Ruby Cates reached the barriers just as they opened. She was swept through with the crowd, but managed to pull free and head toward the southbound Victoria Line platform.

“Hey, Ruby.” Theo was on the step below her. He turned and grinned. “I thought I saw you in the ticket hall. What was that all about?”

“Someone’s idea of a joke. I’m surprised no-one was squashed flat. Where are you going?”

“Oxford Circus. I want to buy some sneakers. How about you?”

“Victoria. I’m going to Brighton.”

“Who you got down there?”

“Just some friends.”

“How long are you going for?”

“Probably just for the weekend. I need a break.”

“You didn’t say you were going.”

“I decided when I heard about Cassie. There’s so much awful stuff going on, the police are hanging around the house, everyone’s on edge. I haven’t been able to concentrate on anything.”