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“Do you like it?” she asked.

“It’s lovely, thank you,” he said and kissed her.

“A flat-warming present,” she said. “This flat needs more warmth.” She handed him another package.

“You shouldn’t do this,” he said, tearing the paper off to reveal a small hammer in a box and a picture hook.

“No excuses,” she said.

They chose a wall in the sitting room and he hammered in the picture hook and hung the poster.

“The place is transformed,” he said, stepping back to admire the poster. “What does ‘Andacht zum Kleinen’ mean?”

“I looked it up. I think it means ‘Devotion to small things’.”

Primo considered this for a second or two. “Very apt,” he said. “Let’s have a drink to celebrate.”

They had stopped for a pizza on the way back from Battersea and had bought a bottle of wine to bring home. They sat with their glasses on the leather sofa, watching the ten o’clock news on television, Rita leaning up against him.

“We’ve got to change this sofa,” she said. “It’s like a gangster’s sofa. What made you buy it?”

“It was going cheap and I was in a hurry,” he said. “We’ll change it, don’t worry.”

Rita wondered if he was picking up the subtext to this discussion.

“How was Dad?” she asked. “I thought it was best to leave the two of you alone.”

“I put a proposition to him — I need his help with something. He said he’d give it serious thought.”

“What proposition?”

“Something to do with the hospital. About a new drug. In fact I gave him a present. I’ve bought him a share in a company, a drug company.”

“You’re trying to turn him into a capitalist, aren’t you?”

“He seemed quite pleased.”

“As long as it’s legal,” she said, turning to kiss his neck. “Let’s get naked, shall we?”

52

IT CAME UP ON the screen: INPHARMATION. COM, black and red, the PHARMA letters pulsing an orangey-crimson. Adam registered, logged in — his nom de plume was ‘chelseabridge’—and he went to the thread for Zembla-4- He read a few of the posts, mosdy pleas from asthma sufferers who had seen the advertorials and were wondering when and if the drug would be available. And then he made his own post, typing in the names of the dead children and the hospitals where they died, adding that they were all participating in Zembla-4 clinical trials when they had suddenly died and then left it at that. He was following Aaron Lalandusse’s instructions precisely: make your first post, then add others every two or three days. Watch it build.

Aaron Lalandusse was an unshaven, bespectacled, thirty-something, with a tangled mop of curly hair. He looked as if he’d slept in his clothes but his voice was deep and sonorous, counterposing the image of geeky adolescence with maturity and gravitas. He had looked with close scrutiny at Adam’s list of names and his other documentation making little popping noises with spittle on his lips as he did so.

“Mmm…Yes…” he said, then, “bloody hell.”

Adam had mentioned nothing about Philip Wang’s death, explaining that he had come across this list during his routine work at St Dot’s and, — worried about what it implied, had decided to have it checked out further.

“This is highly combustible stuff,” Lalandusse said. “I mean, if you’re wrong, then the litigation will be monstrous, unprecedented.”

Adam pointed to the cryptic annotations beside each name. “This is the handwriting of Dr Philip Wang, I believe, the late head of R and D at Calenture-Deutz. I don’t really know what they are.”

“I would say they’re dosages, times,” Lalandusse ventured. “But I’d need to do a bit of checking.” He held up the list. “This is a photocopy — I’d have to see the original. I can’t write anything without seeing that.”

“I can get it for you,” Adam said.

They had met, as agreed, in a small, dark, wood-panelled pub in Covent Garden. The blazing evening sun obliquely struck the pub’s engraved, frosted windows and made the rear snug bar where they were sitting seem so crepuscular that they might have been in a basement. A good place to hatch a conspiracy, Adam thought, as Lalandusse went to the bar to buy them two more bottles of beer.

Lalandusse had then told him about the potency and reach of the bloggers on Inpharmation.Com and had outlined the road ahead, as he saw it. First, set hares running on the internet and see what came back — perhaps someone who had worked on the de Vere wings in the other hospitals had some information. Or disgruntled or ex-Calenture-Deutz employees might want to contribute. At some stage the volume of the Chinese whispers of the internet rumour-mill would be such that Calenture-Deutz would have to issue a press release.

“You know the sort of thing,” Lalandusse said. “Complete outrage, irresponsible, disgraceful, reluctant to dignify malignant smears with a response, etcetera.”

“What then?”

“Well, then I can write my story in the Bulletin — precisely because it’s become a story.” He thought for a moment. “Perhaps we can break the habit of a lifetime and print a facsimile of your list.” He smiled with genuine enthusiasm, the boy in him overcoming the cynical journalist. “Then the shit really would hit the fan.”

Adam smiled as he logged out and exited the site. He was in a large internet café on the Edgware Road. Lalandusse had told him only to use large cafes with dozens of terminals and to keep changing café, and only to pay cash. “They’ll try and find you,” he had said. “You’ve no idea what’s at stake with a new drug like this. How much money.” He laughed. “They’ll want to kill you.” He stifled his laughter. “I’m only joking, don’t worry.”

Adam parked his scooter on the pavement, locking it to the railings, and then climbed over the fence into the triangle, pushing his way through the low branches and the bushes towards his clearing. It was late, almost eleven o’clock, and the rows of bulbs on the superstructure of Chelsea Bridge glowed brightly in the navy-blue night — four brilliant peaks, like the lights on a circus’s big top. He unearthed his cash-box and folded Philip Wang’s original list carefully before slipping it into his jacket pocket. He saw he had about £180 left from his original stash and decided to take it — the days of the triangle were over, he realised, now that he had re-entered society as Primo Belem. He stood up and looked around, thinking back to the weeks when this small clearing and its overarching trees and bushes had been all he could describe as his home. He wondered if he would ever come back — perhaps he would: on some nostalgic pilgrimage in the future.

He climbed back over the fence, smiling at this notion, and unlocked his helmet from its box on the rear of the scooter.

“Well, well, well, if it isn’t my old churchgoing chum, John 1603.”

Adam felt his heart jolt with pure shock and turned slowly to see Vincent Turpin step unsteadily from the shadows. He walked towards him, smiling.

“You have no idea how many nights I’ve spent down here at Chelsea Bridge, hoping to catch a sight of you. No idea…Night after fucking night.” He was close now and Adam could smell the alcohol on his breath. “Almost didn’t recognise you, mate, what with the hair all shaved down, like, different beard and that. Yeah, did a double take. That’s John, I said to myself. Sure as shit: John 1603. Remember that night we came down here, first time? You sort of ducked and dived, didn’t — want to let me know where you kipped down?…Well, you didn’t see me, but I saw you — hopping over the fence. Stuck in my mind, luckily.”

“Nice to see you, Vince,” Adam said. “But I’m in a bit of a hurry.”