Then I let her go, stand up, and walk out of the building without looking back. I don’t want to see the accusation in her gaze. I take a moment to get my bearings then take off down the high street, heading for the Thames. If I walk all night, I can be there by dawn.
IT’S A BITTER night. Clear sky, full moon. The sun’s not down for an hour before there’s frost on the ground. I walk down the Thameside path in the half-light, listening to the lap of the waves as the tide drags the river down, slowly exposing the rubble of a thousand demolished warehouses and the rotting timbers of ancient wharfs and jetties.
I went on a walking tour of the Thames once, when I was a medical student at Barts and The London. The guide was an ancient old woman, eighty if she was a day, yet sprightly and funny and with a deep booming voice that always reached me, even when I was at the edge of the crowd.
A hundred and fifty years ago the exposed mudflats of low tide London would be swarming with mudlarks, even at this time of night, she’d told us. Children between the ages of eight and fifteen would swarm down to the edge of the retreating water, sometimes wading hip deep in mud laced with fresh effluent and the occasional bloated corpse, scavenging for lost trinkets and dropped wallets. Mostly, though, they just found lumps of coal which had fallen off the barges that passed up and down the river. They’d collect the coal in sacks and then take it to sell to a local dealer. If they were lucky, they’d earn a penny a day.
150 years of progress, of making sure that children were protected from that kind of existence — in the West, at least — and yet five years after The Cull, I’d just left a hundred and thirty children who were living together in a crumbling building, scavenging for food and clothes, barely better off than mudlarks. Most of them would probably never go to school or university, never learn about history or geography or medicine.
Human nature tells me that there are sweatshops in England now. Somewhere, someone will have rounded up kids to use in makeshift factories. It’s inevitable. One day someone will let something slip at a market and we’ll follow whispers and rumours and track them down. I know with absolute certainty that if I survive this week, one day I’ll kick down the doors of an old warehouse and find a hundred emaciated, pallid children dressed in rags, making matches or shoelaces.
And I’ll free them, and feed them and clothe them and teach them.
Right now, we are clinging to the scraps of knowledge and technique left to us by the dead, but when the last person who was over 16 during The Culling Year dies, it will be these children who inherit the ruins. It’s vital we protect them. Give them a childhood and an education. If we don’t, we’ll be responsible for a new dark age.
I tell myself this, examine my motives for staying at St Mark’s, rehearse all the arguments I’ve used to justify what we’re doing, all the historical precedents that have spurred me on, all the smiles I’ve brought to the faces of children who would be dead without my intervention. But all of it, every laugh, every smile, just wilts when I think about the man I am walking towards. My grand mission to save a generation of lost kids was discarded, forgotten and irrelevant the instant I heard that name again.
I keep putting one foot in front of the other, forcing my way through the silent city, finally realising the true power of revenge.
IT’S STILL DARK when I reach the reconstructed Globe Theatre. I’m amazed to see it’s still intact, despite a thatched roof that’s practically an invitation to arson. I’m walking past when I catch an echo of a voice. Faint at first but then, as I pass the wrought iron gates, distinct. Someone is reciting Shakespeare from inside the theatre, presumably on the stage. I stand and listen for a moment, surprised by the sudden, unexpected evidence of life. It’s the only sound in the cold, calm night.
It’s a man, young by the sound of it, and he’s not following any play that I know. He skips from this to that — a comic monologue, a Hamlet soliloquy, a sonnet. After a few minutes, I sit on a bench and give myself over to this improbable voice. Was he an actor? If I enter the theatre, will I recognise him? “Oh, you played whatshisname, on The Bill!” Or is he a young man who’d just been accepted to RADA and was about to begin a career that would make him a star, standing alone on a dark stage in the middle of dead city, dreaming of a world where the sex lives of actors were the talk of every sitting room in the land?
He’s good. Emotive. Strong, clear voice. I feel a sudden ache in my chest, and I stifle a sob that seems to have come from nowhere. I sit and listen to King Lear’s death speech with tears pouring down my face. I have no idea why I’m crying, but I can’t help it. The tears just flow out of me.
And as his medley of Shakespeare’s greatest hits continues, this suddenly echoes from inside the wattle and daub walls:
“How couldst thou drain the lifeblood of the child,
To bid the father wipe his eyes withal,
And yet be seen to bear a woman’s face?
Women are soft, mild, pitiful, and flexible;
Thou stern, obdurate, flinty, rough, remorseless.
Bid’st thou me rage? Why, now thou hast thy wish.
Wouldst have me weep? Why, now thou hast thy will.
For raging wind blows up incessant showers,
And when the rage allays the rain begins.
These tears are my sweet Rutland’s obsequies,
And every drop cries vengeance for his death.”
I have no idea what play it’s from, but I hold my breath, transfixed, until it’s finished. The tears turn to ice on my cheeks. When the final syllable fades I release a long, slow breath and rise from my seat.
I walk on, gun in hand, leaving the anonymous actor behind to conjure the spirits of the dead in an empty auditorium.
I have a job to do.
LAMBETH BRIDGE IS gone. There’s just a spur of stone sticking out over the river, like a huge jagged diving board. I walk to the edge and look down into the water, rising now that the tide has turned, swirling and bubbling with the strength of the current. Fall in there, you wouldn’t last long.
A corpse floats past, face down.
The sun is just edging over the horizon as I walk past Victoria Tower Gardens and reach the Palace of Westminster, the seat of British democracy. I stand and gaze in astonishment for a moment at the gun towers and fences, the thin strip of what looks like bare earth between the wire enclosures, and the sign that says ‘minefield’.
On the grass at the centre of Parliament Square stand three crosses, with rotting corpses nailed to them. Some wag has scrawled INRI on the central spar of the middle crucifix. The victims hang there staring at the Houses of Parliament which now sport a huge red circle painted across the stonework.
The wrought iron fence that encloses the Big Ben end of the building has had gibbets attached to the stone corner posts. Only one is currently occupied, by what looks like a young girl. She is curled into a ball, naked and frozen. There are five heads stuck on to spikes along the length of the fence.
A bullet pings off the tarmac at my feet. I hear a high pitched laugh.
“You only get one warning shot, darling,” shouts the gunman who’s just appeared in the nearest watchtower. “And that’s just coz you’re pretty. Normally I just shoot people dead. Saving bullets, you see. Every slug gotta kill. Waste not, want not and all that.”
“I want to talk to your boss,” I shout back.
“You want to die?”
“My name,” I yell, “is Doctor Kate Booker.” That name feels strange in my mouth again after so long. “I know Spider from before The Cull. Tell him I’d like a word.”