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I was back at home before I managed to get anyone on the phone who had been involved in investigating the blinding of Justin Whitestone.

‘Terrible thing,’ said an old DI from New Scotland Yard. ‘Well-educated kid like that, never in any bother, and some little herbert takes his eyes out for looking at him the wrong way or spilling his drink or whatever it was. They don’t need an excuse, do they? Yeah, I remember the case.’

‘Back up a minute,’ I said. ‘This is not an ongoing investigation?’

The DI sighed down the line.

‘What can we do? Everyone’s scared of the Dog Town Boys – and when I say everyone, I mean everyone in about a square mile of the council estates behinds King’s Cross.’

‘But this is one of our own,’ I said. ‘The boy is the son of my DCI at West End Central.’

‘I know whose son he is,’ said the DI from New Scotland Yard, the first frost coming into his voice. ‘But the boy didn’t see who glassed him – or so he says. And nobody in the club knows who did it – or so they say. There’s not a lot we can do.’ Now there was even more frost. ‘And if it was West End Central running the investigation – there’s bugger all you’d be able to do.’

I stared out the window. The dome of St Paul’s bone-white in the moonlight, the party people rolling down Charterhouse Street, the lights of the meat market coming on for the long night shift.

‘I know you did your best,’ I said. ‘It’s just hard to believe that nobody gets lifted for such a serious assault.’

The DI softened.

‘It’s rotten, I know. But even if we lifted one of these little gangsters from the Dog Town Boys, it’s not going to make the kid see again, is it? What can you do, eh? Sometimes the guilty just walk away.’

‘And there was never a lead?’

I heard him hesitate. ‘There was a girl. A young woman. From Hungary. Worked in one of those big Islington squares looking after kiddies of people who work in the City. A nanny. A nice Islington nanny called – let’s see – Margit Mester. Twenty-two. Lovely girl. When we went in that first night, stopped them all leaving and tried to have a word, I spoke to Margit Mester and she pointed out a local lad called Trey N’Dou.’

He spelled it for me.

‘You know this Trey?’ I said.

‘Yeah, Trey N’Dou is the leader of the Dog Town Boys.’

I let that sink in. ‘So what happened to your Hungarian witness, Margit Mester?’

I could already guess the answer.

‘We brought her in for a line-up that included Trey and she didn’t recognise him. Couldn’t place him at the scene. It was noisy, confusing, upsetting. The usual bullshit when a witness gets cold feet.’

‘Can I talk to Margit Mester?’

‘If you go to Budapest.’

‘She went home?’

‘Couldn’t get there fast enough when she twigged who she was pointing a finger at.’

Jackson came out of his room and crossed the loft. At the door, he raised his hand in salute and gave me his gap-toothed grin and pointed at the market. He was off to work. I lifted my hand – goodbye – and he slipped out.

‘The big problem for us was that we didn’t have CCTV,’ said the DI, warming to his theme of the guilty going unpunished. ‘You know the Met solves nearly one hundred murders every year with CCTV images? There are six million CCTV cameras in this country – one for every ten people – but not enough to stop every villain.’

Below me I could see Jackson walking towards Smithfield. But he did not go inside. He turned right and began walking towards Holborn Circus.

‘And there’s no CCTV cameras in toilets,’ I said. ‘Although they have them everywhere else, don’t they?’

‘I’m not allowed to disclose an image of a patient without their written consent,’ said the security officer at the Whittington Hospital.

‘I’m not looking for an image of a patient,’ I said. ‘I want to know who visited him.’

We were in the hospital’s security bunker. It was a darkened room with no natural light where four large screens each showed a grid revealing nine CCTV images, everything from the car park to the maternity ward, the A&E department to the main foyer.

‘How far can you go back?’ I said.

‘I can go back a month,’ the security officer said. ‘That’s how long we store the images.’ The grid of images was constantly changing on the large screens. ‘We’ve got one hundred and fifty cameras – pretty standard for a hospital like the Whittington – and when bad things happen, like a sexual assault on a mixed ward, or a baby abduction on the maternity ward, or the assaults on our staff that happen every drunken weekend of the year – they usually get reported immediately. What we looking for?’

‘Do you have images from the Critical Care Unit?’

He hit some buttons.

‘Waiting room, nurses’ station, entrance to the CCU – you need a card to get beyond the door. Nobody just wanders in.’

‘Let’s have a look at the nurses’ station.’ I thought about it. ‘Let’s start with weekend nights.’

The security officer went back to a Saturday night at the start of the month and found what I was looking for almost immediately.

‘Stop it there,’ I said.

Jackson Rose was on the CCTV.

He was holding a bouquet of flowers and smiling at a pretty Filipina nurse as if the flowers might possibly be for her as he walked past the nurses’ station on his way to visit an old soldier in a coma.

*  *  *

You see London’s homeless at night.

In the day they are invisible, or at least hard to tell from the people with homes. But at night they are revealed and there are places – pathetically few in a wealthy city of ten million souls – where they go to be fed.

One of those places is Waterloo. Under the arches where trains roar above your head, arches that are black with the fumes of today and the fog of long ago.

On this warm summer evening Jackson Rose stood at the back of a white van with a few other volunteers and spooned heaps of Phad Thai noodles on paper plates for men and women of all ages, all races, although many of them wore the rags of what had once been military uniforms.

I waited by the side of the white van, declining a nice old posh lady’s offer of a cup of tea and ‘some of Jackson’s wonderful noodles’. He was trying to serve everyone, but new people kept arriving so in the end he handed over to the nice old posh lady and we walked beyond the arches until the noise of the trains receded and conversation was possible.

‘You quit your job at Smithfield,’ I said. It wasn’t a question.

‘This is more fulfilling,’ he said. ‘You still get your rent money, don’t you?’

‘You think I give a toss about rent money?’

He nodded at the men and women waiting in line for his noodles.

‘A lot of them served. Iraq. Afghanistan. And Northern Ireland and the Falklands, some of the older ones.’

‘Why didn’t you tell me that you visited Bert Page?’

‘Why would I?’

‘Because you know exactly what I’m investigating. You know Darren Donovan put Bert in that coma. You know I’m out there looking for whoever topped Darren Donovan.’

Jackson glanced back at the van where the queue for noodles was growing.

‘Ah, the late Darren Donovan. You seem more concerned about this dead junkie than you do about the old man he ruined.’

‘Look – I can understand why you’d be moved by Bert Page.’

He shook his head. ‘Moved? Is that what you think I am, Max? Moved?’

‘Call it what you want. I understand why you would care, OK? What I don’t understand is why you wouldn’t think to tell me.’

‘Why should I? You already look at me sideways.’

‘I don’t mean to look at you sideways, Jackson.’

He laughed. ‘Do you think I’m involved in any of this, Max? These vigilantes – the Hanging Club – you think I’m mixed up in it in some way?’