Then, just as things seemed to be going great, something hard and heavy and sickeningly solid slammed into the side of my head and my feet went out from under me.
I tried to get up, only to catch a second glancing blow on the back of my neck that took what was left of the fight out of me. More exchanges of thunder, and a shrill, prolonged scream that didn’t go in through my deadened ears but took a more direct route to my brain – or maybe to my soul, if an exorcist has one of those.
It sounded like ‘Daddy’. The word that Abbie had tried to say as she faded out. The world of the dead has very peculiar acoustics.
I raged against the dying of the light: flailed in the dark looking for purchase – something for my fuddled wits to cling to.
I came up slowly. Came together, rather, because it felt like my mind was creeping timidly in from front, back and sides to coalesce as best it could in my skull, which had obviously been dented right out of shape.
I tried to stand and was hauled up onto my knees without ceremony, even before my eyes had kicked in properly. Blearily I saw a woman’s face cross my field of vision, flick a contemptuous glance down at me, and keep on going.
A moment later, as I rediscovered the miracle of depth perception, I saw Gary Coldwood heave into view. I opened my mouth to speak, then closed it again with a grunt as my forehead and spine lit up with seven shades of agony. I sagged, but was held.
‘There’s—’ I tried again, waving a vague, ineffectual hand towards where Peace ought to be. ‘– Injured – needs a doctor.’
‘You worried about the other guy, Fix?’ Coldwood sounded tired and disgusted. A constable appeared beside him with a pair of handcuffs dangling in his hand, which Coldwood took with a nod. ‘You don’t have to be. Looks like you won. The other guy’s dead.’
18
They took me to the Whittington Hospital on Highgate Hill, where I could look out of the window and see the sun setting over Karl Marx’s tomb if I wanted to depress myself even more. There’s a secure wing there that the Met use for terrorists they shoot up in the course of arrest: bars on the windows, plods on the door, and all the lumpy custard you can eat.
They thought I was in a worse way than I was, because the whack I’d taken to the side of my head had laid it open spectacularly – and, the scalp being full of shallow-lying blood vessels, I’d bled like a stuck pig. But when they put me in a wheelchair and took me for a spin down to the radiology department, it turned out there was no concussion worth talking about and no intracranial bleeding. Some people are just born lucky, I guess.
Back up on the secure ward, they wheeled me right past the door to my private room and parked me in the corridor a little further on, where I was given into the custody of two uniformed cops. I didn’t bother to try to get a conversation started: they’d have been under orders not to fraternise, and I wouldn’t have picked up anything worth knowing from them anyway.
Sitting there in one of those hospital gowns that leaves your arse hanging out, I replayed the events of the last few days with bleak self-hatred. Fanke had played me like a fiddle. Obviously he was already in place – having sidled into Pen’s comfort zone to keep an eye on Rafi, not on me. But when the shit hit the fan and the second instalment of their human sacrifice had floated away with the sweet morning dew, he improvised brilliantly.
Or was it more than just an accident that I’d never met him as Dylan Forster? Was he playing the angles even then, keeping me in reserve in case he needed a fall guy at a later stage in the proceedings?
Either way, he’d hired me to find Peace for two reasons, not one. The first was that he needed someone who knew London, and there was nobody on his squad who’d fit the bill. They might be hard as nails, but they couldn’t read the ground: they might take weeks to find Peace, and he needed the job done a whole lot quicker than that.
And the second reason was that he already had enough dead bodies on his hands to constitute a logistical problem. There were the Satanists whom Peace had gunned down at the sacrifice, which was bad enough: but there were also the Torringtons, stone-cold dead in suburbia, which was worse. Whether he’d killed Melanie himself, as I suspected, or she’d met her demise in some other way, the whole operation must have been starting to look both leakier and more high-profile than he would have liked. Why not bring in a third party – someone he could keep discreet tabs on, through Pen, without ever making direct contact himself – to carry the can if things got any worse than they already were?
Stitching me up had been on the agenda right from the start: right from before I’d ever met him.
A clatter of footsteps from further down the corridor roused me from these painful ruminations on the past into an even more painful present. DS Basquiat and her cheerful boy sidekick DC Fields were walking briskly up the corridor towards me. Basquiat had a handbag that looked like Prada slung over her shoulder and she was carrying a manila file with a white file-label that I couldn’t read. She nodded to the nearer of the two uniforms, who unlocked the door and held it open while the other one wheeled me inside.
The room was small and bare: just a table, a few chairs, and a wall-mounted shelf on which there was a battered-looking tape recorder. I recognised the set-up at once: I’ve been in police interview rooms before. Never one that had been designed as part of a hospital ward, but it made sense in the context.
Basquiat threw the file she was carrying down onto the table, hung her jacket – black, short-cut, very stylish – on the back of the chair and sat down. From her bag she took a pen, which she put down next to the file. Fields leaned against the wall, a few feet away from me. The plods withdrew, closing the door behind them.
‘Come on,’ Basquiat said to Fields, a little impatiently. ‘Lights, camera, action.’
He reached out and pressed the button on the tape recorder. ‘Whittington’s secure unit. Interview with Felix Castor,’ he said, in a declamatory voice. ‘Conducted by Detective Sergeant Basquiat with Detective Constable Fields in attendance.’ He glanced down at his watch and added the date and time.
‘I want a lawyer,’ I said. ‘I won’t be saying anything worth hearing until I get one.’
Basquiat raised an eyebrow. ‘You haven’t even been charged with anything yet,’ she said. ‘Wouldn’t you say that’s jumping the gun?’
‘Am I being charged with anything?’ I asked her.
‘Of course you are, Castor. You’re being charged with murder.’
‘Whose murder?’ It was a stupid question, but right then my need to know outweighed my sense of self-preservation.
‘Why?’ Fields sneered. ‘Are you losing count?’
Basquiat looked at him: not an angry look, but one that was prolonged until he looked away. The meaning was unambiguous: it was her interview, and his contributions weren’t welcome.
‘You were found in a burned-out building,’ she said, her gaze flicking back to me, ‘in the same room as a dead body. This corpse turned out to be a man known as Dennis Peace – a man whose profession appears to have been the same as yours. Exorcism. He’d been shot in the chest and abdomen. He also bore injuries from an earlier assault of some kind, but it was the chest shot that killed him, even before the stomach wound had a chance to. He choked to death on his own blood.’
I bowed my head. I’d hoped Peace might have made it somehow, but it had never seemed very likely. I felt a sour, attenuated grief for him, but the real gut-punch was Abbie. What had Fanke done with her? Had he found the locket? Of course he fucking had. He hadn’t crossed half London and murdered a man in cold blood just to walk away with the real job half-done. He had her. He had her soul. Thanks to me, he had everything he needed now to finish what he’d started.