Authors: Gillian Slovo
âWe're holding him under suspicion of riotous assembly.'
âAny evidence of that?'
âNot so far, sir. But reports are that Garcant was everywhere on the first night. We've got a lot of CCTV footage to get through. We'll find him on it eventually.'
âRelease him.'
A flaring in Chahda's eyes. Was he going to refuse?
Bring it on, Joshua thought, bring it on. âAnd get somebody to apologise for the inconvenience.'
âIf you say so, sir,' came Chahda's reply.
âI do say so. They're angry enough in Rockham without us picking on their leaders.'
They were looping the same footage, so when he looked over Chahda's head, he was in time to see again the flash of light against the dipping score of police helmets. The loop seemed to be passing at double speed; soon he saw that raising of police arms. âDid we at least find our man?'
âI'm afraid not, sir.'
So the people of Rockham, who already had a grievance against the police, had witnessed such heavy-handed tactics and all with no result.
âWhat's the latest intel on the availability of guns in the area?'
âA small group of gang leaders are known to carry them, sir. We've picked them up as a precaution.'
More doors kicked in. In this case necessary, but still: âWe're going to have to pour full resources into the Lovelace tonight,' which meant that the rest of London would then be starved of them. âContact the TFC with a view to having some armed officers in reserve. Just in case.'
âAlready set in motion, sir.'
There was something menacing in this man despite his efficiency.
As soon as this emergency was over, Joshua was going to seriously consider getting rid of him. âIf this latest hits the Twitter-sphere, we'll be in for a rocky night. Issue an order city-wide and make sure it is properly distributed. Our aim is, and must be, to contain the trouble and not to stoke it up. No water cannon, no tear gas. Not without my express permission.'
âYes, sir. Anything else?'
âNot at this moment. The Home Secretary asked to be kept in touch with developments. I'll ring and let him know about this.'
And after that, he thought, I had better go and see a man about a Molotov.
8 p.m.
âI see, Commissioner.' Peter glanced at Patricia, who was listening on another receiver and writing down every word. âWhat happened to provoke it?'
As Commissioner Yares tediously went into the details behind this latest Rockham flare-up, Peter heard his mobile ringing. It was Frances's ringtone.
She had, he now remembered, previously called the office and asked that he call her back. âGet that, will you,' he mouthed at Patricia, who, bless her, stretched out for his mobile and spoke softly into it while continuing to note down what Joshua Yares was saying. Which at long last came to an end.
âThank you for keeping me informed, Commissioner. I trust your news, when we next speak, will be more positive.' Peter hung up. âThe man's a peacock. All that glamour display of his about policing by consent just hides that he is too lily-livered to stop trouble in its tracks. And now his men provoke a riot before it's even dark â and all for no reason that I can comprehend. He yawned and thought, if he had his way, Yares would soon be gone. âWhat did Frances want?'
âAll she would say was that it was urgent and that you need to come home.'
Could something have happened to Charlie? âYou sure she didn't say anything else?'
âOnly that you should come home.'
Couldn't be Charlie, then.
âDo you want me to call her and tell her when you'll be able to?'
âYes.' And then, âNo. On second thoughts, I better make the call myself. Hand me my mobile, will you?'
She gave it to him and, saying âI'll fetch some more ice', left the room.
For which he was grateful, it being easier to talk to Frances when he was on his own.
He dialled her phone. Engaged. He tried the home number. It rang and rang but nobody picked up. She must be busy on the mobile.
He'd try again in a few minutes; in the meantime, preparing for the impending interview had taken so much time, he now had an enormous amount to get through.
8.50 p.m.
The estate was quiet. Much quieter than she had ever heard it, especially so early in the night. Not that it was empty. If she stood on the balcony and looked down, she could see, through the fading light, knots of people gathered all around.
They weren't Lovelace residents; they were the police.
A group of them were guarding the community centre: as if it was the people of Rockham, rather than their own colleagues, who had broken into it. Another group was watching as a workman bricked up the building next door. And there were more as well, strolling about, not in the usual twos but in groups of five or six. Which didn't count the ones who were sitting, she'd heard, in the vans around the corner. Waiting. For something that, by the sounds of a burst of laughter that reached her ears, they might quite enjoy.
9 p.m.
Head down, knowing that it would soon be time to leave, Peter kept ploughing through his piles of paperwork.
He had tried Frances three or four times, but each time it had gone straight to answerphone. Couldn't be that urgent or else she would have found a way to get in touch. When she switched her phone back on, she would see how many times he'd tried to reach her. Still, a vague worry lurked, and it prompted him to bring to the surface other odd things he'd recently observed. The way he'd caught her frowning, for example, just the other morning, when she thought he wasn't looking, or the uncharacteristic recent lapses in her concentration. Not like her â she was usually so on the ball.
She couldn't know, could she?
No, of course she couldn't. Of course she didn't.
He picked up the mobile and tried again. Again without result.
Time for him to go and do the first of what would probably turn out to be a round of interviews. He packed papers into his box â he'd have to read them in the car â and yawned. He wasn't tired; he was nervous. Not about speaking to the press per se, but for this one interview that might turn out to be the most important of his life. He yawned again.
His mobile vibrated. A text.
From Frances and it read: âCome home.'
He dialled her mobile.
Straight to answerphone. Odd.
Another buzz. Another text: âCome home.'
What was she playing at?
He texted â he hated the form, made him feel so clumsy: âAm on the ten. See you after.'
To which he got an immediate response: âCome home. Now. Or else.'
9.25 p.m.
Or else what, he wondered, as they drew up outside the house.
âWait here,' he said to Patricia. âI won't be long.'
She nodded. âYou're all right. We can reach the studio in fifteen.'
Fifteen minutes should do it. Whatever
it
was. He stepped out of the car and stood a moment, looking around.
Night had finally covered an outlandish dusk, and now his street was dark and quiet, with only an occasional glimmer of light peaking through drawn curtains. As he walked towards his house, the shadows of trees loomed large. Despite an absence of wind, they seemed to be leaning in on him. Something not right: he could feel it. He looked at his house. It was dark.
As soon as he slipped his key into the lock, Patsy started barking and when he opened up, she kept on. âOut of my way.' He pushed her with his foot. This stopped her noise, although she persisted in sniffing at him as if he were a stranger. He called out, âDarling?'
No answer. He clicked on the hall light.
The door to the living room was open. He switched on the light. The room, he saw, was empty. Perhaps the snug? He walked to the end of the hall and opened the door to her snug: âDarling?' It too was quiet and dark. Through the window he could see the outline of unmoving shrubs. She wasn't in the garden. Not that he could see.
Upstairs then. He mounted the stairs. âHello? Frances? Where have you got to, darling?'
She wasn't in the bedroom. Or in any of the other rooms. She couldn't have gone out: if she had, one of their guards would have mentioned it. He had switched on every light he passed so that the house was now ablaze. He glanced at his watch. Seven minutes gone.
The only room he hadn't tried was the kitchen, because he had seen that it, too, was dark. Now he made his way back downstairs. She wasn't in the kitchen â of course she wasn't â but the door to the garden was open. He moved, in darkness, only to trip over something that turned out to be the dog. It yelped and got up. He could see its baleful yellow eyes staring up at him. âWhy are you always in the way?'
âShe's only ever in your way. She doesn't like you.'
He whirled round to find Frances seated at the table.
âWhat are you doing in the dark?'
âThinking.' She sounded eerily calm.
âYou didn't fancy the garden?'
âIt's no cooler there. And the air stinks of pollution.'
Something in her tone. âAre you all right, darling?'
âYou tell me.'
âI'm due to be interviewed on the ten,' he said. âIn fact,' a quick glance at his watch, âI need to go.'
âIf that's what you want to do, then go.' She sounded sweet. As sweet as toothache. âBut if you do,' she said, âdon't bother coming back.'
She knows, he thought. âWhat's this all about?'
âAbout?' Not only calm but almost serene as she picked up her phone and held it up. âIt's about this.'
She made no move to bring it to him, so, heart hammering, he went to her. When he took the phone, his fingers brushed hers. After she let go, he saw her wipe those fingers down her skirt. She does know, he thought. He glanced at the phone.
He was looking at a photo of him and Patricia.
âWhere did you get this?'
âIt was texted to my phone. Number Unknown. Signed “A Friend”. Clearly no friend of yours.'
He looked again. They were only standing together on a pavement. Side by side, yes, but they could have been talking business. âI see,' he said. âAnd?'
âScroll on.'
More of them, then. He swiped across the screen. It went black. âIt's gone.'
âOh, for God's sake, Peter.' She snatched the phone back. âCan't you do anything for yourself?' She pushed a few buttons and then, without yielding it to him, began to swipe through a series of photographs.
It was like watching his own execution, these pictures flicking past at Frances's command. He saw him and Patricia laughing. Him and Patricia, arms swinging as they walked through an entrance. The back of him and Patricia, his arm now going up as if to put it round her. The two of them standing close, his arm around hers as he said something in her ear.
He couldn't breathe. But had to.
He breathed.
He had imagined this, of course he had, but this was nothing like he had imagined it would be. That had involved his telling one or the other that it was over. When he had made up his mind. This fright was something other. A frozen thing that kept him from figuring out what he was going to say.
Buy time, he told himself, buy time. âWhat is it that you think is going on here?' Wondering, could she have more? More intimate than this?
âWhat I know is going on here,' Frances scrolled back to the first of the photos, âis . . .' she separated her fingers to magnify the first of the images before moving it down so he could see the name of the hotel that he and Patricia had last been in â. . . you and your mistress strolling side by side into a posh fuck-pad.'
The swear word was so out of place, coming as it did from her genteel mouth, he almost smiled. âShe's not my mistress.' If she had more incriminating photos, she would surely have said so. âAnd it's not a fuck-pad. It's a respectable hotel.'
âYou haven't forgotten, have you, Peter darling, that my father made me an expert at this sort of thing?'
She wasn't calm, he realised; she was enraged. He could feel it radiating off her as heat.
Her fury that theoretically should frighten him was having the opposite effect of making her seem strangely attractive. He pushed that to one side to say, âI am not your father. And, yes, as you can see, we were walking into a hotel. And, yes, we were discussing something confidential. No reason to leap to a filthy conclusion.'
âJust discussing? So where are your bodyguards?'
Not the time to tell her how splendid she looked. But he had to say something. Lie, he told himself, while sticking closely to the truth. Or at least as close to the truth as was possible. âIf you must know,' he said, âI was meeting Chahda.'
âWho?'
âAnil Chahda. Deputy Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police Service. I was trying to get him to dish the dirt on his boss. That's why I asked my protective officers to stay back. Couldn't have them knowing what I was up to.'
She blinked. A chink in her composure. He must capitalise on it.
âI'm convinced that the PM's great saint of a Commissioner has been a naughty boy,' he said. âAnd that Chahda's on the brink of spilling the beans.'
At which point, and he didn't know whether to be relieved or angry, the doorbell rang.
He glanced at his watch. Shit. It would soon be ten. âI'm sorry, darling.' The news would just have to push him back. âI must go and tell them . . .' he was already on his way, striding down the corridor and wrenching open the door.
Patricia. It would be her, wouldn't it? Coming to get him. When he had expressly instructed her to wait for him in the car.
âI'm busy,' he said.
âWe just got a message from Number 10. The PM's back. And he's going to do the news.'