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Authors: Mike Carey

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Opening my mind a little more this time, I met head-on the spirit that was waiting in the dark, and I was struck by the sheer
intensity of its rage. It was like scalding water filling the room, unseen and unfelt until now. The strength of it—the strength
of the will behind it—took me by surprise. None of the interactions I’d ever had with John had made me suspect that he could
be capable of that kind of ferocity. Matching it high for high, low for low, I let the music fall into the anger like a calving
iceberg and slowly, gradually, take away its power to hurt.

I lose track of time when I’m doing this stuff. Or maybe it’s fairer to say that time becomes one of the dimensions of the
music, and I can perceive it only as something that’s moving in my chest and under my fingers, flowing out into the pattern
I’m making. In any case, when I finally surfaced, I found that Carla was asleep next to me.

The geist wasn’t asleep, but it was quiescent. It wouldn’t be throwing any more beer bottles around for a while. I felt queasy
all over again as I thought about the contrast between the vaguely well-meaning, more or less ineffectual man I’d known for
the past fifteen years and this baleful ball of hate and wrath. Death changes you—in some cases, brings out the worst in you—but
that didn’t make this any easier to take. Particularly since I found myself wondering whether John Gittings might still be
alive if I’d taken his calls.

My internal logic checker kicked in on my side at that point. You can’t save someone from suicide if he’s serious about making
the effort. John had wanted and intended to die; that much had to be true. Even in New York City, where they’re reputed to
have those giant alligators in the sewers, people don’t casually take loaded shotguns into the toilet with them.

And if it was murder dressed up as suicide? But that really sounded like Mr. Paranoia dropping in for tea.

On paper, in theory, in the cold light of day, I had nothing to reproach myself with. But this was the dark night of John
Gittings’s soul, and I couldn’t let myself off the hook that easily.

I picked up my stuff and went into the bedroom, where I unrolled the sleeping bag on the stripped bed. There’s something cold
and unlovely about a bare mattress. I tried not to look at it as I unpacked the rest of my gear from a ragged-arsed overnight
bag that used to belong to Rafi.

Then I slipped off my shoes, sat back on the bed with my feet up, and finally peeled the layers of duct tape away from the
Sainsbury’s bag that John had squirreled away so carefully. The bag started to tear, and a few small items fell out before
I’d finished unwrapping it: a small key on a knotted shoelace and the torn back of a matchbook from someplace called the Reflections
Café Bar. That left one bulky, rectangular object.

From what Carla had already told me, I wasn’t expecting very much, but the biggest item in the bag was an object of such spectacular
banality that I felt a sense of bathos and letdown even as I pulled it clear of the plastic and stared at the cover. It was
an
A to Z of London
; one of the larger ones, spiral-bound.

I flexed it with my thumb and riffled through it. It had been marked up in black felt tip on almost every page—lines and circles
sketched in, in some cases scribbled out afterward, so that you mostly couldn’t see the features they were originally meant
to be indicating. At least one of them was a church.

And that was it. Not much to go on at first glance; not much to indicate what John had meant when he’d said this was one for
the books. Unless geographical gazetteers were the books he had in mind.

Further examination, though, showed that he’d used the
A to Z
as a notebook, too. The inside front and back covers and the blank spaces on the title and copyright pages were filled with
dense writing. It seemed to be lists of names, and the ones at the front of the book included a lot of people I actually knew—my
own name was there, along with Juliet’s, Carla’s, Bourbon Bryant’s, Reggie Tang’s. Some of them had been ticked off, others
not; some had been ticked, the ticks crossed through, and then ticked again.

Other names, set off in a different column, were new to me or stirred faint echoes in my mind that I couldn’t turn into meanings
right then. Silver. Cornell. Moulson. Lathwell. Richardson. Lambrianou. Hart.

The list inside the back cover seemed to be of places rather than people: Abney Park, Eastcote Lane, St. Andrew’s Old, St.
Andrew’s Gardens, Strayfield. They ran across five columns, written in a tiny, crabbed script; some of the names marked with
symbols, some circled in different-colored inks, some crossed out and then written in again over the top. I remembered Carla’s
description of John writing messages to himself and then tearing them up. It seemed as though he’d been doing more or less
the same thing here.

I flicked back and forth between the various lists, my eye drawn automatically to the parts that were easiest to read, avoiding
other stretches where the density of the crossing out and rewriting made individual words hard to decipher. Eventually, my
sight started to swim, and I gave it up.

I turned my attention to the key on its makeshift bootlace key ring. I looked at it with a certain degree of professional
interest, because breaking and entering has been a hobby of mine at various points in my life. It was small, hollow-barreled,
with the number 167 etched into the diamond-shaped bow end. It was a Lycett, the very distinctive product of that Midlands
locksmithing firm, though it didn’t bear the maker’s name. That was interesting: Lycett did a great many job lots in the eighties
and nineties, mostly for factories and offices, but very few of them were in London. A man with a lot of time on his hands
and a prurient curiosity could probably find the lock that this key fitted. But what would be the point if it turned out to
yield only a few more scribbled, near-illegible palimpsests like the one I’d just looked at?

I put the three items back in the eviscerated bag one by one, thinking that there must be some easier way of solving the John
Gittings conundrum. The matchbook cover, I noticed, had a string of figures written on the back in red ink. A credit card
number? No, only eleven digits, where a credit card would have sixteen. The first three digits were 832, so it didn’t look
like a phone number—but for the hell of it, even though it was well after midnight, I added a zero to the beginning and dialed
it. The shrill, sustained note that means “no connection” was all I got in response.

I stared at the number for a while longer, wondering if I was missing something obvious, but I was finding it hard to focus
through the fuzzy haze inside my head: long day, strong beer. This number would keep until the morning.

I put in one more phone call, this one to Nicky Heath. His name was in John’s
A to Z,
too, but that wasn’t why I called. Nicky’s a ferret, skilled in the digital extraction of information. If anyone could make
sense of John Gittings’s annotations, it was him. Also, being a dead man himself—of the zombie persuasion—he might empathize
with John’s current situation.

That done, I stripped to my boxers, pulled on a T-shirt by way of a pajama top, and crawled into the sleeping bag.

I was expecting to fall asleep right away, but the atmosphere of the place made it hard for me to let go of the day’s tensions.
My playing had created a zone of silence in the room, where usually, I’m surrounded by a low-level psychic buzz of unformed
energies. It was like the disconcerting hush you get when you’re sitting in the kitchen and the fridge stops humming, filling
your senses with an absence that’s somehow louder than the sound it replaced.

I thought about Alastair Barnard’s miserable death and Jan Hunter’s absolute conviction that her husband hadn’t been responsible
for it. Where was the hammer? Why had it been worth taking away from the scene of the crime, since the evidence against Doug
Hunter was already so strong? Maybe because it didn’t fit with the rest of the evidence; maybe because it had the wrong fingerprints
on it. In that case, it was either the real killer who’d waltzed off with it, or another someone had stepped in and swiped
it after the body was found and before the police got there. A pretty narrow window.

In either case, Coldwood was clearly way off the beam when he said that Hunter had taken it himself. Walking through the streets
of London with blood on his clothes, he’d attracted enough attention that people had stopped to watch him pass and then pointed
out to the police where he’d gone. It was inconceivable that he’d been carrying a claw hammer all that time and nobody had
noticed when and where he’d dropped it.

I dozed off at last, into the kind of fitful sleep where you’re sort of aware that time is passing and it’s passing slowly.
I had muddy, tedious dreams in which I was walking down long streets that I didn’t know, looking for a train station because
I had to go somewhere and time was running out. Night was coming on. If I missed the train, I’d be stuck here, and in the
dream, that seemed like a very bad option. I turned corners at random, sure that I’d see the station in the distance, but
each turning was either a blind alley or an avenue that stretched into the distance with no station in sight.

Then I passed a man sitting on the side of the road—in the same attitude, I guess, as Doug Hunter when the cops found him
and took him in. But this wasn’t Doug Hunter, a man I’d yet to meet. It was John Gittings.

I sat down next to him. It would have felt rude to just walk on by.

He gave me a look—more in sorrow than in anger, which came as something of a relief, considering his propensity for violence
on the spirit level. He was dressed in the shabby brown jacket and tan chinos he’d worn on the day of the Whipsnade Zoo debacle
the year before, when he’d taken his eye off the game during a tag-team exorcism and I’d come within an eighth of an inch
of having my head bitten off. It was the last time I’d seen him alive.

He showed me his hands, which were bloody. My subconscious mind was definitely raiding Doug Hunter’s story for narrative guidelines
here.

“Not much left of me now, Fix,” John said lugubriously. Psychologists tell us that you can’t really hear voices in dreams,
but this sounded like the John I remembered: as much vaguely comical self-pity as Morrissey, but John had played the drums
when he was ghostbusting, and no group he was in ever stayed together for very long, so in most respects, you’d have to say
he was more like Johnny Marr.

“No, mate,” I agreed. “You’ve seen better days, that’s for sure.”

Since it was my dream, I checked my pockets for booze. Nothing there but a sprig of silver birch. Okay, that was stuck up
on John’s door to keep the restless dead out. I felt almost ashamed. As dreams went, this was turning into something of a
busman’s holiday.

I offered John the silver birch ward. It was looking a little ragged now, the white thread that bound it starting to unravel,
but he didn’t seem to notice it. He shook his head, staring somberly at the gutter where a trickle of black water was running
along past us, detouring around the toes of his shoes. “Nobody wants to know, do they, Fix?”

“Wants to know what, John?” I asked.

“How the bastards killed me.”

I put the birch twig back in my pocket. “Umm—you killed yourself, John,” I said as tactfully as I could. “You didn’t take
any chances about it, either. You stuck a shotgun in your mouth and pulled the trigger. It took Carla two days to get your
brains off the walls.”

John looked up at me, his expression slightly reproachful. “I might not have had to,” he said, “if you ever picked up your
phone.”

I’d been expecting that one. You didn’t need to be Freud to know why I was dreaming about John Gittings while I was sleeping
in his bed with his dead body in the room next door. “Yeah, I’m sorry,” I said. “Really, really sorry. On the other hand,
you could have left a message that made some kind of sense. You never told me what was at stake, John. You never tried to
meet me halfway.”

He was rummaging in his pockets, patting his jacket, a distracted frown on his face. “I thought I could handle it,” he admitted.
“By the time I decided to bring someone else in on it, I was already in way over my head. I always was an arrogant sod, Fix.
Almost as bad as you. I think I was supposed to give you something.”

“The letter? I got it.”

“No, not the letter. The score. The final score, after the whistle blew.”

“The whistle?”

“Or the drums. I forget. It’s like a skeleton, Fix. The skeleton of a song.”

“Yeah, well, thanks for the thought, John. I guess I’ll live without it. What’s inscription night, by the way? It sounds like
something you’d get at the local bridge club.”

John sighed and stood up, very slowly, with great reluctance. There was a faint splash as he disturbed the water in the gutter,
the rippling aftereffects lasting longer than I would have expected. I looked up into his pleading hangdog face.

“I’ve got to go,” he said. “It’ll have to wait for another time. You won’t let them get me, will you, Fix? I can rely on you
for that much? Blow me away, if you have to. Play me a song and blow me out like a candle. I don’t mind. Just don’t let them
get me.”

I stood up, too, because the street was filling with water. The trickle in the gutter had grown into a flood while I wasn’t
looking, and it was already up to our knees. It was cold and completely opaque, like a rising tide of ink.

“Who, John?” I asked. “Who wants to get you?”

“The same ones as before,” he said with a helpless shrug. He stared into my eyes, his jaw tightening with fear. “Always the
same ones, again and again and again. That’s the point. Kill me if you have to, Fix. Better you than them, God knows.”

He took a few steps away from me out into the road. He stopped and looked off to the right and then to the left, as if unsure
which way to go, or maybe as if checking for traffic—you’ve got to keep your wits about you when you cross the road in London.
As if to underscore that point, he tripped and fell, vanishing into the water almost up to his shoulders. There was a hole
of some kind in the middle of the street. Roadwork, maybe. But it wasn’t roadwork, and I knew.

BOOK: Dead Men's Boots
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