Lockwood & Co. Book Three: The Hollow Boy (26 page)

BOOK: Lockwood & Co. Book Three: The Hollow Boy
11.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“And now we’re heroes together,” he said. “What an experience. What an excellent evening.”

He smiled at us; we smiled at him. Three crocodiles on a muddy shore could not have smiled at each other more eloquently or with such gleaming teeth. We stood waiting, the three of us, and a
moment later were engulfed by shrill inquiries and breathless congratulations.

I
n the aftermath of the carnival attack, certain things swiftly became clear. Other things did not.

Remarkably, only one person had incontrovertibly lost his life—the assailant killed at Mr. Rotwell’s hand. The body of the other, despite police (and relic-men) combing the Thames
shoreline the next day, was never found. Unlikely as it seemed, it was possible he had escaped.

Within minutes of the attack, the Strand and surrounding streets were sealed off, and the grand parade abandoned. Twelve people, eight from the crowd and four from the Fittes and Rotwell float,
had suffered ghost-touch. All were treated on site by medics traveling with the parade. Speed of response ensured that all of them pulled through—even the tweedy lady first enveloped by the
Visitor. She had been kept alive by an adrenaline injection administered on the spot by Holly Munro.

George had single-handedly subdued the original ghost. After surrounding it with iron, he had hunted across the platform till he found the splinters of broken glass that marked where the missile
had struck. There too he found a piece of jawbone, complete with two brown teeth. When this was wrapped in silver, the Visitor had vanished. Further exploration by other agents located five other
Sources scattered among the debris of the floats and street.

Penelope Fittes was uninjured. Steve Rotwell had sprained a wrist while helping his operatives subdue the second Visitor. Both leaders appeared in a photograph on the front cover of the
Times
the following day, Rotwell’s arm displayed prominently in a monogrammed sling.

Curiously enough, despite ending in complete disaster, the carnival—from the point of view of the authorities, at any rate—was a notable success. The shock of the attack seemed to
bring the people of London to their senses. Perhaps it was the very human nature of the assassination attempt. Perhaps it was outrage at the real physical danger Ms. Fittes and Mr. Rotwell had been
in. Present difficulties notwithstanding, they were icons, representatives of the noble firms that had done so much to keep the population safe for over fifty years. Whatever the answer, after that
night the Chelsea protests more or less evaporated. DEPRAC and the agencies were left to go about their business undisturbed.

One other immediate result of the events was a new celebrity status for Lockwood & Co. A photograph of Lockwood during the chase appeared on page three of the
Times
, and in several
other papers. He was caught mid-jump between two floats, his coat flying out behind him, his hair blowing back, his sword held so loosely in his hand it seemed he scarcely touched it. He was a
thing of light and shadow, fragile and dynamic like an airborne bird.

“That’s one I’m definitely putting in the album,” George said.

We sat in our living room, bottles of lemonade on the table, glasses in our hands. The fire was on; we had the curtains shut against the dying day. Piles of crumpled newspapers lay between us,
scrutinized and cast aside; it almost seemed like our old habits of mess and squalor were back again. Holly Munro had been too busy to worry about it. She’d been fielding calls all day. She
was with us now, our casebook open on her knee. Up on the cabinet, the skull in the ghost-jar, quiet and unnoticed, overlooked the happy scene.

“Oh, I shouldn’t bother really, George,” Lockwood said. He took a sip from his glass. “Though if you do, the one in the
Guardian
’s got the nicest
resolution. They don’t crop the coat like the
Times
does, either. Plus, you get a bit of Lucy’s knee as well.”

I snorted good-naturedly. My knee aside, I wasn’t in any of the published photos, but for once the papers
had
mentioned me by name. In fact, all of us got in. My action against
the assailants; George’s struggles with the ghost; Holly’s life-saving efforts with the syringe: all this had been noted and praised. But Lockwood, who had protected Ms. Penelope Fittes
at the crucial moment, was the one singled out for the highest commendation. Certain rich industrialists who had been on the beleaguered float were quoted as mentioning awards.

“We’ve had so much interest since last night,” Holly Munro said. “Requests for interviews, and many possible cases. All of them thanks to you.”

“Thanks to all of us,” George said.

“You know, it shouldn’t be just me in the picture,” Lockwood said reflectively. “It should be the whole team. Though I guess the shot wouldn’t be quite so dynamic.
We all did so well.”

“Yeeuch….”
That was the skull, its voice echoing faintly in my ears.
“How utterly nauseating. Pardon me while I quietly vomit over here.”

I glared at it over the heads of the others. As far as Holly Munro was concerned, the skull was a trapped ghost like any other. I couldn’t talk back to it, or even make rude gestures.
Silent glaring was my limit. But it’s hard to glare successfully at a skull.

“What’s with all the lovey-dovey stuff, Lucy?”
it whispered.
“You should be vaulting the coffee table and pouring your drink down Munro’s blouse. Look
at her, little Miss Prim and Perfect, taking center stage. You’re not standing for this. Go on, punch her! Kick her shins! Snatch off her shoes and throw them in the fire!”

“Will you just—” Everyone looked at me; I cleared my throat. “Will you all just raise a glass,” I said, “to our success? To Lockwood and Co.! To the
team!”

Everyone drank. Lockwood smiled at me. “Thanks, Luce. Nice one.”

It wasn’t quite the way he’d looked at me that moment during the chase, but it echoed it; warmth rushed through me. “So who was behind the attack?” I said, ignoring
extravagant gagging noises coming from the jar. “The papers don’t seem to have a clue.”

“Could be ghost-cults,” Lockwood suggested. “Some of the crankier ones actively resent all agents. They think we’re blocking messages from the beyond. But their usual
tack is angry leafleting, or making speeches at Hyde Park Corner on a Sunday. It’s quite a step up for them to try to assassinate Fittes and Rotwell.”

“Well, Fittes, anyway,” George said. “No one fired at Rotwell.”

“That’s because he’d already jumped down to tackle the ghosts, hadn’t he?” Lockwood said. “To be fair to Rotwell, he reacted quickly, much better than the
other adults—except our friend Sir Rupert, of course. The way Rotwell killed the terrorist was…Well, you clearly don’t mess with him.”

“Right,” I said. In the whirl of events I’d hardly registered it at the time, but Rotwell’s brutally efficient dispatching of the assassin had somehow stuck with me. I
shuddered at the memory. “Just another thought,” I said. “Could it have been Winkman? When George and I met him just before, he threatened some kind of attack.”

“Against
us
,” George said, “not everybody. No, this was way too upscale for Leopold. For starters, whoever it was had the capability of creating those
‘ghost-bombs.’ The dead man had one of the unexploded bulbs on him, Barnes was telling me. They’re quite sophisticated. Someone had to constrain those ghosts, fix their Sources in
the glass. It’s not amateur work.”

“Might have been bought,” I insisted. “Black market stuff.”

“Yeah, but staging the attack. Think of the organization required.”

“We just don’t know,” Lockwood said. “That’s the long and short of it. No one’s been able to identify the body yet. When that happens, we may get an idea. The
good thing is that Penelope Fittes’s life was saved, and few people were seriously hurt. True, Miss Wintergarden broke her leg in her fall, but she hardly counts, I feel. And we’ve
flushed
one
of our mysteries out into the open: we know a bit more about Sir Rupert Gale than we did before.”

Holly Munro had been making neat little notes in the casebook, no doubt planning every last upcoming detail of our lives. “He comes from a very rich and powerful family. If what you say
about him is true—”

“It
is
true,” I said.

“Then he’s not to be taken lightly.”

“Maybe not,” Lockwood said, “but if he’d wanted to act against us underhandedly, he’d have done it long before now. He’s someone who waits for the sporting
chance. We’ll settle accounts one day. Now—” He sat up, took his glass in hand. “I’d just like to make a final toast. We’ve all done well. But there’s one
person who I feel should be thanked for their very special contribution.”

His eyes met mine; I felt happiness run through me like syrup; even the tips of my toes felt warm and prickly. I was back in that moment during the chase. I
hadn’t
been
mistaken.

“Holly,” Lockwood went on, “if it wasn’t for you making the initial contact with Miss Wintergarden, we would not have been there at all last night. You gave us the
opportunity to be in the right place at the right time. Thank you, on behalf of all of us, for what you’re bringing to Lockwood and Co. You’ve done wonders in the office. I think one
day you’ll do wonders in the field.” He raised his glass; the lemonade glinted in the firelight. Holly Munro looked charmingly embarrassed. George clapped her on the back just as she
was about to take a sip, making her cough and gulp, also very charmingly. If it had been me, of course, I’ve have spurted my drink like a fizzy comet across the room. But it wasn’t
me.

On the cabinet opposite the skull in the jar grinned as I played slowly with the glass in my hand.

“Oh, I didn’t do anything,” Holly said, when she had recovered. “You’re the agents. I’m just the backroom player….But, as I say, we
have
had some
interesting requests this morning, if you want to see?”

And, what do you know, George and Lockwood did. Glasses in hand, they made immediate synchronized buttock shuffles across the sofa. Somewhere in my mind a gate slammed, a portcullis crashed
down. I rose slowly. “I’m going upstairs for a bit,” I said. “Just need a rest.”

Lockwood raised his hand. “Don’t blame you, Luce. You’re a star. See you later.”

“Yeah. See you.”

I left the room, shutting the door softly behind me. The hall was cool and full of bluish shade. It seemed soft and flat, echoing the blankness I felt, my detachment inside. The voices of the
others were muffled as I climbed the stairs.

The funny thing was, I still acknowledged the connection that Lockwood and I had made, the previous night, as we ran together side by side, and the rest of the world molded itself around us. It
had been real, I didn’t doubt it. But what I
did
doubt was Lockwood’s ability to sustain that connection in any meaningful way. When the excitement was over, he just snapped
back to his usual cool remove, keeping me at a distance. Well, that wasn’t good enough anymore. We were closer than he admitted, and I deserved…

What
did I deserve?

Information, at the very least.

And if he wouldn’t share it with me, I’d take it for myself.

On the landing, I didn’t hesitate. I went to the door, grasped the handle—so often seen, yet utterly unfamiliar in my hand—turned it, and walked right through. I closed the
door (first rule: never linger on a threshold) and leaned back against the iron bands that sealed the psychic resonance inside. My eyes were closed. I felt the thrum of the death-glow on my skin;
it ruffled through the roots of my hair.

How
strong
it was. You could feel her proximity.

Lockwood had said she’d never come back. But she was close. Close…The echo of the event that had occurred here still raged like cold fire.

What
had
occurred here?

I opened my eyes. Near dark. And in my haste and anger I hadn’t brought a flashlight.

I couldn’t put the light on (if it even worked), just in case someone saw it showing under the door. But it wasn’t quite dusk yet, and of course there was that pale, pale blaze
hanging above the mattress. I shuffled across the room, steering well clear of the bed, and pulled the curtains back.

Dust and dried lavender. It made me want to cough.

Balloons on the wallpaper, animals on the bulletin board: sad aspects of the departed girl. Curious decorations for a girl of fifteen, as if she’d clung to childhood. They’d been
relics of the past even before she’d gone. Blue-gray layers clung to the furniture and boxes, the piles of crates and lavender bouquets. So many boxes. It was only now that I realized how
much of the room was filled with them. This was where he kept it all, still near at hand, but out of sight and almost out of mind: the remnants of his family.

I didn’t want much. Just something. Something about the sister or the parents that would help me understand him.

He’d said, that time he’d brought us here, he’d said there were pictures in the dresser. I stepped around boxes, inched my way across; silent, silent as I could. They were
below me, somewhere downstairs.

Other books

Some Girls Bite by Chloe Neill
The Winner's Game by Kevin Alan Milne
Shadows of the Silver Screen by Edge, Christopher
Tenth Grade Bleeds by Heather Brewer
Calling On Fire (Book 1) by Stephanie Beavers
Micah's Island by Copell, Shari
Identity Unknown by Terri Reed
City of Promise by Beverly Swerling