âWoody!' screamed a voice from the far end of the room. âWhere the hell have you been?'
The question was rhetorical, Woody realised, because it was swiftly followed by a torrent of abuse. He heaved himself out of the chair and ambled over to the source of the noise, hoping that if he got close it'd cut down the decibels and reduce the embarrassment factor. Simpson was sitting back in his reclining chair with his expensively shod feet on the desk. The news editor spent twice as much on a pair of shoes as the paper paid its freelances for an eight-hour shift. They were well polished and gleamed under the overhead fluorescent lights and Woody looked down involuntarily at his own soaking wet, brown Hush Puppies. Woody began to explain but Simpson cut him off and told him that he should have been back hours ago and that he was to get the hell out of the building and not to bother coming back, that he'd got pissed on the job once too often and that there would be no more shifts for him on the paper. Woody could feel that he was being watched by everyone in the newsroom, and he could tell without looking around that more than half the voyeurs were grinning and enjoying his discomfort. His face reddened. He knew there was nothing he could do, he'd have to wait until Simpson had calmed down, maybe some time after Hell had frozen over, but he couldn't face the walk to the door, not with everyone staring at him. He opened his mouth to speak but Simpson waved him away and turned his back on him.
Woody stood there swaying for a few seconds and then with every ounce of control he could muster he slowly walked across the newsroom, his head held high and his eyes fixed on the purple door that led to the stairs and the street and the pub. There was only one thing he wanted, other than a double Bells, and that was to get out of the room with what little dignity he had left intact. He almost made it. He didn't notice the overflowing wastepaper bin and he crashed over it and sprawled against the door. He pushed the door but it wouldn't budge so he pushed harder and then he saw the sign that said âPull' and cruel laughter billowed around him as he eventually staggered out into the corridor.
He headed for the sanctuary of the King's Head but realised that there would be other reporters there, probably knocking back Perrier with the way his luck was going, so instead he walked to the Coach and Horses. They wouldn't cash cheques for him there, not since the bank had bounced one, but at least he wouldn't be laughed at.
It started to rain so he put up the collar of his coat and hunched his shoulders and he stuck close to the wall until he reached the pub. It was fairly busy with closing time fast approaching, but Woody knew that the landlord paid little attention to the licensing laws and that it would be many hours before the last customer left. He took off his coat and shook it before hanging it up by the fruit machine.
âEvening, Woody,' said the barman, a teenager whose name Woody couldn't remember. âUsual?'
Woody nodded and the barman poured a double Bells. A woman sitting on a stool looked at the Bells bottle and then up at Woody. She shuddered. âYou should try a real whisky,' she said. She was sitting next to a man in a brown leather jacket and they both had glasses of amber fluid in front of them. Woody reached for his glass and toasted them.
âThis will do me fine,' he said, and drained it in one.
âNow I'll have one of whatever they're having, and one each for them, too,' Woody said, mentally calculating how much he had in his wallet. They were drinking a ten-year-old malt the name of which Woody didn't recognise but it was smooth and mellow and warmed his chest. He fell into amiable conversation with the couple, talking about the weather, about Docklands, about the Government, anything but what he'd seen that evening.
They asked him what he did and he told them he was a journalist. Her name was Maggie and his was Ross, he sold fax machines and she worked for an insurance company.
As the level of whisky in the bottle dropped Woody began opening himself up to them, about how unhappy he was in his job and his plans for a new life in Los Angeles. An old pal of his had gone out to LA a couple of years ago and had set up an agency specialising in showbiz features and oddball stories for the tabloids, and he'd been pestering Woody to go out and join him.
âYou know, I think I will go,' Woody said, and they nodded in agreement and Maggie bought a round. Some time later the man slapped Woody on the back and said he had to go. He kissed Maggie on the cheek, a brotherly peck Woody noticed, and left. Woody was surprised as he'd assumed they were married or lovers, but Maggie laughed and said no, just friends. He slid on to the stool vacated by Ross, even though he generally preferred to stand while drinking. He was quite taken by Maggie. She had shoulder-length red hair and grey eyes, and the freckles of a teenager even though she must have been in her early thirties. She spoke with a faint Scottish burr and laughed a lot and told jokes dirtier than even Woody thought was proper.
âAre you serious about LA?' she asked, and Woody said he was. She told him that she had a friend living there, and that if he did go she'd put him in touch. She asked for his telephone number and he gave it to her. Eventually she said she had to go. Woody offered to walk her home but she thanked him and said no, she only lived around the corner. Woody shrugged and said goodbye, wondering how she'd react to a brotherly peck on the cheek from him but deciding against it. After she went he finished his whisky and left the pub in search of a black cab. Ten minutes later he was back for his raincoat. It wasn't his night.
Sergeant Fletcher's heart sank when he saw The Chinaman walking slowly up to his desk. He kept his eyes down on his paperwork and wished with all his heart that he'd go away. Nguyen Ngoc Minh coughed quietly. Sergeant Fletcher ignored him. Nguyen coughed again, louder this time. The policeman knew he could put it off no longer. He looked up and feigned surprise.
âMr Nguyen,' he said. âHow can I help you?' His fingers tensed around his ballpoint pen.
âSergeant Fletcher. Is there news about the bomb?' said Nguyen slowly. He stood in front of the desk, his head bowed and his fingers clasped together below his stomach. He was wearing the same clothes he'd worn on his four previous visits to the police station, brown woollen trousers, a blue and green work shirt and a thick quilted coat with a hood. His dark-brown boots were scuffed and worn and if Sergeant Fletcher hadn't known better he might have assumed that the man was a down-and-out looking for a warm cell for the night.
The policeman shook his head slowly. âI am afraid not, Mr Nguyen. But we are doing everything we can, believe me.'
The look in The Chinaman's eyes suggested that he did not believe the sergeant, but he smiled nevertheless, his face wrinkling into deep crevices. It was an ingratiating smile, an eager-to-please look that for some reason made the sergeant immediately feel guilty.
âDo you know who exploded the bomb?' Nguyen asked.
âAs it says in the papers, the IRA has claimed responsibility.'
âAnd do they know who in the IRA is responsible?'
âNo, Mr Nguyen, they do not.' Sergeant Fletcher fought to keep himself from snapping at The Chinaman, but it was hard, bloody hard, because every time he came and stood in front of the desk he asked the same questions with the same inane grin on his face. He realised that the man must be devastated, losing his wife and his daughter, and God knows Fletcher wanted to help, but there was nothing he could do. Nothing.
âHow long will it be, Sergeant Fletcher?' Nguyen asked quietly.
The policeman shook his head sadly. âI wish I knew,' he said.
âThe lady policeman who came to see me last week said that the men would be caught.'
âI am sure they will be.'
âShe said that they will be punished.'
The silly cow. Fletcher wished she'd kept her mouth shut and not raised The Chinaman's hopes. He made a mental note to find out who she was and give her a piece of his mind.
âI am sure that when they are caught they will be punished, Mr Nguyen,' agreed Sergeant Fletcher.
Nguyen began wringing his hands as if washing them. âWhen will that be, Sergeant Fletcher?' The smiled widened, the lips stretched tight across his yellowing teeth.
It was a nervous smile, Fletcher realised. The policeman put his palms down on the desk. âI do not know. I simply do not know.'
âI know you and your men are doing their best. I know they want to catch the men who killed my family. But I wonder . . .' He left the sentence unfinished, his eyes fixed on Fletcher's face.
âYes?' said the sergeant.
âI wonder if there were any other policemen on the case. How do you say, specialists? Policemen who hunt the IRA. The terrorists.'
Fletcher suddenly felt the sky open and the sun beam down. He saw a way of getting The Chinaman off his back once and for all.
âThere are such policemen, Mr Nguyen. They are called the Anti-Terrorist Branch.'
âWhere do I find the Anti-Terrorist Branch?'
Fletcher found himself grinning. âMr Nguyen, stay right where you are. I'll go and write down their address and telephone number for you.'
Elliott Jephcott drove the white Rover off the main road and into the small cobbled mews. He switched off the radio and looked at his watch. It had just turned 8.30 a.m. and he didn't have to be in court until 11.00 a.m. He had plenty of time. He checked his hair in the driving mirror and then reached into the glove compartment for his breath-freshener aerosol and gave his mouth two minty squirts. He put the aerosol back and as he did he saw that a streetsweeper was watching him while he attacked the cobbles with a long-handled brush. Jephcott blushed like a schoolboy caught with a dirty magazine and was immediately angry with himself. A High Court Judge feeling guilty under the scrutiny of a roadsweeper in a filthy donkey jacket? Ridiculous, he thought. He locked the car and walked to the door of Erica's cottage. It opened just as he was reaching for the brass knocker.
âI heard the car,' she said. She looked ravishing, her blonde hair carefully arranged so that she gave the impression that she'd just got out of bed. She moved to the side to let him in and he smelt her perfume. It was the one he'd bought her last month and he was pleased that she'd worn it for him. She was wearing a purple blouse with a high collar and pockets over each breast, and a purple, green and pink flower-patterned skirt that reached halfway down her calves, and around her waist was a purple leather belt. On her left wrist was a thick gold bracelet and around her left ankle was a thin gold chain. He'd bought her the jewellery, too. And the Alfa Romeo outside. That had been a twenty-first birthday present. She was worth it, God she was worth it.
She closed the door and stood behind him, helping him to remove his jacket. She took it and put it on a hanger before putting it away in a cupboard by the front door.
âWhat time do you have to go?' she asked. He knew that she wasn't nagging, not the way his wife did when she asked the same question, she just wanted to know how much time they had together so that she could plan accordingly. He turned and smiled and slipped his arm around her waist.
âNot long enough,' he said and kissed her.
She opened her lips as their mouths met and he felt her soft tongue and heard her moan. She took him by the hand and led him upstairs. âLet's not waste any of it,' she said.
Outside in the mews, the roadsweeper worked carefully, pushing the litter and dust into small, neat piles before using his shovel to scoop it into the plastic bag on his cart. He whistled quietly as he worked, his breath forming white clouds in the cold morning air. The collar of his donkey jacket was turned up and he was wearing thick, woollen gloves. On his head was a blue bobble hat that had seen better days. He stood up and surveyed the area he'd cleaned and nodded to himself. He clipped the shovel to the side of his cart and moved it further down the mews, stopping next to the Rover. Out of the corner of his eye he saw the upstairs curtains being closed.
He began to sweep around the car, slowly and conscientiously, still whistling. He moved between the cart and the car and knelt down to unclip the shovel. As he did he took a metal box, about the size of a box of chocolates, from the rear of the cart and in a smooth motion slipped it up under the wheel-arch of the driver's side of the Rover. There were two large magnets on the box and they latched on to the metal of the car through the underseal and its coating of mud. There was a small chrome switch on one side of the box and he clicked it on as he pulled his hand away.
Inside the box were two batteries, a black plastic alarm clock with a digital display, a small aluminium tube, a tangle of different coloured wires and five pounds of pale-brown Semtex explosive in which was embedded a detonator. As the roadsweeper unclipped his shovel and carefully swept up a cigarette packet and a pile of dust, the clock began ticking off the seconds. The man was in no hurry. The clock was set for five minutes, but even when the time was up the bomb would not explode. The clock merely completed the circuit for the second switch, a mercury tilt-switch which acted as a motion sensor. The design prevented the device going off accidentally. It was one of The Bombmaker's favourite bombs, and one of the simplest. There were no booby traps because it was a small bomb and if it was discovered the bomb disposal experts would dump it into an armoured chest and take it away rather than try to deal with it on the spot.
The streetsweeper left the mews just as the five minutes were up. He left his cart a quarter of a mile away, along with the hat, the donkey jacket and the gloves. Fisher had planned everything down to the last detail. O'Reilly kept on walking until he saw a black cab. He hailed it and took it to Victoria Station where he waited for half an hour before catching another cab back to Wapping.