‘No, you don’t know how we feel.’ Ben Trask looked up at him, all emotion gone now from his face.
‘Anyway,’ Paxton continued, ‘I’d bathe if I were you. And right now.’
The Minister indicated the door. ‘Go on, then,’ he told Paxton. ‘Go and arrange . . . disposal. Do it now – and take a shower, too, if you feel it’s necessary – then report back to me.’
And after the telepath had left the room, past the gaping espers where they crowded the corridor: ‘Ben,’ said the Minister, ‘the killing has started. Right or wrong, like Paxton said, it’s started. And we both know it has to go on. So from now on I want you in charge of this thing. I want you to run the entire show, until it’s sorted out one way or the other.’
Trask stood up, leaned against the wall, looked at the Minister and thought: One way or the other? No, it can only be one way, for the other is unthinkable. Well, someone has to do it, and I’m as experienced as any of them. More than most. And at least if I’m running it I’ll know that that idiot Paxton won’t be doing any more damage.
In the old days it would have been Darcy, Ken Layard, Trevor Jordan and a handful of others. And Harry, of course. But this time they’d be hunting Harry himself, and that was different. And despite what Clarke had said, it looked as if they’d be hunting Jordan, too. And the girl, Penny Sanderson? Jesus, according to the file she was just a kid! But an undead kid.
‘All right?’ said the Minister.
And Trask sighed and answered with an almost imperceptible nod. Yes, it was all right. And Paxton could well have been right, too. If there had been something -anything at all – wrong with Darcy . . .
Trask looked at the girl, her bloodied hands and blouse. ‘Shower,’ he said, simply. ‘And make a good job of it.’ Then, when he and the Minister were alone, he said, ‘When Darcy’s been . . . burned, we have to scatter the ashes. Scatter them far and wide.’ He gave a small shudder. ‘For the fact is, Harry Keogh does things with ashes. And I really don’t think I ever want to see Darcy again. Not on his feet, anyway.’
9:40 a.m.
Harry Keogh had just finished examining the personnel files at Frigis Express’s Darlington depot when three things happened simultaneously. One: the depot clerk, whom Harry had lured from his tiny box of an office with a bogus telephone call, returned unexpectedly. Two: Harry felt a pang – almost a pain – of a sort he’d never experienced before, within his chest, as if someone had doused his heart with ice water. And three: the fading echo of an unrecognized cry bounced off his mind to ricochet into an unreachable metaphysical limbo of its own. And it seemed to the Necroscope that whatever its source, it was intended specifically for him: as if his name had been called from the gulf between life and death.
Deadspeak? But this had been different. Telepathy? Well, maybe. Or a cross between the two? That seemed more likely, and Harry remembered how his mother had described the feelings in her incorporeal heart when a pup called Paddy had been killed by a car on a Bonnyrig road.
So … had someone died? But who? And why had he cried out to Harry?
‘Who the fuck are you?’ demanded the burly, short-sleeved, red-headed clerk, as he herded Harry into the shadows of a dusty corner where the metal filing cabinet met the wall. He gaped at the former contents of the cabinet, now spilling across the floor.
Harry barely glanced at the man’s suspicious, mottled face and said, ‘Shh!’
‘Shh!?’ the other repeated him, disbelievingly. ‘You’ll get shh!, breaking in here! Now what’s the score?’
Harry was trying desperately to hang on to the diminishing ethereal echo of … a cry for help? Was that what it had been? ‘Look,’ he told the very untypical clerk, ‘be quiet a minute, will you?’ He tried to push by him.