“Well, blow me for a game of soldiers . . .” Noah muttered.
The low-voiced exclamation brought Jenna around. “What is it?”
“An iron door! Locked tight as a drum.”
The low door had been set back into an alcove. Clearly, John Lachley had come from behind that door. Jenna tested it, searched for a lock, realized that without a key, they would never get in. The hinge-pins were on the inside, so they couldn’t even lift the door off. “What we need is a key.”
“We’ll have to make do with a lockpick,” Noah muttered. “I’ve cultivated the habit of carrying a set, during the past three years. With your father’s killers on our trail, we’ve occasionally needed a fast entrance into a hiding place. Fortunately,” the detective fished into a coat pocket, coming out with a set of burglar’s tools and crouching before the door, slipping them expertly into the keyhole, “Victorian locks are generally large, clumsy, and easy to open.” Marcus held the candle close to the lock, giving Noah the best light available. The lockpicks scraped and scratched inside the iron door, then something grated and clicked.
“Got it!”
The sudden silence was thick with tension.
The heavy door swung noiselessly open, which spoke of constant oiling and maintenance in this damp environment. Surprisingly, the room beyond was not dark. Gas jets in the floor lit a scene from someone’s private version of hell. Jenna’s skin crawled as she stepped across the threshold, following Noah. She choked the instant she was inside. The sickly odor of rotting meat struck her like a physical blow. The stench permeated the air, foul and thick. When she saw what lay on the floor, Jenna realized with a shock of horror what the stink actually was.