“I went up to Camden police station but they said I have to wait until tomorrow. I told them there couldn’t be any mistake but they weren’t interested in listening to me, so I went down to the tube to check for myself.” Her voice had a soft country burr, Dorset perhaps.
“Come through. This is my kitchen but the others tend to turn up here for coffee. It’s not really fair because they have bigger bedrooms. There’s another kitchen upstairs but they use it as a storeroom. There’s a mountain bike in it no-one’s ever ridden. I’ve learned one thing: Never be the only woman in a household of men.” Ruby’s kitchen was overflowing with dirty crockery, newspapers, magazines and books. A heavy blue glass ashtray pinned down wayward paperwork. There was a faint smell of tobacco, as if someone had been rolling it from a pouch.
“Under normal circumstances I would have run back up here. I run everywhere. I finished the marathon last year. Not going to do it this time, though.” She rapped on the plastic cast.
“What happened?”
“I was training. Really stupid of me – I slipped off the kerb outside the house and fell badly. I didn’t even feel the bone break. I’m working out every day, trying to keep the muscles strong. It should be off soon. I didn’t leave details about Matt at the station so I suppose you’re going to take a statement now?”
“I’m sorry, I think we’re at cross-purposes. This is a routine enquiry about an accident.”
“You’re not here about Matthew Hillingdon?”
“No, a chap called Nikos Nicolau gave me your email address.”
“So you haven’t spoken to the police at Camden? That’s really weird.” Ruby shook the idea around in her head. “Well, it’s good you’re here.”
“Why?”
“Because Matt is missing – I reported him missing.”
“Ah – no, I’m not connected with that. I’m tracing a set of these things a girl called Cassie handed out at her bar.” He passed over the plastic sachet containing the sticker.
“But you must have known something. Matt has one of these things on his computer bag.”
“I think you’d better start from the beginning,” said May, sitting down.
“Matthew Hillingdon is a friend of mine. Well, maybe a bit more than a friend; I’ve been seeing him. He lives here.” She paced awkwardly to the window and back, unable to settle. “We study together at UCL. We were supposed to be meeting up last night, but he never showed.”
“And you went to the police?”
“As soon as he failed to appear. I know, I know, you’re going to say I was overreacting, that’s what they said, but I had my reasons. I haven’t heard from him since.”
“But if it was only last night…”
“He texted me just as he was entering King’s Cross station and said he’d be on the last train, okay? He’d been out drinking at some bar in Spitalfields.” She dug her phone from her pocket and showed him the message: At KX just made last train C U 2mins. The call register showed that the text was sent at 12:20 A.M. “He was probably pretty smashed.”
“What makes you say that?”
“Matt has a habit of texting me when he’s had too many, because if he calls I’ll hear him slurring his words, and he knows I don’t approve of him getting wasted when he’s got a lecture the next morning.”
“Does he get drunk a lot?”
“Yes, lately. He’s under a lot of pressure. He’s got money worries. And he’s finding the course difficult.”
“Did he tell you who he was drinking with?”
“No, one of his classmates, probably. But look at the time of the call. He always catches the tube, so he’d have come on the District & Circle Line, and changed onto the Piccadilly at King’s Cross. We both know that the last train goes at 12:24 A.M. I was waiting by the exit at the next stop, Russell Square. The train only takes two minutes, and came in at 12:26, but he wasn’t on it.”
“Maybe there’s another way out of the station.”
“No, I’ve waited there often enough; there’s only one exit and I was there, right at the barrier, as always.”
“Then he must have missed it.”
“He’d have walked down to me. It doesn’t take long.”
“He could have chosen not to catch the train for some reason.”
“In that case, why would he bother to text and tell me he’d be on it?”
“The London Underground is the most heavily monitored system in the world,” May answered. “There are some things we can do to establish where your friend went. But before I start that process, I need you to be absolutely certain about the facts.”
“If you knew me, Mr May, you’d know I’m certain.”
“One thing at a time. Tell me about the sticker.”
“I don’t know anything more. It was on his bag, that’s all. They’re from the Karma Bar. All the geeks have them. I said I wouldn’t call them geeks but it’s just that they hang out together so much and they never stop working.”
“And you also have one.” May pointed at the sticker on Ruby’s backpack.
Below them, the doorbell rang. “Excuse me for a moment,” said Ruby.
“Do you want me to get it? Your leg – ”
“I can manage.”
May walked over to the kitchen table and thumbed through a paperback. He heard the slam of the front door, followed by thumping footsteps on the stairs. The wild-haired Indian student who appeared in the doorway did not bother introducing himself. He was trying to prevent a fat stack of papers from sliding out of a plastic folder, which was splitting under several loose items of shopping. “Have you seen Theo?” the newcomer asked Ruby.
“I think he had a meeting with one of his tutors. Why on earth didn’t you get a bag?”
“I forgot. Don’t start. I don’t know what he’s bloody playing at. Did Matt leave me any money?”
“Matt didn’t turn up last night. I’m really upset, actually. Are you making toasted sandwiches?”
“You know I am. I don’t know why you always have to ask.” The boy stamped off up the stairs.
“That was Rajan,” Ruby explained to May. “He has the room above this one.” She did not seem pleased to see him.
“Who else lives here?” May asked. He had forgotten the peculiar atmosphere of urgency, languor and confusion that could be detected in student digs.
“Apart from Matt, there’s a guy called Toby Brooke, then there’s Nikos Nicolau and the guy you just saw, Rajan Sangeeta. Theo Fontvieille has the top floor because his rich parents own the building, and we pay his family the rent direct, so it gets kind of feudal around here just before rent day.”
“And you,” May reminded.
“They gave me the attic at first. I wanted to change rooms so I wouldn’t have to go up and down the stairs all the time, but of course I’m a mere girl, so my vote didn’t count until Theo stepped in and supported me. We have too many alpha males living under one roof. Sometimes the competitiveness drives me crazy.”
“Are you in the same field of studies?”
“Toby, Theo, Matt and Rajan are all taking social engineering together.”
“That sounds rather Nietzschean.”
“It’s a branch of urban planning; they’re happy to explain it to anyone who listens. Niko’s aiming for a degree in biochemistry. The rest of his family owns restaurants, and they’re very anxious to ensure that he passes. Theo’s in line to inherit his parents’ fortune and doesn’t have to study, so he’s just doing it for fun.”
“Why were you meeting Matthew Hillingdon at Russell Square tube?”
“We were going to go to the Horse Hospital. I mean, it’s not a horse hospital anymore, although it’s still got cobblestones and there are horse ramps inside. It’s a club, stays open until two. My leg was hurting like hell, but I wanted to spend some time with Matt. Have you got a cigarette?”
“I don’t smoke. So you’re at the same college.”
“I’m a second-year research student,
doing Bioinformatics.”
“I’m afraid I have no idea what that is.”
“Bioinformatics is mostly about searching databases for protein modelling and sequence alignment.”
“How long have you been seeing Mr Hillingdon?”
“He’s missing – you don’t really need to know about our private lives, do you?”
“No, but I might find something you haven’t thought of. Please.”
“Well, we’ve been dating about four months. He’s very sweet, a bit helpless. Probably needs a mother more than a girlfriend. He spends a lot of time at the Karma Bar. He specialises in the analysis of pedestrian traffic flow in urban areas. He’s very goal-oriented, works long hours.”
“And sometimes forgets about meeting you?” added May, gently.
“It’s happened before. But not this time, I’m sure of it. When I heard from him, he was definitely catching that train.” She checked her watch. “I’m due at a class.”
“I’ll walk down with you.”
The sound of The Avalanches playing over the roar of an engine outside sent Ruby to the landing window. “Here’s another one,” she told May. “Theo’s probably the richest guy in the whole of UCL. His father owns, like, half of Hertfordshire or something.”
“That would explain the car,” said May, impressed. Theo Fontvieille was driving a new red Porsche Carrera, a beacon of conspicuous consumption branded with the licence plate THEO 1. He was unfolding himself from the driver’s seat as May arrived back on the street.
“Theo, this is John May. He’s from – ”
“The Peculiar Crimes Unit,” May explained, holding out his hand. “We’ve met.”
“I thought you were a little too old to be a foot soldier. Peculiar Crimes Unit? What’s that?” The surname might have been French, but he had no trace of an accent. Although he shook hands, Fontvieille was clearly keen to get inside.
“It’s a specialist detection unit.”
“I don’t understand. Why are you here? Ruby, what have you been up to?” Although he could have been no older than twenty-one, Fontvieille had the patrician air of someone mature, confident and secure in his wealth. Tanned and moisturised, his long black hair sleekly groomed, he was dressed in a grey hooded top and jeans too well cut to be confused with the kind generally worn on the street. His clothes were bookended with a red silk scarf and red leather trainers that perfectly matched his car. He might have been a model or a city executive, except that there was a discordant note in his appearance that May couldn’t nail down.
“This young lady has lost a friend,” he said.
“What’s he talking about? Ruby, who have you lost?”
“Matt’s been missing since last night.”
“You know he doesn’t always come home.”
“He was supposed to be with me.” She was clearly uncomfortable arguing about a mutual friend in front of May.
“You’ve got to give the guy a bit of room to manoeuver, he’s really stressed out at the moment.”
“That’s easy for you to say, Theo, you never get worried about anything. You don’t have to worry.” It sounded like a put-down. She’s wrong, thought May, who had pinpointed what was bothering him. Theo Fontvieille looked as if he had not enjoyed a good night’s sleep in a week. Beneath the young man’s smooth tan were fault lines and shadows.
“I’ve got to get going,” said Theo. “I’m meeting Rajan, running late. Is he up in his room?”
“God, you guys hang out together every night – don’t you ever get tired of each other’s company?” She sounded jealous.
“Ask me in five years’ time, when we’re running the country. Nice to meet you again, Mr May – and Ruby, when you find Matt tell him he owes me fifty quid.” Theo swung a smart red leather case onto his shoulder and bounded up the stairs.
“Not the bookish type?” May suggested to Ruby.
“I’m sure he only attends UCL to annoy the rest of us, he makes it all seem so easy. He’ll go to an all-night party, then come back and knock out a paper that will have his lecturers mooning over him for weeks.”
“No Karma Bar logo,” May noted.
“Theo wouldn’t be seen dead sticking a cheap club advert on his fine Italian leather. I fear our common ways don’t appeal to him.” She hates him, realised May. Just because of his money, or is there something else? Perhaps that’s not hatred in her eyes, but something quite the opposite.
“All right,” he told her, “I’ll cut a deal with you. Keep your eyes open for any more of these stickers, and I’ll see if I can get you some information on Mr Hillingdon’s whereabouts today, to save you waiting for the regular police.”
“You could do that? I’d be super grateful. I wouldn’t have gone to the police if I wasn’t worried.” Ruby shook his hand. “He has – a history – of being found in unlikely places, rather the worse for wear.”
It had just begun to rain. Strange, thought May as he walked away along the glistening street, she showed little interest in why I had come to see her. She didn’t ask me anything. Presumably too preoccupied with the missing boyfriend. But then there’s the book…
He had seen a bright yellow paperback on her kitchen table, packed with bookmarks and Post-it notes. It had set him wondering if she had deliberately chosen to tell him lies.
May looked back up at the house, and thought he saw Ruby’s face at the rain-streaked second-floor window, staring blankly down at him. A moment later, it was gone.
∨ Off the Rails ∧
22
The Ghost System
Late on Wednesday morning, the two elderly detectives stood in their usual positions, side by side, leaning on the balustrade of Waterloo Bridge, looking into the heart of the city. The clouds moved like freighters, flat-bottomed and dark, laden with incoming cargoes of rain. Bryant had ill-advisedly washed his favourite trilby after venturing into snowdrifts in an earlier case, and its brim had lost all shape. With his hands stuffed in the voluminous pockets of his ratty tweed overcoat and the backs of his trouser bottoms touching the pavement, he appeared to be vanishing entirely inside his clothes. It seemed that a breeze might come along and blow what was left of this bag of rags into the river.
May, on the other hand, stood with his back erect in a smart navy blue Savile Row suit, his blue silk tie knotted over a freshly pressed shirt, his white cuffs studded with silver links. As rain began to fall once more, he unfurled a perfect black umbrella and held it over them. Whenever May felt that his life lacked order, he redressed the imbalance by sprucing up.
It had commonly been noted by their partners that anyone becoming involved with one had to accept the priority of the other. This fact had resulted in two lifetimes of dissatisfying romantic attachments, but could not be helped. To remove either would have been like cutting away a supporting vine, and would have created a sense of misfortune in both that no woman would have been able to forgive herself for.
“Sorry to drag you down here,” said Bryant. “Old habits die hard. I needed to come and do some thinking. I was going to try the Millennium Bridge but there are too many tourists.”
“That’s okay.” May leaned forward to watch a police launch chug under an arch. “Brigitte called late last night. She wants me to visit her in Paris.”
“I bet she was drunk.”
“She was, a bit.”
“I hope you told her you’re in the middle of an important investigation.”
“I said I’d go if we could close the case and stabilise the Unit. But we’re not getting anywhere fast, are we, and unless something breaks – ”
“It will. If we fail the Taylor woman we’ll have struck out twice in a row. There won’t be a third chance. How did you get on with your student?”
“She thought I’d come to visit her because she’d reported her boyfriend going missing,” May explained. “Reckons he disappeared at King’s Cross station early this morning.”
Bryant’s ears pricked up. “Strange coincid
ence.”
“Most of the other students in the house had the same altered sticker on their bags. And I saw something in her flat that bothered me.”
“Oh, snooping around, were you?”
“Hardly. It was on the kitchen table, in plain sight. A pocket guide to the haunted stations of the London Underground called Mind the Ghosts, with her name pencilled inside. It resonated a little too much with what she was saying. I swiped it. Here.” He pulled the dog-eared paperback from his pocket and passed it to Bryant. “Take a look at Chapter Six. She’s bookmarked a section about the ghost of a girl called Annie Evans.”
“This is more my territory than yours. I’m impressed you’d think of it.” Bryant dug out his reading glasses, wound them around his ears and found the passage. “Says here ‘a sickly child, imprisoned, starved and beaten to death by the woman who employed her, in the year of 1758’. I’m not entirely with you.”
“If you look at the next page, it explains that Annie Evans’s ghost is supposed to haunt Russell Square tube station between midnight and one A.M. The guards hear her running along the platform, but as soon as she boards a carriage she vanishes. The girl I saw, Ruby Cates, said she had been waiting at Russell Square for her boyfriend under identical circumstances.”
“So you think she read this and concocted the story?”
“I really don’t know what to think. I mean, what would she have to gain by doing so? And why bother to report him missing at all?”
“You know, you’re finally starting to think like me. Leave me the book and I’ll see if there’s anything you missed.”
“Be my guest.”
“Students,” Bryant said with a sigh. “They’re all so impatient to get on with their careers now. Why can’t they go back to smoking pot and talking rubbish like the good old days?”
Bryant & May 08; Off the Rails b&m-8 Page 13