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Pack Animals

Page 20

by Peter Anghelides


  ‘Was he angry about missing the match?’ asked Ianto.

  ‘Angrier that Banana got pissed in the City Arms and had to be carried home.’

  Jack hung back quietly, unnoticed. He enjoyed the easy confidence that his team had together, friendship and trust forged in combat against whatever the Rift could throw at them. Sometimes he just liked to watch them like this, so proud of their achievements.

  He left them in the Hub celebrating, and slipped away for his appointment in town. David Brigstocke was already sitting at a table in the window of Casa Celi when Jack arrived.

  ‘My first instinct was that this would be a trick.’ Brigstocke tried to sound nonchalant, but Jack could practically hear his heart hammering the inside of his tweed jacket. Did the guy have nothing else in his wardrobe? ‘Are you humouring me, Jack?’

  Jack pushed aside a red napkin containing cutlery so that he could lean on the table. ‘Stand you up? Never.’

  Brigstocke put his hand into his jacket pocket.

  ‘No recording, please,’ said Jack.

  ‘Would there be any point?’

  Jack shook his head very slightly. ‘But tonight, I’m trusting you. Let’s just talk.’

  Brigstocke brought his hand back out again, and folded it over the other on the metal table. ‘I notice that you walked here.’

  ‘Exercise is how I retain these irresistible good looks.’

  ‘Something more than that, I think.’ Brigstocke’s eyes glittered. ‘Your foot’s completely healed. Impossibly fast, wouldn’t you say? And as for the injuries you sustained in the Stadium…’

  Jack beckoned the waiter over and ordered a glass of iced water for himself and a Morreti beer for Brigstocke.

  ‘Captain Hark-a-ness!’ declared the waiter. ‘And-a what-a else can I get-a for you?’

  Jack grinned and sent him on his way. He knew that Enrico Celi was a Welsh Italian with a natural South Wales accent. ‘Save it for the punters, Rico,’ he laughed.

  Rico winked, and returned to a large table at the rear of the café. A small group of Italians from the international were trying to enjoy themselves. Depending on the result, Rico had been planning either a celebration or a wake, but the match postponement had dampened enthusiasm. A smaller number had turned up than he’d expected. Jack studied them across the room as they gazed sullenly at their gnocchi. All of them had the dark hair and tan that made even the meanest of features look attractive. Well, compared to the Welsh anyway, thought Jack as one drunk hammered on the front window while staggering past.

  Which brought his attention back to Brigstocke.

  ‘I saw that one of its heads seemed to have had a fatal wound,’ Brigstocke quoted, ‘but that this deadly injury had healed and the whole world had marvelled and followed the beast.’

  ‘Beast?’ smiled Jack. ‘I’ve been called that before.’

  Brigstocke leaned closer. ‘It’s from the Bible. In the church this morning, do you remember? You’re not a beast, Jack. But you’re something more than human.’

  Jack sipped his water and said nothing.

  ‘And I’ve seen you and your team in action today. Properly, I mean. Saving all those people. And so much more. I hope I helped.’

  Jack thought about the unicorn. ‘More than you know.’

  ‘What will all those people know about this?’

  ‘Not much,’ admitted Jack. The rest of the Torchwood team had swung into action in the Stadium aftermath. The football players got Retcon added to their team-room drinks. And the recuperating TV crews and stewards received particular treatment from a special ambulance crew made up of Ianto, Gwen and Owen.

  Brigstocke wasn’t convinced. ‘How do you explain the wreck of the Stadium?’

  ‘Nasty bit of vandalism,’ suggested Jack. ‘Freak winds.’

  ‘And that light show in the night sky?’

  ‘Good idea,’ smiled Jack. ‘Light show. Hadn’t thought of that.’

  Brigstocke scowled. ‘You’re just giving them a pack of lies.’

  ‘People want to believe it,’ Jack said. ‘They wouldn’t believe the truth. There’s no point having the facts if you can’t process them and stay sane.’ He contemplated the water in his glass as he swirled it around. ‘Knowledge isn’t the same as wisdom.’

  ‘Why? What’s the difference?’

  Jack smiled. ‘Knowledge is when you can tell that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is when you leave it out of a fruit salad.’

  The journalist blinked slowly, unsure about this.

  ‘I know you want to join Torchwood.’ Jack was pleased to see that Brigstocke’s pupils dilated at this. ‘But would that be wise?’

  Brigstocke clearly took this as encouragement. ‘I want to be a proper part of it. Not just because I’m chasing down what happened to Rhodri—’

  ‘But because you got a taste of it today, yeah.’ Jack looked out through the café window, into the evening. The pavement tables were occupied by a hardy bunch of inveterate smokers, huddled against the cold, suffering for their addiction. ‘Torchwood work hard to protect these people. And just as hard to prevent them knowing they’re being protected. We can’t always save everyone.’ He stared back at Brigstocke. ‘We couldn’t save Rhodri.’

  And Jack explained how Brigstocke’s friend had been a victim of a Weevil attack. Who Torchwood were. Why they’d covered up the death. Brigstocke seemed to relax into his seat, as though the revelations had confirmed everything he’d always believed. To conclude his explanation, Jack stuck his leg out beside the table and performed an ankle rotation with his completely healed foot.

  ‘Do you still want to join Torchwood?’

  Brigstocke was good. He gave the impression that he was thinking carefully before he said: ‘Yes, Jack. Yes, I do.’

  ‘Your turn, David,’ Jack murmured. ‘Tell me what you already know. How you discovered it. Who told you.’

  Brigstocke did just that. Jack listened openly, uncritically, for nearly an hour while the Italian table cleared and Rico brought them more drinks. Sometimes Jack peered at things through the big glass window beside them – the straggling remnants of the international, staggering through the town centre and in danger of missing their last train home. Or giggling kids in lurid Halloween costumes, toting bags of booty from their trick-or-treating. But mostly he looked candidly into Brigstocke’s earnest, pleading eyes, gauging the journalist’s pain and passion.

  ‘OK,’ Jack concluded. He gulped down the dregs of his latest glass of water. ‘I’m gonna talk to the others.’

  The last of the Halloween kids brushed past the café window, squeaking the plastic tip of his devil’s pitchfork along the glass.

  Trick or treat, Jack thought.

  ‘Let me sleep on it, David. And I’ll contact you again tomorrow.’

  By then, the Retcon in the journalist’s last Morreti beer would have done the trick. David would forget he’d ever been interested in Torchwood. Jack knew it was so much easier to hide the truth than have to tell Brigstocke a pack of lies.

  Acknowledgements

  Albert DePetrillo, for the opportunity.

  Steve Tribe and Gary Russell, for knowledge and wisdom.

  James Goss and Phil Ford, for the company.

  Lee Binding, for the cover.

  Michael Stevens, Joe Lidster, John Barrowman and Anna Lea, for the audiobook of Another Life.

  Anne Summerfield, for always.

  Also available from BBC Books

  TORCHWOOD

  THE TWILIGHT STREETS

  Gary Russell

  ISBN 978 1 846 07439 4

  UK £6.99 US$11.99/$14.99 CDN

  There’s a part of the city that no one much goes to, a collection of rundown old houses and gloomy streets. No one stays there long, and no one can explain why – something’s not quite right there.

  Now the Council is renovating the district, and a new company is overseeing the work. There will be street parties and events to show off the newly gentrified
neighbourhood: clowns and face-painters for the kids, magicians for the adults – the street entertainers of Cardiff, out in force.

  None of this is Torchwood’s problem. Until Toshiko recognises the sponsor of the street parties: Bilis Manger.

  Now there is something for Torchwood to investigate. But Captain Jack Harkness has never been able to get into the area; it makes him physically ill to go near it. Without Jack’s help, Torchwood must face the darker side of urban Cardiff alone…

  Featuring Captain Jack Harkness as played by John Barrowman, with Gwen Cooper, Owen Harper, Toshiko Sato and Ianto Jones as played by Eve Myles, Burn Gorman, Naoki Mori and Gareth David-Lloyd, in the hit series created by Russell T Davies for BBC Television.

  Also available from BBC Books

  TORCHWOOD

  SKYPOINT

  Phil Ford

  ISBN 978 1 846 07575 9

  UK £6.99 US$11.99/$14.99 CDN

  ‘If you’re going to be anyone in Cardiff, you’re going to be at SkyPoint!’

  SkyPoint is the latest high-rise addition to the ever-developing Cardiff skyline. It’s the most high-tech, avantgarde apartment block in the city. And it’s where Rhys Williams is hoping to find a new home for himself and Gwen. Gwen’s more concerned by the money behind the tower block – Besnik Lucca, a name she knows from her days in uniform.

  When Torchwood discover that residents have been going missing from the tower block, one of the team gets her dream assignment. Soon SkyPoint’s latest newly married tenants are moving in. And Toshiko Sato finally gets to make a home with Owen Harper.

  Then something comes out of the wall…

  Featuring Captain Jack Harkness as played by John Barrowman, with Gwen Cooper, Owen Harper, Toshiko Sato and Ianto Jones as played by Eve Myles, Burn Gorman, Naoki Mori and Gareth David-Lloyd, in the hit series created by Russell T Davies for BBC Television.

  Also available from BBC Books

  TORCHWOOD

  ALMOST PERFECT

  James Goss

  ISBN 978 1 846 07573 5

  UK £6.99 US$11.99/$14.99 CDN

  Emma is 30, single and frankly desperate. She woke up this morning with nothing to look forward to but another evening of unsuccessful speed-dating. But now she has a new weapon in her quest for Mr Right. And it’s made her almost perfect.

  Gwen Cooper woke up this morning expecting the unexpected. As usual. She went to work and found a skeleton at a table for two and a colleague in a surprisingly glamorous dress. Perfect.

  Ianto Jones woke up this morning with no memory of last night. He went to work, where he caused amusement, suspicion and a little bit of jealousy. Because Ianto Jones woke up this morning in the body of a woman. And he’s looking just about perfect.

  Jack Harkness has always had his doubts about Perfection.

  Featuring Captain Jack Harkness as played by John Barrowman, with Gwen Cooper and Ianto Jones as played by Eve Myles and Gareth David-Lloyd, in the hit series created by Russell T Davies for BBC Television.

  Also available from BBC Books

  THE

  TORCHWOOD

  ARCHIVES

  ISBN 978 1 846 07459 2

  £14.99

  Separate from the Government

  Outside the police

  Beyond the United Nations…

  Founded by Queen Victoria in 1879, the Torchwood Institute has long battled against alien threats to the British Empire. The Torchwood Archives is an insider’s look into the secret world of this unique investigative team.

  In-depth background on personnel, case files on alien enemies of the Crown and descriptions of extra-terrestrial technology collected over the years will uncover more about the world of Torchwood than ever previously known, including some of the biggest mysteries surrounding the Rift in space and time running through Cardiff.

  Based on the hit series

  created by Russell T Davies

  for BBC Television.

 

 

 


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