Thursday 12th July 2018
Chapter 1
Steve Hunt swiped his Oyster card at the ticket barrier and doubled back on himself to head up the steps out of Tottenham Court Road Tube station, checking the time on his phone. According to Marissaās diary, her lunch date was at 1.30 p. m. in a restaurant called Verdiās; casual ItalianāSicilian dining apparently.
Heād googled it. It looked nice. And it was only a seven-minute walk from Tottenham Court Road, which gave him plenty of time to scope out whoever she was meeting and get over to the Irish embassy for this ridiculous presentation thing Eva had organised.
Marissa had said she was meeting Jacinta, a girl sheād been to uni with in Dublin, and who now was working for some energy company. Her employers might be interested in one of the homeless charities Marissa was involved with.
It hadnāt sounded quite right to Steve. Heād met Marissa just after sheād finished her last year of chemistry at Trinity College Dublin ā sheād taken the summer off and was waitressing in Marthaās Vineyard. Heād been working in New York for a tech start-up. Theyād got married on the beach, and when the job with Cybex had come up in London, theyād moved to the UK and heād found the picture-perfect family home in a leafy street in Highgate.
But he was pretty sure that this week was the first time sheād mentioned anyone called Jacinta.
Verdiās looked very cosy on Google Street View. It had a big window facing on to the quiet one-way street that linked Tottenham Court Road with Gower Street. Marissa always liked to know what was going on around her. He was pretty sure she would have booked a table near the window ā unless, of course, she didnāt want to be seen with āJacintaā, or whoever it was she was having lunch with.
Sheād been meeting someone, Steve had guessed from her diary entries, at least twice a week for the last twelve months. Not just for lunch; there were visits to museums, antiques fairs and all sorts of other weird shit in there, too. And then there were the weekends she went back to Ireland, to see her father and air out the family house ā not that her pop recognised her any more or had cared much about his daughters, even before his mind had started to go. And there was that time she went to Bristol for some sort of mindfulness weekend, and the refugee conference in Birmingham. The events were all real ā heād checked. And sheād been there; heād activated the āfind my phoneā function on her iPhone long ago. But he couldnāt be totally sure what sheād been doing when she was in each location.
Weaving through the crowd at the top of the station steps, Steve paused, glancing up at the Dominion Theatre, their latest show Bat Out of Hell emblazoned over the doorway. He half-smiled to himself.
Theyād been to a show at the Dominion almost their first weekend in London. He couldnāt even remember what it was ā that seemed like a lifetime ago now. Sheād been so excited to move here. Sheād said she found New York isolating, as if she didnāt fit. Here, sheād felt sheād know people, that she could build her life ⦠their life. Perhaps she should have got a job when they got married and first moved to New York, but he didnāt want her working. Heād found lots to keep her busy, introduced her to volunteering at the shelter, and her allowance was more than generous. There was no point in her being out of the house every day doing some dumb research job. Anything could happen.
Steve glanced at his phone again. He needed to get moving, there was a lot going on today ā and then heād found out about Marissaās lunch date ⦠Steve felt his phone vibrate in his hand. Reissās name appeared on the screen in a Facebook message.
Reports of shots fired in Wimbledon; steer clear.
Reiss had attached a blurry photo of a crowd looking panicked.
Steve paused outside the open doors of the store on the corner of New Oxford Street, his eyes on the screen, frowning. He ran his hand through his dark hair, changing screens, checking his social media accounts.
āYou all right there, mate?ā
One of the uniformed doormen appeared behind beside him. Steve grimaced and held up his phone.
āSomethingās happening in Wimbledon ā a terrorist shooting or something.ā
As he said it people around him turned to look, and he turned the phone to them. A voice behind him said, āCheck the hashtag #LondonAttack.ā
The security man pulled out his own phone.
āSomethingās going off. Look, thereās photos.ā
āItāll be packed, itās the womenās semis today.ā Steve heard a different voice behind him but didnāt turn to acknowledge the speaker. He scanned the hashtag on Twitter.
āThereās something happening in Trafalgar Square, too.ā Glancing up at the security man, Steve clicked through to the Metropolitan Police Twitter feed, reading out loud: āāUnsubstantiated reports of gunshots at Wimbledon Tennis Club and an explosion in Trafalgar Square. Both areas being evacuated. Keep calm and vigilant. āā He paused. āThey put āRun Hide Tellā at the end of every tweet. Youād wonder what they think youāre going to do.ā
āThey donāt want anyone hanging about and taking photos when these things are going down. Dudes think they can make money out of the news networks if they get video.ā Another voice by way of explanation.
The crowd around him was growing, their phones out, checking the hashtag, sharing the news. It was spreading it like a virus. Something was happening and it was gathering momentum.
Steve looked at the time on his phone and said to no one in particular, āChrist, I need to get going. Iāve a meeting. Iām going to walk ā reckon we need to stay out of the Underground.ā
The crowd around him had filled the broad entrance to the store. Other employees joined the group, everyone finding solidarity in the moment, in checking their phones. Suddenly the blaring of a siren cut through the roar of the traffic ā a police car, followed by two fire engines, heading down the Charing Cross Road. Steve felt the tension in the crowd go up a notch.
It was already 1.15.
Whatever was going on, he needed to get moving or he wouldnāt get to the embassy for Evaās presentation.
This could snarl up the traffic all over the city. And it sounded as if shit was happening all over the place. Heād no idea why Eva had chosen to do this today; it was a crazy news week between the football and Trumpās arrival. Normally everyone was focused on Wimbledon at this time of year, but it wasnāt even getting a look-in. The papers were still full of the boys in the Thai cave and the presidential balloon. It was almost as if she didnāt want any press, but then perhaps she was being smart; the business, education and technology journalists werenāt getting much out of the World Cup, and there were only so many articles they could run deriding the President of the United States of America. As Reiss was always saying, she wasnāt PR Director just because she had great tits.
Pushing out of the crowd, Steve didnāt wait for the lights as he crossed Tottenham Court Road. Pausing in the middle, he let a cab pass and then jogged across the road. On the other side he walked briskly, his blazer over his arm, his tie loose at his neck, the end lifted by his movement. He could feel the sweat starting to trickle down his back under the crisp cotton of his pale blue shirt.
Boy, it was hot.
The perfect day for terrorists to strike, when tempers were already fraying and people were so focused on their own issues, they werenāt likely to be vigilant. And they had picked locations where there were guaranteed to be crowds, where any activity would grab the headlines. It was the mixed doubles quarter-finals this afternoon in Wimbledon; the first game should have started by now, if the courts hadnāt been evacuated. Steve had played a bit of tennis in college but wasnāt interested enough to be paying Centre Court prices for tickets. Reiss, his right-hand man at Cybex, was all over it, though, made a point of taking clients at every opportunity. Which was why heād got stuck with doing this presentation. Today of all days.
Steve hurried on, the thoughts of spending the afternoon in some stuffy embassy making small-talk with even stuffier academics overshadowed by the much more immediate need to find out what was going on with Marissa. He felt his mouth dry, his stomach turning over with pent-up anxiety and tension.
Who was she meeting?
Heading down a side street towards the restaurant, Steve kept to the shaded side. Around him he could hear people talking, see them checking their phones. News of whatever was happening in Wimbledon and Trafalgar Square was spreading.
Verdiās was in the middle of a row of elegant shops towards the end of the road. Behind him, Steve heard another siren and glanced over his shoulder to see a squad car heading towards him, its lights flashing. A moment later it passed and, brake lights flashing, stopped at the end of the street.
The rear door swung open and immediately a tall dude in a blazer and chinos appeared, crossed the pavement and got in. Although he looked a good ten years older than Steve ā maybe forty-five ā Steve could tell from the way he moved that he was he was fit, and even from this distance, over six feet tall. Before the man had the door closed, the car was heading off towards Gower Street, its right indicator flashing as the sirens blared on.
Steve straightened his back, pulling himself up to his full five foot nine. He was fit, worked out three times a week, played squash with Reiss. He knew he looked good for his age, didnāt need to be wearing a jacket in this weather to look like he was someone.
As Steve arrived outside the restaurant he slowed so he could glance in, as if he was just passing. He saw Marissa immediately, her blonde hair swept up in a ponytail, a white halter-neck blouse emphasising her tan and hollowed-out collarbones. She was sitting on her own, nursing a glass of white wine about three tables in from the window. As he looked in, she looked up, catching his eye, her eyes opening wide, her smile surprised.
Sheād always been a good actress.
Chapter 2
Brioni braced herself against the stairs as the number 13 bus lurched around Hyde Park Corner. She drew in a sharp breath, trying to make her already lean self even thinner so she didnāt make contact with any of the other passengers crammed in front of the double doors downstairs. It was just as well sheād lost her puppy fat when sheād been away. Living on rice had its advantages.
At the last two stops the driver had refused more passengers, igniting tempers among those queuing to get on. He was right to, though; even with people getting off, there was barely room to breathe. Brioni had been on trains like this in India, and she was starting to think London was almost as bad as New Delhi. Exactly like India, it seemed to be a city crammed full of people permanently in motion. It was a bit less chaotic, and there were actual road signs that people obeyed ā mainly ā and she hadnāt seen a cow yet, but personal space just didnāt seem to exist, on the Tube ā really on the Tube ā on the buses, even on the broad pavements that lined Oxford Street.
The sheer number of people gave her a headache, made her feel claustrophobic. She didnāt think sheād ever get used to this many people in one place. At home in Ireland it had been the exact opposite; there had been lots of cows there, but there had been lots of space, too ā too much space. Built on coastal rock now covered by a sand dune, their house had a field on one side and a steep slope to the beach and the sea on the other. Space, but the wrong sort of space.
Maybe that was why sheād gone travelling ā to find herself and how she fitted in on the planet. Brioni still wasnāt sure. Despite the oppressive heat on the bus, she felt her skin goose-bump. Memories of a dense, hot night ā of leaving a bar in Krabi with a group of men behind her ā sprang into her head.
It had been such crap timing. Not that she could have chosen a good time to get mugged, it had to be said, but as sheād arrived in Thailand sheād had that moment of revelation ...