- Adams Guy
- The House That Jack Built
- Torchwood_The_House_That_Jack_B_split_011.html
THREE
Gwen pulled up alongside the
cordoned-off police tent that was keeping Danny Wilkinson's body
out of sight. She stepped out of the car, smiling despite herself
as she watched a couple of men struggle to drag a mattress from the
back of a transit van. Beyond them, a woman was staring back at her
from the open doorway of a house that looked to have seen better
days. Certainly the weeds on the drive and the cracked front window
spoke of neglect. The two men stumbled at the kerb, mattress
wilting between them as they turned in opposite directions. There
were a number of people hovering on pavements and in front gardens.
Most of them had probably already seen the body but still wanted to
see more.
Gwen, realising that she was staring
at the woman in the doorway, gave an embarrassed smile and turned
away. She ducked under the police tape and did her best not to
appear hurt by how hostile the uniformed officers were on her
arrival. The ranking officer on site simply waved at the small team
of officers loitering around the body and walked out of the tent.
Not a word was spoken as she was left on her own.
While the existence of Torchwood was
still deemed 'secret', most of the police force knew of them,
albeit only as 'that weird Special Ops lot'. Things had been too
public of late, what with zombies marching the streets and people
dropping like flies during the Welsh Amateur Operatic Contest.
There was only a certain number of times the regular force could be
kicked off an unusual crime scene by a handful of plainclothes
operatives before two and two would be put together and a degree of
resentment fostered. Nobody liked to be deemed unskilled for an
investigation – whether they might want to pursue it or not – and
there was no more effective phrase in the policing handbook for
pissing off an officer than 'need to know only'.
Gwen squatted down next to Danny's
body. The only overt physical damage was the shattered teeth and
bloody gums where the boy's face had hit the ground, but that
somehow made it worse. The surreal presentation and the palpable
look of fear in his eyes was far more disturbing than anything so
obvious as an open wound. How long had he been trapped like that?
How long had he struggled? It made her itch just to think about
it.
'Weird, huh?'
Jack's voice startled her and she
wondered how long she'd been staring. 'You were
quick.'
'Knew the way.'
He hissed air between his teeth as he
took in the details of the body. 'That's just... wrong.'
It looked like he'd be using
Alexander's pager sooner than he'd hoped.
Ianto parked the unmarked white van
as close to the police tent as possible, grabbed a toolbox off the
passenger seat and a white cotton face-mask from the glovebox. He
hopped out of the van, only too aware that every net curtain within
spitting distance was twitching as the locals ignored their usual
afternoon telly for a slice of voyeurism closer to home. It must be
like having Jeremy Kyle on all day. 'My boy in pavement scandal –
lie detector special.' God, but he hated the
suburbs...
He ducked down and entered the police
tent.
'Hello, campers,' he said, putting
down his toolbox. He cracked it open and pulled out a medium-sized
chrome flask. 'Who's for coffee, then?'
'You read my mind,' Jack smiled and
gave Ianto a wink.
'If the first thing that pops into
your head when you see me is "hope that sexy devil put the kettle
on before he left", then I can honestly say I don't know you half
as well as I thought.'
'OK, it was the second thing that
popped into my head.'
Ianto walked around Danny's body,
sipping at his own drink. 'Poor sod,' he muttered before turning to
Jack. 'When I got Gwen's message, I was already heading over
here.'
'How come?'
'We picked up a huge chronon surge in
the area. I cross-checked it with police reports and picked up news
of Danny Wilkinson here.'
'The Rift?'
Ianto shook his head. 'Don't think
so, the decay signature was different.'
Gwen began to make a sarcastic 'chat'
gesture with her hands. 'Chronons... blah, blah... decay
signatures... Try to remember we didn't all grow up playing with
chemistry sets. Some of us had a life.'
Ianto smiled. 'Actually, I loved
Action Men when I was growing up.'
'Plus ça
change,' Jack said with a wink. 'Chronon particles are the
fallout from temporal disruption,' he told Gwen. 'Like radiation.
You can look at the way the particles degenerate to trace where
they came from in the first place. The Rift has a very specific
particle-decay signature. This didn't match it.'
'Thank you for the geekless
subtitles.' She smiled. 'But how does weird time poo do that to a
pavement?'
'Normally, I'd say it doesn't,' Jack
replied. 'But I guess that's what we have to find out, isn't
it?'
Ianto walked over to his toolbox and
pulled out a small pen-shaped object.
'You might want to step back,' he
warned Jack and Gwen. 'This thing's lethal.'
He placed his coffee at the far end
of the tent before walking back over to the body. He twisted the
object in his hand, and there was a high-pitched whine. He pointed
it at the ground and began to trace a line around the body, a wedge
of road surface – about four or five centimetres wide – vaporising
as he passed. Finally, back where he started, he turned the machine
off and placed it back in his toolbox.
'Pocket pneumatic drill?' asked Gwen.
'Handy.'
'I just bet it's sonic.' Jack
smiled.
'Tosh's notes say "molecular",
actually,' Ianto replied. 'It isolates the construction of the
physical object you're pointing it at and removes that object
completely within specified parameters. Bit like erasing stuff in
Photoshop, only more dangerous... I sincerely doubt you can make
your foot vanish at the ankle using Photoshop.'
Ianto walked out of the tent, went to
the back of the van and unloaded a chunky-looking trolley, like a
hospital gurney but more capable of off-roading. Wheeling it into
the tent and alongside Danny's body, he squatted down and
sighed.
'Unfortunately, nobody's thought of a
cool way of doing the next bit.' He looked up at Jack. 'Cop your
end, then,' he said. 'I'm not getting a hernia on my
own.'
Jack came over and forced his fingers
around the edge of pavement Ianto had left intact. The pair of them
gave a roar as they hoisted it onto the trolley.
'Such manliness,' Gwen sighed. 'I'm
almost overcome. Now hunt me bison.'
Neither of them graced her with a
reply as they covered the body with a sheet and wheeled the trolley
back out to the van.
Jack brushed fragments of grit from
his palms as he watched Ianto pull away from the kerb and set off
back to the Hub.
'I'll pay a visit to the kid's
parents,' he said to Gwen.
'Sure?' she asked. It wasn't a part
of the job any of them relished.
'Sure. Just set the boring paper
trail running for me, would you? Traffic accident, no
witnesses.'
'You sure we can contain this that
simply? Loads of people are bound to have seen
something.'
'Nobody'll believe it. The family are
the only ones who'll cause a fuss. The neighbours will just make
gossip, and nobody believes that.' He grinned. 'If I'm wrong we'll
just add a little something to the water supply. Again. You want to
ring PC Plod and tell them they can have their tent back or shall
I?'
'I'll be politer,' she replied,
pulling out her mobile.
'Yes you will.' He looked up at the
sky where grim and weighty clouds clambered over one another, eager
to give Cardiff a soaking. 'Tell 'em to make it quick if they want
to be back indoors and curled up with their sweet tea and chocolate
digestives before the rain comes.'
'Try and remember I used to be on the
force, Jack,' Gwen sighed, selecting Andy's phone number on her
mobile speed dial.
'Yeah, but then you got a proper job.
No more chasing scallywags and rescuing cats from trees for
you.'
Gwen rolled her eyes, turning her
back on him and getting into her car as Andy answered the
phone.
Jack walked along the road, stopping
in front of Jackson Leaves. It looked so tatty compared to the
other houses in the street.
'Rotten tooth in an expensive smile,'
he said. 'Scrub up, lick of paint – nobody would know how old you
are.' He smiled at the idea. 'You and me both.'
He spotted movement at the front
window, a momentary flash of red beyond the dirty, cracked glass.
He turned away, not wanting to draw any more attention than they
already had, and strolled back to the SUV.
Getting behind the wheel, he brought
up the Wilkinson family's information on the built-in palmtop and
was about to set the GPS when the street name clicked into place.
He knew it; it was only just around the corner.
The first fat drops of rain exploded
against the tinted glass of the windscreen, blurring the view
outside to a dripping watercolour. He stared at the old houses as
they appeared to melt. It was so easy to superimpose the city he
once knew over the top of the one around him now. To look at these
Edwardian stacks and remember them as new, as modern. But he fought against the temptation. He
had always been a man – despite the affectation of his clothing –
who tried to look forward. With the amount of history he held in
his head, he could ill afford to do anything else. If he didn't box
it up and lock it away, he would soon lose himself in it. Despite
his best efforts, he still sometimes found himself panicking in a
crowd, throwing second glances everywhere as the curve of a nose or
twitch of a smile reminded him of someone he had once known. Ianto
had once asked him how many lovers he had had. Jack had refused to
answer, not to spare either of their feelings, more out of the fear
that he might be unable to list them all. That would have hurt too
much.
He put the wipers on their fastest
setting, bringing the outside world back into sharp clarity, and
drove to Danny Wilkinson's house.
Ianto pulled into the underground car
park beneath the Millennium Centre, wincing as he always did when
in the van. (He knew he had a spare few centimetres to clear the
overhead barrier, but it didn't look like it, and he always
expected the sound of tearing metal to accompany him into the
gloom.) He hated having to sneak things into the Hub by this, the
'tradesmen's entrance'. He felt too exposed.
In the early days of Torchwood
Cardiff, there had been access to the lower storage areas via
submarine. Submarine... How cool was
that? Who said things always improved over time?
He parked the van in its registered
bay, stepped out and checked around to make sure he was alone. He
had made it his business to know all the users of the car park,
their details filed away in his head. He used the Loci – or Memory
Palace – technique, allocating visual triggers to the information
so as to be able to store and recall everything quickly. He
pictured the owners of each of the cars around him and then – using
an expanded mental layout of the house he had grown up in – he
checked each one of them off, placing them in a line of cupboards
that he visualised in his old kitchen. For example, if he opened
the cupboard just above the sink – the one with a Fiat 500 key-fob
hanging from the handle – he would see David Thompson, the jolly
young man who dealt with the intranet at the Welsh Assembly, sat on
a tin of baked beans. In his hands he held the jack of clubs
(Blackjack: giving his age as twenty-one in Ianto's system), and a
photograph of Kelly Rowland (Thompson's flat-mate was called
Kelly). If Ianto were to lean in and look at the time on Thompson's
watch – a scratched souvenir from Disneyworld, Mickey waving his
gloved hands cheerily as the seconds ticked away – he would see the
hands pointing to five past nine: Thompson started work at nine and
finished at five. It sounded complex, but Ianto found he could
store huge quantities of information using the system, and storing
information was a big part of what his life was about.
He finished his quick sweep around
the bays on the lower level – everyone in their right place and
nobody to see what he was up to – before opening the back doors of
the van. The trolley's legs dropped down onto the concrete floor,
taking the weight of Danny Wilkinson and the chunks of tarmac still
attached to him. Ianto wheeled it over towards the door marked
'Private' that led to the Hub. He raised his face so the
retinal-scanning software in the security camera could check him
against access protocols. After a couple of seconds, the lock
clicked to open and the doors parted slightly. Moving as quickly as
possible – the doors were on a timer system of nine seconds – he
wheeled the trolley into the short tunnel on the other side and
pushed the doors firmly closed behind him.
The tunnel badly needed sorting out,
the damp having encouraged moss to cluster around the light
fittings like bushy green beards. It smelt bad too, though he was
unsure whether there was much he'd be able to do about that. He
hated getting behind in his housework. The Hub had gone to pot over
recent months.
He walked through the weapons store –
trying not to think about the amount of dusting that represented – then into the Hub
itself.
Gwen had beaten him
back.
'Took your time,' she said as he
wheeled the trolley past her desk.
'I mind the speed limits when I have
dead bodies in the back of the van,' he replied. 'Has Jack called
that old friend of his yet?'
'Alexander Martin?' Gwen shook her
head. 'Don't know. He was dealing with the boy's
parents.'
'Oh.' Ianto nodded, lining the
trolley alongside the upper railing of the Autopsy Room. 'The fun
bit of the job.'
'Yeah.'
'Makes a change from you having to do
it, I suppose.'
Ianto attached the slab of tarmac to
a chain winch bolted into the ceiling, lifted it up and then
lowered it into the Autopsy Room so that it was sat on the
examination table. He ran down the stairs, lined the slab up and
made sure the supports were tightened so the table could take the
weight. He jogged back up the steps and over to his desk to check
whether anything significant had occurred in his
absence.
There had, and his face fell as he
scanned his monitor screen. 'There's been another chronon
surge...'
'Where?' Gwen asked, scooting over on
her wheeled chair.
'Right on top of the last
one.'