- Adams Guy
- The House That Jack Built
- Torchwood_The_House_That_Jack_B_split_013.html
FIVE
The windows appeared to be crying as
much as Valerie Wilkinson, the rain trickling its way down the
panes, dripping off the sill onto wilting blooms hammered down by
the seasonal downpour.
'I'm sorry,' said Jack, unable to
think of what else to say.
'No you're not,' she replied after a
moment or two, dabbing at her running nose with a torn fist of
kitchen roll. 'You didn't even know him. He's just a problem to
solve.'
Jack stared at the floor, tracking
the patterns in the lino as if following a maze that would let him
escape from the unpleasant atmosphere.
'Yes,' he said eventually. 'But I
will do my best to solve it, for what that's worth.'
She looked him up and down. 'I'm not
sure it's worth much... I can't even remember who you said you
were. You're not police.'
'No.'
'Why can't I remember?' she stumbled
slightly, holding on to the work surface for support. 'I don't even
remember letting you in...'
Jack got to his feet picking up the
empty mugs from the table. 'You won't.'
Her legs gave way beneath her, so he
put the mugs down quickly, moved to her side and supported her
weight.
'It's OK,' he said. 'It just causes
memory retardation, no other side effects.' That we know of anyway, he thought. He made her
comfortable and lifted her chin slightly so he could look into her
eyes. 'Your son died in a road accident. It was sudden and he felt
no pain. There was nothing strange about the circumstances and, as
sad as you are, there is no choice but to accept it and move on
with your life.'
He sighed, pulled a handkerchief from
his pocket – such an old-fashioned future-boy... who even carried
handkerchiefs these days? – and began to rub down any of the
surfaces he might have touched.
'You'll think your heart is broken,'
he said, rubbing the armrests of the chair he had sat in and the
surface of the pine table. 'That the death of someone who was once
part of you can never be weathered, that you will just sit and
rot...' He bit his lower lip. Who was it he was trying to convince
here, her or himself? 'But life goes on.' He stared right at her.
'You can, you will, know happiness
again.'
His mobile began ringing, and there
was a flicker in her eyes as it broke through the haze of the
drug.
'Who are you?' she whispered,
half-noticing him.
'I'm the last person you should ask
that question,' he replied, pulling her eyelids gently closed with
his fingers and answering the mobile. 'Hold on,' he said into the
phone. 'You never saw me,' he whispered in Mrs Wilkinson's ear as
she sank into sleep, moving quickly out of the house, wiping the
door handles as he went.
Outside, he put the phone back to his
ear. 'Hey, Gwen, sorry... Just readjusting the facts in the case of
Danny Wilkinson.'
'No problem. Police reports altered
and the usual news blankets in place at my end. Traffic accident,
as you said.'
'Great. Thanks.'
'You may have another one on your
hands, though. Huge chronon surge not a stone's throw from where we
found the body, I've sent the coordinates to your
PDA.'
'Great...' Jack was already climbing
into the driver's seat and accessing the GPS software. 'Got it,' he
said as the bookmark popped up onscreen. He dropped his mobile into
his pocket and drove back towards Jackson Leaves. By now the rain
was really thundering down, bouncing off the road surface and
chasing leaves and litter along the gutter. He had to lean forward
in his seat to see through the windscreen, even with the wipers on
full speed. The police tent had been retrieved in his absence, and
the excavated trench was overflowing with rainwater. God always
cleans up his crime scenes.
He parked up and checked his PDA
again. The surge appeared to be coming from the house almost
directly opposite where Danny Wilkinson's body had been found. It
hid its Edwardian heritage under layers of middle-class chic;
faux-Japanese stone garden in front, Laura Ashley curtains visible
through the lead-lined double-glazing. Come Christmas, Jack was in
no doubt that ghastly fibre-optic threads would dangle from the
guttering. Maybe a hollow-plastic Santa hiding within the shadows
of the conifers, a brittle dwarf devoid of happiness or
soul.
Jack pulled up the collar of his coat
and clambered out of the SUV, dashing through the rain to the cover
of the house's front porch. He rang the doorbell. No answer.
Dropping to his haunches, he poked the letterbox open and peered
through. There was little to see but a cream hallway leading
through to the kitchen, where the owner was at work if the smell
was anything to go by, Jack's mouth watered at the thick scent of
roast meat. Pork, if he was any judge.
He rang the bell again and moved
towards the lounge window, peering through the rain-splashed glass
at the dark shape he could see sat in the far corner. Oh... Not
pork.
He moved back to the front door but
didn't bother with the bell, trying the handle just in case. The
door was unlocked, so he pushed it open.
The smell of cooked meat washed over
him. Now that he knew what it actually was, it made his belly
groan. He pulled out his handkerchief, held it in the rain for a
moment and then wrapped it around the lower part of his face so he
looked like a Wild West outlaw. It didn't completely remove the
smell, but it lessened it enough to walk inside without fear of
throwing up. He took a few deep breaths of cool, wet air before
moving into the lounge.
The body was black and pink, streaked
with slicks of pearlescent body fat that caught what little light
there was from the late-afternoon sun outside the window. Jack
hunted through the inside pockets of his coat and pulled out a pair
of latex gloves. With gritted teeth, he took hold of the woman's
body and tilted it slightly in the chair. The scorch marks on the
leather made it impossible to believe that the fire had started
anywhere but the victim herself. Somehow she had burned while the
rest of the room had remained untouched. Her skin crumbled and
flaked under his fingers as he let her rock back to where she had
been sitting. Looking around, he could see no other sign of damage;
the ceiling bore a black mark where the smoke from her burning
candle of a body had stained the paint, but that was
all.
Suddenly the corpse flared again,
knocking him on his back as he threw himself away from the blaze.
The flames roared around the woman's body, small embers glowing
inside her like the pulsing light of a firefly.
Then, as instantly as it had
reignited, it vanished, the flames disappearing to leave just the
smouldering cadaver.
Jack's mobile rang again. He snatched
it out of his pocket and answered. 'Let me guess,' he said straight
away. 'Another surge?'
'Yes,' said Ianto. 'Same location as
before but very brief. How did you know?'
'I was looking at it.' He got to his
feet, keeping his distance from the body. 'I have a cremated corpse
sat in front of me. Nothing's damaged but the chair it was sitting
in.'
'Freaky.'
'Oh yeah... I'll bring the body in,
but I want you to paper over the cracks for me.'
'No problem, bringing up the details
now... The house belongs to Trevor Banks, he was a
banker...'
'Deceased is a woman.'
'Most likely his wife then, Gloria.
We'll confirm that when we have the body. I'll see if I can trace
Mr Banks before he gets in your way.'
Through the window, Jack watched a
BMW pull into the drive.
'Too late, he's here. Back soon.'
Jack cut off the call and reached into his pocket for the Retcon.
What an afternoon this was turning out to be...