- Adams Guy
- The House That Jack Built
- Torchwood_The_House_That_Jack_B_split_017.html
NINE
Gwen parked the car and sat for a few
minutes watching the rain paint patterns with the streetlights on
the windscreen.
She often sat in the car for a while
before going up to the flat she shared with Rhys. These few minutes
of silence were an emotional airlock between her working life with
Torchwood and her marriage. When she had first started, she had
found it near impossible to keep the two apart in her head. After
joining the police force, she had gone through a period of fear
that was common in new recruits: the job gave you a heightened
awareness of what bad things the world could offer and the result
was that, for a while at least, you became convinced danger was
around every corner. That feeling had trebled when joining
Torchwood. She would watch Rhys sleeping and imagine him a mess of
Weevil bites. It just felt so damn dangerous in Cardiff, and she
couldn't quite believe that the violence wouldn't reach them. How
could it not? It was everywhere...
She had calmed down eventually of
course. She would have gone mad otherwise. When your day can be
anything from the living dead to extraterrestrial infections, you
need to be able to compartmentalise. This was part of that, just
leaning back in the car seat, closing her eyes and pushing it all
away. Today, the image that stuck to the back of her eyes, like
chewing gum, was that of Danny Wilkinson's serrated teeth as they
tried to chew their way through tarmac. She had seen worse things,
but there was something about it that made her belly churn more
than normal. It was a pain she could almost relate to...
Almost. There was the smell of Gloria's
body too, a black sweetness that clung at the back of her throat.
She bit her lip, forcing the thought away before it made her
gag.
She ferreted in the door compartments
for a brolly but came up with nothing more useful than an empty
water bottle and a crisp packet. Grabbing them for the bin, she
opened the door and made a dash for dryness.
Upstairs, having been alerted by the
sound of the car engine, Rhys watched Gwen out of the window, as he
opened a bottle of chilled Sauvignon Blanc – her favourite, so why
would he buy anything else? He'd noticed a long time ago how she
sat outside for ages after returning from work. The first time he'd
caught her at it, he'd been terrified, his head buzzing with all
the imagined reasons she might be nervous about coming in.
Convinced she was going to confess to an affair by the time she
finally appeared, he'd been on edge all night, snappy with her,
waiting for the axe to fall. Of course it never had. Wasn't he
always his own worst enemy in the end?
He poured two glasses of wine as he
heard her feet on the stairs and the involuntary moan as she shook
cold rainwater from her hair. As the door opened, he put a glass in
her hand and a kiss on her lips.
'Now that's service!' she laughed,
still pulling her damp hair away from her face.
'Damn right. Now sit down, and I'll
fetch a towel for your hair.'
She took off her boots and did as he
asked, taking a sip of the chilled wine and nudging the James Bond
boxed set that was on the carpet with her foot.
'Been getting pointers?' she asked as
he came back with the towel.
'Eh?'
She nodded at the DVDs.
'Oh, aye... Passes the time while
you're saving the world.' He smiled and draped the towel over her
head. 'Have you?'
'Have I what?' she replied rubbing at
her wet hair.
'Saved the world of course? It
happens so often I sometimes forget to ask.' He grinned as he
headed to the kitchen.
'No, not today,' she called after
him, draping the towel across her lap. 'Today was not a good
day.'
Rhys came back and looked at her.
'Tell me about it.'
She smiled to see how much he clearly
loved her. 'You don't want to know.'
'I do, of course I do. Come on, Gwen,
what sort of husband would I be if I wasn't here to offload
on?'
'Two people died,' she said. 'One was
only a young lad...the other a woman.'
'Do you know who did it?' Rhys
asked.
'We don't even know whether it was
natural or not,' Gwen admitted. 'For all we know, there could be
more by the morning.'
'But you still came
home.'
Gwen smiled. 'I missed
you.'
Rhys nodded, returning to the kitchen
and opening the oven. 'That and the fact you were starving and knew
that I was cooking.' He removed the baking tray and dropped it onto
the work surface. 'Spare ribs!'
Gwen caught the smell wafting from
the oven and was on her feet and running towards the
bathroom.
Rhys bit his lip as the sound of her
throwing up worked its way back to the kitchen.
'Or maybe you're not that hungry
after all,' he muttered, putting down his oven glove and stepping
through to the bathroom.
'I'm sorry,' Gwen said, wiping her
mouth and flushing the toilet. 'It was the smell... The woman I
said about, she burned to death and... Sorry, I just
can't.'
Rhys sat down on the edge of the
bathtub and stroked her hair. 'Don't be silly, not your fault... I
just wish... I... I don't know.'
'What?'
'Wish I knew all the right things to
say to make you feel better,' he said. 'It's not like other people,
is it? If your wife comes home from a bad day at the office you
listen to her bitch about her boss, say all the right things and
help her get it off her chest. With you... Well, what can I say?
"Sorry you've had another day of death and violence, love, fancy a
takeaway and a rented movie to take your mind off it?" There's just
nothing I can do is there? How can I help you deal with the sort of
thing that's your day? I just feel useless sometimes.'
Gwen hugged him. 'You're not useless
at all, you're lovely. In fact you're perfect.'
He smiled. 'Oh aye, you're right
actually. I forget how great I am sometimes.'
'You do,' she said, squeezing his
hand.
They sat there for a moment, holding
each other's hands.
'Go on,' Rhys said
eventually.
'Go on what?'
'Go back to work,' Rhys replied.
'You'll feel better if you just work through it. I know you, come
the early hours you'll stumble on something and it'll all start
making more sense and then you can walk
away a bit, knowing you've done something.'
Gwen stared at him and felt her love
for the man deepen even further than she could have thought
possible. 'What did I ever do to deserve you?' she
said.
'No idea,' he grinned. 'You're just
the luckiest woman in all of Cardiff, I suppose.'
'In the whole world.'
'Whole universe!'
'Now you're talking.' He kissed her
on the cheek. 'Go on, I mean it. I won't even miss you. I've got
wine, extra dinner and more action films than I can shake a machine
gun at. You'll only cramp my style. I had the perfect evening
planned before you showed up and dripped all over the
sofa.'
She kissed him again, hard, and
nodded.
He sat there a little longer as he
listened to her grab her car keys and head back out of the
door.
'I lied,' he said to himself. 'I miss
you more than you ever know.'
Getting up, he headed back into the
kitchen to plate up his dinner.
Gwen stepped back into the Hub and
walked over to her workstation.
She could hear the sound of Alexander
still working away in the Autopsy Room, the occasional swear word
or grunt wafting up the stairs. She wondered where Jack knew him
from. He hadn't volunteered the information, of course. Did he
ever? The old man had just been presented to them as 'someone he
knew', and that would have to be enough. Not that she didn't trust
Jack, but – and maybe it was the old copper in her – she liked to
know who she was dealing with, didn't like secrets. Never mind,
secrets were Jack's preferred currency and she supposed one day she
would get used to it.
She booted up her computer and
settled herself in her chair. While she might not be able to find
out anything about Alexander just now, there were certainly more
pressing mysteries to hand and hopefully they were something she could figure out. After all,
with the facilities she had at Torchwood there was very little she
couldn't discover given a little time and enough processing power
to run a small country. She had never got over how wonderful
Torchwood's search database was. Having worked in law enforcement,
she knew that – whatever films said to the contrary –
cross-referencing evidence was not the same as Googling. You didn't
just put in two or three search strings then get presented with a
handful of potential suspects. It took hours and – worse than that
– there was no guarantee that you'd find anything useful at the end of it. Actually, scratch
that, it was exactly like Google... But
not with Torchwood. The database was composed of every conceivable
registry: civil, law enforcement, even intelligence services – her
computer access alone was enough to have her assassinated as a
security risk in nineteen countries.
She tapped in the address and then
sat back, wondering what might help to narrow it down. It was
depressing to admit there was nothing... The state of the body
perhaps? No, that might make things too specific. Chronons?
Perhaps. She tapped them in and then deleted it again. Just check
the address, start wide and narrow down.
She rummaged in her workstation for
the little jar of instant coffee she kept hidden from Ianto, but it
was empty. She went to persuade the coffee machine to give her a
cup while the computer gave itself a good talking to. She tapped
her nails impatiently on the side of the machine as it bubbled and
gurgled its way towards a gritty cappuccino. She was sure Ianto had
sabotaged the thing to ensure it never came close to competing with
his own finely crafted caffeine doses. Perhaps he injected it with
river silt. Finally, it dribbled apologetically into a mug, which
Gwen carried back to her desk.
Her monitor was attempting not to
look smug as it offered an alphabetical list of news reports and
police files relating to the road in Penylan. She was surprised by
how many there were, even more so once she realised they all
related to the same building: the house she had seen the young
couple moving in to. But that was nothing compared to the final
revelation her computer had to offer. She stabbed at the button of
her desk intercom, scanning the text on her screen as she waited
for Jack to answer.
'Hey, Gwen,' barked the intercom
speaker. 'Please tell me it's not morning already.'
'We need to talk,' Gwen replied.
'Boardroom, twenty minutes.'
'OK,' Jack said as he strolled into
the Boardroom. 'Brighten up my night and tell me you've found
something we can go beat up. Dealing with Alexander's given me lots
of aggression to work off.'
'Sit down,' Gwen replied, connecting
her PDA to the projector, 'and shut up.'
'I just love bossy women,' Jack replied, though his smile
soon faded as her mood reached him.
The projection screen began to fill
with images: an elderly lady with skin as pale as a bed-sheet; a
skinny girl, little to her but cheekbones and sadness; a
long-haired surfer-type, beard grown thick to hide his youth; a
glamorous woman, headscarf and big sunglasses; a myopic balding
man, like a mole in a pullover... The faces kept coming, fourteen
in all, until one final portrait made Jack sit
forward.
It was his own.
'What have all these people got in
common?' asked Gwen.
Jack could only shrug, though a
suspicion rolled around in his head that was confirmed when she
cued up the next image.
'They all lived here,' she said,
pointing to the photo of the Edwardian house. 'Jackson Leaves,
built in 1906 and trouble ever since, it seems. Were you going to
mention it?'
'That I lived there?' Jack replied.
'Probably not... It hardly seemed relevant. I've been around, you
know... There's not many parts of Cardiff I don't know
intimately.'
'Not many of its residents either,'
Gwen muttered.
'My point is, just because I used to
live nearby doesn't mean Danny Wilkinson's death was anything to do
with me.'
'Maybe not, but I'd be willing to bet
that something about that house is connected.' Gwen tapped the
trackpad on her PDA, and the line of faces reappeared on the
projection screen. 'It has a history, Jack,' she pointed at the
faces. 'You're the odd one out here. Know why?'
Jack shrugged.
Gwen stared at him for a moment, as
if trying to decide whether she believed him or not. 'You're the
only one who's still alive,' she said. 'The rest of them died in
the house.'
'All of
them?' said Jack. 'That's long odds.'
'Ridiculously long, and they don't include people
like Danny who died on the doorstep.' Gwen stared at the faces on
the screen. 'The odds get worse,' she continued, pointing at the
old lady. 'Joan Bosher. Lived there over thirty years before a
heart attack sent her packing, she's the one who left it to the
young couple we saw moving in yesterday. She's the only person on
this list whose death could have been natural. The rest... no
way.'
She pointed at the thin woman. 'When
Joan Bosher originally moved in, she let out rooms to lodgers. This
is one of them: Kerry Robinson, librarian and aspiring poet, opened
her wrists in the bathtub.'
She moved her finger to the
long-haired man. 'Richard Hopkins, trainee hairdresser in Barry,
also a lodger. He went berserk with a croquet mallet at a local
pub.' Gwen glanced at her PDA to remind her of the name. 'The Hop
and Kilderkin... Ran back to the house and put a pair of
hairdressing scissors through his left eye.' She pointed at the
woman in a headscarf. 'Michelle Sillence, interior designer – owned
the place before Joan with an intention to renovate. She didn't so
much as open a pot of paint...'
Gwen sighed and rubbed at her tired
face. 'She was found hanging from one of the roof joists in the
attic, pigeons had made a meal of her face. We've got the lot,
drowned, shot, stabbed...' She gestured vaguely at the faces in
front of them. 'All of them died... badly at Jackson Leaves.'
Jack stared at the screen. 'It was a
nice house...'
'You – and possibly Joan Bosher – are
the only ones who think so. As much as it makes me cringe to say
it, something about that house attracts violence and
death.'
'So what is it, and why were Joan and
I not affected?'
'You telling me that you live a
violence-free life?'
Jack stared at her for a moment. 'I
suppose not.'
'For all we know, you just might not
have noticed.'
Jack's mobile rang. He pulled it from
his pocket and flipped it open. 'Yeah?'
Gwen watched the smile falter on his
face. 'In your what?' he asked before his expression changed from
confusion to concern. 'I know where it is,' he snapped. 'I'll be
right over.'
He closed the phone.
'Ianto's been found unconscious,' he
said. 'You'll never guess where...'