The Body At The Tower - Part 22
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Part 22

"Hold him until the police arrive."

"Hold Keenan? Good luck."

"The two of us together a three, perhaps..."

Mary looked at him. His eyes were very bright, even by gaslight. Glittering with suppressed fever, perhaps a but more likely the effects of that stimulant. He was vibrating with impatience and excitement, a rather un-James-like condition. She suddenly wondered if he'd be the steady, intelligent ally she had a.s.sumed a and then set aside that doubt. There simply wasn't time for it. Whatever happened, whatever he did, she would simply have to improvise and hope for the best.

As they crept up the final few steps, Mary was very glad she'd been up once before. The sun would now be low on the horizon and she was uncertain of how well lit the belfry might be. Without a rough idea of its dimensions and layout, she'd have no idea what she was seeing and almost no chance of remaining unseen. It hardly counted as an advantage, but it comforted her nevertheless.

"Mary?" James was so close behind her that his whisper tickled her ear.

"Yes?"

"My physician warned me sternly against excitement of any sort."

She almost giggled. "Shut up, James."

"Can you see anything?"

"No, and I can't hear, either!"

But suddenly, she could. Male voices, clear and close by.

"You paying or not? I ain't got all night."

"Neither have I, Keenan." Harkness sounded oddly calm. "Neither have I."

The voices were so near that Mary instinctively shrank back into the warmth of James's body. He placed a hand on her shoulder. If it was meant to comfort, it did rather the reverse: his fingers trembled, very subtly and very quickly, and she wondered again about those powders he'd taken. She'd never noticed his hands shake before a had marvelled, rather, at their steadiness under pressure. Tonight they vibrated.

"Well then?"

"Oh, you'll get what you deserve, Keenan. I'll make sure of that."

"You ain't threatening me, Harkness. I ain't afraid of you."

"Ah a and here is what's interesting: I'm no longer afraid of you."

There was a pause.

"You didn't think of that, did you? What happens when silly old Harkness is no longer frightened of you?"

Another pause.

"No smart rejoinder from you, Keenan? You're not generally short of one."

"Stop your blathering: you paying up or not?"

"I'm not." Harkness took a deep breath, and Mary heard the smile in his voice. "Did you hear me? I'm not going to pay you any longer, you blackmailing devil."

James sucked in his breath sharply. Mary tensed a it sounded loud in her ear a but Keenan and Harkness continued, fully absorbed in their exchange.

"I did a few sums earlier today," said Harkness conversationally. "D'you know how much you bled me for, Keenan? The total of what I've paid you and Wick both, these past ten months?" He didn't wait for a reply. "It seemed quite manageable, at first, one pound a week. Then two. Even five. I could manage five, although I expect it was divided between you three, so to you it didn't seem so splendid after a while. It was ten pounds a ten pounds a week! a that broke me. Such a paltry sum, really: a couple of new dresses for my daughters, the cost of a party given by my wife. But all told it came to more than two hundred pounds.

"And here's what I'd like to know: I can see how I'd have spent it. I've a wife and family. Daughters are expensive and sons even more so. And I suppose Wick had a family, too a poor souls. But what did you do with your eighty pounds, Keenan? That's what I can't understand."

"Go to h.e.l.l," snarled Keenan. "If you don't pay up, you know what'll happen to you."

"The question of h.e.l.l is in the hands of the Almighty. But you might have gathered by now, Keenan, that I'm no longer afraid of what you might do to me. In fact, I'm almost looking forward to it."

There followed a long silence, during which Mary carefully leaned past the doorway at the top of the stairs. James did likewise. The two men were, as she'd imagined, in a far corner of the belfry. Harkness had his hands braced against the half-wall, as though he were admiring the effects of sunset over the London streets. His posture was deceptively casual but the set of his shoulders, hunched and stiff, revealed his underlying tension. In contrast Keenan, who stood facing him, leaned slightly forward, poised for a physical struggle. Yet there was a curious rigidity in his stance, as though he didn't know how to manage the situation before him. Harkness's desperate serenity robbed him of his most effective weapon: the threat of violence.

"Then why'd you call me here?" growled Keenan. He clenched and unclenched his fists as though he could feel Harkness's soft, loose neck between his fingers.

"Why, to tell you of my decision, of course."

"Up here? What's wrong with the office?"

Harkness smiled and looked out over the city. "It's a beautiful evening. I wanted to enjoy the view."

"I don't give a d.a.m.n about the view."

"You might, if you consider what your future holds."

"What's that, then?"

"Breaking stones, at best."

For just a moment, Keenan blinked with surprise. Then, he gave a sudden bark of laughter. "You outdone yourself there, Harky. Don't you know if I go to gaol, you're going too? I'd lie myself black in the face to see you get more time than me."

Harkness, too, was smiling a a curious bend of his lips that had as little to do with humour as Keenan's laugh. "You're not as clever as I'd expected, Keenan. I confess to a touch of disappointment. You know," he went on, straightening now and leaning against the edge of the belfry, "you've a certain low, criminal cunning not uncommon to your cla.s.s. But your problem, Keenan, is that you lack imagination. You can't possibly imagine what I'm thinking or feeling right now. And that will be your downfall."

"Rubbish," growled Keenan, swinging away sullenly. "All rubbish. How the h.e.l.l you going to get me in trouble while covering over your own part? You took half the profits; you fixed the b.l.o.o.d.y books."

Harkness's gaze, intent on the glowing horizon, never wavered. That intense serenity transformed his entire face, returned to it colour and even a little youth. And then Mary became aware of the greatest difference in his appearance: the twitch was gone. Harkness's left cheek was entirely still and smooth. "I've no interest in covering my own guilt. Far from it: I've left a letter detailing the entire scheme." He swung to meet Keenan's surprised face. "Yes, everything from the time I caught you thieving. I've set out why I agreed to turn a blind eye and even falsify the accounts, in exchange for half the profits. Also how your friend Wick discovered our plan, and began to blackmail me. It took me a while to work out that you were behind that neat trap, you know a setting him onto me like that. Such crookedness was entirely beyond my experience."

"No more, though," sneered Keenan.

"You're quite correct." Harkness's tone was austere, schoolmasterly. "I've done wrong, grievous wrong. And I shall atone for it."

"How?" Keenan's tone turned suspicious. "What's this letter, and where is it?"

"Ah: the low instinct for survival, coming once again to the surface. Suffice to say, the letter's in a safe place. You'll not find it. But the authorities will, you may depend upon it, and they'll know precisely what happened."

"All right. Supposing this letter's real, and supposing some copper finds it, and supposing he believes all your rot. What's to say he'll find me? It's a big town, is London a supposing I stays in it." He stared at Harkness, who stood, unmoving, staring out over the darkening streets. "Eh? Supposing all that?"

Harkness blinked and smiled, as though emerging from a reverie. "D'you want to know what happened to Wick?"

Keenan's face became very still. "I know what happened. He fell."

"But how?" persisted Harkness. "And when, and why?"

"He just did, all right? Accidents happen a specially here, it seems."

"I suppose they do. But you must wonder why he was up here."

"No. I don't." The voice, cold and stony, also held just the suggestion of a quiver.

Behind her, Mary could feel James holding his breath. If Harkness did intend goading Keenan into an explanation, this was a desperate and foolish method. It couldn't last. It was only remarkable that Keenan hadn't already exploded.

She crept forward another few inches, angling for a better view of Keenan's face. She would now be almost entirely visible to them in the doorway. There was no cover in the belfry, no small nook in which to tuck herself unnoticed. And over them all, the great bell loomed high in the tower's peak. Black inside, monstrous in scale, it hung there like a lofty, judging G.o.d, waiting for the puny humans below to do something definitive. To act, rather than talk.

"I'll tell you."

"I said, I don't want to hear!" The sharp lash of Keenan's voice reverberated through the small s.p.a.ce, ringing slightly in the bell's great cavern.

"It was his suggestion a Wick's, I mean a that we meet up here," said Harkness. He couldn't be oblivious of Keenan's rising panic. If anything, he seemed to welcome it. "He insisted, in fact. I didn't want to meet him at all; tried to put him off for as long as possible. He was only going to raise his demands, you know. Of course you know a you probably put him up to it. Didn't you, Keenan?"

The master bricklayer glowered, unmoving.

"No matter; we met, at Wick's demand, here in the belfry after dark. It was perhaps ten o'clock. I was late in arriving, and Wick was displeased. He upbraided me in most vulgar terms. And I a I had lost courage, and permitted him to do so." Harkness's left eye twitched, just once. "Perhaps I regret that the most: losing sight of my position as a gentleman." He paused for a moment before a slight movement from Keenan returned him to the present. "No matter. Wick demanded an increase in his already outrageous bribe: twelve pounds a week, all for keeping silent about my careless bookkeeping.

"I said to you earlier that ten pounds a week broke me. I was a broken man already, although I didn't know it. But I knew I could not meet his increased demand, and told the scoundrel so in no uncertain terms. He had the temerity to say he would go to my wife, and tell her of the situation; that perhaps she would be willing to sell her jewels in order to preserve my good name. And he a he intimated that if her jewels were not sufficient to satisfy him ... well, he spoke only as a low-born villain could..." Harkness paused again to swallow his outrage. When he spoke again, his voice was cool and detached. "No gentleman would suffer such an insult. I lost my temper and we came to blows. We were standing so a Wick here, and I just where you are now."

Keenan made a startled gesture, then quickly controlled it. "I heard enough," he said in a low, guttural voice. But he made no attempt to depart. If anything, he inched closer to Harkness, spellbound by the tale.

"Wick was much stronger than I, of course: all that manual labour. And yet when he came at me, I managed to resist with a strength I hadn't known I possessed. We grappled," said Harkness, almost in a tone of wonder. "I don't understand fighting a physical violence has always made me ill a but I wasn't afraid. If anything, I enjoyed it."

"You devil! You're enjoying this, too." Keenan launched himself at Harkness, seizing him by the throat. The older man stumbled back, falling heavily against the stone half-wall. It must have hurt, for he was bent backwards over the ledge, but he made no sound of pain or fear, even when Keenan began to throttle him, voice high now with fury. "You b.l.o.o.d.y devil! You pushed him, didn't you? You tricked him into coming here, and you pushed him off the ledge."

"Stop!" That clear, commanding voice was James's, echoing into the hollow of Big Ben as he sprang past Mary towards the two men. The belfry was small, James's legs were long, and in just a few strides he was upon them.

He wasn't quick enough. Keenan started up at the sound; beneath him, Harkness flailed. Their combined movement was enough to topple Harkness over the lip of the half-wall. It was a curious way to fall, Mary noted mechanically. Harkness ought to have tipped back head first, if at all; and if so, he should have taken Keenan with him. Yet here they were, with Harkness outside the belfry and Keenan within, balanced precariously on his belly, hanging over the ledge. There was a sharp, panicked cry a whether from Harkness or from Keenan, Mary couldn't be certain.

James dived forward and caught Keenan's thrashing legs, landing with a grunt and a thud. There was a collective, convulsive gasp. Then came only the wind whistling through the open chamber.

Keenan remained perfectly still, still anch.o.r.ed by James's grip. The upper half of his body dangled outside the belfry, and he made no move to rise. Mary, half a step behind James, dashed towards the ledge and peered over. There, with his large, soft hands wrapped about Keenan's meaty forearms, was Harkness. His feet dangled against the roof tiles below and he peered up with an oddly composed expression.

At the sight of Mary's face poking over the edge, however, he frowned. "Quinn? What on earth are you doing here?"

Mary swallowed and remembered she was still in disguise. "Helping Mr Easton, sir. Just hang on, and we'll get you up." She was about to add, "Don't panic," but it hardly seemed appropriate in Harkness's case; he was more serene than she'd ever seen him.

Keenan's face, however, wore an expression of dread and nausea. He dangled, inverted, his face growing steadily redder. "For G.o.d's sake, drag me back!" he cried hoa.r.s.ely. It was a peculiarly pa.s.sive position for such an active, aggressive man: if he kicked his legs, he risked dislodging James, his anchor. And Harkness was beginning to slide from his grasp.

Harkness looked mildly perplexed, as though he couldn't quite remember how he'd come to be dangling three hundred feet over the cobblestoned streets of Westminster. And then his expression cleared. "Is that you, Easton, keeping this scoundrel from falling to his death?"

James emitted a half-gasp, equal parts exertion and amus.e.m.e.nt. "Yes, Harkness. I haven't the weight to drag you both back up."

"Well, I shouldn't worry about that," replied Harkness in an astoundingly conversational tone. "I'm quite prepared to meet my Lord and Saviour."

"So soon? Surely not."

Keenan's darkening face reflected Mary's astonishment. "This ain't no tea party!" he yelped. "You, boy! Help drag me back inside before my arms drop off!"

Mary grasped one of Keenan's legs and pulled, but her meagre body-weight was insufficient to make a real difference: Harkness and Keenan carried at least twenty-five stone between them, and she and James weighed significantly less. To pull them up, against gravity, was impossible without some sort of aid. And there wasn't time to go for help.

She looked at James. "There's all sorts of rope up here. We could use that."

James nodded, sweat beginning to bead his forehead. "Good. I'll show you the knots to use."

"There's a simpler solution, my boy," came Harkness's voice, much m.u.f.fled by wind and stone. "I had hoped to take Keenan with me, but that clearly isn't to be, if you're holding him. But once he lets me go, you ought to be able to save him for the police."

There was an instant, general outcry.

"He's gone mad!"

"What the devil are you on about, Harkness?"

"What d'you mean, once he lets you go?"

"Just what I said," said Harkness, maddeningly cool. "I a.s.sume, Easton, that you and the lad heard enough of our conversation to work out what's happened."

James a.s.sented with a grunt.

"I'm out of choices, my dear boy. Death is my only desire now."

"You daft old fool!" snarled Keenan. "Go on, then, I'll let go of you, and you're welcome! I got witnesses as to say you wanted to die."

"No!" snapped James. "If you let him fall, Keenan, I'll push you over the edge myself. Harkness," he continued, trying to sound reasonable now, "we'll discuss this once you're safely in the belfry, not now. Quinn, get those ropes."

Mary scrambled towards the nearest coil of rope, a remainder from the installation of the great bell. She wrapped it about Keenan's ankles, knotted it soundly and anch.o.r.ed the other end using rings embedded in the stone wall. And then the real labour began.

With their feet braced against the lip of the central air shaft, she and James began to pull. The rope was thick and strong, and there were no obstacles in their path. Keenan was nearly half inside to begin with, and Harkness a consistent, if dead, weight at the other end. Yet almost as they began to make progress, a furious tussle began on the precipice.

"Oi!" cried Keenan, "he's a-going, he's a-going."

"Hold him!" barked James. "As you value your life, hold on to him."

"He's let go of me!"

"Then hold tighter!"

They retracted the rope in hard-fought increments, one inch, even half an inch at a time. Sometimes they made no progress for the stretch of a minute, so great was the effort of raising those two large, struggling men. It was James, Mary thought, a rivulet of sweat running down her forehead. Despite his heroic efforts, he was beginning to flag. The hectic glitter in his eyes was gone, his colour ashen beneath the rosy flush of exertion, his breath coming in short, sharp gasps.

He caught her a.s.sessing glance. "Pull harder!"

She nodded, although she was already pulling with all her might.

Somehow, somehow, Keenan's torso inched towards them, dragged painfully over the open ledge. He was very still and completely silent, waiting, holding, concentrating. At long last, his armpits hooked the edge of the half-wall.