do.’
Tunstall sat down at the interview table.‘What does that mean?’
‘We have access to … certain abilities that other units don’t.Which means that, as Detective Sergeant Costain says, we are indeed willing to believe you.We know there are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio.So telling the whole truth now might really do you a favour.’
The man looked more scared than ever.
* * *
It took until lunchtime to complete the interview and sort out the paperwork.Tunstall’s story was indeed impossible, and confirmed all the physical evidence.The man finally said he couldn’t remember anything else and needed to get some sleep.Quill ended the interview.He found his own attention starting to wander and baulked at the prospect of going back to the team’s nick for maybe only an hour or two of bleary discussion, so he sent his team home for the day and went back to his bed.Only to find that Jessica was home and wanted to play with trains.So that was what they did, until Quill lay his head down on top of the toy station and started snoring.
* * *
Kev Sefton felt that he was finally getting somewhere.Being the officer who’d become most interested in the London occult and who’d started to read up on it had given him some extra responsibilities, okay.But now, instead of being second undercover, he was first … whatever his new job title was.Doing that well made him feel better about being out of the mainstream of policing while London was going up in flames.
He’d kept the phial with the silver goo in it in his fridge at home overnight, next to the beer, with a Post-it note on it that told Joe not to touch it.That summed up, he thought, the make-do way his team did things.He was used to having odd dreams now, as his brain dealt with all that he’d had to stuff into it, but those of last night were particularly weird.He felt as if he’d been rifled through and shaken out, as if large things were moving inside him.That phrase had brought a smile to his face as he drove through the gate that led onto the waste ground across the road from Gipsy Hill police station, the mud baked into dust by the early sunshine. No change there, then. He’d stopped on the steps of the Portakabin that served the team, exiled from the mainstream as they were, as an ops room and looked out across London.There was that smell on the warm air … smoke.Well, now they might be doing something to help restore order.He’d taken a deep breath and headed inside.
Now, as the others watched, wearing oven gloves he’d stolen from the canteen across the way, he was using a pencil to encourage the silver goo out of the phial and onto a saucer.He was hoping that graphite and tea-stained china didn’t react with whatever this silver stuff was.Maybe it would tell them something if it did.He was trying to take a scientific approach to his London occultism.Sometimes that made him feel like Isaac bloody Newton, and sometimes as if he was barking up completely the wrong tree.It felt as if this London business only submitted to science sometimes, when it felt like it.The goo dropped onto the saucer.The others leaned closer.Sefton thought he could hear a faint sizzling.He took the thermometer he’d bought at the chemist’s and held it as close to the gel as he dared.He nodded and put on his most serious expression.‘It’s … really cold,’ he said.
‘Like the insides of every ghost we’ve encountered,’ said Quill.
‘Only this is much more extreme, and, because we’re pretty sure that what we’ve seen aren’t exactly ghosts in the usual sense of the word, inverted commas around the g-word, please,’ said Sefton.
‘Is that it’s “really cold” the full extent of your analysis?’asked Quill.
‘If we can get hold of some specialist tools, like maybe a temperature sensor that I could actually risk inside this stuff, then I’d do better.But that’d only get us so far.Only we can see this