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Rivers of London (Rivers of London #1)(17)

Author:Ben Aaronovitch

‘It’s been three days,’ I said. ‘Won’t the vestigia have worn off?’

‘Stone retains vestigia very well. That’s why old buildings have such character,’ said Nightingale. ‘That said, what with the foot traffic and the area’s supernatural components, they certainly won’t be easy to trace.’

We reached the Jag. ‘Can animals sense vestigia?’

‘It depends on the animal,’ said Nightingale.

‘What if it was one that we think might already be connected to the case?’ I asked.

‘Why are we drinking in your room?’ asked Lesley.

‘Because they won’t let me take the dog into the pub,’ I said.

Lesley, who was perched on my bed, reached down and scratched Toby behind the ears. The dog whimpered with pleasure and tried to bury its head in Lesley’s knee. ‘You should have told them it was a ghost-hunting dog,’ she said.

‘We’re not hunting for ghosts,’ I said. ‘We’re looking for traces of supernatural energy.’

‘Did he really say he was a wizard?’

I was really beginning to regret telling Lesley everything. ‘Yes,’ I said. ‘I saw him do a spell and everything.’

We were drinking bottles of Grolsch from a crate that Lesley had liberated from the station’s Christmas party and stashed behind a loose section of plasterboard in the kitchenette.

‘You remember that guy we arrested for assault last week?’

‘How could I forget.’ I’d been shoved into a wall during the struggle.

‘I think you hit your head much harder then you thought,’ she said.

‘It’s all real,’ I said. ‘Ghosts, magic, everything.’

‘Then why doesn’t everything seem different?’ she asked.

‘Because it was there in front of you all the time,’ I said. ‘Nothing’s changed, so why should you notice anything?’ I finished my bottle. ‘Duh!’

‘I thought you were a sceptic,’ said Lesley. ‘I thought you were scientific.’

She handed me a fresh bottle and I waved it at her.

‘Okay,’ I said. ‘You know my dad used to play jazz?’

‘’Course,’ said Lesley. ‘You introduced me once – remember? I thought he was nice.’

I tried not to wince at that and continued, ‘And you know jazz is about improvising on a melody?’

‘No,’ she said. ‘I thought it was when you sang about cheese and tying up people’s gaiters.’

‘Funny,’ I said. ‘I once asked my dad’ – when he was sober – ‘how he knew what to play. And he said that when you get the right line, you just know because it’s perfect. You’ve found the line, and you just follow it.’

‘And that’s got the fuck to do with what?’

‘What Nightingale can do fits with the way I see the world. It’s the line, the right melody.’

Lesley laughed. ‘You want to be a wizard,’ she said.

‘I don’t know.’

‘Liar,’ she said, ‘you want to be his apprentice and learn magic and ride a broomstick.’

‘I don’t think real wizards ride broomsticks,’ I said.

‘Would you like to think about what you just said?’ asked Lesley. ‘Anyway, how would you know? He could be whooshing around even as we’re speaking.’

‘Because if you had a car like that Jag you wouldn’t spend any time mucking about on a broomstick.’

‘Fair point,’ said Lesley, and we clinked bottles.

*

Covent Garden, night time again. This time with a dog.

Also a Friday night, which meant crowds of young people being horribly drunk and loud in two dozen languages. I had to carry Toby in my arms or I’d have lost him in the crowd – lead and all. He enjoyed the ride, alternating between snarling at tourists, licking my face and trying to drive his nose into passing armpits.

I’d offered Lesley a chance to put in some unpaid overtime, but strangely she’d declined. I did zap her Brandon Coopertown’s picture and she’d promised to put his details on HOLMES for me. It was just turning eleven when Toby and I reached the Piazza and found Nightingale’s Jag parked as close to the Actors’ Church as you could get without being towed away.

Nightingale climbed out as I walked over. He was carrying the same silver-topped cane as he had when I’d first met him. I wondered if it had any special significance beyond being a handy blunt instrument in times of trouble.

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