The shops of Hatton Garden were dark and shuttered. In Charleston Street the windows of the Crozier were blazing with light. Someone was thumping the keys of a piano inside the saloon bar and producing a sound that was just recognizable as “The Teddy Bears’ Picnic.” He turned into the alley leading to the square and hesitated. He wanted whisky, he thought, he wanted a whole bloody bottle of the stuff.
The music from the pub was gathering in volume, and people were singing. He didn’t want to get drunk among all that cheerfulness. Besides, Ingleby-Lewis would probably be there, and perhaps Fimberry or even Serridge. He still had nearly half a bottle of gin in his flat. Drinking alone was far more appealing than that dreadful jollity inside the pub. It would be cheaper too.
He left the alley and passed into the relative gloom of Bleeding Heart Square. It was very quiet after the din of the pub. Suddenly the silence was broken by running footsteps. He had time to register that they were behind him, that they belonged to more than one person, and that they were coming toward him. He turned toward the sound.
But he was much too late. A heavy blow landed on his upper left arm, just below the shoulder. In a tiny instant of lucidity he realized that if he hadn’t started to turn, it would have been his collarbone. Someone cannoned into him, sending him sprawling across wet cobbles, jarring his body with the violence of the fall.
He writhed on the ground, struggling to get up, and grabbed a man’s arm, as unyielding as an iron bar. Heavy breathing filled his ears. He sensed shadowy figures surrounding him.
A boot hammered into his ribs. He cried out. He grabbed the man’s wrist and pulled, trying to haul himself up. His nose exploded in pain and his head jerked back. He fell back on the cobbles. The boot went into his ribs again. He was lying on his back now with someone holding his shoulders down and somebody else trying to pull apart his legs. He twisted away but they were too strong for him.
Someone punched the inside of his thigh. Christ, they’re going for my balls. He lost his grip on the wrist. His hands curled into fists. He lashed out and was rewarded with a grunt. Then a blow-a kick?-landed in his crotch and he screamed, a high, inhuman sound.
“Listen to me, you bastard,” a voice snarled very close to his ear, penetrating the white curtain of pain. “I’ll say this only once. And if you don’t take notice I’m going to cut your prick off and shove it down your mouth.”
A door opened somewhere. The music was suddenly louder as if the teddy bears were pouring into Bleeding Heart Square itself. Rory’s shoulders and legs were free. He rolled onto his side, curling into a protective huddle. He heard voices and running footsteps.
“Hey, I say!” a slurred male voice said. “Mind where you’re going, old man. What’s the rush?”
The footsteps receded. Now there were other footsteps, much slower and less regular.
“I say,” the voice said again. “You all right, old chap? Bit squiffy, eh?”
Another door opened, and another wedge of light spilled into the square. Rory forced open his eyes but the pain made it hard to focus. He recognized the voice rather than the dark shape looming over him. He tried to speak but there was blood on his face and some of it had got inside his mouth and made him cough.
“I don’t think those fellows liked the cut of your jib,” Captain Ingleby-Lewis continued.
There were more footsteps, lighter and faster than the others.
“Father, what’s happening?”
“Hello, my dear. I think someone’s had a bit of an accident.”
Rory struggled into a sitting position. Lydia Langstone was on one side of him and her father was on the other.
“Mr. Wentwood-what on earth is going on?”
“Someone…” He stopped trying to get up as a twinge of pain made him groan. “Someone attacked me.”
“Can you stand?” Lydia asked.
“It’s a damned disgrace,” Captain Ingleby-Lewis said. “This wouldn’t have happened before the war, you know.”
“What-what wouldn’t?” Rory asked.
“This sort of barefaced robbery. What can you expect with these Bolsheviks everywhere? It makes Jack think he’s as good as his master. I’d hang the lot of them if I had my way. It’s the only answer.”
Rory groggily maneuvered himself onto his hands and knees.
“Father,” Lydia said, “help Mr. Wentwood up.”
“Eh? Oh yes. Of course.”
Ingleby-Lewis hooked an arm under Rory’s, the one that had taken the blow, and pulled. Rory squealed with pain. Ingleby-Lewis started back and nearly sat down.
“Let me help,” Lydia said.
Together they pulled Rory to his feet. He stood swaying for a moment, supported by Lydia and Ingleby-Lewis on either side. “The Teddy Bears’ Picnic” tinkled and thumped across the square. He had not realized before how damned sinister the tune was.
“Damn,” he said. “I hope I’m not bleeding on you.”
“Don’t worry,” Lydia said. “We’d better get you back to the house. Can you walk?”
“I think so.”
“We need to find a policeman. What did they steal?”
“I don’t think they stole anything.”
“I arrived just in time,” said Ingleby-Lewis with a note of congratulation in his voice. “They’re yellow at heart, you know, scum like that.”
“How many were there?”
“Two,” Ingleby-Lewis said. “Or was it three? Great big chaps, in any case. Cowardly devils. As soon as they saw me, they-”
“Let’s take Mr. Wentwood back to the house. Then perhaps you could find a police officer.”
“Not much point, my dear.”
“But Mr. Wentwood has been attacked.”
“It does happen, I’m afraid. Especially around here. Friday night and all that. Nothing was stolen. I’m not sure the police would be very sympathetic and frankly it’s a waste of time. They’re not going to catch the blackguards, after all. Much better to get Mr. Wentwood cleaned up.”
Lydia stooped and picked up something that glinted in the light. “Is this yours?”
Rory blinked at her.
“This cufflink,” she said with a touch of impatience.
“I don’t know.” It was hard enough to stand, let alone talk. “Probably.”
She held it out to him. Rory swayed, wondering if he would be sick. She pushed the cufflink into the pocket of his raincoat and took his arm. “Hold up,” she said. “We’ll get you inside.”
The first step made him howl with agony, but as the three of them moved slowly toward the door of the house, the pain receded a little. Captain Ingleby-Lewis was less than steady on his feet. Rory wasn’t sure who was supporting whom. Once they reached the hallway, Rory let go of Lydia’s arm and took firm hold of the newel post.
“Can you manage the stairs?” she asked.
“I think so. I’m sorry to be such a bore.”
“It’s not your fault. Come up to our flat and I’ll get some hot water.”
“Brandy,” Ingleby-Lewis said behind them with the air of a man who says Eureka! “That’s what one needs in a situation like this. I’ll see if the Crozier can provide some, shall I?”
Lydia took Rory into the sitting room she shared with her father, and made him sit down at the table. Ingleby-Lewis set off to the Crozier on his errand of mercy. Lydia went away for a moment.
Rory thought that the room seemed tidier and cleaner than before. Indeed, it looked almost cheerful. There was a book lying open with its spine upward, as though Lydia had put it down in a hurry on the table when she heard the commotion outside. He craned to see the title, and the movement made him wince. Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own. How odd. He would have expected an Agatha Christie novel or even a well-thumbed copy of Horse & Hound. A snapshot protruded from the pages, a marker no doubt. He made out the top half of a rather pretty girl in a bathing costume, surrounded by several grinning young men with little moustaches. He heard footsteps and turned away.