‘Nine-twenty-five to Penzance,' Cal said, as he led her inside.

‘Doesn't it disturb the birds?' she asked. ‘Being so close to the tracks?'

‘They got used to it when they were still in their shells,' he replied, and went to greet the pigeons.

She watched him talking to them, paddling his fingers against the wire mesh. He was a strange one, no doubt of that; but no stranger than she, probably. What surprised her was the casual way they dealt with the imponderables which had suddenly entered their lives. They stood, she sensed, on a threshold; in the realm beyond a little strangeness might be a necessity.

Cal suddenly turned from the cage.

‘Gikhrist,' he said, with a fierce grin. ‘I just remembered. They talked about a guy called Gilchrist.'

‘Who did?'

‘When I was on the wall. The removal men. God, yes! I looked at the birds and it all came back. I was on the wall and they were talking about selling the carpet to someone called Gilchrist.'

‘That's our man then.'

Cal was back in the house in moments.

‘I don't have any cake -' Brendan said as his son made for the telephone in the hallway. ‘What's the panic?'

‘It's nothing much,' said Suzanna.

Brendan poured her a cup of coffee, while Cal rifled through the directory. ‘You're not a local lass, are you?' Brendan said.

‘I live in London.'

‘Never liked London,' he commented. ‘Soulless place.'

‘I've got a studio in Muswell Hill. You'd like it.' When Brendan looked puzzled at this, she added: ‘I make pottery.'

‘I've found it,' said Cal, directory in hand. ‘K. W. Gilchrist,' he read, ‘Second-Hand Retailer.'

‘What's all this about?' said Brendan.

‘I'll give them a call,' Cal said.

‘It's Sunday,' said Suzanna.

‘Lot of these places are open Sunday morning.' he replied, and returned to the hallway.

‘Are you buying something?' Brendan said.

‘In a manner of speaking,' Suzanna replied.

Cal dialled the number. The receiver at the other end was picked up promptly. A woman said:

‘Gilchrist's?'

‘Hello,' said Cal. ‘I'd like to speak to Mr Gilchrist please.'

There was a beat's silence, then the woman said:

‘Mr Gilchrist's dead.'

Jesus, Shadwell was fast, Cal thought.

But the telephonist hadn't finished:

‘He's been dead eight years,' she said. Her voice had less colour than the speaking clock. ‘What's your enquiry concerning?'

‘A carpet,' said Cal.

‘You want to buy a carpet?'

‘No. Not exactly. I think a carpet was brought to your saleroom by mistake -'

‘By mistake?'

‘That's right. And I have to have it back. Urgently.'

‘I'm afraid you'll have to speak to Mr Wilde about that.'

‘Could you put me through to Mr Wilde then, please?'

‘He's in the Isle of Wight.'

‘When will he be back?'

Thursday morning. You'll have to ring back then.'

‘Surely that must be -'

He stopped, realizing the line was dead.

‘Damn,' he said. He looked up too see Suzanna standing at the kitchen door. ‘Nobody there to talk to.' He sighed. ‘Where does that leave us?'

‘Like thieves in the night,' she replied softly.

3

When Cal and the woman had gone, Brendan sat awhile watching the garden. He'd have to get to work on it soon: Eileen's letter had chastized him for being so lax in its upkeep.

Musing on the letter inevitably led him back to its carrier, the celestial Mr Shadwell.

Without analysing why, he got up and went to the ‘phone, consulting the card the angel had given him, then dialled. His memory of the encounter with Shadwell had almost been burned away by the brightness of the gift the Salesman had brought, but there'd been a bargain made, that he did remember, and it somehow concerned Cal.

‘Is that Mr Shadwell?'

‘Who is this please?'

‘It's Brendan Mooney.'

‘Oh Brendan. How good to hear your voice. Do you have something to tell me? About Cal?'

‘He went to a warehouse, for furniture and such.'

‘Did he indeed. Then we shall find him, and make him a happy man. Was he alone?'

‘No. There was a woman with him. A lovely woman.'

‘Her name?'

‘Suzanna Parrish.'

‘And the warehouse?'

A vague twinge of doubt touched Brendan. ‘Why is it you need Cal?'

‘I told you. A prize.'

‘Oh yes. A prize.'

‘Something to take his breath away. The warehouse, Brendan. We have a deal, after all. Fair's fair.'

Brendan put his hand into his pocket. The letter was still warm. There was no harm in making bargains with angels, was there? What could be safer?

He named the warehouse.

‘They only went for a carpet -' Brendan said.

The receiver clicked.

‘Are you still there?' he said.

But the divine messenger was probably already winging his way.

IX

FINDERS KEEPERS

1

Gilchrist's Second-Hand Furniture Warehouse had once been a cinema, in the years when cinemas were still palatial follies. A folly it remained, with its mock-rococo facade, and the unlikely dome perched on its roof; but there was nothing remotely palatial about it now. It stood within a stone's throw of the Dock Road, the only property left in its block that remained in use. The rest were either boarded up or burned out.

Standing at the corner of Jamaica Street, staring across at the dereliction, Cal wondered if the late Mr Gilchrist would have been proud to have his name emblazoned across such a decayed establishment. Business could not flourish here, unless they were the kind of dealings best done out of the public eye.

The opening times of the warehouse were displayed on a weather-beaten board, where the cinema had once announced its current fare. Sundays, it was open between nine-thirty and twelve. It was now one-fifteen. The double-doors were closed and bolted, and a pair of huge ironwork gates, a grotesque addition to the facade, padlocked in front of the doors.

‘What are your house-breaking skills like?' Cal asked Suzanna.

‘Under-developed,' she replied. ‘But I'm a fast learner.' They crossed Jamaica Street for a closer inspection. There was little need to pretend innocence; there had been no pedestrians on the street since they'd arrived, and traffic was minimal.

‘There must be some way in,' said Suzanna. ‘You head round the far side. I'll go this way.'

‘Right. Meet you at the back.'

They parted. Whereas Cal's route had taken him into shadow, Suzanna's left her in bright sunlight. Oddly, she found herself longing for some clouds. The heat was making her blood sing, as though she was tuned in to some alien radio-station, and its melodies were whining around her skull.

As she listened to them Cal stepped around the corner, startling her.

‘I've found a way,' he said, and led her round to what had once been the cinema's emergency exit. It too was padlocked, but both chain and lock were well rusted. He had already found himself half a brick, with which he now berated the lock. Brick-shards flew off in all directions, but after a dozen blows the chain surrendered. Cal put his shoulder to the door, and pushed. There was a commotion from inside, as a mirror and several other items piled against the door toppled over; but he was able to force a gap large enough for them to squeeze through.

2

The interior was a kind of Purgatory, in which thousands of household items - armchairs, wardrobes, lamps large and small, curtains, rugs - awaited Judgment, piled up in dusty wretchedness. The place stank of its occupants; of things claimed by woodworm and rot and sheer usage; of once fine pieces now so age-worn even their makers would not have given them house room.

And beneath the smell of decrepitude, something more bitter and more human. The scent of sweat perhaps, soaked up by the boards of a sick bed, or in the fabric of a lamp that had burned through a night whose endurer had known no morning. Not a place to linger too long.


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