The broken cage, p.1
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The Broken Cage, page 1

 

The Broken Cage
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The Broken Cage


  The Broken Cage

  Crow Investigations Book Seven

  Sarah Painter

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, organisations, places, events, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events, is purely coincidental.

  * * *

  Copyright © 2022 by Sarah Painter

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Published by Siskin Press Limited

  Cover Design by Stuart Bache

  Also by Sarah Painter

  The Language of Spells

  The Secrets of Ghosts

  The Garden of Magic

  * * *

  In The Light of What We See

  Beneath The Water

  * * *

  The Lost Girls

  * * *

  The Crow Investigations Series

  The Night Raven

  The Silver Mark

  The Fox’s Curse

  The Pearl King

  The Copper Heart

  The Shadow Wing

  Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Thank you for reading!

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Love urban fantasy?

  This book is dedicated to the NHS with my deepest gratitude

  Chapter One

  The cast had come off Lydia’s left forearm two weeks previously and she was diligently doing her physical therapy exercises. Her broken nose had healed remarkably quickly and she no longer frightened small children with her bruised face. It was a drizzly Thursday and she was standing out on the terrace cradling a hot coffee in her favourite mug and watching the steam rise in the grey London dawn.

  Fleet had slept at his own flat and would already be on his way to work. Jason was sitting on the sofa in the living room-slash-office of the flat, glued to his beloved laptop. A street-sweeping vehicle was making its noisy way down the lane which ran behind her building, its beeping joining the constant hum of traffic. A breeding pair of jackdaws were perched on the railing, preening each other with their beaks. Jackdaws were smaller than crows, the smallest corvids in the family, but Lydia had always had a soft spot for them. She raised her mug in greeting and two sets of black eyes swivelled to gaze directly into hers. Lydia stopped herself before she enquired after their wellbeing. There were limits.

  Since throwing herself off a roof, killing her cousin Maddie in the process, Lydia had taken time off from Crow Investigations. Not so much because she wanted to, but because the rest of the world insisted. And, while she would never have admitted as much, she had been in a fair amount of pain ever since the morphine drops from the hospital had run out. She pushed back the sleeve on her hoodie and inspected the pale skin of her arm. There was still the faint blue tinge of old bruising. Although, Lydia would be the first to admit, that might just be the extremely pale colour of her normal skin. So white it was blue. Whatever, her skin tone hadn’t benefitted from four weeks in a cast, but there were no visible signs of her broken ulna and radius. A compound fracture that the ortho guy had called ‘unpleasant’.

  It was fine that she had taken time to heal. She hadn’t had a holiday in years and must have been owed the break. A couple of months of enforced inactivity had probably done her good. Okay, so she had felt like a caged bird and had spent every single night dreaming of flying, but whatever. She was fine.

  The jackdaws were still sitting together, watching as Lydia drained the dregs of her coffee. As she turned away to go back inside, the larger of the two birds hopped along the railing. Its head ducked in a quick, jerky movement and then both birds took flight, wheeling over Lydia’s head and up to the main roofline. Lydia stooped to pick up the small item dropped by the bird. Jackdaws were like magpies – they liked shiny things – so it wasn’t entirely a surprise that the bird had been carrying something. What was unsettling was the deliberate way it had been left behind. Like an offering. Or a message.

  * * *

  Jason hadn’t moved from his position on the sofa and he didn’t look up when Lydia walked into the office holding the gift the jackdaw had left her. Flinging herself into her chair, she put her Docs onto the desk, one leg crossed over the other, and leaned back. The ceiling needed painting. She blinked away the image of falling soil, earth filling her mouth and nose until she couldn’t breathe. Jumping off the roof had been almost easy after being buried alive in the Pearl court beneath Highgate Wood. She opened her hand. The pendant was gold. Or maybe brass, Lydia was no expert. An old-fashioned thing with diamond chips set around the edge and a fat pearl in the centre.

  Lydia felt the blast of cold air a second before Jason spoke. ‘What’s that?’

  He had moved to her side of the room, leaving the laptop open on the sofa. ‘Jewellery.’

  ‘Well I got that much.’ Jason leaned closer and squinted at the pendant. He didn’t need to squint, Lydia assumed, same as he didn’t need to breathe or fidget or fold himself into a sitting position to use the sofa, but they were good signs. She only worried about Jason when he forgot his old habits and started floating above the ground like a proper ghost.

  ‘Where’s it from?’

  Lydia gestured in the direction of the terrace. ‘Jackdaw dropped it.’

  ‘A bird?’

  ‘Yep.’

  ‘That seems ominous.’

  Lydia was about to reassure him when an appalling sound split the air. It took Lydia a beat to understand that it was the fire alarm and another beat for her to think ‘it’s good the alarm works’ before she realised that Jason was gripping her arm, sending freezing chills up to her shoulder. He was mouthing something. Saying something. Lydia’s head was splitting with the sound and all she could think about was getting away from it. The cold brought her back to herself. She was halfway out to the roof terrace and she realised in that moment that she had been planning to jump. Not to jump, to take flight. Stupid, she berated herself, swivelling around and heading for the front door to the flat instead. Down the stairs, Jason keeping pace with her, and into the cafe.

  It was just as loud down there, but Lydia couldn’t feel heat or see smoke so she was beginning to relax and believe it was a false alarm. It was also mercifully early and the place was deserted. Not even open to the breakfast crowd, yet. The door to the kitchen opened and Angel appeared holding a fire extinguisher. Her dreads were caught up in a hairnet and her white apron was stained wet. Hopefully with water and not boiling oil. She hit a code into a wall mounted panel by the door and silenced the alarm. In the merciful silence which followed, Lydia waited for an explanation.

  Angel wasn’t stopping, though, and she was back through the swing door, smoke billowing with the movement of the door.

  ‘Don’t,’ Jason said, as Lydia made to follow Angel. ‘You should get out.’

  ‘It’s fine,’ she threw over her shoulder. If Angel was happy to go back into the kitchen, Lydia wasn’t worried.

  The kitchen, however, looked anything but ‘fine’ and Angel was coughing through a wet tea towel she had tied around her face. The smoke didn’t seem that bad, but within seconds Lydia was fighting the urge to cough, too. ‘What happened?’

  Angel didn’t answer straight away. She was occupied with moving a blackened pan from the stove with oven gloves and putting it into the sink.

  ‘I think that’s past it,’ Lydia said.

  Angel shot her an unreadable look. She looked wild. The whites of her eyes showing all the way round and Lydia realised that she had never seen Angel look properly panicked before. ‘It’s okay,’ she said. ‘Nobody got hurt. This is just… Stuff. Don’t worry.’

  Angel nodded tightly and turned back to the stove. A large soot mark stretched up the steel wall plate at the back of the hob and Angel reached for it, touching the surface lightly with one finger.

  Her silence was getting eerie, so Lydia produced her coin and squeezed it in her palm, pushing a little Crow behind her next question. ‘What happened?’

  Angel’s head snapped around and she looked directly into Lydia’s eyes. For a moment, she was reminded of the jackdaws.

  ‘I was distracted. I was making hash browns, just shallow frying them in the pan…’ she trailed off. ‘Damn it.’

  ‘What?’

  ‘I liked that pan.’

  Lydia wasn’t sure how to phrase her next question without it sounding like a criticism, but she had to ask. ‘What’s wrong? This isn’t like you.’

  Angel’s
shoulders slumped even lower. It was disturbing. She was usually a force of nature. Terrifyingly capable and self-contained and so acerbic it was a wonder all her cooking didn’t taste of lemon. ‘We’ll need to replace that,’ Angel waved her hand at the fire extinguisher.

  ‘Tell me,’ Lydia said, refusing to be distracted.

  The cook turned to face Lydia, lifting her chin. ‘It’s Nat. She’s gone.’

  A beat. ‘When you say “gone”?’

  ‘Left.’

  Thank Feathers. It was hard for Lydia not to assume that ‘gone’ meant ‘dead’. Still, it wouldn’t be the appropriate response to hearing that Angel’s wife had left. ‘I’m sorry.’

  Angel turned away and resumed the clean-up operation.

  Lydia opened her mouth to ask if there was anything she could do. But she wasn’t Angel’s friend. She was her boss, the head of the Crow Family. And a PI who really needed to get back to work. ‘Order a new extinguisher, pan and whatever else got damaged on the cafe account.’ She hesitated for a second and then added: ‘Feel free to close up today. Or the rest of the week. You can take some time off if you…’

  ‘No,’ Angel said quietly. ‘Not necessary.’

  * * *

  Jason was still hanging out in the main part of the cafe, concern etched across his face. He had one arm wrapped around his body and was fiddling with the sleeve of his suit jacket. ‘It’s fine,’ Lydia said quietly. ‘Small pan fire. Angel put it out.’

  ‘That could have been bad.’ His eyes were still worried.

  ‘Could have been. Wasn’t.’

  ‘How are you so calm?’

  Lydia wanted to say that being stalked by a contract killer who also happened to be her cousin or being in an underground cave-in of the Pearl court or being the head of the infamous Crow Family while simultaneously trying to dismantle the criminal side to the business had given her a high tolerance for stress, but she wasn’t sure if it was true. It sounded good, but the truth was something less impressive and altogether more frightening. She wasn’t sure she was capable of feeling anything anymore. As her bones had healed, sealing over the damage, she had felt another kind of covering stealing across her whole being. Her world felt muted. Everything experienced as if from behind smoked glass. Fleet had stopped asking her to see a PTSD counsellor, but she still caught him watching her with a creased brow when he thought she wasn’t looking.

  Her mobile vibrated in her pocket. It was Fleet, and she walked away from Jason as she answered. He had been insisting that he hadn’t been having any premonitions or ‘weird feelings’ but he always seemed to call when there was a chink in her habitual armour. Maybe it was just the finely honed instincts of a concerned boyfriend, or maybe it was the extra gleam that suffused Fleet and gave him an instinctual edge over mere mortals. She rolled her shoulders and forced herself to smile as she spoke, hoping to sound perkier than she felt. ‘Hey.’

  ‘I’m sorry to call so early.’

  ‘No worries, I was up. You all right?’

  ‘Me, yes. My detained suspect, not so much.’

  Fleet had been working long hours on a missing person case. There was the suggestion of foul play and they had real fears about the missing man’s wellbeing. Plus, it was a high-profile victim and there was pressure from top brass to get a result, but Lydia knew he had been hiding most of his stress. This didn’t sound like the breakthrough he had been hoping for.

  ‘He was alone for an hour,’ Fleet was saying, his voice strangely flat. ‘Tops. Now he’s dead.’

  ‘Feathers, I’m sorry.’ People killed themselves in custody. It wasn’t common but it happened too often to be called ‘rare’. Given how Lydia had felt when banged up in Camberwell nick, she could understand the impulse. Escape by any means.

  ‘I need to ask you something. I don’t want to, I know you’re not back at work.’

  ‘I am back,’ Lydia broke in. ‘I keep telling you I’m fine. What do you need?’

  ‘Do you know Mikhail Laurent?’

  Lydia paused. She didn’t recognise the name but took a moment to double-check her first response. Nope. Nothing. ‘I don’t. Is that your suspect?’

  ‘He sometimes went by Mik the Drummer. And I had an informant who called him The Jekyll.’

  ‘Not familiar. Sorry. Why?’

  ‘Because he’s asking for you.’

  Chapter Two

  Fleet was heading up the Murder Team for the borough of Southwark, which included Peckham, Dulwich, Bermondsey and Camberwell. It wasn’t exactly a promotion, but it was definitely the work he wanted. The Fleet that met Lydia on the front steps of Camberwell nick was suited, booted and had the air of command. He reminded her of the copper she had first met at The Fork after a hitman had attempted to throw her from her own roof terrace: pulsing with purpose and energy. He touched her shoulder. ‘Thank you for coming.’

  She opened her mouth to say ‘no problem’ but that would be a lie, so she settled for ‘of course’.

  She didn’t want to go into the station. She knew she didn’t want to be within ten metres of the place, but the feelings of animosity were as muted as all the rest. There were advantages to being numb.

  Fleet swept Lydia past the security desk and into the non-public area of the station. A uniformed officer with a short ponytail and square fringe stepped in front as if hoping to waylay Fleet. Lydia didn’t see the look he gave her, but it was enough to make her step smartly back.

  The detention suite was swathed in police caution tape. Which seemed ironic. Fleet pulled on plastic booties over his shoes and handed a pair to Lydia. Then they double-gloved with thin latex and elbow-length gauntlets. ‘Crime scene officers have started, but I’ve asked them to clear out for five minutes.’

  A stone-faced man with very pink skin and slightly bulging blue eyes emerged from the crime scene, his white coverall rustling. He didn’t so much as glance at Lydia and made a beeline for Fleet. ‘This isn’t-’

  Fleet didn’t let him get any further. ‘I take full responsibility.’

  Lydia could see Fleet didn’t like the man, which was curious. He was usually excellent at hiding his feelings. Either she had got really good at reading Fleet, or he wasn’t bothering to hide his antipathy for some reason. Maybe it was a perk of being the boss. Or perhaps it was the case getting under his skin.

  Of course, everybody would be tense. A death in the station wasn’t ideal. They knew fingers would be pointed, and the police had been getting plenty of negative press in recent times. Questions were being asked. Policies examined. Individual officers being held to account. It was a good thing as far as Lydia was concerned and she knew that Fleet agreed. We should be accountable, he said. We should be held to a higher standard, not a lower one. But whatever his moral standpoint, it still put pressure on his department and stress levels had already been high before a suspect died while in their care.

  The SOC officer looked at Lydia, finally. ‘She should be booked.’

  Lydia’s hands curled into fists and she felt the press of her coin. She tilted her chin, looking directly into the man’s eyes until he looked away.

  ‘Anyway,’ he muttered, moving off. ‘Don’t touch anything.’

  ‘Obviously,’ Fleet said blandly.

  As they approached the door, Lydia felt a prickling sensation across the back of her neck. She looked back, expecting to see Grumpy McGrumperson scowling at her, but the corridor was deserted.

  The cell wasn’t the same one that Lydia had been held in, but it was identical. Same obscured glass window with wide bars, same depressing tiled walls and stainless steel toilet, same thin blue wipe-clean mattress on a narrow platform. What was startling about this tableau, however, was the dead body.

 
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