by Jim Kelly
THE GREAT DARKNESS
JIM KELLY
To Rowan Haysom,
for his insight into the City of Cambridge
and sharing a generous sense of place
CONTENTS
TITLE PAGE
DEDICATION
MAP
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
CHAPTER TWENTY
CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
CHAPTER THIRTY
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO
CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE
CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX
CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE
CHAPTER FORTY
CHAPTER FORTY-ONE
CHAPTER FORTY-TWO
CHAPTER FORTY-THREE
CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR
CHAPTER FORTY-FIVE
CHAPTER FORTY-SIX
CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER FORTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER FORTY-NINE
CHAPTER FIFTY
CHAPTER FIFTY-ONE
CHAPTER FIFTY-TWO
CHAPTER FIFTY-THREE
CHAPTER FIFTY-FOUR
CHAPTER FIFTY-FIVE
CHAPTER FIFTY-SIX
CHAPTER FIFTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER FIFTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER FIFTY-NINE
CHAPTER SIXTY
CHAPTER SIXTY-ONE
CHAPTER SIXTY-TWO
CHAPTER SIXTY-THREE
CHAPTER SIXTY-FOUR
CHAPTER SIXTY-FIVE
CHAPTER SIXTY-SIX
CHAPTER SIXTY-SEVEN
CHAPTER SIXTY-EIGHT
CHAPTER SIXTY-NINE
CHAPTER SEVENTY
CHAPTER SEVENTY-ONE
CHAPTER SEVENTY-TWO
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
BY JIM KELLY
COPYRIGHT
AUTHOR’S NOTE
The City of Cambridge is one of the principal characters in The Great Darkness. Like all fictional characters it is in part a combination of reality and imagination, both in terms of its geography, and history. The City of Sheffield is a minor character, but the same applies.
CHAPTER ONE
October 1939
Cambridge, England
The secret place lay at the end of one of Cambridge’s many blind alleys, through a small oak door. Brooke had the key which turned the well-oiled antique lock. Slipping down the narrow, mossy steps, he reached the river. Here he sat in the darkness on a stone ledge, setting his ochre-tinted glasses on a shelf in the brickwork. A wooden box, with a slate lid, hid a canvas bag containing bathing shorts and a towel.
For a moment he sat listening to the old city, unseen beyond the high walls. Water trickled in drains, pans clattered in a college kitchen, and close by a bicycle rumbled over cobbles. And something new, the sounds of war: soldiers marching, synchronised boots fading away towards the station, and the silence of war, the empty streets, the buses and trams confined to depots, the cinemas and theatres boarded shut.
To the south, a pair of searchlights crossed and uncrossed in the sky like knitting needles, on the watch for the parachutes of spies.
Brooke filled his lungs with the night air, laced with the scent of the river, that unmistakable concoction of river weed, sodden roots and banks. Coal fires brought a smoky softness to the night. The great Fen fields to the north, harvested of beet and potatoes and cabbages, added an earthy edge, the signature of the deep black peat below. And, tonight, a trace of air fuel from the fighter base on the outskirts of the city.
Setting his hat on a nail in the frame of the door, Brooke took a minute to change, folding his clothes neatly in the box. For a moment he hesitated: swimming after dark had been banned, and the army ran a motorboat on regular patrols, armed with a searchlight. But such rules, for Brooke, had always amounted to a challenge.
He used his palms to raise himself the inch needed to allow a forward slide from the step into the cool, forgiving stream.
He lay on his back, floating, looking up into the mercy of the night. Closing his damaged eyes, he drifted with the current, which ran in its ancient canyon of stone; dark tonight, not overseen by the jewelled windows of college rooms. Especially dark tonight, for all of Cambridge was cast in shadow, the streets patrolled by air raid wardens, every window blind. The Great Darkness had fallen by Whitehall decree across half of England, an official blackout in preparation for the bombs that would fall.
For now the war itself, a month old, had been branded ‘phoney’ – the German offensive in the west, following the surprise attack on Poland, was not expected until the new year. The Poles fought on, but were clearly losing. The Russians had invaded from the east. The French had managed a token sortie in the Saar, while the British Expeditionary Force camped along the Belgian border.
But there were casualties, even as the world waited. In the Atlantic, a U-boat had sunk HMS Courageous, with the loss of more than five hundred men. One of the dead had been a former scholar at Brooke’s old college. They’d posted his name on a board by the porters’ lodge, a little ceremony which brought the loss closer to home. For Brooke, just forty years old but a veteran of the Great War, it felt like an augury.
He swam north, where open meadows lay on the west bank, a fen marked on one of Brooke’s beloved city maps as St John’s Wilderness. The river ahead retained the ghost of its reflection: a sinuous bend of faint luminescence, slightly blurred by a rising mist. Somewhere, he heard the dull thud of a poacher’s gun, repeated, matched by echoes. Submerging his face, his eyes, then his ears, he listened to the river turning over the tiny pebbles of its gravel bed, a treble, set against the bass note of the water, the deep rumble of the main stream, as it ran between its banks.
As he surfaced he caught, or rather finally identified, a noise that had been present for some time, and which he’d confused with the under-song of the river itself.
A trundle, a murmur, as of cart wheels.
But he could see nothing: the darkness seemed to rest against his eyes.
The cart wheels came closer, with the trudge of boots matching the pace of the turning wheels.
Finally, he glimpsed shadows on the bank.
And heard a voice: ‘Grim work.’
A half-bar of a song in three voices followed, the melody tangled.
‘Quiet there! Right, we’re under the trees, boys. Those who want to smoke, can.’
A match flared, then another, the light passing from face to face. Brooke saw it all in a moment: a line of three empty carts, the traces horseless. A dozen soldiers, each with a spade, stood in a circle as the cigarette smoke rose. Recalling the scene later for Claire, his wife, he noted that the men appeared cowed, shoulders down, heads bowed, one leaning on the next.
Soldiers had become as common as students on the streets. In the weeks sinc
e Chamberlain’s broadcast had marked the advent of war, Cambridge was an armed camp. Tents in rows filled Parker’s Piece, one of the city’s great parks, as if re-enacting the night before Crecy, or Agincourt. Anti-aircraft guns, dug into pits, formed a necklace of encampments along the borough boundary. Even the sky was defended, dotted with barrage balloons, held by cables over the railway lines and factories, braced to deter dive-bombers when they came, flying low.
But given the strictures of the Great Darkness, what had brought this platoon of men out to the meadows at midnight?
A voice from the riverbank: ‘So no pocket money this time, eh, Sarg?’
‘You’ve done alright. I told the lot of you, stick with me and you’ll not go short. Next time they’ll pay double.’ This accent came from the North, a strange guttural sound Brooke couldn’t place, but the questioner was a Londoner.
Brooke caught a sweet smell on the breeze.
It was as if the next speaker had heard his thoughts. ‘That’s you, Spider – the stink: you haven’t had a wash this year.’
London again, the East End, reeking of the market stall and bargain calls.
‘Christ. The stench is on the spades,’ said another.
‘Use the river.’ The sergeant’s voice this time, losing patience with his men.
Brooke saw the white splashes where they plunged the tools in the water.
‘Right. Let’s get some grub,’ said the sergeant. ‘Put your backs into it …’
Cigarette butts sizzled in the stream, and the soldiers were gone, tramping south, man-hauling the empty carts away to the north.
The sticky sweet smell went with them.
Treading water, Brooke pushed thick wet hair out of his eyes. He thought that anything undertaken by night came freighted with connotations: shame, secrecy, guilt. What had the soldiers buried? Where was the pit?
Detective Inspector Eden Brooke swam back to the mossy steps.
CHAPTER TWO
Brooke was a nighthawk, but he was not alone. Over the years since he’d been invalided home from the last war, his insomnia had deepened, and the wounds to his eyes had failed to heal, so he’d taken to strolling the streets at night. He found them inhabited by fellow travellers: those who couldn’t sleep, those who didn’t wish to sleep, those whose work began when the sun went down. They offered a warm fire, a friendly chat and sometimes inspiration when a case proved intractable. Each night he did, finally, find rest: at home if Claire was not on night shifts at the hospital, or in a cell at the station. Sleep, when it did come, was always brief and sudden. In the dark watches of the night his life often felt like a clock winding down.
Rose King, at her tea stall on Market Hill, had been his first nighthawk. Returning from the Great War, Brooke had joined the Borough – the city’s own police force, one of the oldest, and smallest, in the country. After training, he’d secured a night beat, a preordained path which led him across Market Hill, the city’s central square, each midnight. Rose had provided a hot drink and, beneath a wide awning, an oasis of golden light.
But even the resilient Rose had to abide by the rules and regulations of the Great Darkness, and he found her hut boarded up in the corner of the square, amongst the empty traders’ stalls, and partly obscured by a wall of sandbags. A chalk sign read simply: CLOSED BY GOVERNMENT ORDER.
Brooke stood in the silent square, considering his next move, lighting one of his precious Black Russian cigarettes. He watched the flame consume the paper, edging down towards the golden filter. The mist was thickening, seeping up through drain covers and out of culverts, a milk-white flood which threatened to engulf the city. The night was getting chilly, and his damp hair made him shiver. The strains of a piano came and went from a nearby pub, but there was no light, just a half-line of a song.
Something of the scene he had witnessed on the riverbank refused to succumb to a rational explanation. Many people are curious and ask questions, but Brooke was driven by an innate conviction that he had a right to know the answers. The result was a restless life. Why order soldiers to dig at night? Why promise to pay soldiers to dig at night? He needed a fresh perspective, to rise above the moment, and he knew precisely which nighthawk to visit.
Leaving the shadows of the old market he made his way down Petty Cury, the narrow street a procession of shop windows taped up in criss-cross patterns against bomb blast. His footsteps echoed, thanks to the Blakeys on his brogues: metal studs to protect the leather, an army trick he’d adopted for civvy street. He circled St Andrew the Great, playing his torch over the stained glass, noting the familiar image he’d been shocked by as a boy: the severed head of John the Baptist, neatly set on its silver platter, awash with the saint’s blood.
An echo of this grisly martyrdom waited a hundred yards along the street, where Brooke paused outside Sidney Sussex College. His father, a professor of medicine, had been a distant figure, but had once returned home from dinner at the college with a sensational story, which he’d told his son while sitting on his bed, an unheard-of degree of intimacy that had cemented the moment in Brooke’s memory more than the gruesome tale itself.
‘I’ve seen a man’s skull tonight,’ his father had said, his eyes bright in the candlelight.
The story was richly Gothic. The body of Oliver Cromwell, the great republican and a former student of the college, had been dug up from his quiet grave by supporters of the restored King Charles II. The head, hacked from the body, had been hung from London Bridge, beside that of common criminals, where it was pecked at by birds.
‘The eyes were first to go,’ his father had explained.
Blown down in a storm, the top of the skull had fractured and had been spirited away by supporters, taken north to Cambridge to be hidden within the great man’s old college. Only two trusted fellows ever knew its hiding place at any time. On special nights, the lights over dinner were doused and the custodians despatched to find the treasure, which was set on the polished mahogany table, supporting a candle.
‘He was with us until the port and cheese,’ his father had said, tucking Brooke in. ‘Then he was whisked away.’
As Brooke surveyed the college facade, he saw a flickering light, briefly, in one of the lancet windows: the selected fellows, perhaps, returning Cromwell’s head to its hiding place.
Pressing on, he cut down an alley full of metal bins to a fire escape, which took him up six flights before decanting him onto the roof of one of the shops. A metal ladder led a few feet further aloft to a lookout post, one of several set up across the city by the Observer Corps, with a sweeping panoramic view across the rooftops, ideal for spotting enemy aircraft and the fires their bombs and incendiaries might ignite.
Jo Ashmore emerged from a conical hut at the rear of the platform, straightening her uniform, unable to stop herself retouching her short, expensively cut brown hair. Tall, willowy, fashionably boyish, she smiled broadly when she recognised her visitor.
Brooke swept his hand across the scene below. ‘The Great Darkness! A success, and no doubts. But what have you seen, Jo? Tell me all.’
‘Always questions, Brooke, never answers.’
‘I’m a scientist. Sorry, I was a scientist, of sorts,’ he said, taking off his hat and running a hand back through the thick black hair. ‘If you want answers, you must ask questions. Ask the right one, at the right time, and the world makes sense.’
She peered at Brooke’s shadowy face and laughed, retrieving a powder compact from her uniform and holding the mirror up. The detective took off his glasses and stared at his own image: the high forehead, the pale blue eyes, the hair flopping forward. A long strand of green river weed was stuck to his cheek.
‘You’ll be growing webbed feet next,’ she said.
Ashmore was Brooke’s newest nighthawk recruit, tonight marking her first full month as a member of the Observer Corps. She’d grown up next door to the Brookes, played with their children, free to come and go with her brother, Marcus. The houses, a mirror-pair of
detached villas, were set in meadows down by the river. The families were close in that entirely natural way which means that nobody can recall how the threads had become entangled.
A racy reputation had marked her coming of age: there were parties in London, boyfriends with fast cars, smart clothes. She’d abandoned it all at the outbreak of war for her post, a mystery Brooke suspected she felt cast her in a Romantic light. He noted that she’d expertly applied lipstick to create a delicate bow of her lips, and that her tin hat had been hand-painted with the elegant motif: OC.
From her post she watched for EA: enemy aircraft, especially bombers, of which, so far in this war, there had been none. But the whole country had its eyes on the sky, when it wasn’t trying to ferret out spies and German parachutists hidden in garden sheds. This was the intolerable burden of the phoney war: a time of watching and waiting.
Not a single light betrayed the city below. Rooftops stretched north towards the Fens, south to the Gogs, a range of low chalk hills, dimly seen against the stars. Mist lay in the streets, as if college sheets had been laid out on the cobbles.
‘I saw you earlier,’ she said, a smile widening under the tin hat. ‘It’s a good job these glasses aren’t really powerful otherwise I might have seen more than I should.’
She enjoyed teasing Brooke about his looks. When she was a child she’d been told the tall, pale man with the odd glasses had fought with T. E. Lawrence in the wildernesses of Egypt and Palestine. The great hero’s dark good looks found an echo in Brooke, a wounded knight, brooding, soldiering on. And there’d been a medal from the king, for some always unspoken act of heroism, which added lustre to the legend. As a ten-year-old she’d once spent an evening with Brooke’s daughter searching the upper floors of the house for his missing desert robes.
‘You didn’t see anything else when I was swimming?’ asked Brooke. ‘On the far bank, just there …’ He pointed to a spot in the gloom beyond the rooftops.
She went back to her hut, reappeared with a box file and handed Brooke a typed order sheet:
CAM 005/OC ADVISORY