fall to them when the Lovelace came down.
Itâs like a microcosm for the world, she thought: burning before final destruction.
A shower. Cold. Thatâs what was required.
She prolonged the showerâs beneficial effects by letting the water evaporate as she moved into the lounge.
With its heaters blaring, this room was also unbearably hot. If they donât fix it soon, she thought, Iâll pull the radiators off the wall: thatâd force their hands.
Catching the fury behind that intention, she thought maybe Lyndall was right: maybe they should cut their losses and move before the estate breathed its last.
The bedroom had to be cooler than this. She made her way back and, having opened the curtains, settled herself on top of the bed. And there she lay, letting her thoughts drift as she watched the night edged out by a bloodied dawn that washed the dirty white walls with pink. Soon after, bands of crimson and purple and deep dark red began to streak the sky in defiance of the rising sun.
Such a ferocious sight. Red sky in the morning: an omen.
For days now sheâd had a feeling of something not being right. It wasnât just Banjiâs recent reappearance, or the impending closure of the estate; it was a feeling that something awful was about to happen. To her. To Lyndall. Or to somebody they knew. Banji perhaps.
She seemed to see again that vision of him, dwarfed by the helicopter, and then the lonely slope of his back as he had walked away.
She should have kept him with her, should not have let him go.
A crazy thought. She couldnât have stopped him. Never could.
Itâs the heat, she thought, itâs playing with my mind. Except this was not the first time that a similar foreboding had gripped her. Sheâd felt it just before her father had died, for example, or when . . .
No, she would not think of it. She reached out and switched on the radio.
âItâs 6. 15,â she heard, âand the temperature in London continues to climb.â
1.45 p.m.
All Joshua had to do was ask for coffee and it would be instantly supplied. But hours of speed-reading through seemingly unending piles of urgent for-his-eyes-only documents made him want a short break, and, as well, it would be good for him to be sighted by some of the thousands who worked in the building, especially on his first day.
He made his way down the corridor, reaching the lift just as the door began to glide shut. The policeman inside the lift jabbed at a button and the door slid open.
âThatâs all right, officer. Iâll take the stairs.â As Joshua turned away, he took with him a frozen image of the manâs rictus grin.
He pushed through the swing doors and made his way down, two steps at a time, to the senior canteen on the third floor.
It was a quiet room, and luxurious, its windows lining the whole of one wall to look out on the Thames, and with plush tables and chairs that wouldnât have been out of place in a five-star restaurant. Another of his predecessorâs extravagances, although, from what heâd read that morning, a comparatively small one. Even so, given the dire state of the Metâs finances, it would have to go.
No need, anyway, for silver service, especially when all you were after was a coffee. âNo, thanks,â he told the waiter who was bent on ushering him to the Commissionerâs special table, âIâll get it myself.â
There was a queue by the takeaway counter, which evaporated at his approach. âGo ahead,â he said to an officer who should have been in front of him, but she smiled and slunk away.
âCoffee,â he said. âStrong and black,â and when the woman behind the counter reached for a cup from above the coffee machine, he added, âTakeaway.â
âWe can easily fetch the cup, sir. When youâre done.â
âIâve no doubt that you can. But why should you have to? A paper cup