The Silkworm

Robert Galbraith by Robert Galbraith

 

 

 

To Jenkins,

 

without whom…

 

he knows the rest

 

 

 

… blood and vengeance the scene, death the story,

 

a sword imbrued with blood, the pen that writes,

 

and the poet a terrible buskined tragical fellow,

 

with a wreath about his head of burning match instead of bays.

 

 

 

The Noble Spanish Soldier

 

Thomas Dekker

 

 

 

 

 

1

 

 

 

QUESTION

 

What dost thou feed on?

 

 

ANSWER

 

 

Broken sleep.

 

Thomas Dekker, The Noble Spanish Soldier

 

 

 

 

 

‘Someone bloody famous,’ said the hoarse voice on the end of the line, ‘better’ve died, Strike.’

 

The large unshaven man tramping through the darkness of pre-dawn, with his telephone clamped to his ear, grinned.

 

‘It’s in that ballpark.’

 

‘It’s six o’clock in the fucking morning!’

 

‘It’s half past, but if you want what I’ve got, you’ll need to come and get it,’ said Cormoran Strike. ‘I’m not far away from your place. There’s a—’

 

‘How d’you know where I live?’ demanded the voice.

 

‘You told me,’ said Strike, stifling a yawn. ‘You’re selling your flat.’

 

‘Oh,’ said the other, mollified. ‘Good memory.’

 

‘There’s a twenty-four-hour caff—’

 

‘Fuck that. Come into the office later—’

 

‘Culpepper, I’ve got another client this morning, he pays better than you do and I’ve been up all night. You need this now if you’re going to use it.’

 

A groan. Strike could hear the rustling of sheets.

 

‘It had better be shit-hot.’

 

‘Smithfield Café on Long Lane,’ said Strike and rang off.

 

The slight unevenness in his gait became more pronounced as he walked down the slope towards Smithfield Market, monolithic in the winter darkness, a vast rectangular Victorian temple to meat, where from four every weekday morning animal flesh was unloaded, as it had been for centuries past, cut, parcelled and sold to butchers and restaurants across London. Strike could hear voices through the gloom, shouted instructions and the growl and beep of reversing lorries unloading the carcasses. As he entered Long Lane, he became merely one among many heavily muffled men moving purposefully about their Monday-morning business.

 

A huddle of couriers in fluorescent jackets cupped mugs of tea in their gloved hands beneath a stone griffin standing sentinel on the corner of the market building. Across the road, glowing like an open fireplace against the surrounding darkness, was the Smithfield Café, open twenty-four hours a day, a cupboard-sized cache of warmth and greasy food.

 

The café had no bathroom, but an arrangement with the bookies a few doors along. Ladbrokes would not open for another three hours, so Strike made a detour down a side alley and in a dark doorway relieved himself of a bladder bulging with weak coffee drunk in the course of a night’s work. Exhausted and hungry, he turned at last, with the pleasure that only a man who has pushed himself past his physical limits can ever experience, into the fat-laden atmosphere of frying eggs and bacon.

 

Two men in fleeces and waterproofs had just vacated a table. Strike manoeuvered his bulk into the small space and sank, with a grunt of satisfaction, onto the hard wood and steel chair. Almost before he asked, the Italian owner placed tea in front of him in a tall white mug, which came with triangles of white buttered bread. Within five minutes a full English breakfast lay before him on a large oval plate.

 

Strike blended well with the strong men banging their way in and out of the café. He was large and dark, with dense, short, curly hair that had receded a little from the high, domed forehead that topped a boxer’s broad nose and thick, surly brows. His jaw was grimy with stubble and bruise-coloured shadows enlarged his dark eyes. He ate gazing dreamily at the market building opposite. The nearest arched entrance, numbered two, was taking substance as the darkness thinned: a stern stone face, ancient and bearded, stared back at him from over the doorway. Had there ever been a god of carcasses?

 

He had just started on his sausages when Dominic Culpepper arrived. The journalist was almost as tall as Strike but thin, with a choirboy’s complexion. A strange asymmetry, as though somebody had given his face a counterclockwise twist, stopped him being girlishly handsome.

 

‘This better be good,’ Culpepper said as he sat down, pulled off his gloves and glanced almost suspiciously around the café.

 

‘Want some food?’ asked Strike through a mouthful of sausage.

 

‘No,’ said Culpepper.

 

‘Rather wait till you can get a croissant?’ asked Strike, grinning.

 

‘Fuck off, Strike.’

 

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