"We've a body this morning that could be Sean, and I'm sure Ulrike clued you in on that. Beyond that, we've got a kid called Jared Salvatore identified and three others in line to be claimed by someone. Five in all."
He didn't say anything, but he seemed to be holding his breath for some reason, and Barbara wondered what that meant. He finally murmured, "Jesus."
"What's happened to the rest of your assessment kids, Mr. Strong?" Barbara asked.
"What do you mean?"
"How closely do you follow them when they're done with their first two weeks at this place?"
"I don't. I haven't. I mean, they go on to their instructors next. If they want to go on, that is. The instructors keep tabs on how they're doing, and they report in to Ulrike. The whole team meets every two weeks and we talk, and Ulrike herself counsels the kids having trouble." He frowned. He tapped his knuckles on his desk. "If these other kids turn out to be ours...Someone's trying to discredit Colossus," he told her. "Or one of us. Someone's trying to get at one of us."
"You think that's the case?" Barbara asked.
"If even one other of the bodies comes from here, what else is there to think?"
"That kids are in danger all over London," Barbara said, "but that they're really up against it if they end up here."
"Like we're setting out to kill them, you mean?" Strong's question was outraged.
Barbara smiled and flipped her notebook closed. "Your words, not mine, Mr. Strong," she said.
REVEREND BRAM SAVIDGE and his wife lived in a West Hampstead neighbourhood that belied the church leader's we-are-of-the-people demeanour. It was a small house, true. But it was far more than anyone whom Lynley had seen either dishing out the food or eating it at Plugged Inn to the Lord could afford. And Savidge led the way there in a late-model Saab. As DC Havers would have happily pointed out: Someone round here wasn't hurting for lolly.
Savidge waited for Lynley to find a place for the Bentley on the tree-lined street. He stood on the front step of his house, looking vaguely biblical with his caftan blowing in the winter breeze, coatless despite the frigid winter weather. When Lynley finally joined him, he sorted out three locks on the front door and opened it. He called, "Oni? I've brought a visitor, darling."
He didn't call out about Sean, Lynley noted. Not "Has the boy phoned?" Not "Any word from Sean?" Just "I've brought a visitor, darling," and in a tentative manner that sounded somehow like a warning and was completely out of character for the man Lynley had been speaking with so far.
There was no immediate reply to Savidge's call. He said to Lynley, "Wait here," and directed him to the sitting room. He himself went to a staircase and climbed quickly to the first floor. Lynley heard him moving along a corridor.
He took a moment to gaze round the sitting room, which was simply fitted out with well-made furniture and a brightly patterned rug. The walls held old documents, framed and mounted, and as above him doors opened and closed in rapid succession, Lynley went to examine these. One was an antique bill of lading, apparently from a ship called the Valiant Sheba whose cargo had been twenty males, thirty-two females-eighteen of whom were documented as "breeding"-and thirteen children. Another was a letter written in copperplate on stationery that bore "Ash Grove, nr Kingston" as its letterhead. Faded with time, this proved difficult to read, but Lynley made out "excellent stud potential" and "if you can control the brute."
"My thrice-great-grandfather, Superintendent. He didn't quite take to slavery."
Lynley turned. In the doorway, Savidge stood with a girl at his side. "Oni, my wife," he said. "She's asked to be introduced."
It was hard for Lynley to believe he was looking at Savidge's wife, for Oni appeared no older than sixteen, if that. She was thin, long necked, and African to the core. Like her husband, her manner of dress was ethnic, and she carried an unusual musical instrument in her arms, its belly not unlike a banjo, but with a tall bridge that lifted more than a dozen strings high up.
One glance at her explained a great deal to Lynley. Oni was exquisite: like midnight unblemished, with hundreds of years of blood untarnished by miscegenation. She was what Savidge himself could never be because of the Valiant Sheba. She was also the last thing a rational