Lockwood & Co.: The Screaming Staircase

Lockwood & Co.: The Screaming Staircase Read Free

Book: Lockwood & Co.: The Screaming Staircase Read Free
Author: Jonathan Stroud
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checked everything back in the office, but we were more than happy to do it again. A girl at Rotwell’s had died the previous week after forgetting to restock her magnesium flares.
    Outside the window, the sun was gone. Faint clouds choked the blue-black sky, and mists had risen to engulf the garden. Beyond black hedges, lights shone in other houses.They were near, but also distant, cut off from us like ships passing across deep water.
    We put the belts back on, and checked the Velcro strapping around the rapiers. I fixed the teas and brought them to the table. Lockwood found the biscuits. We sat together while the oil lamp flickered and shadows danced in the corners of the room.
    At last Lockwood pulled the collar of his greatcoat high about his neck. ‘Let’s see what Mrs Hope has to say for herself,’ he said. He stretched out a long thin hand for the folder lying on the table. Lamplight glimmered darkly in his flop of hair.
    As he read, I checked the thermometer clipped to my belt. Fifteen degrees. Not warm, but roughly what you’d expect from an unheated house at this time of year. I took my notebook from another pouch and jotted down the room and figure. I also recorded details of the aural phenomena I’d experienced in the hall.
    Lockwood tossed the folder aside. ‘Well, that was useful.’
    ‘Really?’
    ‘No. I’m being ironic. Or is it sarcastic? I can never remember.’
    ‘Irony’s cleverer, so you’re probably being sarcastic. What’s she say?’
    ‘Absolutely nothing of any use. She might as well have written it in Latin for all the good it does us. Here’s asummary. The Hopes have lived here for two years. Before that they were down in Kent somewhere; she gives lots of irrelevant detail about how happy they were. Hardly any curfews, ghost-lamps almost never on, how you could go for a walk late evening and only meet your living neighbours. That sort of thing. Don’t believe a word of it myself; Kent’s had one of the biggest outbreaks of anywhere outside London, according to George.’
    I sipped my tea. ‘It’s where the Problem began , I thought.’
    ‘So they say. Anyhow, then they moved up here. All fine, no troubles in the house. No manifestations of any kind. Husband changed his job, started working from home. That’s six months ago. Still nothing funny going on. Then he fell downstairs and died.’
    ‘Hold it,’ I said. ‘How did he fall?’
    ‘Tripped, apparently.’
    ‘What I mean is, was he alone?’
    ‘According to Mrs Hope, he was. She was in bed. Happened during the night. She says her husband was a bit distracted in the weeks before he died. Hadn’t been sleeping well. She thinks he got up to get a drink of water.’
    I grunted noncommittally. ‘Ri-i-ight . . .’
    Lockwood flashed me a glance. ‘You think she pushed him?’
    ‘Not necessarily. But it would provide a motive for the haunting, wouldn’t it? Husbands don’t normally haunt wives,except when there’s reasons. Pity she didn’t want to talk to us. I’d have liked to suss her out.’
    ‘Well, you can’t always tell by looking,’ Lockwood said. He shrugged his narrow shoulders. ‘Did I ever tell you about the time I met the notorious Harry Crisp? Sweet-faced man, he was, soft-voiced and twinkly-eyed. Good company and very plausible; he actually got me to lend him a tenner. Yet it turned out in the end that he was the most appalling murderer who liked nothing better than to—’
    I held up a hand. ‘You did tell me that. About a million times.’
    ‘Oh. Well, the point is, Mr Hope could be coming back for a host of other reasons that aren’t to do with vengeance. Something left undone, for instance: a will he hasn’t told his wife about, or some stash of money hidden under the bed . . .’
    ‘Yeah, maybe. So the disturbances began soon after his death?’
    ‘A week or two later. She was mostly away from the house up until then. Once she’d moved back, she began to be aware of an unwelcome

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