Eyes still on the ceiling, brow furrowed in thought, Strike said:
“We’ve got two days at that tech conference starting tomorrow. Which do you want to do, Harley Street or a conference center out in Epping Forest? We can swap over if you want. D’you want to spend tomorrow watching Dodgy, or with hundreds of stinking geeks in superhero T-shirts?”
“Not all tech people smell,” Robin reprimanded him. “Your mate Spanner doesn’t.”
“You don’t want to judge Spanner by the amount of deodorant he puts on to come here,” said Strike.
Spanner, who had overhauled their computer and telephone system when the business had received its dramatic boost in business, was the younger brother of Strike’s old friend Nick. He fancied Robin, as she and Strike were equally aware.
Strike mulled over options, rubbing his chin again.
“I’ll call Chiswell back and find out what he’s after,” he said at last. “You never know, it might be a bigger job than that lawyer whose wife’s sleeping around. He’s next on the waiting list, right?”
“Him, or that American woman who’s married to the Ferrari dealer. They’re both waiting.”
Strike sighed. Infidelity formed the bulk of their workload.
“I hope Chiswell’s wife isn’t cheating. I fancy a change.”
The sofa made its usual flatulent noises as Strike quit it. As he strode back to the inner office, Robin called after him:
“Are you happy for me to finish up this paperwork, then?”
“If you don’t mind,” said Strike, closing the door behind him.
Robin turned back to her computer feeling quite cheerful. A busker had just started singing “No Woman, No Cry” in Denmark Street and for a while there, while they talked about Billy Knight and the Chiswells, she had felt as though they were the Strike and Robin of a year ago, before he had sacked her, before she had married Matthew.
Meanwhile, in the inner office, Strike’s call to Jasper Chiswell had been answered almost instantly.
“Chiswell,” he barked.
“Cormoran Strike here,” said the detective. “You spoke to my partner a short while ago.”
“Ah, yes,” said the Minister for Culture, who sounded as though he were in the back of a car. “I’ve got a job for you. Nothing I want to discuss over the phone. I’m busy today and this evening, unfortunately, but tomorrow would suit.”
“
“Sorry, no chance tomorrow,” said Strike, watching motes of dust fall through the bright sunlight. “No chance until Friday, actually. Can you give me an idea what kind of job we’re talking about, Minister?”
Chiswell’s response was both tense and angry.
“I can’t discuss it over the phone. I’ll make it worth your while to meet me, if that’s what you want.”
“It isn’t a question of money, it’s time. I’m solidly booked until Friday.”
“Oh, for Christ’s sake—”
Chiswell suddenly removed his phone from his mouth and Strike heard him talking furiously to somebody else.
“—
In the background, Strike heard a nervous man say:
“I’m sorry, Minister, it was No Entry—”
“Never mind that! Open this—
Strike waited, eyebrows raised. He heard a car door slam, rapid footsteps and then Jasper Chiswell spoke again, his mouth close to the receiver.
“The job’s urgent!” he hissed.
“If it can’t wait until Friday, you’ll have to find someone else, I’m afraid.”
“
Chiswell said nothing for a few seconds; then, finally:
“It’s got to be you. I’ll explain when we meet, but—all right, if it
“All right,” Strike agreed, now thoroughly intrigued. “See you at Pratt’s.”
He hung up and returned to the office where Robin was opening and sorting mail. When he told her the upshot of the conversation, she Googled Pratt’s for him.
“I didn’t think places like this still existed,” she said in disbelief, after a minute’s reading off the monitor.
“Places like what?”
“It’s a gentleman’s club… very Tory… no women allowed, except as guests of club members at lunchtime… and ‘to avoid confusion,’” Robin read from the Wikipedia page, “‘all male staff members are called George.’”
“What if they hire a woman?”
“Apparently they did in the eighties,” said Robin, her expression midway between amusement and disapproval. “They called her Georgina.”
9
Henrik Ibsen,