Chapter 209 The Resurrection Man's House
POV: Callum | Shoreditch, Jack's building
Jack's building in Shoreditch has not changed since the last time I was here, which is to say it has the quality of a place where change would be noticed and corrected, the specific ordered quality of someone who treats their workspace as a thinking tool and who maintains it accordingly. Files organized by date and cross-referenced by subject. Maps on the walls with layers of notation in different colors. The smell of old paper and the chemical smell of preservation work and underneath both of those something else, something colder, which is the smell of a room where records of dead people live.
Jack is already laying documents on the table when I arrive, which means he knew I was coming before I arrived, which is either a surveillance capability I did not know he had or the specific intuition of someone who has been watching the situation develop and who worked out that this visit was inevitable.
"Parliament building," I say.
"I know why you're here," he says. He is twenty-one now and he has the quality Silas had, the specific composure of someone who moves through dangerous situations by being the person in the room with the most useful information, which is a kind of power that does not require size or strength and which is therefore available to people who are not large or strong. He sets a floor plan on the table. "Main hall. Holding wing. Execution chamber, which is on the east side of the building at ground level." He sets a second document beside it. "Security rotation on execution days. Six at main, two at service, one at each internal checkpoint."
"How current is this?"
"Updated this morning," he says. "I have a contact on the Parliament cleaning staff."
The floor plan is better than anything Tom built from public records. The execution chamber has two access points, the corridor from the holding wing and a second door on the south wall that connects to a storage area, which connects through two rooms to the service entrance. The service entrance that Isla's distraction is intended to clear.
"I need something else," I say.
He looks at me.
"Violette's records," I say. "Mordaunt's blackmail files. She gave them to you."
"She gave them to me to manage," he says, with the specific distinction of someone who tracks these things carefully. "Not to release."
"If those records go public during the execution," I say, "Parliament is going to be managing a catastrophic political crisis instead of managing a security situation. Twelve senior vampires having their leverage exposed simultaneously cannot be contained quickly. It creates the gap."
Jack sits with this for a moment. He has the quality of someone doing a genuine calculation, not performing deliberation but actually weighing things.
"The favor," he says. "The one you owe me for the building layout. I am calling it now. You use the records and the debt is paid."
"Agreed," I say.
"You understand what this does," he says. "It is not just a distraction. It is the full exposure of the blackmail network that Mordaunt has used to control Parliament for thirty years. Every member who has been coerced, every decision that was produced by leverage rather than genuine vote, every institution that was shaped by what Mordaunt knew about people and chose to use." He looks at me. "Parliament does not recover from this quickly. The system you have been fighting inside for three years is going to collapse. What replaces it is not guaranteed."
"What replaces it," I say, "is what we build."
He opens a drawer and removes a drive and sets it on the table between us. "There is a supernatural press network. Three outlets. I have their contact details. If the files are transmitted to all three simultaneously during the execution, they are published before Parliament can suppress them." He slides a second paper across. "These are the contacts. This is the transmission method. This is the timing window that produces maximum disruption."
I pick up the drive and the paper.
"Jack," he says. "It destroys everything. Parliament, the system, all of it. London falls into chaos. You sure?"
I hold the drive. I think about the breakfast this morning and the eight to four vote and Isolde's leverage and thirty years of Mordaunt holding files over people until even the ones who wanted to do right could not do it. I think about Valentina in a clean cell in a building down the road and the two hours and the two-hour window closing toward noon.
"Yes," I say.