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Authors: Natasha Ngan

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BOOK: The Memory Keepers
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45

SEVEN

Despite everything that had happened, Seven felt weirdly happy that morning when he woke.

He didn’t try convincing himself that last night had all been a dream. He didn’t groan at the thought of having to see Alba again. He just stumbled out of bed, head groggy from tiredness, pulling on his tattered grey shirt and blue trousers before heading out of the flat, a twisted little smile dancing on his lips.

Yes, his life was a mess. But for the first time ever, he had someone to share that mess with.

Seven headed through Vauxhall to Clapham Road. The street was busy with traffic. Glaring grey light from the overcast day glanced off the metal shells of cars and motorbikes and lorries, the blare of their horns and grumbling engines loud in the fume-clogged air.

Digging in his trouser pocket, Seven pulled out the few coins he had. He bit back a curse. As always, it was less than he’d thought; even though he’d been poor his whole life, he still half hoped some sort of miracle would happen and he’d suddenly discover a giant pot of gold tucked down the front of his pants. But his last payment from Carpenter for stealing Alastair White’s skid had gone almost entirely on rent, and there was barely any left.

Seven’s stomach let out a growl.

‘I know,’ he said sadly, patting it. ‘Trust me, I know.’

He followed the road towards the Overground track that cut through at Clapham North. Most of the old railway lines had been removed for new buildings, but like so much of South the regeneration work was often abandoned due to lack of government funding. Seven didn’t mind though. As with the ancient Battersea Power Station, Southers had appropriated the space for their own use. He liked the market that had sprung up along the disused tracks here. It was busy and noisy: perfect conditions for thieving.

At the bridge over the tracks, Seven jumped the low brick wall and went down the grassy bank onto the railway line. Amid the tangled foliage that carpeted the metal tracks in greens and browns, hundreds of market stands and hawker stalls had been set up. They ran down the centre of the disused line in a colourful display of flapping awnings and signs. His stomach growled louder at the food smells wafting up from cookers in thick clouds of steam.

‘Two for a pound,’ called out a stall-owner, catching Seven eyeing her melons (the fruit kind, he might add).

Ducking his head, he moved on through the busy crowds.

The trouble with stealing from Southers was that they
expected
it. That’s why Seven often took food from his skid-thieving jobs in North to keep him going. Northers left their food out, not a care in the world. In South you were considered a prince if you weren’t so starving you could actually save food for later.

After a few minutes browsing the market, Seven found what he was looking for. A stall selling freshly made pastries and breads was wedged in on one side by a gnarled old oak. The tree’s wide trunk protruded onto the path, creating a bottleneck outside the stall.

Seven slipped in with the crowd. He followed its flow, moving closer to the bakery stall. Even over the stink of the bodies pressed against him, he could smell fresh bread, and it made his mouth water.

He was right next to the stall now. He chanced a quick side-glance to see what was on offer; all of it looked delicious. Then, keeping his head down, he reached out a hand.

He was away with a handful of pastry before he’d even taken another breath. Seven allowed himself to be swallowed back up in the stream of people. He counted in his head as he moved away from the stall, waiting for a shout or cry of recognition.

One.

Nothing.

Two
.

Nothing.

Three
.

Still nothing.

Confident he’d got away with it, he looked at what he’d stolen. It was some sort of sweet pastry, sticky with a thick maple coating and braided with raisins.

‘Well done, hands,’ Seven muttered, grinning, then lifted the pastry to his lips. But before he could take a bite –

Crash!

Out of nowhere, something collided into him.

Cries flew up, the crowd scattering as Seven was bowled over, the back of his head smacking into the trampled grass. His eyes jammed shut as pain snapped down his spine, and then he was opening them, looking into the black-furred face of a dog.

A huge, effing
beast
of a dog.

Its front paws pressed down heavy on his stomach. Letting out a huff of hot, wet air into his face, it dipped its head down, going for the pastry clutched to Seven’s chest. Its rough tongue scraped over his hands.

‘Hey!’ Seven cried. ‘That’s mine!’

Grabbing the dog’s muzzle, he shoved it away.

The dog growled. Its ears snapped back. Baring its teeth, it lunged forward and grabbed the collar of his shirt. Teeth dug into his skin. The dog jerked its head from side to side and the sound of the fabric tearing was like a whip-crack through the air. When the dog finally pulled away, still snarling, a piece of Seven’s tattered shirt hung from its muzzle.

Seven scrambled to his feet. He held up the sad, squashed remains of his pastry, debating whether or not to eat it.
So it has a little dog-dribble on it now
, he thought
. What doesn’t?
Then he realised the crowd had gone silent, everyone staring at him.

His cheeks flamed.

‘What?’ Seven shouted, glaring at them.

It took him a few more seconds to realise what they were staring at.

The front of his ripped shirt had flapped open, and the tattoo on his chest – the outline of a saw, one of the marks the London Guard had shown on their broadcast about the raid, offering a monetary reward for information that led to any of the skid-thieves’ capture – was now clear for everyone to see.

‘Oh, crap,’ Seven muttered.

Then he turned and ran.

46

ALBA

They had a table at Goldman’s Grill, an expensive, brasserie-style restaurant in Paternoster Square. It was on the top floor of what used to be one of the world’s premiere investment banks before America’s triple recession at the end of the twenty-first century. A glass wall ran along one side of the restaurant. Low-hanging chandeliers lit everything in a crystalline glow. Waiters in black waistcoats and silver aprons moved carefully between the tables, trays balanced on their hands.

Alba was sat with her back to the window, though she wished she were facing it instead. The view over Paternoster Square with St Paul’s’ great spired dome would have been far more pleasant to look at than the faces of her parents, Thierry, and his mother and father.

She had been surprised they’d chosen such a busy restaurant for lunch. The Burton-Lyons were the most recognisable family in London. Security would be of the utmost importance. But towards the end of the meal, Alba noticed a couple of men in black suits standing just outside the entrance to the restaurant, scanning the room behind dark glasses; they must be the Burton-Lyons’ guards.

‘Don’t worry,’ Thierry said when he noticed her looking. He leant in close. ‘They’ll leave us alone whenever I ask.’

‘Perfect,’ she muttered.

They had been at lunch for almost two hours. The waiters had just brought dessert: rosewater crème brûlées and delicate vials of sweet wine. Though no one had brought up the specific subject of marriage yet, Alba knew it was coming. The Whites and the Burton-Lyons had never dined together alone before. There was a reason they were starting now.

Thierry’s hand was hovering dangerously near her leg, and she was just wondering whether to slap it away or ignore it when there was a faint buzzing sound from somewhere under the table.

Thierry pulled out a small tablet from his trouser pocket. Despite herself, Alba couldn’t help but be interested in the device. As well as limiting her watching the Net, her parents wouldn’t allow her to have any tablets of her own.

A girl’s face came up on the screen as the caller.

‘A friend of yours?’ asked Alba, trying to sound uninterested.

Thierry slid his finger over the screen to reject the call. ‘Just a girl I met who will not stop hounding me,’ he said, shrugging. ‘It’s unfortunate when girls take a few nights together as meaning something more. They need to understand that there is no time for love when you are preparing to run a country.’ He put the tablet back in his pocket, and before she could stop him, placed a hand on Alba’s thigh. ‘Wouldn’t you agree?’

Alba broke his gaze, cheeks burning with disgust. Thierry had effectively just told her he’d already slept with quite a few girls  …  and he had said it so casually, as though it were nothing. Was this really the sort of man she’d have to spend the rest of her years with?

And as for love? Alba didn’t care what Thierry thought. She
certainly
had time for it (with someone other than him, of course). She wanted romance and passion. She wanted the butterflies-in-your-stomach and the head-in-the-clouds kind of love. The sort of love she read about in novels, where the heroes and heroines were prepared to die before they would ever give each other up.

She wanted –

‘Seven.’

Alba nearly jumped out of her seat.

‘What?’ she blustered, looking round wildly at Thierry.

‘I know,’ he said, nodding at her expression. ‘Seven families already asking my parents for my match with their daughters. There’ll be more, I’m sure.’

Alba blinked.

His hand tightened on her leg. ‘That’s why my parents are in such a hurry to announce
our
match –’

‘Are you whispering our secrets, Thierry?’

Thierry’s father, Christian Burton-Lyon, smiled at them from across the table. There was something almost ridiculous about his appearance: his hair was set in little oily black curls on the top of his head, and a moustache twirled over his top lip. His neck and belly were wide with age.

‘You’ve only been back in London less than a week.’ Christian Burton-Lyon’s smooth voice was thick with a French accent. He twirled a glass in one hand, teeth glittering. ‘At this rate, soon the entire city will know the details of our most intimate business.’

Thierry gave a brusque laugh. ‘Apologies, Father. But how is a man to keep quiet when he is sitting next to such a beautiful woman?’

‘Too right, my dear boy,’ said Christian Burton-Lyon, smiling. ‘Too right.’

‘Oh, will you boys behave.’

Thierry’s mother, Julia, smiled and shook her head. She was pretty, with a tall, slender frame and short brown hair cropped around her chin. Unlike her husband and son, her accent was that of a high-class Norther.

‘Your mother is right,’ Christian Burton-Lyon continued, after giving his wife a playful poke. ‘No matter how eager we may be to share it, the news is not to go public until the Winter-turn Ball.’

‘My lips are sealed, Father.’


Merveilleux
. Now, where were we  … ’

As the adults at the table fell back into conversation, Thierry leant close to Alba. She didn’t hear a word of what he was saying, still reeling from the knowledge that their engagement would be announced at the Winter-turn Ball. That was just a couple of weeks away. It was far too soon.

Though a million
light-years
away was too soon when it came to Thierry.

Dolly had promised she’d find a way to save Alba from marriage. But what could she do in two weeks? And once the news of the engagement went public, Alba would never be able to escape it. Her name would be tied to Thierry’s forever.

‘What now?’ Thierry growled suddenly, pulling his hand off her knee and sliding the tablet back out of his pocket.

‘Another needy ex-girlfriend?’ asked Alba coolly.

He didn’t answer. He was holding the tablet in such a way she couldn’t see the screen, so when he let out a booming laugh, she flinched.

‘Wonderful news from the London Guard,’ Thierry said loudly, cutting off the chatter around the table. ‘They have just named another of the escaped memory-thieves from the raid at Borough Market. Apparently he was spotted in South an hour ago. The tattoo on his chest was recognised as belonging to one of the thieving crews. They’ve got his ID now. The ugly bastard will be caught in no time.’

Thierry set his tablet on the table. He pushed it forward so everyone could see the picture of the boy on its screen.

Alba’s heart nearly flat-out stopped.

Before she’d even looked at the image she knew whose face it would be, but it still hit her with a force so strong it took her breath away. There he was, those small grey eyes and rumpled hair and beautiful, twisted grin looking up at her from the screen, and printed below them the words:

WANTED FOR IMMEDIATE ARREST

47

SEVEN

‘You look terrible, man.’

Seven had forgotten Sunday was Kola’s day off. As he crashed through the door to the flat, panting from running the whole way back from the market, he stumbled back in surprise to see Kola sitting on the sofa.

In the murky light, the sky outside thick with clouds, the flat was cast in shadows. A single light buzzed overhead. Kola was dressed in a slim brown shirt and black trousers. He had been reading from a newspaper folded open across his knees; an underground South publication from the look of it, the headline reading:
BLOODBATH AT BOROUGH MARKET
. He placed it on the table, eyes not straying from Seven as he took in his bloodied chest and ripped shirt.

‘You look
really
terrible.’

Seven let out a disbelieving breath. ‘Thanks for that,’ he said through gritted teeth. He pushed the door shut behind him and sagged against it. ‘I hadn’t noticed.’

Kola stood. His eyes paused on the tattoo on Seven’s chest before moving to look over the damage of the dog’s bite below, where his flesh was raw and mangled.

‘What happened?’

Seven scowled. ‘An asshole of a dog happened, that’s what.’

‘Let me take a look.’

‘It’s OK.’

‘You’re injured,’ Kola said patiently. ‘I’ve tended to wounds on the other workers at the docks when they haven’t been able to afford doctors. I might be able to help.’

Carefully, Seven lowered the hand grasping his wound. It came away slick with blood. Immediately the pain intensified, throbbing nauseatingly; it felt as though each movement was shifting the tears in his flesh. He hadn’t noticed how bad the dog’s bite had been at first. He’d just been concerned with getting as far away as possible. Now the adrenalin had died down, the pain was like a siren, screaming in his chest.

Kola gestured to the sofa. ‘Take off your shirt so I can get to the wound. And keep your hand pressed against it.’

As Kola disappeared into the kitchen, Seven collapsed on the sofa. He tugged off what was left of his shirt and threw the bloodied fabric to the floor. He didn’t even have space in his head to worry about the fact that one of the only shirts in his possession was now beyond repair. His mind was spinning, and not just from the pain.

What was he meant to do now? Some of the people at the market were bound to report him to the London Guard. They might even have done it by now. And then the London Guard would figure out who he was and where he lived, and then –

Panic whirred through Seven. This flat was his home. The memorium was his life’s collection, everything he worked for. He couldn’t lose all of that now because of one pastry and a stupid-ass dog.

‘Right.’ Kola walked back into the room with his hands full of medical supplies. ‘Let’s sort out this wound.’

Seven’s eyes widened. ‘Where the hell did you get all that?’ There were strips of gauze, bandage fabric, antiseptic cream, a bottle of cleaning fluid and even a pair of sterile gloves.

Kola set the items down on the table. ‘I thought it would be good to have some things in case of an emergency,’ he said. ‘I don’t think the North doctors who pass through the docks will miss a few supplies here and there.’

Seven couldn’t help grinning. So he wasn’t the only thief in the flat. His smile soon disappeared when he noticed the needle in Kola’s collection.

Kola followed his train of sight. ‘I’m going to have to stitch the wound closed after I clean it,’ he explained. ‘Unfortunately, I don’t have any anaesthetic for you to take.’

Seven closed his eyes. ‘Of
course
you don’t.’

Maybe it was the loss of blood or the sight of the needle, or just all the events of the last few crappy hours catching up with him, but he really was feeling very faint again now. He sagged into the sofa, letting out a hiss of breath. His chest felt as though a small star was bursting inside it.

‘Seven?’

Kola was watching him, his handsome face with its straight nose and thin lips set into an expression that somehow managed to be both soft and firm at the same time.

His lips pulled into a small, tight smile. ‘Don’t worry. It won’t hurt as much as you’re thinking.’

Just like that afternoon on the rooftop of their block of flats a few weeks ago, when Kola had asked about fighting the boys who terrorised him, Seven felt a rush of gratitude towards this boy he barely knew. Kola was a lot like Alba, he thought (though, to be fair,
she’d
started their friendship with blackmail): ready to help out someone they had no need to.

Kindness wasn’t something Seven was used to. After looking away, embarrassed, he turned back to meet Kola’s eyes and nodded.

‘I’m ready,’ he said.

Kola nodded. Then, before Seven could do or say anything to stop him, Kola drew a hand back, closing his fingers into a fist, and the next thing Seven knew was the feel of Kola’s knuckles smashing into the side of his jaw and his world snapped off into black.

BOOK: The Memory Keepers
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