Rivers of London (Rivers of London #1)(106)



‘Have you got all your things?’ I asked.

Ash nodded, and tapped the satchel that hung at his hip.

Isis emerged from the crowd long enough to give me a sisterly kiss on the cheek and to extract a promise that I would come to the theatre with her, such things now being possible in this new and glorious summer. I’d have left there and then, but it took Ash’s relatives a good part of an hour to say goodbye to him and it was almost dusk when we got away. As Ash and I walked back to the Jag, I turned and saw that Father Thames’s people had hung hurricane lamps from the branches of the ancient yew. At least two fiddles were playing, and I heard a clackety sound that I can only assume came from a washboard. There were figures loping and dancing in the yellow light, and the seductive, melancholy music that gets played at any party you haven’t been invited to. I wasn’t sure, but with a pang I thought I saw Beverley Brook among the dancers.

‘Will there be dancing in London?’ asked Ash. He sounded as nervous as Beverley had been.

‘Definitely,’ I said.

We got into the Jag and headed down the A308 for the M25 and home.

‘Will there be drinking?’ asked Ash, displaying a fine sense of priorities.

‘Have you ever been to London?’ I asked.

‘No,’ said Ash. ‘I’ve never even been in a town before. Our dad doesn’t hold with that sort of thing.’

‘Don’t worry. It’s basically just like the country,’ I said. ‘Only with more people.’

THE END

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