The Wreckage: A Thriller
an unnatural y tal , thin girl with large eyes and a swan neck—a model with dreams of becoming an actress; not beautiful, just different.
    It’s almost five o’clock before Hol y’s name is cal ed. Her assigned partner is an inch shorter than she is and seems to be channeling Hugh Grant with his flop of hair and nervous mumbling. Hol y ignores his affectations and tries to relax, finding places in the dialogue to move and look away and back to her partner.
    When she finishes, she waits. The director confers with his assistant. Then he tel s Hol y to leave her number. It’s not a cal back and it’s not a rejection. She almost skips off stage.
    Outside she runs along the street and descends the steps into Charing Cross Station. She needs to get to Hatton Garden before the jewelry shops close. Walking down the escalator, she fol ows the subterranean maze of passages until she reaches the Northern Line and takes a tube to Tottenham Court Road, before changing to the Central Line and surfacing again at Chancery Lane.
    Stepping into a doorway on Holborn Road, she takes off her coat and pul s on a cashmere cardigan before brushing her hair. Using a smal compact, she paints her lips and checks her make-up, pouting at her reflection. Final y she unwraps the delicate hair-comb from tissue paper, sliding it into her hair and looking at the result in a shop window. Satisfied, she turns into Hatton Garden and chooses a jewelry shop that is clear of customers.
    An assistant is returning a tray of engagement rings to a display case.
    “Can I help you?”
    “I’m not sure. I haven’t done this sort of thing before,” says Hol y, putting on a perfect Sloane Square accent. “My mother wanted a few pieces of jewelry valued. She’s looking to sel them. They were gifts from Daddy, who isn’t her favorite person.”
    Hol y takes out a smal velvet box and places it on the glass counter-top. The assistant fetches the owner, who emerges from the back room as though he’s been interned there since the war. Blinking at her shyly, the old jeweler examines each stone and setting with an eyeglass.
    Hol y leans closer. She’s wearing an expensive watch on her wrist. She wants the jeweler to notice.
    “There’s nothing here of particular value,” he says. “Apart from the sentimental sort,” he adds.
    “Oh, Mummy wil be disappointed. I think she was hoping… wel , it doesn’t matter. Thank you anyway.”
    As she’s talking, Hol y takes out the hair-comb and tosses her hair back before reinserting it again.
    “That’s a very interesting piece,” says the jeweler. “May I see it?”
    “What? This old thing.”
    Even before she places the hair-comb in the old jeweler’s hands, she can see the hunger in his eyes. Desire is something Hol y understands, particularly in men.
    “It belonged to my grandmother.”
    “And perhaps to her grandmother,” he says.
    “Is it that old?”
    “Indeed it is.”
    The jeweler motions to his assistant, who unfurls a dark velvet cloth. The hair-comb is placed careful y at the center of the fabric.
    “Would you consider sel ing it?”
    “But it’s an heirloom.”
    “A shame.” His fingers tap thoughtful y on the counter. “I could give you seven hundred pounds.”
    Hol y has to stop herself from looking surprised. “Real y? I didn’t think…”
    Opening the cash register, the jeweler begins counting out notes in front of her. “Perhaps I could go as high as a thousand.”
    “No, real y, I couldn’t.”
    The stack of notes has grown higher.
    “What about these?” Hol y motions to the velvet box.
    “Fourteen hundred for the lot.”
    “If I change my mind?”
    “By al means—come back. I am a reasonable man.”
    The door opens behind her and a man enters. Hol y turns. She recognizes him but it takes a moment for her mind to put him in any sort of context. Then it dawns on her. The robbery… last night… the ex-copper!
    Panic prickles on both sides of her skin and she hears a sad

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