![]() Many held mobile telephones aloft to take pictures before moving on. Members of the public were crowding at either end of the road, held at bay by more police some had come, on purpose, to look, others had paused on their way to work. The television stations had already had the news for several hours. Police officials, some of them white-clothed forensic experts, could be glimpsed in the hallway beyond. The entrance to number 18 was bounded with tape. To fill the time, the woolly-hatted cameramen filmed the backs of the photographers, the balcony, the tent concealing the body, then repositioned themselves for wide shots that encompassed the chaos that had exploded inside the sedate and snowy Mayfair street, with its lines of glossy black doors framed by white stone porticos and flanked by topiary shrubs. Between recordings, the reporters stamped their feet and warmed their hands on hot beakers of coffee from the teeming café a few streets away. From time to time there came outbreaks of desultory clicking, as the watchers filled the waiting time by snapping the white canvas tent in the middle of the road, the entrance to the tall red-brick apartment block behind it, and the balcony on the top floor from which the body had fallen.īehind the tightly packed paparazzi stood white vans with enormous satellite dishes on the roofs, and journalists talking, some in foreign languages, while soundmen in headphones hovered. Snow fell steadily on to hats and shoulders gloved fingers wiped lenses clear. Photographers stood massed behind barriers patrolled by police, their long-snouted cameras poised, their breath rising like steam. THE BUZZ IN THE STREET was like the humming of flies.
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