The Long
Dark Tea-Time of the Soul
Douglas
Adams (1988)
========================================================================
Notes:
1.
This text file was converted from MS Word 7.0 .doc file of the same
book.
2. This
file, I think, is in ANSI format
(Windows Charset). If you view this
file in DOS you will probably see some strange characters. The file was saved as ANSI to save some special characters in the text. It can be freely
viewed with Courier New font (but
Fixedsys might give you problems). There's no problem viewing the file from Netscape Navigator.
3.
The italics of the original
text have been kept by putting the italicised text between
‘/’ characters, i.e. when you see /xxx/, then xxx is supposed to be italics. If it disturbs you you can simply remove all the
‘/’ characters from
the text, because they don't
show up anywhere else (use Replace in your text editor).
4. The
alignment is set to 72 characters. If it disturbs you, then, well, get the version without line
breaks and use word wrap!
5. The
orignal .doc file was corrected: compared with the book (Pan) in some places, and spell checked.
6. Last
Edited 05Aug1997. File Version 1.02c
7.
Some statistics of the original .doc
file: about 75,000 words, about 2100 paragraphs. Takes about 100 pages with Courier New size 9, on
an A4 page.
8. IF YOU
LIKE THIS BOOK, *BUY IT!* GOOD AUTHORS DESERVE THAT.
9. Enjoy!
buffer
========================================================================
Douglas
Adams
The Long
Dark Tea-Time of the Soul
----------------------------------
For Jane
[::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
This book was written and typeset on an Apple Macintosh II and an
Apple
LaserWriter II NTX. The word
processing software was
FullWrite
Professional
from Ashton Tate. The final
proofing and photosetting was
done by
The Last Word, London SW6.
I
would like to say
an enormous thank
you to my amazing
and
wonderful
editor, Sue Freestone.
Her
help, support, criticism,
encouragement, enthusiasm and
sandwiches
have been beyond measure. I also owe
thanks and apologies to
Sophie,
James and Vivian who saw so
little of her during the final
weeks of
work.
[::: CHAPTER 1
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
It can hardly be a coincidence that
no language on Earth has ever produced the expression ‘as pretty as an
airport’.
Airports are ugly. Some are very ugly.
Some attain a degree of ugliness that can only be the result of a special
effort. This ugliness arises because airports are full of people who are tired,
cross, and have just discovered that their
luggage has landed in Murmansk (Murmansk airport is the only known exception to
this otherwise infallible rule), and architects have on the whole tried to
reflect this in their designs.
They have sought to highlight the tiredness
and crossness motif with brutal shapes and nerve jangling colours, to make effortless
the business of separating the traveller for ever from his or her luggage or loved
ones, to confuse the traveller with arrows that appear to point at the windows,
distant tie racks, or the current position of Ursa Minor in the night sky, and wherever
possible to expose the plumbing on the grounds that it is functional, and
conceal the location of the departure gates, presumably on the grounds that
they are not.
Caught in the middle of a sea of
hazy light and a sea of hazy noise, Kate Schechter stood and doubted.
All the way out of London to Heathrow
she had suffered from doubt. She was not a superstitious person, or even a
religious person, she was simply someone who was not at all sure she should be
flying to Norway. But she was finding it increasingly easy to believe that God,
if there was a God, and if it was remotely possible that any godlike being who could
order the disposition of particles at the creation of the Universe would also be
interested in directing traffic on the M4, did not want her to fly to Norway
either. All the trouble with the tickets, finding a next-door neighbour to look
after the cat, then finding the cat so it could be looked after by the
next-door neighbour, the sudden leak in the roof, the missing wallet, the
weather, the unexpected death of the next-door neighbour, the pregnancy of the
cat -- it all had the semblance of an orchestrated campaign of obstruction
which had begun to assume godlike proportions.
Even the taxi-driver -- when she had
eventually found a taxi -- had said, ‘Norway? What you want to go there for?’
And when she hadn’t instantly said, ‘The aurora borealis!’ or ‘Fjords!’ but had
looked doubtful for a moment and bitten her lip, he had said, ‘I know, I bet it’s
some bloke dragging you out there. Tell you what, tell him to stuff it. Go to
Tenerife.’
There was an idea.
Tenerife.
Or even, she dared to think for a
fleeting second, home.
She had stared dumbly out of the
taxi window at the angry tangles of traffic and thought that however cold and
miserable the weather was here, that was nothing to what it would be like in
Norway.
Or, indeed, at home. Home would be
about as icebound as Norway right now. Icebound, and punctuated with geysers of
steam bursting out of the ground, catching in the frigid air and dissipating between
the glacial cliff faces of Sixth Avenue.
A quick glance at the itinerary Kate
had pursued in the course of her thirty years would reveal her without any doubt
to be a New Yorker. For though she had lived in the city very little, most of
her life had been spent at a constant distance from it. Los Angeles, San
Francisco, Europe, and a period of distracted wandering around South America
five years ago following the loss of her newly married husband, Luke, in a New
York taxi-hailing accident.
She enjoyed the notion that New York
was home, and that she missed it, but in fact the only thing she really missed
was pizza. And not just any old pizza, but the sort of pizza they brought to
your door if you phoned them up and asked them to. That was the only real
pizza. Pizza that you had to go out and sit at a table staring at red paper napkins
for wasn’t real pizza however much extra pepperoni and anchovy they put on it.
London was the place she liked
living in most, apart, of course, from the pizza problem, which drove her
crazy. Why would no one deliver pizza? Why did no one understand that it was
fundamental to the whole nature of pizza that it arrived at your front door in
a hot cardboard box? That you slithered it out of greaseproof paper and ate it in
folded slices in front of the TV? What was the fundamental flaw in the stupid, stuck-up,
sluggardly English that they couldn’t grasp this simple principle? For some odd
reason it was the one frustration she could never learn simply to live with and
accept, and about once a month or so she would get very depressed, phone a
pizza restaurant, order the biggest, most lavish pizza she could describe --
pizza with an extra pizza on it, essentially -- and then, sweetly, ask them to deliver
it.
‘To what?’
‘Deliver. Let me give you the
address --’
‘I don’t understand. Aren’t you
going to come and pick it up?’
‘No. Aren’t you going to deliver? My
address --’
‘Er, we don’t do that, miss.’
‘Don’t do what?’
‘Er, deliver...’
‘You /don’t deliver/? Am I /hearing
you correctly/...?’
The exchange would quickly
degenerate into an ugly slanging match which would leave her feeling drained
and shaky, but much, much better the following morning. In all other respects
she was one of the most sweet-natured people you could hope to meet.
But today was testing her to the
limit.
There had been terrible traffic jams
on the motorway, and when the distant flash of blue lights made it clear that
the cause was an accident somewhere ahead of them Kate had become more tense
and had stared fixedly out of the other window as eventually they had crawled past
it.
The taxi-driver had been
bad-tempered when at last he had dropped her off because she didn’t have the
right money, and there was a lot of disgruntled hunting through tight trouser pockets before he was eventually able
to find change for her. The atmosphere was heavy and thundery and now, standing
in the middle of the main check-in concourse at Terminal Two, Heathrow Airport,
she could not find the check-in desk for her flight to Oslo.
She stood very still for a moment,
breathing calmly and deeply and trying not to think of Jean-Philippe.
Jean-Philippe was, as the taxi-driver
had correctly guessed, the reason why she was going to Norway, but was also the
reason why she was convinced that Norway was not at all a good place for her to
go. Thinking of him therefore made her head oscillate and it seemed best not to
think about him at all but simply to go to Norway as if that was where she
happened to be going anyway. She would then be terribly surprised to bump into
him at whatever hotel it was he had written on the card that was tucked into
the side pocket of her handbag.
In fact she would be surprised to
find him there anyway. What she would be much more likely to find was a message
from him saying that he had been unexpectedly called away to Guatemala, Seoul
or Tenerife and that he would call her from
there. Jean-Philippe was the most continually absent person she had ever met. In
this he was the culmination of a series. Since she had lost Luke to the great
yellow Chevrolet she had been oddly dependent on the rather vacant emotions that
a succession of self-absorbed men had inspired in her.
She tried to shut all this out of
her mind, and even shut her eyes for a second. She wished that when she opened
them again there would be a sign in front of her saying ‘This way for Norway’
which she could simply follow without needing to think about it or anything
else ever again. This, she reflected, in a continuation of her earlier train of
thought, was presumably how religions got started, and must be the reason why
so many sects hang around airports looking for converts. They know that people
there are at their most vulnerable and perplexed, and ready to accept any kind
of guidance.
Kate opened her eyes again and was,
of course, disappointed. But then a second or two later there was a momentary parting
in a long surging wave of cross Germans in inexplicable yellow polo shirts and through
it she had a brief glimpse of the check-in desk for Oslo. Lugging her garment
bag on to her shoulder, she made her way towards it.
There was just one other person before
her in the line at the desk and he, it turned out, was having trouble or
perhaps making it.
He was a large man, impressively large
and well-built -- even expertly built -- but he was also definitely odd-looking
in a way that Kate couldn’t quite deal with. She couldn’t even say what it was
that was odd about him, only that she was immediately inclined not to include
him on her list of things to think about at the moment. She remembered reading an
article which had explained that the central processing unit of the human brain
only had seven memory registers, which meant that if you had seven things in
your mind at the same time and then thought of something else, one of the other
seven would instantly drop out.
In quick succession she thought
about whether or not she was likely to catch the plane, about whether it was
just her imagination that the day was a particularly bloody one, about airline staff
who smile charmingly and are breathtakingly rude, about Duty Free shops which are
able to charge much lower prices than ordinary shops but -- mysteriously -- don’t, about whether or not she felt
a magazine article about airports coming on which might help pay for the trip, about
whether her garment bag would hurt less on her other shoulder and finally, in spite
of all her intentions to the contrary, about Jean- Philippe, who was another set
of at lest seven subtopics all to himself.
The man standing arguing in front of
her popped right out of her mind.
It was only the announcement on the
airport Tannoy of the last call for her flight to Oslo which forced her
attention back to the situation in front of her.
The large man was making trouble
about the fact that he hadn’t been given a first class seat reservation. It had
just transpired that the reason for this was that he didn’t in fact have a
first class ticket.
Kate’s spirits sank to the very bottom
of her being and began to prowl around there making a low growling noise.
It now transpired that the man in
front of her didn’t actually have a ticket at all, and the argument then began to
range freely and angrily over such topics as the physical appearance of the airline
check-in girl, her qualities as a person, theories about her ancestors, speculations
as to what surprises the future might have in store for her and the airline for
which she worked, and finally lit by chance on the happy subject of the man’s
credit card.
He didn’t have one.
Further discussions ensued, and had
to do with cheques, and why the airline did not accept them.
Kate took a long, slow, murderous
look at her watch.
‘Excuse me,’ she said, interrupting
the transactions. ‘Is this going to take long? I have to catch the Oslo
flight.’
‘I’m just dealing with this
gentleman,’ said the girl, ‘I’ll be with you in just one second.’
Kate nodded, and politely allowed
just one second to go by.
‘It’s just that the flight’s about
to leave,’ she said then. ‘I have one bag, I have my ticket, I have a reservation.
It’ll take about thirty seconds. I hate to interrupt, but I’d hate even more to
miss my flight for the sake of thirty seconds. That’s thirty actual seconds, not
thirty “just one” seconds, which could keep us here all night.’
The check-in girl turned the full
glare on her lipgloss on to Kate, but before she could speak the large blond
man looked round, and the effect of his face was a little disconcerting.
‘I, too,’ he said in a slow, angry
Nordic voice, ‘wish to fly to Oslo.’
Kate stared at him. He looked
thoroughly out of place in an airport, or rather, the airport looked thoroughly
out of place around him.
‘Well,’ she said, ‘the way we’re stacked
up at the moment it looks like neither of us is going to make it. Can we just
sort this one out? What’s the hold-up?’
The check-in girl smiled her
charming, dead smile and said, ‘The airline does not accept cheques, as a
matter of company policy.’
‘Well I do,’ said Kate, slapping
down her own credit card. ‘Charge the gentleman’s ticket to this, and I’ll take
a cheque from him.
‘OK?’ she added to the big man, who
was looking at her with slow surprise. His eyes were large and blue and
conveyed the impression that they had looked at a lot of glaciers in their time.
They were extraordinarily arrogant and also muddled.
‘OK?’ she repeated briskly. ‘My name
is Kate Schechter. Two ‘c’s, two ‘h’s, two ‘e’s and also a ‘t’, an ‘r’ and an
‘s’. Provided they’re all there the bank won’t be fussy about the order they come
in. They never seem to know themselves.’
The man very slowly inclined his
head a little towards her in a rough bow of acknowledgement. He thanked her for
her kindness, courtesy and some Norwegian word that was lost on her, said that
it was a long while since he had encountered anything of the kind, that she was
a woman of spirit and some other Norwegian word, and that he was indebted to
her. He also added, as an afterthought, that he had no cheque-book.
‘Right!’ said Kate, determined not
to be deflected from her course. She fished in her handbag for a piece of paper,
took a pen from the check-in counter, scribbled on the paper and thrust it at
him.
‘That’s my address,’ she said, ‘send
me the money. Hock your fur coat if you have to. Just send it me. OK? I’m taking
a flyer on trusting you.’
The big man took the scrap of paper,
read the few words on it with immense slowness, then folded it with elaborate
care and put it into the pocket of his coat. Again he bowed to her very
slightly.
Kate suddenly realised that the
check-in girl was silently waiting for her pen back to fill in the credit card form.
She pushed it back at her in annoyance, handed over her own ticket and imposed
on herself an icy calm.
The airport Tannoy announced the
departure of their flight.
‘May I see your passports, please?’
said the girl unhurriedly.
Kate handed hers over, but the big
man didn’t have one.
‘You /what/?’ exclaimed Kate. The
airline girl simply stopped moving at all and stared quietly at a random point
on her desk waiting for someone else to make a move. It wasn’t her problem.
The man repeated angrily that he didn’t
have a passport. He shouted it and banged his fist on the counter so hard that
it was slightly dented by the force of the blow.
Kate picked up her ticket, her passport
and her credit card and hoisted her garment bag back up on to her shoulder.
‘This is when I get off,’ she said, and
simply walked away. She felt that she had made every effort a human being could
possibly be expected to make to catch her plane, but that it was not to be. She
would send a message to Jean-Philippe saying that she could not be there, and it
would probably sit in a slot next to his message to her saying why he could not
be there either. For once they would be equally absent.
For the time being she would go and
cool off. She set off in search of first a newspaper and then some coffee, and
by dint of following the appropriate signs was unable to locate either. She was
then unable to find a working phone from which to send a message, and decided
to give up on the airport altogether. Just get out, she told herself, find a taxi,
and go back home.
She threaded her way back across the
check-in concourse, and had almost made it to the exit when she happened to
glance back at the check-in desk that had defeated her, and was just in time to
see it shoot up through the roof engulfed in a ball of orange flame.
As she lay beneath a pile of rubble,
in pain, darkness, and choking dust, trying to find sensation in her limbs, she
was at least relieved to be able to think that she hadn’t merely been imagining
that this was a bad day. So thinking, she passed out.
[::: CHAPTER 2
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
The usual people tried to claim
responsibility.
First the IRA, then the PLO and the
Gas Board. Even British Nuclear Fuels rushed out a statement to the effect that
the situation was completely under control, that it was a one in a million
chance, that there was hardly any radioactive leakage at all, and that the site
of the explosion would make a nice location for a day out with the kids and a picnic,
before finally having to admit that it wasn’t actually anything to do with them
at all.
No cause could be found for the
explosion.
It seemed to have happened spontaneously
and of its own free will. Explanations were advanced, but most of these were
simply phrases which restated the problem in different words, along the same
principles which had given the world ‘metal fatigue’. In fact, a very similar phrase
was invented to account for the sudden transition of wood, metal, plastic and
concrete into an explosive condition, which was ‘non-linear catastrophic
structural exasperation’, or to put it another way -- as a junior cabinet
minister did on television the following night in a phrase which was to haunt the
rest of his career -- the check-in desk had just got ‘fundamentally fed up with
being where it was’.
As in all such disastrous events,
estimates of the casualties varied wildly. They started at forty-seven
dead, eighty-nine seriously injured, went up to sixty-three dead, a hundred and
thirty injured, and rose as high as one hundred and seventeen dead before the
figures started to be revised downwards once more. The final figures revealed that
once all the people who could be accounted for had been accounted for, in fact
no one had been killed at all. A small number of people were in hospital
suffering from cuts and bruises and varying degrees of traumatised shock, but that,
unless anyone had any information about anybody actually being missing, was
that.
This was yet another inexplicable
aspect to the whole affair. The force of the explosion had been enough to
reduce a large part of the front of Terminal Two to rubble, and yet everyone
inside the building had somehow either fallen very luckily, or been shielded
from one piece of falling masonry by another, or had the shock of the explosion
absorbed by their luggage. All in all, very little luggage had survived at all.
There were questions asked in Parliament about this, but not very interesting
ones.
It was a couple of days before Kate
Schechter became aware of any of these things, or indeed of anything at all in
the outside world.
She passed the time quietly in a
world of her own in which she was surrounded as far as the eye could see with
old cabin trunks full of past memories in which she rummaged with great
curiosity, and sometimes bewilderment. Or, at least, about a tenth of the cabin
trunks were full of vivid, and often painful or uncomfortable memories of her
past life; the other nine-tenths were full of penguins, which surprised her. Insofar
as she recognised at all that she was dreaming, she realised that she must be
exploring her own subconscious mind. She had heard it said that humans are supposed
only to use about a tenth of their brains, and that no one was very clear what
the other nine-tenths were for, but she had certainly never heard it suggested
that they were used for storing penguins.
Gradually the trunks, the memories and
the penguins began to grow indistinct, to become all white and swimmy, then to
become like walls that were all white and swimmy, and finally to become walls that
were merely white, or rather a yellowish, greenish kind of off-white, and to enclose
her in a small room.
The room was in semi-darkness. A bedside
light was on but turned down low, and the light from a street lamp found its way
between the grey curtains and threw sodium patterns on the opposite wall. She became
dimly aware of the shadowed shape of her own body lying under the white,
turned-down sheet and the pale, neat blankets. She stared at it for a nervous while,
checking that it looked right before she tried, tentatively, to move any part
of it. She tried her right hand, and that seemed to be fine. A little stiff and
aching, but the fingers all responded, and all seemed to be of the right length
and thickness, and to bend in the right places and in the right directions.
She panicked briefly when she
couldn’t immediately locate her left hand, but then she found it lying across
her stomach and nagging at her in some odd way. It took her a second or two of
concentration to put together a number of rather disturbing feelings and
realise that there was a needle bandaged into her arm. This shook her quite
badly. From the needle there snaked a long thin transparent pipe that glistened
yellowly in the light from the street lamp and hung in a gentle curl from a
thick plastic bag suspended from a tall metal stand. An array of horrors briefly
assailed her in respect of this apparatus, but she peered dimly at the bag and saw
the words ‘Dextro-Saline’. She made herself calm down again and lay quietly for
a few moments before continuing her exploration.
Her ribcage seemed undamaged. Bruised
and tender, but there was no sharper pain anywhere to suggest that anything was
broken. Her hips and thighs ached and were stiff, but revealed no serious hurt.
She flexed the muscles down her right leg and then her left. She rather fancied
that her left ankle was sprained.
In other words, she told herself,
she was perfectly all right. So what was she doing here in what she could tell
from the septic colour of the paint was clearly a hospital?
She sat up impatiently, and
immediately rejoined the pen guins for an entertaining few minutes.
The next time she came round she
treated herself with a little more care, and lay quietly, feeling gently
nauseous.
She poked gingerly at her memory of
what had happened. It was dark and blotchy and came at her in sick, greasy
waves like the North Sea. Lumpy things jumbled
themselves out of it and slowly arranged
themselves into a heaving airport. The airport was sour and ached in her head, and
in the middle of it, pulsing like a migraine, was the memory of a moment’s
whirling splurge of light.
It became suddenly very clear to her
that the check-in concourse of Terminal Two at Heathrow Airport had been hit by a meteorite. Silhouetted
in the flare was the fur-coated figure of a big man who must have caught the
full force of it and been reduced instantly to a cloud of atoms that were free
to go as they pleased. The thought caused a deep and horrid shudder to go
through her. He had been infuriating and arrogant, but she had liked him in an odd
way. There had been something oddly noble in his perverse bloody-mindedness. Or
maybe, she realised, she liked to think that such perverse bloody-mindedness was
noble because it reminded her of herself trying to order pizza to be delivered in
an alien, hostile and non-pizza-delivering world. Nobleness was one word for making a fuss about the trivial inevitabilities of life, but there were others.
She felt a sudden surge of fear and
loneliness, but it quickly ebbed away and left her feeling much more composed,
relaxed, and wanting to go to the lavatory.
According to her watch it was shortly
after three o’clock, and according to everything else it was night-time. She should
probably call a nurse and let the world know she had come round. There was a window
in the side wall of the room through which she could see a dim corridor in which
stood a stretcher trolley and a tall black oxygen bottle, but which was otherwise
empty. Things were very quiet out there.
Peering around her in the small room
she saw a white-painted plywood cupboard, a couple of tubular steel and vinyl
chairs lurking quietly in the shadows, and a white-painted plywood
bedside cabinet which supported a small bowl with a single banana in it. On the
other side of the bed stood her drip stand. Set into the wall on that side of
the bed was a metal plate with a couple of black knobs and a set of old bakelite
headphones hanging from it, and wound around the tubular side pillar of the bedhead
was a cable with a bell push attached to it, which she fingered, and then
decided not to push.
She was fine. She could find her own
way about.
Slowly, a little woozily, she pushed
herself up on to her elbows, and slid her legs out from under the sheets and on
to the floor, which was cold to her feet. She could tell almost immediately
that she shouldn’t be doing this because every part of her feet was sending
back streams of messages telling her exactly what every tiniest bit of the floor
that they touched felt like, as if it was a strange and worrying thing the like
of which they had never encountered before. Nevertheless she sat on the edge of
the bed and made her feet accept the floor as something they were just going to
have to get used to.
The hospital had put her into a
large, baggy, striped thing. It wasn’t merely baggy, she decided on examining
it more closely, it actually was a bag. A bag of loose blue and white striped
cotton. It opened up the back and let in chilly night draughts. Perfunctory sleeves
flopped half-way down her arms. She moved her arms around in the light,
examining the skin, rubbing it and pinching it, especially around the bandage which
held her drip needle in place. Normally her arms were lithe and the skin was
firm and supple. Tonight, however, they looked like bits of chickens. Briefly
she smoothed each forearm with her other hand, and then looked up again,
purposefully.
She reached out and gripped the drip
stand and, because it wobbled slightly less than she did, she was able to use it
to pull herself slowly to her feet. She stood there, her tall slim figure
trembling, and after a few seconds she held the drip stand away at a bent arm’s
length, like a shepherd holding a crook.
She had not made it to Norway, but
she was at least standing up.
The drip stand rolled on four small and
independently perverse wheels which behaved like four screaming children in a
supermarket, but nevertheless Kate was able to propel it to the door ahead of her.
Walking increased her sense of wooziness, but also increased her resolve not to
give in to it. She reached the door, opened it, and pushing the drip stand out ahead
of her, looked out into the corridor.
To her left the corridor ended in a couple
of swing-doors with circular porthole windows, which seemed to lead into a
larger area, an open ward perhaps. To her right a number of smaller doors
opened off the corridor as it continued on for a short distance before turning
a sharp corner. One of those doors would probably be the lavatory. The others?
Well, she would find out as she looked for the lavatory.
The first two were cupboards. The
third was slightly bigger and had a chair in it and therefore probably counted as
a room since most people don’t like to sit in cupboards, even nurses, who have to
do a lot of things that most people wouldn’t like to. It also had a stack of styro
beakers, a lot of semi-congealed coffee creamer and an elderly coffee maker,
all sitting on top of a small table together and seeping grimly over a copy of
the /Evening Standard/.
Kate picked up the dark, damp paper
and tried to reconstruct some of her missing days from it. However, what with her
own wobbly condition making it difficult to read, and the droopily
stuck-together condition of the newspaper, she was able to glean little more
than the fact that no one could really say for certain what had happened. It
seemed that no one had been seriously hurt, but that an employee of one of the airlines
was still unaccounted for. The incident had now been officially
classified as an ‘Act of God’.
‘Nice one, God,’ thought Kate. She
put down the remains of the paper and closed the door behind her.
The next door she tried was another
small side ward like her own. There was a bedside table and a single banana in
the fruit bowl.
The bed was clearly occupied. She
pulled the door to quickly, but she did not pull it quickly enough.
Unfortunately something odd had caught her attention, but although she had
noticed it, she could not immediately say what it was. She stood there with the
door half closed, staring at the door, knowing that she should not look again, and
knowing that she would.
Carefully she eased the door back
open again.
The room was darkly shadowed and
chilly. The chilliness did not give her a good feeling about the occupant of
the bed. She listened. The silence didn’t sound too good either. It wasn’t the
silence of healthy deep sleep, it was the silence of nothing but a little distant
traffic noise.
She hesitated for a long while,
silhouetted in the doorway, looking and listening. She wondered about the sheer
bulk of the occupant of the bed and how cold he was with just a thin blanket
pulled over him. Next to the bed was a small tubular-legged vinyl bucket chair
which was rather overwhelmed by the huge and heavy fur coat draped over it, and
Kate thought that the coat should more properly be draped over the bed and its
cold occupant.
At last, walking as softly and
cautiously as she could, she moved into the room and over to the bed. She stood
looking down at the face of the big, Nordic man. Though cold, and though his
eyes were shut, his face was frowning slightly as if he was still rather
worried about something. This struck Kate as being almost infinitely sad. In
life the man had had the air of someone who was beset by huge, if somewhat puzzling,
difficulties, and the appearance that he had almost immediately found things beyond this
life that were a bother to him as well was miserable to contemplate.
She was astonished that he appeared
to be so unscathed. His skin was totally unmarked. It was rugged and healthy --
or rather had been healthy until very recently. Closer inspection showed a
network of fine lines which suggested that he was older than the mid-thirties
she had originally assumed. He could even have been a very fit and healthy man in
his late forties.
Standing against the wall, by the
door, was something unexpected. It was a large Coca-Cola vending machine. It
didn’t look as if it had been installed there: it wasn’t plugged in and it had
a small neat sticker on it explaining that it was temporarily out of order. It
looked as if it had simply been left there inadvertently by someone who was
probably even now walking around wondering which room he had left it in. Its large
red and white wavy panel stared glassily into the room and did not explain
itself. The only thing the machine communicated to the outside world was that
there was a slot into which coins of a variety of denominations might be
inserted, and an aperture to which a variety of different cans would be
delivered if the machine was working, which it was not. There was also an old sledge-hammer
leaning against it which was, in its own way, odd.
Faintness began to creep over Kate, the
room began to develop a slight spin, and there was some restless rustling in
the cabin trunks of her mind.
Then she realised that the rustling
wasn’t simply her imagination. There was a distinct noise in the room -- a heavy,
beating, scratching noise, a muffled fluttering. The noise rose and fell like
the wind, but in her dazed and woozy state, Kate could not at first tell where
the noise was coming from. At last her gaze fell on the curtains. She stared at
them with the worried frown of a drunk trying to work out why the door is
dancing. The sound was coming from the curtains. She walked uncertainly towards
them and pulled them apart. A huge eagle with circles tattooed on its wings was
clattering and beating against the window, staring in with great yellow eyes
and pecking wildly at the glass.
Kate staggered back, turned and
tried to heave herself out of the room. At the end of the corridor the porthole
doors swung open and two figures came through them. Hands rushed towards her as
she became hopelessly entangled in the drip stand and began slowly to spin
towards the floor.
She was unconscious as they carefully
laid her back in her bed. She was unconscious half an hour later when a
disturbingly short figure in a worryingly long white doctor’s coat arrived, wheeled
the big man away on a stretcher trolley and then returned after a few minutes for
the Coca-Cola machine.
She woke a few hours later with a
wintry sun seeping through the window. The day looked very quiet and ordinary,
but Kate was still shaking.
[::: CHAPTER 3
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
The same sun later broke in through
the upper windows of a house in North London and struck the peacefully sleeping
figure of a man.
The room in which he slept was large
and bedraggled and did not much benefit from the sudden intrusion of light. The
sun crept slowly across the bedclothes, as if nervous of what it might find
amongst them, slunk down the side of the bed, moved in a rather startled way
across some objects it encountered on the floor, toyed nervously with a couple of
motes of dust, lit briefly on a stuffed fruitbat hanging in the corner, and
fled.
This was about as big an appearance
as the sun ever put in here, and it lasted for about an hour or so, during which
time the sleeping figure scarcely stirred.
At eleven o’clock the phone rang, and
still the figure did not respond, any more than it had responded when the phone
had rung at twenty-five to seven in the morning, again at twenty to seven,
again at ten to seven, and again for ten minutes continuously starting at five to
seven, after which it has settled into a long and significant silence,
disturbed only by the braying of police sirens in a nearby street at around nine
o’clock, the delivery of a large eighteenth- century dual manual harpsichord at around nine-fifteen, and the collection
of same by bailiffs at a little after ten. This was a not uncommon sort of
occurrence -- the people concerned were accustomed to finding the key under the
doormat, and the man in the bed was accustomed to sleeping through it. You would
probably not say that he was sleeping the sleep of the just, unless you meant
the just asleep, but it was certainly the sleep of someone who was not fooling
about when he climbed into bed of a night and turned off the light.
The room was not a room to elevate
the soul. Louis XIV, to pick a name at random, would not have liked it, would
have found it not sunny enough, and insufficiently full of mirrors. He would
have desired someone to pick up the socks, put the records away, and maybe burn
the place down. Michelangelo would have been distressed by its proportions, which
were neither lofty nor shaped by any noticeable inner harmony or symmetry,
other than that all parts of the room were pretty much equally full of old
coffee mugs, shoes and brimming ashtrays, most of which were now sharing their tasks
with each other. The walls were painted in almost precisely that shade of green
which Raffaello Sanzio would have bitten off his own right hand at the wrist
rather than use, and Hercules, on seeing the room, would probably have returned
half an hour later armed with a navigable river. It was, in short, a dump, and was
likely to remain so for as long as it remained in the custody of Mr Svlad, or
‘Dirk’, Gently, né Cjelli.
At last Gently stirred.
The sheets and blankets were pulled
up tightly around his head, but from somewhere half way down the length of the bed
a hand slowly emerged from under the bedclothes and its fingers felt their way
in little tapping movements along the floor. Working from experience, they neatly
circumvented a bowl of something very nasty that had been sitting there since Michaelmas,
and eventually happened upon a half- empty pack of untipped Gauloises and a box
of matches. The fingers shook a crumpled white tube free of the pack, seized it
and the box of matches, and then started to poke a way through the sheets
tangled together at the top of the bed, like a magician prodding at a handkerchief
from which he intends to release a flock of doves.
The cigarette was at last inserted
into the hole. The cigarette was lit. For a while the bed itself appeared to be
smoking the cigarette in great heaving drags. It coughed long, loud and shudderingly
and then began at last to breathe in a more measured rhythm. In this way, Dirk Gently
achieved consciousness.
He lay there for a while feeling a
terrible sense of worry and guilt about something weighing on his shoulders. He
wished he could forget about it, and promptly did. He levered himself out of
bed and a few minutes later padded downstairs.
The mail on the doormat consisted of
the usual things: a rude letter threatening to take away his American Express
card, an invitation to apply for an American Express card, and a few bills of
the more hysterical and unrealistic type. He couldn’t understand why they kept sending
them. The cost of the postage seemed merely to be good money thrown after bad.
He shook his head in wonderment at the malevolent incompetence of the world,
threw the mail away, entered the kitchen and approached the fridge with
caution.
It stood in the corner.
The kitchen was large and shrouded in
a deep gloom that was not relieved, only turned yellow, by the action of switching
on the light. Dirk squatted down in front of the fridge and carefully examined
the edge of the door. He found what he was looking for. In fact he found more
than he was looking for.
Near the bottom of the door, across the
narrow gap which separated the door from the main body of the fridge, which
held the strip of grey insulating rubber, lay a single human hair. It was stuck
there with dried saliva. That he had expected. He had stuck it there himself
three days earlier and had checked it on several occasions since then. What he
had not expected to find was a second hair.
He frowned at it in alarm. A
/second/ hair?
It was stuck across the gap in the
same way as the first one, only this hair was near the top of the fridge door,
and he had not put it there. He peered at it closely, and even went so far as
to go and open the old shutters on the kitchen windows to let some extra light
in upon the scene.
The daylight shouldered its way in
like a squad of policemen, and did a lot of /what’s-all-this/ing around the room
which, like the bedroom, would have presented anyone of an aesthetic
disposition with difficulties. Like most of the rooms in Dirk’s house it was
large, looming and utterly dishevelled. It simply sneered at anyone’s attempts to
tidy it, sneered at them and brushed them aside like one of the small pile of
dead and disheartened flies that lay beneath the window, on top of a pile of
old pizza boxes.
The light revealed the second hair
for what it was -- a grey hair at root, dyed a vivid metallic orange. Dirk
pursed his lips and thought very deeply. He didn’t need to think hard in order
to realise who the hair belonged to -- there was only one person who regularly
entered the kitchen looking as if her head had been used for extracting metal oxides
from industrial waste -- but he did have seriously to consider the implications
of the discovery that she had been plastering her hair across the door of his
fridge.
It meant that the silently waged
conflict between himself and his cleaning lady had escalated to a new and more
frightening level. It was now, Dirk reckoned, fully three months since this
fridge door had been opened, and each of them was grimly determined not to be
the one to open it first. The fridge no longer merely stood there in the corner
of the kitchen, it actually lurked. Dirk could quite clearly remember the day on
which the thing had started lurking. It was about a week ago, when Dirk had
tried a simple subterfuge to trick Elena -- the old bat’s name was Elena,
pronounced to rhyme with cleaner, which was an irony that Dirk now no longer
relished -- into opening the fridge door. The subterfuge had been deftly deflected
and had nearly rebounded horribly on Dirk.
He had resorted to the strategy of going
to the local mini-market to buy a few simple groceries. Nothing contentious --
a little milk, some eggs, some bacon, a carton or two of chocolate custard and a
simple half-pound of butter. He had left them, innocently, on top of the fridge
as if to say, ‘Oh, when you have a moment, perhaps you could pop these
inside...’
When he had returned that evening
his heart bounded to see that they were no longer on top of the fridge. They
were gone! They had not been merely moved aside or put on a shelf, they were
nowhere to be seen. She must finally have capitulated and put them away. In the
fridge. And she would surely have cleaned it out once it was actually open. For
the first and only time his heart swelled with warmth and gratitude towards her,
and he was about to fling open the door of the thing in relief and triumph when
an eighth sense (at the last count, Dirk reckoned he had eleven) warned him to be
very, very careful, and to consider first where Elena might have put the
cleared out contents of the fridge.
A nameless doubt gnawed at his mind
as he moved noiselessly towards the garbage bin beneath the sink. Holding his
breath, he opened the lid and looked.
There, nestling in the folds of the
fresh black bin liner, were his eggs, his bacon, his chocolate custard and his
simple half-pound of butter. Two milk bottles stood rinsed and neatly lined up
by the sink into which their contents had presumably been poured.
She had thrown it away.
Rather than open the fridge door,
she had thrown his food away. He looked round slowly at the grimy, squat, white
monolith, and that was the exact moment at which he realised without a shadow
of a doubt that his fridge had now begun seriously to lurk.
He made himself a stiff black coffee
and sat, slightly trembling. He had not even looked directly at the sink, but
he knew that he must unconsciously have noticed the two clean milk bottles there,
and some busy part of his mind had been alarmed by them.
The next day he had explained all
this away to himself. He was becoming needlessly paranoiac. It had surely been an
innocent or careless mistake on Elena’s part. She had probably been brooding distractedly
on her son’s attack of bronchitis, peevishness or homosexuality or
whatever it was that regularly prevented her from either turning up, or from having
noticeable effect when she did. She was Italian and probably had absent-mindedly
mistaken his food for garbage.
But the business with the hair
changed all that. It established beyond all possible doubt that she knew
exactly what she was doing. She was under no circumstances going to open the
fridge door until he had opened it first, and he was under no circumstances going
to open the fridge until she had.
Obviously she had not noticed his
hair, otherwise it would have been her most effective course simply to pull it
off, thus tricking him into thinking she had opened the fridge. He should
presumably now remove her hair in the hope of pulling that same trick on her, but
even as he sat there he knew that somehow that wouldn’t work, and that they were
locked into a tightening spiral of non-fridge-opening that would lead them both
to madness or perdition.
He wondered if he could hire someone
to come and open the fridge.
No. He was not in a position to hire
anybody to do anything. He was not even in a position to pay Elena for the last
three weeks. The only reason he didn’t ask her to leave was that sacking
somebody inevitably involved paying them off, and this he was in no position to
do. His secretary had finally left him on her own initiative and gone off to do
something reprehensible in the travel business. Dirk had attempted to cast
scorn on her preferring monotony of pay over --
‘/Regularity/ of pay,’ she had
calmly corrected him.
-- over job satisfaction.
She had nearly said, ‘Over /what/?’,
but at that moment she realised that if she said that she would have to listen
to his reply, which would be bound to infuriate her into arguing back. It
occurred to her for the first time that the only way of escaping was just not
to get drawn into these arguments. If she simply did not respond this time, then
she was free to leave. She tried it. She felt a sudden freedom. She left. A
week later, in much the same mood, she married an airline cabin steward called
Smith.
Dirk had kicked her desk over, and then
had to pick it up himself later when she didn’t come back.
The detective business was currently
as brisk as the tomb. Nobody, it seemed, wished to have anything detected. He had
recently, to make ends meet, taken up doing palmistry in drag on Thursday
evenings, but he wasn’t comfortable with it. He could have withstood it -- the hateful,
abject humiliation of it all was something to which he had, in different ways,
now become accustomed, and he was quite anonymous in his little tent in the back
garden of the pub -- he could have withstood it all if he hadn’t been so
horribly, excruciatingly good at it. It made him break out in a sweat of self-loathing.
He tried by every means to cheat, to fake, to be deliberately and cynically
bad, but whatever fakery he tried to introduce always failed and he invariably
ended up being right.
His worst moment had come about as a
result of the poor woman from Oxfordshire who had come in to see him one
evening. Being in something of a waggish mood, he had suggested that she should
keep an eye on her husband, who, judging by her marriage line, looked to be a bit
of a flighty type. It transpired that her husband was in fact a fighter pilot,
and that his plane had been lost in an exercise over the North Sea only a
fortnight earlier.
Dirk had been flustered by this and had
soothed meaninglessly at her. He was certain, he said, that her husband would
be restored to her in the fullness of time, that all would be well, and that
all manner of things would be well and so on. The woman said that she thought
this was not very likely seeing as the world record for staying alive in the North
Sea was rather less than an hour, and since no trace of her husband had been
found in two weeks it seemed fanciful to imagine that he was anything other than
stone dead, and she was trying to get used to the idea, thank you very much.
She said it rather tartly.
Dirk had lost all control at this
point and started to babble.
He said that it was very clear from
reading her hands that the great sum of money she had coming to her would be no
consolation to her for the loss of her dear, dear husband, but that at least it
might comfort her to know that he had gone on to that great something or other in
the sky, that he was floating on the fleeciest of white clouds, looking very
handsome in his new set of wings, and that he was terribly sorry to be talking such
appalling drivel but she had caught him rather by surprise. Would she care for
some tea, or some vodka, or some soup?
The woman demurred. She said she had
only wandered into the tent by accident, she had been looking for the
lavatories, and what was that about the money?
‘Complete gibberish,’ Dirk had explained. He was in great difficulties, what with having the
falsetto to keep up. ‘I was making it up as I went along,’ he said. ‘Please
allow me to tender my most profound apologies for intruding so clumsily on your
private grief, and to escort you to, er, or rather, direct you to the, well, what
I can only in the circumstances call the lavatory, which is out of the tent and
on the left.’
Dirk had been cast down by this
encounter, but was then utterly horrified a few days later when he discovered
that the very following morning the unfortunate woman had learnt that she had
won £250,000 on the Premium Bonds. He spent several hours that night standing on
the roof of his house, shaking his fist at the dark sky and shouting, ‘Stop it!’
until a neighbour complained to the police that he couldn’t sleep. The police
had come round in a screaming squad car and woken up the rest of the
neighbourhood as well.
Today, this morning, Dirk sat in his
kitchen and stared dejectedly at his fridge. The bloody-minded ebullience which
he usually relied on to carry him through the day had been knocked out of him
in its very opening moments by the business with the fridge. His will sat imprisoned in it, locked up by a single hair.
What he needed, he thought, was a
client. Please, God, he thought, if there is a god, any god, bring me a client.
Just a simple client, the simpler the better. Credulous and rich. Someone like that
chap yesterday. He tapped his fingers on the table.
The problem was that the more credulous
the client, the more Dirk fell foul at the end of his own better nature, which was
constantly rearing up and embarrassing him at the most inopportune moments.
Dirk frequently threatened to hurl his better nature to the ground and kneel on
its windpipe, but it usually managed to get the better of him by dressing
itself up as guilt and self-loathing, in which guise it could throw him right
out of the ring.
Credulous and rich. Just so that he
could pay off some, perhaps even just one, of the more prominent and sensational
bills. He lit a cigarette. The smoke curled upwards in the morning light and attached
itself to the ceiling.
Like that chap yesterday...
He paused.
The chap yesterday...
The world held its breath.
Quietly and gently there settled on him
the knowledge that something, somewhere, was ghastly. Something was terribly
wrong.
There was a disaster hanging
silently in the air around him waiting for him to notice it. His knees tingled.
What he needed, he had been thinking,
was a client. He had been thinking that as a matter of habit. It was what he
always thought at this time of the morning. What he had forgotten was that he
had one.
He stared wildly at his watch.
Nearly eleven-thirty. He shook his head to try and clear the silent ringing
between his ears, then made a hysterical lunge for his hat and his great leather
coat that hung behind the door.
Fifteen seconds later he left the
house, five hours late but moving fast.
[::: CHAPTER 4
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
A minute or two later Dirk paused to
consider his best strategy. Rather than arrive five hours late and flustered it
would be better all round if he were to arrive five hours and a few extra
minutes late, but triumphantly in command.
‘Pray God I am not too soon!’ would be
a good opening line as he swept in, but it needed a good follow-through as
well, and he wasn’t sure what it should be.
Perhaps it would save time if he
went back to get his car, but then again it was only a short distance, and he
had a tremendous propensity for getting lost when driving. This was largely
because of his method of ‘Zen’ navigation, which was simply to find any car
that looked as if it knew where it was going and follow it. The results were
more often surprising than successful, but he felt it was worth it for the sake
of the few occasions when it was both.
Furthermore he was not at all
certain that his car was working.
It was an elderly Jaguar, built at that
very special time in the company’s history when they were making cars which had
to stop for repairs more often than they needed to stop for petrol, and
frequently needed to rest for months between outings. He was, however, certain,
now that he came to think about it, that the car didn’t have any petrol and
furthermore he did not have any cash or valid plastic to enable him to fill it
up.
He abandoned that line of thought as
wholly fruitless.
He stopped to buy a newspaper while he
thought things over. The clock in the newsagent’s said eleven thirty-five. Damn,
damn, damn. He toyed with the idea of simply dropping the case. Just walking
away and forgetting about it. Having some lunch. The whole thing was fraught with
difficulties in any event. Or rather it was fraught with one particular difficulty
which was that of keeping a straight face. The whole thing was complete and
utter nonsense. The client was clearly loopy and Dirk would not have considered
taking the case except for one very important thing.
Three hundred pounds a day plus
expenses.
The client had agreed to it just like
that. And when Dirk had started his usual speech to the effect that his methods,
involving as they did the fundamental interconnectedness of all things, often
led to expenses that might appear to the untutored eye to be somewhat tangential
to the matter in hand, the client had simply waved the matter aside as
trifling. Dirk liked that in a client.
The only thing the client had
insisted upon in the midst of this almost superhuman fit of reasonableness was
that Dirk had to be there, absolutely had, had, had to be there ready, functioning
and alert, without fail, without even the merest smidgen of an inkling of
failure, at six-thirty in the morning. Absolute.
Well, he was just going to have to
see reason about that as well. Six-thirty was clearly a preposterous time and he, the client, obviously hadn’t meant it
seriously. A civilised six-thirty for twelve noon was almost certainly what he
had in mind, and if he wanted to cut up rough about it, Dirk would have no
option but to start handing out some serious statistics. Nobody got murdered
before lunch. But nobody. People weren’t up to it. You needed a good lunch to
get both the blood- sugar and blood-lust levels up. Dirk had the figures to
prove it.
Did he, Anstey (the client’s name
was Anstey, an odd, intense man in his mid-thirties with staring eyes, a narrow
yellow tie and one of the big houses in Lupton Road; Dirk hadn’t actually liked
him very much and thought he looked as if he was trying to swallow a fish), did
he know that 67 per cent of all known murderers, who expressed a preference, had
had liver and bacon for lunch? And that another 22 per cent had been torn
between either a prawn biryani or an omelette? That dispensed with 89 per cent
of the threat at a stroke, and by the time you had further discounted the salad
eaters and the turkey and ham sandwich munchers and started to look at the number
of people who would contemplate such a course of action without any lunch at
all, then you were well into the realms of negligibility and bordering on
fantasy.
After two-thirty, but nearer to
three o’clock, was when you had to start being on your guard. Seriously. Even
on good days. Even when you weren’t receiving death threats from strange
gigantic men with green eyes, you had to watch people like a hawk after the
lunching hour. The really dangerous time was after four o’clockish, when the
streets began to fill up with marauding packs of publishers and agents,
maddened with fettucine and kir and baying for cabs. Those were the times that
tested men’s souls. Six-thirty in the morning? Forget it. Dirk had.
With his resolve well stiffened Dirk
stepped back out of the newsagent’s into the nippy air of the street and strode
off.
‘Ah, I expect you’ll be wanting to
pay for that paper, then, won’t you, Mr Dirk, sir?’ said the newsagent,
trotting gently after him.
‘Ah, Bates,’ said Dirk loftily, ‘you
and your expectations. Always expecting this and expecting that. May I
recommend serenity to you? A life that is burdened with expectations is a heavy
life. Its fruit is sorrow and disappointment. Learn to be one with the joy of
the moment.’
‘I think it’s twenty pence that one,
sir,’ said Bates, tranquilly.
‘Tell you what I’ll do, Bates,
seeing as it’s you. Do you have a pen on you at all? A simple ball-point will
suffice.’
Bates produced one from an inner
pocket and handed it to Dirk, who then tore off the corner of the paper on which
the price was printed and scribbled ‘IOU’ above it. He handed the scrap of paper
to the newsagent.
‘Shall I put this with the others,
then, sir?’
‘Put it wherever it will give you the
greatest joy, dear Bates, I would want you to put it nowhere less. For now,
dear man, farewell.’
‘I expect you’ll be wanting to give me
back my pen as well, Mr Dirk.’
‘When the times are propitious for such
a transaction, my dear Bates,’ said Dirk, ‘you may depend upon it. For the
moment, higher purposes call it. Joy, Bates, great joy. Bates, please let go of
it.’
After one last listless tug, the
little man shrugged and padded back towards his shop.
‘I expect I’ll be seeing you later,
then, Mr Dirk,’ he called out over his shoulder, without enthusiasm.
Dirk gave a gracious bow of his head
to the man’s retreating back, and then hurried on, opening the newspaper at the
horoscope page as he did so.
‘Virtually everything you decide today
will be wrong,’ it said bluntly.
Dirk slapped the paper shut with a
grunt. He did not for a second hold with the notion that great whirling lumps
of rock light years away knew something about your day that you didn’t. It just
so happened that ‘The Great Zaganza’ was an old friend of his who knew when Dirk’s
birthday was, and always wrote his column deliberately to wind him up. The paper’s
circulation had dropped by nearly a twelfth since he had taken over doing the horoscope,
and only Dirk and The Great Zaganza knew why.
He hurried on, flapping his way
quickly through the rest of the paper. As usual, there was nothing interesting.
A lot of stuff about the search for Janice Smith, the missing airline girl from
Heathrow, and how she could possibly have disappeared just like that. They printed
the latest picture of her, which was on a swing with pigtails, aged six. Her father,
a Mr Jim Pearce, was quoted as saying it was quite a good likeness, but she had
grown up a lot now and was usually in better focus. Impatiently, Dirk tucked the
paper under his arm and strode onwards, his thoughts on a much more interesting
topic.
Three hundred pounds a day. Plus
expenses.
He wondered how long he could
reasonably expect to sustain in Mr Anstey his strange delusions that he was about
to be murdered by a seven foot tall, shaggy-haired creature with huge green
eyes and horns, who habitually waved things at him: a contract written in some incomprehensible
language and signed with a splash of blood, and also a kind of scythe. The
other notable feature of this creature was that no one other than his client had
been able to see it, which Mr Anstey dismissed as a trick of the light.
Three days? Four? Dirk didn’t think
he’d be able to manage a whole week with a straight face, but he was already looking
at something like a grand for his trouble. And he would stick a new fridge down
on the list of tangential but non-negotiable expenses. That would be a good one.
Getting the old fridge thrown out was definitely part of the interconnectedness
of all things.
He began to whistle at the thought of
simply getting someone to come round and cart the thing away, turned into Lupton
Road and was surprised at all the police cars there. And the ambulance. He
didn’t like them being there. It didn’t feel right. It didn’t sit comfortably in
his mind alongside his visions of a new fridge.
[::: CHAPTER 5
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
Dirk knew Lupton Road. It was a wide
tree-lined affair, with large late-Victorian terraces which stood tall and sturdily
and resented police cars. Resented them if they turned up in numbers, that is,
and if their lights were flashing. The inhabitants of Lupton Road liked to see a
nice, well-turned-out single police car patrolling up and down the street in a
cheerful and robust manner -- it kept property values cheerful and robust too.
But the moment the lights started flashing in that knuckle-whitening blue, they
cast their pallor not only on the neatly pointed bricks that they flashed
across, but also on the very values those bricks represented.
Anxious faces peered from behind the
glass of neighbouring windows, and were irradiated by the blue strobes.
There were three of them, three
police cars left askew across the road in a way that transcended mere parking. It
sent out a massive signal to the world saying that the law was here now taking
charge of things, and that anyone who just had normal, good and cheerful
business to conduct in Lupton Road could just fuck off.
Dirk hurried up the road, sweat pricking
at him beneath his heavy leather coat. A police constable loomed up ahead of
him with his arms spread out, playing at being a stop barrier, but Dirk swept him
aside in a torrent of words to which the constable was unable to come up with a
good response off the top of his head. Dirk sped on to the house.
At the door another policeman stopped
him, and Dirk was about to wave an expired Marks and Spencer charge card at him
with a deft little flick of the wrist that he had practised for hours in front
of a mirror on those long evenings when nothing much else was on, when the
officer suddenly said, ‘Hey, is your name Gently?’
Dirk blinked at him warily. He made a
slight grunting noise that could be either ‘yes’ or ‘no’ depending on the
circumstances.
‘Because the Chief has been looking
for you.’
‘Has he?’ said Dirk.
‘I recognised you from his
description,’ said the officer looking him up and down with a slight smirk.
‘In fact,’ continued the officer, ‘he’s
been using your name in a manner that some might find highly offensive. He even
sent Big Bob the Finder off in a car to find you. I can tell that he didn’t find
you from the fact that you’re looking reasonably well. Lot of people get found
by Big Bob the Finder, they come in a bit wobbly. Just about able to help us
with our enquiries but that’s about all. You’d better go in. Rather you than
me,’ he added quietly.
Dirk glanced at the house. The stripped-pine
shutters were closed across all the windows. Though in all other respects the
house seemed well cared for, groomed into a state of clean, well-pointed affluence,
the closed shutters seemed to convey an air of sudden devastation.
Oddly, there seemed to be music coming
from the basement, or rather, just a single disjointed phrase of thumping music
being repeated over and over again. It sounded as if the stylus had got stuck
in the groove of a record, and Dirk wondered why no one had turned it off, or at
least nudged the stylus along so that the record could continue. The song
seemed very vaguely familiar and Dirk guessed that he had probably heard it on the
radio recently, though he couldn’t place it. The fragment of lyric seemed to be
something like:
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/’ and so on.
‘You’ll be wanting to go down to the
basement,’ said the officer impassively, as if that was the last thing that
anyone in their right mind would be wanting to do.
Dirk nodded to him curtly and
hurried up the steps to the front door, which was standing slightly ajar. He shook
his head and clenched his shoulders to try and stop his brain fluttering.
He went in.
The hallway spoke of prosperity imposed
on a taste that had originally been formed by student living. The floors were stripped
boards heavily polyurethaned, the walls white with Greek rugs hung on them, but
expensive Greek rugs. Dirk would be prepared to bet (though probably not to pay
up) that a thorough search of the house would reveal, amongst who knew what
other dark secrets, five hundred British Telecom shares and a set of Dylan
albums that was complete up to /Blood on the Tracks/.
Another policeman was standing in
the hall. He looked terribly young, and he was leaning very slightly back
against the wall, staring at the floor and holding his helmet against his
stomach. His face was pale and shiny. He looked at Dirk blankly, and nodded faintly
in the direction of the stairs leading down.
Up the stairs came the repeated
sound:
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/’
Dirk was trembling with a rage that
was barging around inside him looking for something to hit or throttle. He
wished that he could hotly deny that any of this was his fault, but until
anybody tried to assert that it was, he couldn’t.
‘How long have you been here?’ he
said curtly.
The young policeman had to gather
himself together to answer.
‘We arrived about half-hour ago,’ he
replied in a thick voice. ‘Hell of a morning. Rushing around.’
‘Don’t tell me about rushing around,’ said Dirk, completely meaninglessly. He launched himself
down the stairs.
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/’
At the bottom there was a narrow
corridor. The main door off it was heavily cracked and hanging off its hinges. It
opened into a large double room. Dirk was about to enter when a figure emerged
from it and stood barring his way.
‘I hate the fact that this case has
got you mixed up in it,’ said the figure, ‘I hate it very much. Tell me what
you’ve got to do with it so I know exactly what it is I’m hating.’
Dirk stared at the neat, thin face
in astonishment.
‘Gilks?’ he said.
‘Don’t stand there looking like a startled
whatsisname, what are those things what aren’t seals? Much worse than seals.
Big blubbery things. Dugongs. Don’t stand there looking like a startled dugong.
Why has that...’ Gilks pointed into the
room behind him, ‘why has that...man in there got your name and telephone
number on an envelope full of money?’
‘How m...’ started Dirk. ‘How, may I
ask, do you come to be here, Gilks? What are you doing so far from the Fens? Surprised
you find it dank enough for you here.’
‘Three hundred pounds,’ said Gilks.
‘Why?’
‘Perhaps you would allow me to speak
to my client,’ said Dirk.
‘Your client, eh?’ said Gilks
grimly. ‘Yes. All right. Why don’t you speak to him? I’d be interested to hear
what you have to say.’ He stood back stiffly, and waved Dirk into the room.
Dirk gathered his thoughts and
entered the room in a state of controlled composure which lasted for just over
a second.
Most of his client was sitting
quietly in a comfortable chair in front of the hi-fi. The chair was placed in the
optimal listening position -- about twice as far back from the speakers as the
distance between them, which is generally considered to be ideal for stereo imaging.
He seemed generally to be casual and
relaxed with his legs crossed and a half-finished cup of coffee on the small table
beside him. Distressingly, though, his head was sitting neatly on the middle of
the record which was revolving on the hi-fi turntable, with the tone arm snuggling
up against the neck and constantly being deflected back into the same groove.
As the head revolved it seemed once every 1.8 seconds or so to shoot Dirk a reproachful
glance, as if to say, ‘See what happens when you don’t turn up on time like I asked
you to,’ then it would sweep on round to the wall, round, round, and back to
the front again with more reproach.
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/’
The room swayed a little around
Dirk, and he put his hand out against the wall to steady it.
‘Was there any particular service you
were engaged to provide for your client?’ said Gilks behind him, very quietly.
‘Oh, er, just a small matter,’ said
Dirk weakly. ‘Nothing connected with all this. No, he, er, didn’t mention any
of this kind of thing at all. Well, look, I can see you’re busy, I think I’d
better just collect my fee and leave. You say he left it out for me?’
Having said this, Dirk sat heavily on
a small bentwood chair standing behind him, and broke it.
Gilks hauled him back to his feet
again, and propped him against the wall. Briefly he left the room, then came
back with a small jug of water and a glass on a tray. He poured some water into
the glass, took it to Dirk and threw it at him.
‘Better?’
‘No,’ spluttered Dirk, ‘can’t you at
least turn the record off?’
‘That’s forensic’s job. Can’t touch
anything till the clever dicks have been. Maybe that’s them now. Go out on to the
patio and get some air. Chain yourself to the railing and beat yourself up a little,
I’m pushed for time myself. And try to look less green, will you? It’s not your
colour.’
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/’
Gilks turned round, looking tired
and cross, and was about to go out and up the stairs to meet the newcomers
whose voices could be heard up on the ground floor, when he paused and watched
the head revolving patiently on its heavy platter for a few seconds.
‘You know,’ he said at last, ‘these smart-alec
show-off suicides really make me tired. They only do it to annoy.’
‘/Suicide?/’ said Dirk.
Gilks glanced round at him.
‘Windows secured with iron bars half
an inch thick,’ he said. ‘Door locked from the inside with the key still in the
lock. Furniture piled against the inside of the door. French windows to the
patio locked with mortice door bolts. No signs of a tunnel. If it was murder
then the murderer must have stopped to do a damn fine job of glazing on the way
out. Except that all the putty’s old and painted over.
‘No. Nobody’s left this room, and
nobody’s broken into it except for us, and I’m pretty sure we didn’t do it.
‘I haven’t time to fiddle around on
this one. Obviously suicide, and just done to be difficult. I’ve half a mind to
do the deceased for wasting police time. Tell you what,’ he said, glancing at
his watch, ‘you’ve got ten minutes. If you come up with a plausible explanation
of how he did it that I can put in my report, I’ll let you keep the evidence in
the envelope minus 20 per cent compensation to me for the emotional wear and
tear involved in not punching you in the mouth.’
Dirk wondered for a moment whether
or not to mention the visits his client claimed to have received from a strange
and violent green-eyed, fur-clad giant who regularly emerged out of nowhere
bellowing about contracts and obligations and waving a three foot glittering-edged
scythe, but decided, on balance, no.
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/’
He was seething at himself at last.
He had not been able to seethe at himself properly over the death of his client
because it was too huge and horrific a burden to bear. But now he had been
humiliated by Gilks, and found himself in too wobbly and disturbed a state to
fight back, so he was able to seethe at himself about that.
He turned sharply away from his tormentor
and let himself out into the patio garden to be alone with his seethings.
The patio was a small, paved,
west-facing area at the rear which was largely deprived of light, cut off as it
was by the high back wall of the house and by the high wall of some industrial
building that backed on to the rear. In the middle of it stood, for who knew what
possible reason, a stone sundial. If any light at all fell on the sundial you would
know that it was pretty close to noon, GMT. Other than that, birds perched on
it. A few plants sulked in pots.
Dirk jabbed a cigarette in his mouth
and burnt a lot of the end of it fiercely.
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/’ still nagged from inside the house.
Neat garden walls separated the patio
on either side from the gardens of neighbouring houses. The one to the left was
the same size as this one, the one to the right extended a little further,
benefiting from the fact that the industrial building finished flush with the intervening
garden wall. There was an air of well-kemptness. Nothing grand, nothing flashy,
just a sense that all was well and that upkeep on the houses was no problem.
The house to the right, in particular, looked as if it had had its brickwork
repointed quite recently, and its windows reglossed.
Dirk took a large gulp of air and
stood for a second staring up into what could be seen of the sky, which was
grey and hazy. A single dark speck was wheeling against the underside of the
clouds. Dirk watched this for a while, glad of any focus for his thoughts other
than the horrors of the room he had just left. He was vaguely aware of comings and
goings within the room, of a certain amount of tape-measuring happening, of a
feeling that photographs were being taken, and that severed-head-removal
activities were taking place.
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
i --/
‘/Don’t pi --/’
Somebody at last picked it up, the
nagging repetition was at last hushed, and now the gentle sound of a distant television
floated peacefully on the noontime air.
Dirk, however, was having a great deal
of difficulty in taking it all in. He was much more aware of taking a
succession of huge swimmy whacks to the head, which were the assaults of guilt.
It was not the normal background-noise type of guilt that comes from just being
alive this far into the twentieth century, and which Dirk was usually fairly adept
at dealing with. It was an actual stunning sense of, ‘this specific terrible
thing is specifically and terribly my fault’. All the normal mental moves wouldn’t
let him get out of the path of the huge pendulum. /Wham/ it came again,
/whizz/, /wham/, again and again, /wham/, /wham/, /wham/.
He tried to remember any of the
details of what his late client (/wham, wham/) had said (/wham/) to him
(/wham/), but it was (/wham/) virtually impossible (/wham/) with all this whamming
taking place (/wham/). The man had said (/wham/) that (Dirk took a deep breath)
(/wham/) he was being pursued (/wham/) by (/wham/) a large, hairy, green-eyed
monster armed with a scythe.
/Wham!/
Dirk had secretly smiled to himself
about this.
/Whim, wham, whim, wham, whim,
wham!/
And had thought, ‘What a silly man.’
/Whim, whim, whim, whim, wham!/
A scythe (/wham/), and a contract
(/wham/).
He hadn’t known, or even had the faintest
idea as to what the contract was for.
‘Of course,’ Dirk had thought
(/wham/).
But he had a vague feeling that it
might have something to do with a potato. There was a bit of a complicated
story attached to that (/whim, whim, whim/).
Dirk had nodded seriously at this point
(/wham/), and made a reassuring tick (/wham/) on a pad which he kept on his desk
(/wham/) for the express purpose of making reassuring ticks on (/wham, wham, wham/).
He had prided himself at that moment on having managed to convey the impression
that he had made a tick in a small box marked ‘Potatoes’.
/Wham, wham, wham, wham!/
Mr Anstey had said he would explain
further about the potatoes when Dirk arrived to carry out his task.
And Dirk had promised (/wham/), easily
(/wham/), casually (/wham/), with an airy wave of his hand (/wham, wham,
wham/), to be there at six- thirty in the morning (/wham/), because the
contract (/wham/) fell due at seven o’clock.
Dirk remembered having made another tick
in a notional ‘Potato contract falls due at 7.00 a.m.’ box. (/Wh.../)
He couldn’t handle all this whamming
any more. He couldn’t blame himself for what had happened. Well, he could. Of
course he could. He did. It was, in fact, his fault (/wham/). The point was
that he couldn’t continue to blame himself for what had happened and think clearly
about it, which he was going to have to do. He would have to dig this horrible
thing (/wham/) up by the roots, and if he was going to be fit to do that he had
somehow to divest himself (/wham/) of this whamming.
A huge wave of anger surged over him
as he contemplated his predicament and the tangled distress of his life. He
hated this neat patio. He hated all this sundial stuff, and all these neatly
painted windows, all these hideously trim roofs. He wanted to blame it all on the
paintwork rather than on himself, on the revoltingly tidy patio paving-stones, on
the sheer disgusting abomination of the neatly repointed brickwork.
‘Excuse me...’
‘What?’ He whirled round, caught
unawares by this intrusion into his private raging of a quiet polite voice.
‘Are you connected with...?’ The woman indicated all the
unpleasantness and the lower-ground-floorness and the horrible sort of policeness
of things next door to her with a little floating movement of her wrist. Her
wrist wore a red bracelet which matched the frames of her glasses. She was
looking over the garden wall from the house on the right, with an air of
slightly anxious distaste.
Dirk glared at her speechlessly. She
looked about forty-somethingish and neat, with an instant and unmistakable
quality of advertising about her.
She gave a troubled sigh.
‘I know it’s probably all very terrible
and everything,’ she said, ‘but do you think it will take long? We only called
in the police because the noise of that ghastly record was driving us up the wall.
It’s all a bit...’
She gave him a look of silent
appeal, and Dirk decided that it could all be her fault. She could, as far as
he was concerned, take the blame for everything while he sorted it out. She deserved
it, if only for wearing a bracelet like that.
Without a word, he turned his back
on her, and took his fury back inside the house where it began rapidly to freeze
into something hard and efficient.
‘Gilks!’ he said. ‘Your smart-alec suicide
theory. I like it. It works for me. And I think I see how the clever bastard
pulled it off. Bring me pen. Bring me paper.’
He sat down with a flourish at the
cherrywood farmhouse table which occupied the centre of the rear portion of the
room and deftly sketched out a scheme of events which involved a number of
household or kitchen implements, a swinging, weighted light fitting, some very precise
timing, and hinged on the vital fact that the record turntable was Japanese.
‘That should keep your forensic
chaps happy,’ said Dirk briskly to Gilks. The forensic chaps glanced at it,
took in its salient points and liked them. They were simple, implausible, and
of exactly that nature which a coroner who liked the same sort of holidays in
Marbella which they did would be sure to relish.
‘Unless,’ said Dirk casually, ‘you are
interested in the notion that the deceased had entered into some kind of diabolical
contract with a supernatural agency for which payment was now being exacted?’
The forensic chaps glanced at each other
and shook their heads. There was a strong sense from them that the morning was
wearing on and that this kind of talk was only introducing unnecessary complications
into a case which otherwise could be well behind them before lunch.
Dirk made a satisfied shrug, peeled off
his share of the evidence and, with a final nod to the constabulary, made his
way back upstairs.
As he reached the hallway, it suddenly
became apparent to him that the gentle sounds of day-time television which he
had heard from out in the garden had previously been masked from inside by the insistent
sound of the record stuck in its groove.
He was surprised now to realise that
they were in fact coming from somewhere upstairs in this house. With a quick look
round to see that he was not observed he stood on the bottom step of the
staircase leading to the upstairs floors of the house and glanced up them in surprise.
[::: CHAPTER 6
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
The stairs were carpeted with a
tastefully austere matting type of substance. Dirk quietly made his way up them,
past some tastefully dried large things in a pot that stood on the first
landing, and looked into the rooms on the first floor. They, too, were tasteful
and dried.
The larger of the two bedrooms was the
only one that showed any signs of current use. It had clearly been designed to
allow the morning light to play on delicately arranged flowers and duvets
stuffed with something like hay, but there was a feeling that socks and used
shaving heads were instead beginning to gather the room into their grip. There was
a distinct absence of anything female in the room -- the same sort of absence
that a missing picture leaves behind it on a wall. There was an air of tension
and of sadness and of things needing to be cleaned out from under the bed.
The bathroom, which opened out from
it, had a gold disc hung on the wall in front of the lavatory, for sales of five
hundred thousand copies of a record called /Hot Potato/ by a band called
Pugilism and the Third Autistic Cuckoo. Dirk had a vague recollection of having
read part of an interview with the leader of the band (there were only two of
them, and one of them was the leader) in a Sunday paper. He had been asked
about their name, and he had said that there was an interesting story about it,
though it turned out not to be. ‘It can mean whatever people want it to mean,’
he had added with a shrug from the sofa of his manager’s office somewhere off
Oxford Street.
Dirk remembered visualising the
journalist nodding politely and writing this down. A vile knot had formed in Dirk’s
stomach which he had eventually softened with gin.
‘/Hot Potato/...’ thought Dirk. It
suddenly occurred to him looking at the gold disc hanging in its red frame,
that the record on which the late Mr Anstey’s head had been perched was
obviously this one. Hot Potato. Don’t pick it up.
What could that mean?
Whatever people wanted it to mean,
Dirk thought with bad grace.
The other thing that he remembered
now about the interview was that Pain (the leader of Pugilism and the Third
Autistic Cuckoo was called Pain) claimed to have written the lyrics down more or
less verbatim from a conversation which he or somebody had overheard in a café
or a sauna or an aeroplane or something like that. Dirk wondered how the originators
of the conversation would feel to hear their words being repeated in the
circumstances in which he had just heard them.
He peered more closely at the label in
the centre of the gold record. At the top of the label it said simply, ‘ARRGH!’,
while underneath the actual title were the writers’ credits -- ‘Paignton, Mulville,
Anstey’.
Mulville was presumably the member of
Pugilism and the Third Autistic Cuckoo who wasn’t the leader. And Geoff Anstey’s
inclusion on the writing credits of a major-selling single was probably what had
paid for this house. When Anstey had talked about the contract having something
to do with /Potato/ he had assumed that Dirk knew what he meant. And he, Dirk,
had as easily assumed that Anstey was blithering. It was very easy to assume
that someone who was talking about green- eyed monsters with scythes was also blithering
when he talked about potatoes.
Dirk sighed to himself with deep
uneasiness. He took a dislike to the neat way the trophy was hanging on the
wall and adjusted it a little so that it hung at a more humane and untidy angle.
Doing this caused an envelope to fall out from behind the frame and flutter towards
the floor. Dirk tried unsuccessfully to catch it. With an unfit grunt he bent
over and picked the thing up.
It was a largish, cream envelope of
rich, heavy paper, roughly slit open at one end, and resealed with Sellotape.
In fact it looked as if it had been opened and resealed with fresh layers of
tape many times, an impression which was borne out by the number of names to
which the envelope had in its time been addressed -- each successively crossed out
and replaced by another.
The last name on it was that of
Geoff Anstey. At least Dirk assumed it was the last name because it was the
only one that had not been crossed out, and crossed out heavily. Dirk peered at
some of the other names, trying to make them out.
Some memory was stirred by a couple
of the names which he could just about discern, but he needed to examine the
envelope much more closely. He had been meaning to buy himself a magnifying
glass ever since he had become a detective, but had never got around to it. He
also did not possess a penknife, so reluctantly he decided that the most prudent
course was to tuck the envelope away for the moment in one of the deeper
recesses of his coat and examine it later in privacy.
He glanced quickly behind the frame
of the gold disc to see if any other goodies might emerge but was disappointed,
and so he quit the bathroom and resumed his exploration of the house.
The other bedroom was neat and
soulless. Unused. A pine bed, a duvet and an old battered chest of drawers that
had been revived by being plunged into a vat of acid were its main features.
Dirk pulled the door of it closed behind him, and started to ascend the small, wobbly,
white-painted stairway that led up to an attic from which the sounds of Bugs
Bunny could be heard.
At the top of the stairs was a
minute landing which opened on one side into a bathroom so small that it would
best be used by standing outside and sticking into it whichever limb you wanted
to wash. The door to it was kept ajar by a length of green hosepipe which trailed
from the cold tap of the wash-basin, out of the bathroom, across the landing
and into the only other room here at the top of the house.
It was an attic room with a severely
pitched roof which offered only a few spots where a person of anything
approaching average height could stand up.
Dirk stood hunched in the doorway
and surveyed its contents, nervous of what he might find amongst them. There was
a general grunginess about the place. The curtains were closed and little light
made it past them into the room, which was otherwise illuminated only by the flickering
glow of an animated rabbit. An unmade bed with dank, screwed-up sheets was
pushed under a particularly low angle of the ceiling. Part of the walls and the
more nearly vertical surfaces of the ceiling were covered with pictures crudely
cut out of magazines.
There didn’t seem to be any common
theme or purpose behind the cuttings. As well as a couple of pictures of flashy
German cars and the odd bra advertisement, there were also a badly torn picture
of a fruit flan, part of an advertisement for life insurance and other random fragments
which suggested they had been selected and arranged with a dull, bovine
indifference to any meaning that any of them might have or effect they might
achieve.
The hosepipe curled across the floor
and led around the side of an elderly armchair pulled up in front of the
television set.
The rabbit rampaged. The glow of his
rampagings played on the frayed edges of the armchair. Bugs was wrestling with
the controls of an aeroplane which was plunging to the ground. Suddenly he saw
a button marked ‘Autopilot’ and pressed it. A cupboard opened and a robot pilot
clambered out, took one look at the situation and baled out. The plane hurtled on
towards the ground but, luckily, ran out of fuel just before reaching it and so
the rabbit was saved.
Dirk could also see the top of a
head.
The hair of this head was dark,
matted and greasy. Dirk watched it for a long, uneasy moment before advancing
slowly into the room to see what, if anything, it was attached to. His relief
at discovering, as he rounded the armchair, that the head was, after all,
attached to a living body was a little marred by the sight of the living body
to which it was attached.
Slumped in the armchair was a boy.
He was probably about thirteen or
fourteen, and although he didn’t look ill in any specific physical way, he was definitely
not a well person. His hair sagged on his head, his head sagged on his
shoulders, and he lay in the armchair in a sort of limp, crumpled way, as if
he’d been hurled there from a passing train. He was dressed merely in a cheap
leather jacket and sleeping-bag.
Dirk stared at him.
Who was he? What was a boy doing
here watching television in a house where someone had just been decapitated? Did
he know what had happened? Did Gilks know about him? Had Gilks even bothered to
come up here? It was, after all, several flights of stairs for a busy policeman
with a tricky suicide on his hands.
After Dirk had been standing there for
twenty seconds or so, the boy’s eyes climbed up towards him, failed utterly to
acknowledge him in any way at all, and then dropped again and locked back on to
the rabbit.
Dirk was unused to making quite such
a minuscule impact on anybody. He checked to be sure that he did have his huge
leather coat and his absurd red hat on and that he was properly and
dramatically silhouetted by the light of the doorway.
He felt momentarily deflated and said,
‘Er...’ by way of self introduction, but it didn’t get the boy’s attention. He
didn’t like this. The kid was deliberately and maliciously watching television
at him. He frowned. There was a kind of steamy tension building in the room it
seemed to Dirk, a kind of difficult, hissing quality to the whole air of the
place which he did not know how to respond to. It rose in intensity and then
suddenly ended with an abrupt click which made Dirk start.
The boy unwound himself like a slow,
fat snake, leaned sideways over the far side of the armchair and made some
elaborate unseen preparations which
clearly involved, as Dirk now realised, an electric kettle. When he resumed his
earlier splayed posture it was with the addition of a plastic pot clutched in his
right hand, from which he forked rubbery strands of steaming gunk into his
mouth.
The rabbit brought his affairs to a
conclusion and gave way to a jeering comedian who wished the viewers to buy a
certain brand of lager on the basis of nothing better than his own hardly
disinterested say- so.
Dirk felt that it was time to make a
slightly greater impression on the proceedings than he had so far managed to
do. He stepped forward directly into the boy’s line of sight.
‘Kid,’ Dirk said in a tone that he
hoped would sound firm but gentle and not in any way at all patronising or
affected or gauche, ‘I need to know who --’
He was distracted at that moment by
the sight which met him from the new position in which he was standing. On the
other side of the armchair there was a large, half full catering-size box of
Pot Noodles, a large, half full catering-size box of Mars Bars, a half
demolished pyramid of cans of soft drink, and the end of the hosepipe. The hosepipe
ended in a plastic tap nozzle, and was obviously used for refilling the kettle.
Dirk had simply been going to ask
the boy who he was, but seen from this angle the family resemblance was
unmistakable. He was clearly the son of the lately decapitated Geoffrey Anstey.
Perhaps this behaviour was just his way of dealing with shock. Or perhaps he really
didn’t know what had happened. Or perhaps he...
Dirk hardly liked to think.
In fact he was finding it hard to think
clearly while the television beside him was, on behalf of a toothpaste
manufacturing company, trying to worry him deeply about some of the things
which might be going on in his mouth.
‘OK,’ he said, ‘I don’t like to
disturb you at what I know must be a difficult and distressing time for you,
but I need to know first of all if you actually realise that this is a
difficult and distressing time for you.’
Nothing.
All right, thought Dirk, time for a
little judicious toughness. He leant back against the wall, stuck his hands in
his pockets in an OK- if-that’s-the-way-you-want-to-play-it manner, stared moodily
at the floor for a few seconds, then swung his head up and let the boy have a hard
look right between the eyes.
‘I have to tell you, kid,’ he said
tersely, ‘your father’s dead.’
This might have worked if it hadn’t been
for a very popular and long-running commercial which started at that moment. It
seemed to Dirk to be a particularly astounding example of the genre.
The opening sequence showed the
angel Lucifer being hurled from heaven into the pit of hell where he then lay
on a burning lake until a passing demon arrived and gave him a can of a fizzy soft
drink called /sHades/. Lucifer took it and tried it. He greedily guzzled the
whole contents of the can and then turned to camera, slipped on some Porsche design
sunglasses, said, ‘Now we’re /really/ cookin’!’ and lay back basking in the
glow of the burning coals being heaped around him.
At that point an impossibly deep and
growly American voice, which sounded as if it had itself crawled from the pit
of hell, or at least from a Soho basement drinking club to which it was keen to
return as soon as possible to marinade itself into shape for the next
voice-over, said, ‘/sHades/. The Drink from Hell...’ and the can revolved a little
to obscure the initial ‘/s/’, and thus spell ‘Hades’.
The theology of this seemed a little
confused, reflected Dirk, but what was one tiny extra droplet of misinformation
in such a raging torrent?
Lucifer then mugged at the camera
again and said, ‘I could really /fall/ for this stuff...’ and just in case the
viewer had been rendered completely insensate by all these goings-on, the opening
shot of Lucifer being hurled from heaven was briefly replayed in order to emphasise
the word ‘fall’.
The boy’s attention was entirely
captivated by this.
Dirk squatted down in between the
boy and the screen.
‘Listen to me,’ he began.
The boy craned his neck round to look
past Dirk at the screen. He had to redistribute his limbs in the chair in order
to be able to do this and continue to fork Pot Noodle into himself.
‘Listen,’ insisted Dirk again.
Dirk felt he was beginning to be in serious
danger of losing the upper hand in the situation. It wasn’t merely that the
boy’s attention was on the television, it was that nothing else seemed to have any
meaning or independent existence for him at all. Dirk was merely a featureless
object in the way of the television. The boy seemed to bear him no malice, he
merely wished to see past him.
‘Look, can we turn this off for a
moment?’ Dirk said, and he tried not to make it sound testy.
The boy did not respond. Maybe there
was a slight stiffening of the shoulders, maybe it was a shrug. Dirk turned
around and was at a loss to find which button to push to turn the television
off. The whole control panel seemed to be dedicated to the single purpose of
keeping itself turned on -- there was no single button marked ‘on’ or ‘off’. Eventually
Dirk simply disconnected the set from the power socket on the wall and turned
back to the boy, who broke his nose.
Dirk felt his septum crunching from
the terrific impact of the boy’s forehead as they both toppled heavily backwards
against the set, but the noise of the bone breaking, and the noise of his own
cry of pain as it broke was completely obliterated by the howling screams of
rage that erupted from the boy’s throat. Dirk flailed helplessly to try and protect
himself from the fury of the onslaught, but the boy was on top with his elbow in
Dirk’s eye, his knees pounding first on Dirk’s ribcage, then his jaw and then
on Dirk’s already traumatised nose, as he scrambled over him to reconnect the power
to the television. He then settled back comfortably into the armchair and
watched with a moody and unsettled eye as the picture reassembled itself.
‘You could at least have waited for
the news,’ he said in a dull voice.
Dirk gaped at him. He sat huddled on
the floor, coddling his bleeding nose in his hands, and gaped at the
monstrously disinterested creature.
‘Whhfff...fffmmm...nnggh!’ he protested,
and then gave up for the time being, while he probed his nose for the damage.
There was definitely a wobbly bit
that clicked nastily between his fingers, and the whole thing seemed suddenly to
be a horribly unfamiliar shape. He
fished a handkerchief out of his pocket and held it up to his face. Blood
spread easily through it. He staggered to his feet, brushed aside non-existent offers
of help, stomped out of the room and into the tiny bathroom. There, he yanked
the hosepipe angrily off the tap, found a towel, soaked it in cold water and
held it to his face for a minute or two until the flow of blood gradually slowed
to a trickle and stopped. He stared at himself in the mirror. His nose was quite
definitely leaning at a slightly rakish angle. He tried bravely to shift it, but
not bravely enough. It hurt abominably, so he contented himself with dabbing at
it a little more with the wet towel and swearing quietly.
Then he stood there for a second or
two longer, leaning against the basin, breathing heavily, and practising saying
‘All right!’ fiercely into the mirror. It came out as ‘Aww-bwigh!’ and lacked any
real authority. When he felt sufficiently braced, or at least as braced as he was
likely to feel in the immediate future, he turned and stalked grimly back into
the den of the beast.
The beast was sitting quietly
absorbing news of some of the exciting and stimulating game shows that the evening
held in store for the determined viewer, and did not look up as Dirk
re-entered.
Dirk walked briskly over to the
window and drew the curtains sharply back, half hoping that the beast might
shrivel up shrieking if exposed to daylight, but other than wrinkling up its
nose, it did not react. A dark shadow flapped briefly across the window, but
the angle was such that Dirk could not see what caused it.
He turned and faced the boy-beast. The
midday news bulletin was starting on television, and the boy seemed somehow a
little more open, a little more receptive to the world outside the flickering
coloured rectangle. He glanced up at Dirk with a sour, tired look.
‘Whaddayawananyway?’ he said.
‘I ted you whad I wad,’ said Dirk,
fiercely but hopelessly, ‘I wad...hag od a bobed...I gnow thad faith!’
Dirk’s attention had switched suddenly
to the television screen, where a rather more up-to-date photograph of the
missing airline check- in girl was being shown.
‘Whadayadoingere?’ said the boy.
‘Jjchhhhh!’ said Dirk, and perched
himself down on the arm of the chair, peering intently at the face on the
screen. It had been taken about a year ago, before the girl had learnt about
corporate lipgloss. She had frizzy hair and a frumpy, put-upon look.
‘Whoareyou? Wassgoinon?’ insisted
the boy.
‘Loog, chuddub,’ snapped Dirk, ‘I’b
tryid to wodge dthith!’
The newscaster said that the police professed
themselves to be mystified by the fact that there was no trace of Janice Smith
at the scene of the incident. They explained that there was a limit to the number
of times they could search the same buildings, and appealed for anyone who
might have a clue as to her whereabouts to come forward.
‘Thadth by segradry! Thadth Mith Pearth!’ exclaimed Dirk in astonishment.
The boy was not interested in Dirk’s
ex-secretary, and gave up trying to attract Dirk’s attention. He wriggled out
of the sleeping-bag and sloped off to the bathroom.
Dirk sat staring at the television, bewildered
that he hadn’t realised before who the missing girl was. Still, there was no reason
why he should have done, he realised. Marriage had changed her name, and this was
the first time they had shown a photograph that actually identified her. So far
he had taken no real interest in the strange incident at the airport, but now
it demanded his attention.
The explosion was now officially
designated an ‘Act of God’.
But, thought Dirk, what god? And
why?
What god would be hanging around
Terminal Two of Heathrow Airport trying to catch the 15.37 flight to Oslo?
After the miserable lassitude of the
last few weeks, he suddenly had a great deal that required his immediate
attention. He frowned in deep thought for a few moments, and hardly noticed
when the beast-boy snuck back in and snuggled back into his sleeping-bag just
in time for the advertisements to start. The first one showed how a perfectly
ordinary stock cube could form the natural focus of a normal, happy family
life.
Dirk leapt to his feet, but even as he
was about to start questioning the boy again his heart sank as he looked at
him. The beast was far away, sunk back in his dark, flickering lair, and Dirk
did not feel inclined to disturb him again at the moment.
He contented himself with barking at
the unresponding child that he would be back, and bustled heavily down the
stairs, his big leather coat flapping madly behind him.
In the hallway he encountered the
loathed Gilks once more.
‘What happened to you?’ said the
policeman sharply, catching sight of Dirk’s bruised and bulging nose.
‘Ondly whad you dold me,’ said Dirk,
innocently. ‘I bead bythelf ub.’
Gilks demanded to know what he had been
doing, and Dirk generously explained that there was a witness upstairs with some
interesting information to impart. He suggested that Gilks go and have a word
with him, but that it would be best if he turned off the television first.
Gilks nodded curtly. He started to
go up the stairs, but Dirk stopped him.
‘Doedth eddydthig dthrike you adth
dthraydge aboud dthidth houdth?’ he said.
‘What did you say?’ said Gilks in
irritation.
‘Subbthig dthraydge,’ said Dirk.
‘Something what?’
‘Dthraydge!’ insisted Dirk.
‘Strange?’
‘Dthadth right, dthraydge.’
Gilks shrugged. ‘Like what?’ he
said.
‘Id dtheemdth to be cobbleedly
dthouledth.’
‘Completely what?’
‘Dthouledth!’ he tried again. ‘Thoul-leth!
I dthigg dthadth dverry idderedthigg!’
With that he doffed his hat
politely, and swept on out of the house and up the street, where an eagle
swooped out of the sky at him and came within a whisker of causing him to fall
under a 73 bus on its way south. For the next twenty minutes, hideous yells and
screams emanated from the top floor of the house in Lupton Road, and caused
much tension among the neighbours. The ambulance took away the upper and lower remains
of Mr Anstey and also a policeman with a bleeding face. For a short while after
this, there was quietness.
Then another police car drew up outside
the house. A lot of ‘Bob’s here’ type of remarks floated from the house, as an
extremely large and burly policeman heaved himself out of the car and bustled
up the steps. A few minutes and a great deal of screaming and yelling later he
re- emerged also clutching his face, and drove off in deep dudgeon, squealing
his tyres in a violent and unnecessary manner.
Twenty minutes later a van arrived from
which emerged another policeman carrying a tiny pocket television set. He
entered the house, and re-emerged a short while later leading a docile thirteen-year-old
boy, who was content with his new toy.
Once all policemen had departed,
save for the single squad car which remained parked outside to keep watch on the
house, a large, hairy, green-eyed figure emerged from its hiding place behind
one of the molecules in the large basement room.
It propped its scythe against one of
the hi-fi speakers, dipped a long, gnarled finger in the almost congealed pool
of blood that had collected on the deck of the turntable, smeared the finger
across the bottom of a sheet of thick, yellowing paper, and then disappeared
off into a dark and hidden otherworld whistling a strange and vicious tune and
returning only briefly to collect its scythe.
[::: CHAPTER 7
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
A little earlier in the morning, at
a comfortable distance from all these events, set at a comfortable distance
from a well-proportioned window through which cool mid-morning light was
streaming, lay an elderly one-eyed man in a white bed. A newspaper sat like a
half- collapsed tent on the floor, where it had been hurled two minutes before,
at shortly after ten o’clock by the clock on the bedside table.
The room was not large, but was
furnished in excessively bland good taste, as if it were a room in an expensive
private hospital or clinic, which is exactly what it was -- the Woodshead
Hospital, set in its own small but well-kempt grounds on the outskirts of a
small but well-kempt village in the Cotswolds.
The man was awake but not glad to
be.
His skin was very delicately old, like
finely stretched, translucent parchment, delicately freckled. His exquisitely frail hands lay slightly curled on the pure white linen
sheets and quivered very faintly.
His name was variously given as Mr
Odwin, or Wodin, or Odin. He was -- is -- a god, and furthermore he was that
least good of all gods to be alongside, a cross god. His one eye glinted.
He was cross because of what he had
been reading in the newspapers, which was that another god had been cutting
loose and making a nuisance of himself. It didn’t say that in the papers, of
course. It didn’t say, ‘God cuts loose, makes nuisance of himself in airport,’ it
merely described the resulting devastation and was at a loss to draw any meaningful
conclusions from it.
The story had been deeply unsatisfactory
in all sorts of ways, on account of its perplexing inconclusiveness, its
going-nowhereness and the irritating (from the newspapers’ point of view) lack
of any good solid carnage. There was of course a mystery attached to the lack
of carnage, but a newspaper preferred a good whack of carnage to a mere mystery
any day of the week.
Odin, however, had no such
difficulty in knowing what was going on. The accounts had ‘Thor’ written all
over them in letters much too big for anyone other than another god to see. He
had thrown this morning’s paper aside in irritation, and was now trying to
concentrate on his relaxation exercises in order to avoid getting too disturbed
about all this. These involved breathing in in a certain way and breathing out
in a certain other way and were good for his blood pressure and so on. It was
not as if he was about to die or anything -- ha! -- but there was no doubt that
at his time of life -- ha! -- he preferred to take things easy and look after
himself.
Best of all he liked to sleep.
Sleeping was a very important activity
for him. He liked to sleep for longish periods, great swathes of time. Merely
sleeping overnight was not taking the business seriously. He enjoyed a good
night’s sleep and wouldn’t miss one for the world, but he didn’t regard it as anything
even half approaching enough. He liked to be asleep by half past eleven in the
morning if possible, and if that could come directly after a nice leisurely
lie-in then so much the better. A little light breakfast and a quick trip to the
bathroom while fresh linen was applied to his bed is really all the activity he
liked to undertake, and he took care that it didn’t jangle the sleepiness out of
him and thus disturb his afternoon of napping. Sometimes he was able to spend an
entire week asleep, and this he regarded as a good snooze. He had also slept
through the whole of 1986 and hadn’t missed it.
But he knew to his deep
disgruntlement that he would shortly have to arise and undertake a sacred and
irritating trust. Sacred, because it was godlike, or at least involved gods,
and irritating because of the particular god that it involved.
Sneakily, he twitched the curtains
at a distance, using nothing but his divine will. He sighed heavily. He needed to
think and, what was more, it was time for his morning visit to the bathroom.
He rang for the orderly.
The orderly arrived promptly in his well-pressed
loose green tunic, good-morninged cheerfully, and bustled around locating
bedroom slippers and dressing-gown. He helped Odin out of bed, which was a
little like rolling a stuffed crow out of a box, and escorted him slowly to the
bathroom. Odin walked stiffly, like a head hung between two heavy stilts draped
in striped Viyella and white towelling. The orderly knew Odin as Mr Odwin, and
didn’t realise that he was a god, which was something that Odin tended to keep
quiet about, and wished that Thor would too.
Thor was the God of Thunder and,
frankly, acted like it. It was inappropriate. He seemed unwilling, or unable,
or maybe just too stupid to understand or accept...Odin stopped himself. He
sensed that he was beginning mentally to rant. He would have to consider calmly
what next to do about Thor, and he was on his way to the right place for a good
think.
As soon as Odin had completed his
stately hobble to the bathroom door, two nurses hurried in and stripped and remade
the bed with immense precision, patting down the fresh linen, pulling it taut, turning
it and tucking it. One of the nurses, clearly the senior, was plump and
matronly, the other younger, darker and more generally bird- like. The
newspaper was whisked off the floor and neatly refolded, the floor was briskly
Hoovered, the curtains hooked back, the flowers and the untouched fruit
replaced with fresh flowers and fresh fruit that would, like every piece of
fruit before them, remain untouched.
When after a little while the old
god’s morning ablutions had been completed and the bathroom door reopened,
the room had been transformed. The actual differences were tiny, of course,
but the effect was of a subtle but magical transformation into something cool and
fresh. Odin nodded in quiet satisfaction to see it. He made a little show of
inspecting the bed, like a monarch inspecting a line of soldiers.
‘Is it well tucked?’ he asked in his
old and whispery voice.
‘It is very well tucked, Mr Odwin,’ said
the senior nurse with an obsequious beam.
‘Is it neatly turned?’ It clearly
was. This was merely a ritual.
‘Turned very neatly indeed, Mr
Odwin,’ said the nurse, ‘I supervised the turning down of the sheets myself.’
‘I’m glad of that, Sister Bailey,
very glad,’ said Odin. ‘You have a fine eye for a trimly turned fold. It alarms
me to know what I shall do without you.’
‘Well, I’m not about to go anywhere,
Mr Odwin,’ said Sister Bailey, oozing happy reassurance.
‘But you won’t last for ever, Sister
Bailey,’ said Odin. It was a remark that puzzled Sister Bailey on the times she
had heard it, because of its apparent extreme callousness.
‘Sure, and none of us lasts for
over, Mr Odwin,’ she said gently as she and the other nurse between them
managed the difficult task of lifting Odin back into bed while keeping his
dignity intact.
‘You’re Irish aren’t you, Sister
Bailey?’ he asked, once he was properly settled.
‘I am indeed so, Mr Odwin.’
‘Knew an Irishman once. Finn something.
Told me a lot of stuff I didn’t need to know. Never told me about the linen.
Still know now.’
He nodded curtly at this memory and
lowered his head stiffly back on to the firmly plumped up pillows and ran the back
of his finely freckled hand over the folded-back linen sheet. Quite simply he
was in love with linen. Clean, lightly starched, white Irish linen, pressed, folded,
tucked -- the words themselves were almost a litany of desire for him. In
centuries nothing had obsessed him or moved him so much as linen now did. He could
not for the life of him understand how he could ever have cared for anything
else.
Linen.
And sleep. Sleep and linen. Sleep in
linen. Sleep.
Sister Bailey regarded him with a
sort of proprietary fondness. She did not know that he was a god as such, in fact
she thought he was probably an old film producer or Nazi war criminal.
Certainly he had an accent she couldn’t quite place and his careless civility, his
natural selfishness and his obsession with personal hygiene spoke of a past that
was rich with horrors.
If she could have been transported to
where she might see her secretive patient enthroned, warrior father of the warrior
Gods of Asgard, she would not have been surprised. That is not quite true, in fact.
She would have been startled quite out of her wits. But she would at least have
recognised that it was consistent with the qualities she perceived in him, once
she had recovered from the shock of discovering that virtually everything the
human race had ever chosen to believe in was true. Or that it continued to be
true long after the human race particularly needed it to be true any more.
Odin dismissed his medical
attendants with a gesture, having first asked for his personal assistant to be
found and sent to him once more.
This caused Sister Bailey to tighten
her lips just a very little. She did not like Mr Odwin’s personal assistant,
general factotum, manservant, call him what you will. His eyes were malevolent,
he made her jump, and she strongly suspected
him of making unspeakable suggestions to her nurses during their tea breaks.
He had what Sister Bailey supposed was
what people meant by an olive complexion, in that it was extraordinarily close
to being green. Sister Bailey was convinced that it was not right at all.
She was of course the last person to
judge somebody by the colour of their skin -- or if not absolutely the last,
she had at least done it as recently as yesterday afternoon when an African
diplomat had been brought in to have some gallstones removed and she had
conceived an instant resentment of him. She didn’t like him. She couldn’t say exactly
what it was she didn’t like about him, because she was a nurse, not a
taxi-driver, and she wouldn’t let her personal feelings show for an instant. She
was much too professional, much too good at her job, and treated everyone with
a more or less equal efficient and cheerful courtesy, even, she thought -- and
a profound iciness settled on her at this point -- even Mr Rag.
‘Mr Rag’ was the name of Mr Odwin’s
personal assistant. There was nothing she could do about it. It was not her place
to criticise Mr Odwin’s personal arrangements. But if it had been her business,
which it wasn’t, then she would greatly have preferred it, and not just for herself,
but for Mr Odwin’s own well-being as well, which was the important thing, if he
could have employed someone who didn’t give her the absolute heebie-jeebies,
that was all.
She thought no more about it, merely
went to look for him. She had been relieved to discover when she came on duty
this morning that Mr Rag had left the premises the previous night, but had then,
with a keen sense of disappointment, spotted him returning about an hour or so
ago.
She found him exactly where he was not
supposed to be. He was squatting on one of the seats in the visitors’
waiting-room wearing what looked horribly like a soiled and discarded doctor’s
gown that was much too big for him. Not only that, but he was playing a thinly unmusical
tune on a sort of pipe that he had obviously carved out of a large disposable hypodermic
syringe which he absolutely should not have had.
He glanced up at her with his quick,
dancing eyes, grinned and continued to tootle and squeak, only significantly
louder.
Sister Bailey ran through in her mind
all the things that it was completely pointless to say about either the coat or
the syringe, or about him being in the visitors’ room frightening, or preparing
to frighten, the visitors. She knew she wouldn’t be able to stand the air of injured
innocence with which he would reply, or the preposterous absurdity of his
answers. Her only course was simply to let it pass and just get him away from the
room and out of the way as quickly as possible.
‘Mr Odwin would like to see you,’
she said. She tried to jam some of her normal lilting quality into her voice,
but it just wouldn’t go. She wished his eyes would stop dancing like that. Apart
from finding it highly disturbing from both a medical and aesthetic point of
view she also could not help but be piqued by the impression it conveyed that there
were at least thirty-seven things in the room more interesting than her.
He gazed at her in this
disconcerting manner for a few seconds then, muttering that there was no peace for
the wicked, not even the extremely wicked, he pushed past Sister Bailey and skedaddled
up the corridor to receive instructions from his lord and master, quickly, before
his lord and master fell asleep.
[::: CHAPTER 8
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
By the end of the morning Kate had
discharged herself from hospital. There were some initial difficulties involved
in this because first the ward sister and then the doctor in charge of Kate’s
case were adamant that she was in no fit state to leave. She had only just
emerged from a minor coma and she needed care, she needed --
‘Pizza --’ insisted Kate.
-- rest, she needed --
‘-- my own home, and fresh air. The air
in here is horrible. It smells like a vacuum cleaner’s armpit.’
-- further medication, and should definitely remain under observation
for another day or so until they were satisfied that she had made a full
recovery.
At least, they were fairly adamant.
During the course of the morning Kate demanded and got a telephone and started
trying to order pizza to be delivered to her ward. She phoned around all of the
least co- operative pizza restaurants she knew in London, harangued them, then made
some noisily unsuccessful attempts to muster a motorbike to roam around the West
End and try and pick up for her an American Hot with a list of additional peppers
and mushrooms and cheeses which the controller
of the courier service refused even to attempt to remember, and after an hour or
so of this sort of behaviour the objections to Kate discharging herself from
the hospital gradually fell away like petals from an autumn rose.
And so, a little after lunchtime,
she was standing on a bleak West London street feeling weak and shaky but in
charge of herself. She had with her the empty, tattered remains of the garment bag
which she had refused to relinquish, and also a small scrap of paper in her
purse, which had a single name scribbled on it.
She hailed a taxi and sat in the back
with her eyes closed most of the way back to her home in Primrose Hill. She
climbed up the stairs and let herself into her top-floor flat. There were ten
messages on her answering machine, which she simply erased without listening
to.
She threw open the window in her bedroom
and for a moment or two leaned out of it at the rather dangerous and awkward angle
which allowed her to see a patch of the park. It was a small corner patch, with
just a couple of plane trees standing in it. The backs of some of the intervening
houses framed it, or rather, just failed totally to obscure it, and made it
very personal and private to Kate in a way which a vast, sweeping vista would
not have been.
On one occasion she had gone to this
corner of the park and walked around the invisible perimeter that marked out
the limits of what she could see, and had come very close to feeling that this
was her own domain. She had even patted the plane trees in a proprietorial sort
of way, and had then sat beneath them watching the sun going down over London --
over its badly spoiled skyline and its non-delivering pizza restaurants -- and
had come away with a profound sense of something or other, though she wasn’t quite
certain what. Still, she had told herself, these days she should feel grateful
for a profound sense of anything at all, however unspecific.
She hauled herself in from the
window, left it wide open in spite of the chill of the outside air, padded
through into the small bathroom and ran the bath. It was a bath of the sprawling
Edwardian type which took up a wonderfully disproportionate amount of the space
available, and encompassed most of the rest of the room with cream-painted
pipes. The taps seethed. As soon as the room was sufficiently full of steam to be
warm, Kate undressed and then went and opened the large bathroom cupboard.
She felt faintly embarrassed by the
sheer profusion of things she had for putting in baths, but she was for some reason
incapable of passing any chemist or herb shop without going in to be seduced by
some glass-stoppered bottle of something blue or green or orange and oily that was
supposed to restore the natural balance of some vague substance she didn’t even
know she was supposed to have in her pores.
She paused, trying to choose.
Something pink? Something with extra
Vitamin B? Vitamin B12? B13? Just the number of things with different types of
Vitamin B in them was an embarrassment of choice in itself. There were powders as
well as oils, tubes of gel, even packets of some kind of pungent smelling seed that
was meant to be good for some obscure part of you in some arcane way.
How about some of the green
crystals? One day, she had told herself in the past, she would not even bother
trying to choose, but would simply put a bit of everything in. When she really
felt in need of it. She rather thought that today was the day, and with a
sudden reviving rush of pleasure she set about putting a drop or two of everything
in the cupboard into the seething bath until it was confused with mingling,
muddying colours and verging on the glutinous to touch.
She turned off the taps, went to her
handbag for a moment, then returned and lowered herself into the bath, where
she lay with her eyes closed, breathing slowly for fully three minutes before at
last turning her attention to the scrap of paper she had brought with her from
the hospital.
It had one word on it, and it was a
word she had dragged out of an oddly reluctant young nurse who had taken her
temperature that morning.
Kate had questioned her about the
big man. The big man whom she had encountered at the airport, whose body she
had seen in a nearby side ward in the early hours of the night.
‘Oh no,’ the nurse had said, ‘he
wasn’t dead. He was just in some sort of coma.’
Could she see him? Kate had asked.
What was his name?
She had tried to ask idly, in passing
as it were, which was a difficult trick to pull off with a thermometer in her mouth,
and she wasn’t at all certain she had succeeded. The nurse had said that she couldn’t
really say, she wasn’t really meant to talk about other patients. And anyway,
the man wasn’t there any more, he had been taken somewhere else. They had sent
an ambulance to collect him and take him somewhere else.
This had taken Kate considerably by
surprise.
Where had they taken him? What was
this special place? But the nurse had been unwilling to say anything much more,
and a second or two later had been summoned away by the Sister. The only word
the nurse had said was the one that Kate had then scribbled down on the piece
of paper she was now looking at.
The word was ‘Woodshead’.
Now that she was more relaxed she
had a feeling that the name was familiar to her in some way, though she could
not remember where she had heard it.
The instant she remembered, she could
not stay in the bath any longer, but got out and made straight for the
telephone, pausing only briefly to shower all the gunk off her.
[::: CHAPTER 9
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
The big man awoke and tried to look
up, but could hardly raise his head. He tried to sit up but couldn’t do that
either. He felt as if he’d been stuck to the floor with superglue and after a few
seconds he discovered the most astounding reason for this.
He jerked his head up violently,
yanking out great tufts of yellow hair which stayed painfully stuck to the
floor, and looked around him. He was in what appeared to be a derelict warehouse,
probably an upper floor judging by the wintry sky he could see creeping past
the grimy, shattered windows.
The ceilings were high and hung with
cobwebs built by spiders who did not seem to mind that most of what they caught
was crumbling plaster and dust. They were supported by pillars made from upright
steel joists on which the dirty old cream paint was bubbled and flaking, and
these in turn stood on a floor of battered old oak on to which he had clearly
been glued. Extending out for a foot or two in a rough oval all around his
naked body the floor glistened darkly and dully. Thin, nostril-cleaning fumes
rose from it. He could not believe it. He roared with rage, tried to wriggle and
shake himself but succeeded only in tugging painfully at his skin where it was
stuck fast to the oak planks.
This had to be the old man’s doing.
He threw his head back hard against
the floor in a blow that cracked the boards and made his ears sing. He roared again
and took some furious satisfaction in making as much hopeless, stupid noise as
he could. He roared until the steel pillars rang and the cracked remains of the
windows shattered into finer shards. Then, as he threw his head angrily from
one side to the other he caught sight of his sledge-hammer leaning against the
wall a few feet from him, heaved it up into the air with a word, and sent it
hurtling round the great space, beating and clanging on every pillar until the whole
building reverberated like a mad gong.
Another word and the hammer flew
back at him, missed his head by a hand’s-width and punched straight down through
the floor, shattering the wood and the plaster below.
In the darker space beneath him the
hammer spun, and swung round in a slow heavy parabola as bits of plaster fell
about it and rattled on the concrete floor below. Then it gathered a violent momentum
and hurtled back up through the ceiling, smacking up a stack of startled splinters
as it punched through another oak floorboard a hand’s-width from the soles of
the big man’s feet.
It soared up into the air, hung
there for a moment as if its weight had suddenly vanished, then, deftly flicking
its short handle up above its head, it drove hard back down through the floor
again -- then up again, then down again, punching holes in a splintered ring
around its master until, with a long heavy groan, the whole oval section of punctured
floor gave way and plunged, twisting, through the air. It shattered itself against
the floor below amidst a rain of plaster debris, from which the figure of the
big man then emerged, staggering, flapping at the dusty air and coughing. His
back, his arms and his legs were still covered with great splintered hunks of
oak flooring, but at least he was able to move. He leant the flat of his hands against
the wall and violently coughed some of the dust from his lungs.
As he turned back, his hammer danced
out of the air towards him, then suddenly evaded his grasp and skidded joyfully
off across the floor striking sparks from the concrete with its great head,
flipped up and parked itself against a nearby pillar at a jaunty angle.
In front of him the shape of a large
Coca-Cola vending machine loomed through the settling cloud of dust. He regarded
it with the gravest suspicion and worry. It stood there with a sort of glazed, blank
look to it, and had a note from his father stuck on the front panel saying whatever
he was doing, stop it. It was signed ‘You-know- who’, but this had been crossed
out and first the word ‘Odin’ and then in larger letters ‘Your Father’ had been
substituted. Odin never ceased to make absolutely clear his view of his son’s intellectual
accomplishments. The big man tore the note off and stared at it in anger. A postscript
added darkly ‘Remember Wales. You don’t want to go through all that again.’ He screwed
the note up and hurled it out of the nearest window, where the wind whipped it up
and away. For a moment he thought he heard an odd squeaking noise, but it was
probably just the blustering of the wind as it whistled between the nearby derelict
buildings.
He turned and walked to the window
and stared out of it in a belligerent sulk. Glued to the floor. At his age. What
the devil was that supposed to mean? ‘Keep your head down,’ was what he
guessed. ‘If you don’t keep it down, I’ll have to keep it down for you.’ That
was what it meant. ‘Stick to the ground.’
He remembered now the old man saying
exactly that to him at the time of all the unpleasantness with the Phantom
fighter jet. ‘Why can’t you just stick to the ground?’ he had said. He could
imagine the old man in his soft-headed benign malice thinking it very funny to
make the lesson so literal.
Rage began to rumble menacingly
inside him but he pushed it down hard. Very worrying things had recently begun happening
when he got angry and he had a bad feeling, looking back at the Coca-Cola
vending machine, that another of those very worrying things must have just happened.
He stared at it and fretted.
He felt ill.
He had felt ill a lot of late, and he
found it impossible to discharge what were left of his godly duties when he felt
he was suffering from a sort of continual low-grade flu. He experienced headaches,
dizzy spells, guilt and all the sorts of ailments that were featured so often in
television advertisements. He even suffered terrifying blackouts whenever the
great rage gripped him.
He always used to have such a wonderful
time getting angry. Great gusts of marvellous anger would hurl him through
life. He felt huge. He felt flooded with power and light and energy. He had always
been provided with such wonderful things to get angry about -- immense acts of
provocation or betrayal, people hiding the Atlantic ocean in his helmet,
dropping continents on him or getting drunk and pretending to be trees. Stuff
you could really work up a rage about and hit things. In short he had felt good
about being a Thunder God. Now suddenly it was headaches, nervous tension,
nameless anxieties and guilt. These were new experiences for a god, and not
pleasant ones.
‘You look ridiculous!’
The voice screeched out and affected
Thor like fingernails scratched across a blackboard lodged in the back of his
brain. It was a mean voice, a spiteful, jeering voice, a cheap white nylon
shirt of a voice, a shiny-trousered pencil moustache of a voice, a voice, in
short, which Thor did not like. He reacted very badly to it at the best of
times, and was particularly provoked to have to hear it while standing naked in
the middle of a decrepit warehouse with large sections of an oak floor still
stuck to his back.
He spun round angrily. He wanted to
be able to turn round calmly and with crushing dignity, but no such strategy ever
worked with this creature, and since he, Thor, would only end up feeling
humiliated and ridiculous whatever posture he adopted, he might as well go with
one he felt comfortable with.
‘Toe Rag!’ he roared, yanked his hammer
spinning into the air and hurled it with immense, stunning force at the small
creature who was squatting complacently in the shadows on top of a small heap
of rubble, leaning forward a little.
Toe Rag caught the hammer and placed
it neatly on top of the pile of Thor’s clothes that lay next to him. He
grinned, and allowed a stray shaft of sunlight to glitter on one of his teeth.
These things don’t happen by accident. Toe Rag had spent some time while Thor was
unconscious working out how long it would take him to recover, then industriously
moving the pile of rubble to exactly this spot, checking the height and then calculating
the exact angle at which to lean. As a provocateur he regarded himself as a
professional.
‘Did you do this to me?’ roared
Thor. ‘Did you --’
Thor searched for any way of saying
‘glue me to the floor’ that didn’t sound like ‘glue me to floor’, but
eventually the pause got too long and he had to give up.
‘-- glue me to the floor?’ he
demanded at last. He wished he hadn’t asked such a stupid question.
‘Don’t even answer that!’ he added
angrily and wished he hadn’t said that either. He stamped his foot and shook
the foundations of the building a little just to make the point. He wasn’t
certain what the point was, but he felt that it had to be made. Some dust
settled gently around him.
Toe Rag watched him with his
dancing, glittering eyes.
‘I merely carry out the instructions
given to me by your father,’ he said in a grotesque parody of obsequiousness.
‘It seems to me,’ said Thor, ‘that the
instructions my father has been giving since you entered his service have been
very odd. I think you have some kind of evil grip on him. I don’t know what kind
of evil grip it is, but it’s definitely a grip, and it’s definitely...’ synonyms
failed him ‘...evil,’ he concluded.
Toe Rag reacted like an iguana to whom
someone had just complained about the wine.
‘Me?’ he protested. ‘How can I
possibly have a grip on your father? Odin is the greatest of the Gods of
Asgard, and I am his devoted servant in all things. Odin says, “Do this,” and I
do it. Odin says, “Go there,” and I go there. Odin says, “Go and get my big
stupid son out of hospital before he causes any more trouble, and then, I don’t
know, glue him to the floor or something,” and I do exactly as he asks. I am
merely the most humble of functionaries. However small or menial the task,
Odin’s bidding is what I am there to perform.’
Thor was not sufficiently subtle a
student of human nature or, for that matter, divine or goblin nature, to be
able to argue that this was in fact a very powerful grip to hold over anybody,
particularly a fallible and pampered old god. He just knew that it was all
wrong.
‘Well then,’ he shouted, ‘take this
message back to my father, Odin. Tell him that I, Thor, the God of Thunder,
demand to meet him. And not in his damned hospital either! I’m not going to
hang about reading magazines and looking at fruit while he has his bed changed!
Tell him that Thor, the God of Thunder, will meet Odin, the Father of the Gods of
Asgard, tonight, at the Challenging Hour in the Halls of Asgard!’
‘Again?’ said Toe Rag, with a sly
glance sideways at the Coca-Cola vending machine.
‘Er, yes,’ said Thor. ‘Yes!’ he repeated
in a rage. ‘Again!’
Toe Rag made a tiny sigh, such as one
who felt resigned to carrying out the bidding of a temperamental simpleton might
make, and said, ‘Well, I’ll tell him. I don’t suppose he will be best pleased.’
‘It is no matter of yours whether he
is pleased or not!’ shouted Thor, disturbing the foundations of the building once
more. ‘This is between my father and myself! You may think yourself very
clever, Toe Rag, and you may think that I am not --’
Toe Rag arched an eyebrow. He had prepared
for this moment. He stayed silent and merely let the stray beam of sunlight
glint on his dancing eyes. It was a silence of the most profound eloquence.
‘I may not know what you’re up to,
Toe Rag, I may not know a lot of things, but I do know one thing. I know that I
am Thor, the God of Thunder, and that I will not be made a fool of by a
goblin!’
‘Well,’ said Toe Rag with a light
grin, ‘when you know two things I expect you’ll be twice as clever. Remember to
put your clothes on before you go out.’ He gestured casually at the pile beside
him and departed.
[::: CHAPTER 10
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
The trouble with the sort of shop
that sells things like magnifying glasses and penknives is that they tend also
to sell all kinds of other fascinating things, like the quite extraordinary
device with which Dirk eventually emerged after having been hopelessly unable to
decide between the knife with the built-in Philips screwdriver, toothpick and ball-point
pen and the one with the 13-tooth gristle saw and the tig- welded rivets.
The magnifying glasses had held him in
thrall for a short while, particularly the 25-diopter, high-index,
vacuum-deposited, gold-coated glass model with the integral handle and mount
and the notchless seal glazing, but then Dirk had happened to catch sight of a small
electronic I Ching calculator and he was lost.
He had never before even guessed at
the existence of such a thing. And to be able to move from total ignorance of
something to total desire for it, and then actually to own the thing all within
the space of about forty seconds was, for Dirk, something of an epiphany.
The electronic I Ching calculator
was badly made. It had probably been manufactured in whichever of the
South-East Asian countries was busy tooling up to do to South Korea what South
Korea was busy doing to Japan. Glue technology had obviously not progressed in that
country to the point where things could be successfully held together with it. Already
the back had half fallen off and needed to be stuck back on with Sellotape.
It was much like an ordinary pocket
calculator, except that the LCD screen was a little larger than usual, in order
to accommodate the abridged judgements of King Wen on each of the sixty-four
hexagrams, and also the commentaries of his son, the Duke of Chou, on each of the
lines of each hexagram. These were unusual texts to see marching across the
display of a pocket calculator, particularly as they had been translated from the
Chinese via the Japanese and seemed to have enjoyed many adventures on the way.
The device also functioned as an
ordinary calculator, but only to a limited degree. It could handle any calculation
which returned an answer of anything up to ‘4’.
‘1+1’ it could manage (‘2’), and
‘1+2’ (‘3’) and ‘2+2’ (‘4’) or ‘tan 74’ (‘3.4874145’), but anything above ‘4’
it represented merely as ‘A Suffusion of Yellow’. Dirk was not certain if this
was a programming error or an insight beyond his ability to fathom, but he was crazy
about it anyway, enough to hand over £20 of ready cash for the thing.
‘Thank you, sir,’ said the proprietor.
‘It’s a nice piece that. I think you’ll be happy with it.’
‘I ab,’ said Dirk.
‘Glad to hear it, sir,’ replied the
proprietor. ‘Do you know you’ve broken your nose?’
Dirk looked up from fawning on his
new possession.
‘Yedth,’ he said testily, ‘obf
courth I dknow.’
The man nodded, satisfied.
‘Just that a lot of my customers
wouldn’t always know about a thing like that,’ he explained.
Dirk thanked him tersely and hurried
out with his purchase. A few minutes later he took up residence at the small
corner table of an Islington café, ordered a small but incredibly strong cup of
coffee, and attempted to take stock of his day. A moment’s reflection told him that
he was almost certainly going to need a small but incredibly strong beer as
well, and he attempted to add this to his order.
‘A wha?’ said the waiter. His hair
was very black and filled with brilliantine. He was tall, incredibly fit and
too cool to listen to customers or say consonants.
Dirk repeated his order, but what with
having the café’s music system, a broken nose, and the waiter’s insuperable cool
to contend with, he eventually found it simpler to write out the order on a
napkin with a stub of pencil. The waiter peered at it in an offended manner, and
left.
Dirk exchanged a friendly nod with the
girl sitting half reading a book at the next table, who had watched this exchange
with sympathy. Then he set about laying out his morning’s acquisitions on the
table in front of him -- the newspaper, the electronic I Ching calculator and the
envelope which he had retrieved from behind the gold disc on Geoffrey Anstey’s
bathroom wall. He then spent a minute or two dabbing at his nose with a
handkerchief, and prodding it tenderly to see how much it hurt, which turned
out to be quite a lot. He sighed and stuffed the handkerchief back in his
pocket.
A few seconds later the waiter
returned bearing a herb omelette and a single breadstick. Dirk explained that this
wasn’t what he had ordered. The waiter shrugged and said that it wasn’t his
fault.
Dirk had no idea what to say to
this, and said so. He was still having a great deal of difficulty speaking. The
waiter asked Dirk if he knew that he had broken his nose and Dirk said that
yedth, dthagg you berry budge, he did. The waiter said that his friend Neil had
once broken his nose and Dirk said that he hobed it hurd like hell, which seemed
to draw the conversation to a close. The waiter took the omelette and left,
vowing never to return.
When the girl sitting at the next
table looked away for a moment, Dirk leaned over and took her coffee. He knew that
he was perfectly safe doing this because she would simply not be able to believe
that this had happened. He sat sipping at the lukewarm cup and casting his mind
back over the day.
He knew that before consulting the I
Ching, even an electronic one, he should try and compose his thoughts and allow
them to settle calmly.
This was a tough one.
However much he tried to clear his mind
and think in a calm and collected way, he was unable to stop Geoffrey Anstey’s
head revolving incessantly in his mind. It revolved disapprovingly, as if pointing
an accusing finger at Dirk. The fact that it did not have an accusing finger
with which to point only served to drive the point it was trying to make home
all the harder.
Dirk screwed up his eyes and
attempted to concentrate instead on the problem of the mysteriously vanished
Miss Pearce, but was unable to get much of a grip on it. When she had used to
work for him she would often disappear mysteriously for two or three days at a
time, but the papers didn’t make any kind of fuss about it then. Admittedly,
there weren’t things exploding around her at the time, at least, not that he was
aware of. She had never mentioned anything exploding particularly.
Furthermore, whenever he thought of
her face, which he had last seen on the television set in Geoffrey Anstey’s
house, his thoughts tended instantly to sink towards the head which was busy revolving
thirty- three and a third times a minute three floors beneath it. This was not conducive
to the calm and contemplative mood he was seeking. Nor was the very loud music
on the café’s music system.
He sighed, and stared at the
electronic I Ching calculator.
If he wanted to get his thoughts
into some kind of order then maybe chronological order would be as good a one
as any. He decided to cast his mind back to the beginning of the day, before any
of these appalling things had happened, or at least, before they’d happened to him.
First there had been the fridge.
It seemed to him that by comparison
with everything else, the problem of what to do about his fridge had now shrunk
to fairly manageable proportions. It still provoked a discernible twinge of
fear and guilt, but here, he thought, was a problem which he could face up to
with relative calm.
The little book of instructions
suggested that he should simply concentrate ‘soulfully’ on the question which was
‘besieging’ him, write it down, ponder on it, enjoy the silence, and then once
he had achieved inner harmony and tranquillity he should push the red button.
There wasn’t a red button, but there
was a blue button marked ‘Red’, and this Dirk took to be the one.
He concentrated for a while on the
question, then looked through his pockets for a piece of paper, but was unable
to find one. In the end he wrote his question, ‘Should I buy a new fridge?’ on
a corner of his napkin. Then he took the view that if he was going to wait
until he had achieved inner harmony and tranquillity he could be there all
night, so he went ahead and pushed the blue button marked ‘Red’ anyway. A
symbol flashed up in a corner of the screen, a hexagram which looked like this:
====== ======
==============
====== ======
====== ======
====== ======
==============
3 : CHUN
The I Ching calculator then scrolled this text across its tiny LCD
display:
‘/THE JUDGEMENT OF KING WEN:
‘Chun Signifies Difficulties At
Outset, As Of Blade Of
Grass Pushing Up Against Stone. The Time Is Full Of
Irregularities And Obscurities: Superior Man Will Adjust
His Measures As In Sorting The Threads Of The Warp
And Woof. Firm Correctness Will Bring At Last Success.
Early Advances Should Only Be Made With Caution.
There Will Be Advantage In Appointing Feudal Princes.
‘LINE 6 CHANGES:
‘THE COMMENTARY OF THE DUKE OF CHOU:
‘The Horses And The Chariot Obliged
To Retreat.
Streams Of Bloody Tears Will Flow./’
Dirk considered this for a few moments,
and then decided that on balance it appeared to be a vote in favour of getting
the new fridge, which, by a staggering coincidence, was the course of action
which he himself favoured.
There was a pay phone in one of the dark
corners where waiters slouched moodily at one another. Dirk threaded his way through
them, wondering whom it was they reminded him of, and eventually deciding that it
was the small crowd of naked men standing around behind the Holy Family in
Michelangelo’s picture of the same name, for no more apparent reason than that
Michelangelo rather liked them.
He telephoned an acquaintance of his
called Nobby Paxton, or so he claimed, who worked the darker side of the domestic
appliance supply business. Dirk came straight to the point.
‘Dobby, I deed a fridge.’
‘Dirk, I been saving one against the
day you’d ask me.’
Dirk found this highly unlikely.
‘Only I wand a good fridge you thee,
Dobby.’
‘This is the best, Dirk. Japanese.
Microprocessor controlled.’
‘What would a microprothethor be
doing id a fridge, Dobby?’
‘Keeping itself cool, Dirk. I’ll get
the lads to bring it round right away. I need to get it off the premises pretty
sharpish for reasons which I won’t trouble you with.’
‘I apprethiade thid, Dobby,’ said
Dirk. ‘Problem id, I’m not at home at preddent.’
‘Gaining access to houses in the
absence of their owners is only one of the panoply of skills with which my lads
are blessed. Let me know if you find anything missing afterwards, by the way.’
‘I’d be happy to, Dobby. Id fact if
your ladth are in a mood for carting thtuff off I’d be glad if they would
thtart with my old fridge. It badly needth throwing away.’
‘I shall see that it’s done, Dirk.
There’s usually a skip or two on your street these days. Now, do you expect to be
paying for this or shall I just get you kneecapped straight off, save everybody
time and aggravation all round?’
It was never one hundred per cent clear
to Dirk exactly when Nobby was joking and he was not keen to put it to the
test. He assured him that he would pay him, as soon as next they met.
‘See you very soon then, Dirk,’ said
Nobby. ‘By the way, do you know you sound exactly as if someone’s broken your
nose?’
There was a pause.
‘You there, Dirk?’ said Nobby.
‘Yed,’ said Dirk. ‘I wad judd
liddening to a reggord.’
‘/Hot Potato!/’ roared the hi-fi in
the café.
‘/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
it up,
‘Quick, pass it on, pass it on, pass
it on./’
‘I said, do you know you sound exactly
as if someone’s broken your nose?’ repeated Nobby.
Dirk said that he did know this, thanked
Nobby for pointing it out, said goodbye, stood thoughtfully for a moment, made another
quick couple of phone calls, and then threaded his way back through the huddle of
posing waiters to find the girl whose coffee he had appropriated sitting at his
table.
‘Hello,’ she said, meaningfully.
Dirk was as gracious as he knew how.
He bowed to her very politely,
doffed his hat, since all this gave him a second or so to recover himself, and
requested her permission to sit down.
‘Go ahead,’ she said, ‘it’s your
table.’ She gestured magnanimously.
She was small, her hair was neat and
dark, she was in her mid- twenties, and was looking quizzically at the
half-empty cup of coffee in the middle of the table.
Dirk sat down opposite her and leant
forward conspiratorially. ‘I expeg,’ he said in a low voice, ‘you are enquirigg
after your coffee.’
‘You betcha,’ said the girl.
‘Id very bad for you, you dow.’
‘Is it?’
‘Id id. Caffeide. Cholethderog in
the milgg.’
‘I see, so it was just my health you
were thinking of.’
‘I was thiggigg of meddy thiggs,’
said Dirk airily.
‘You saw me sitting at the next
table and you thought “There’s a nice-looking girl with her health in ruins. Let
me save her from herself.”’
‘In a nudthell.’
‘Do you know you’ve broken your
nose?’
‘Yeth, of courth I do,’ said Dirk
crossly. ‘Everybody keepth --’
‘How long ago did you break it?’ the
girl asked.
‘Id wad broked for me,’ said Dirk,
‘aboud tweddy middidd ago.’
‘I thought so,’ said the girl.
‘Close your eyes for a moment.’
Dirk looked at her suspiciously.
‘Why?’
‘It’s all right,’ she said with a
smile, ‘I’m not going to hurt you. Now close them.’
With a puzzled frown, Dirk closed
his eyes just for a moment. In that moment the girl reached over and gripped him
firmly by the nose, giving it a sharp twist. Dirk nearly exploded with pain and
howled so loudly that he almost attracted the attention of a waiter.
‘You widge!’ he yelled, staggering wildly
back from the table clutching his face. ‘You double-dabbed widge!’
‘Oh, be quiet and sit down,’ she
said. ‘All right, I lied about it not going to hurt you, but at least it should
be straight now, which will save you a lot worse later on. You should get
straight round to a hospital to have some splints and padding put on. I’m a
nurse, I know what I’m doing. Or at least, I think I do. Let’s have a look at
you.’
Panting and spluttering, Dirk sat
down once more, his hands cupped round his nose. After a few long seconds he
began to prod it tenderly again and then let the girl examine it.
She said, ‘My name’s Sally Mills, by
the way. I usually try to introduce myself properly before physical intimacy takes
place, but sometimes,’ she sighed, ‘there just isn’t time.’
Dirk ran his fingers up either side
of his nose again.
‘I thigg id id trader,’ Dirk said at
last.
‘Straighter,’ Sally said. ‘Say
“straighter” properly. It’ll help you feel better.’
‘Straighter,’ said Dirk. ‘Yed. I
thee wad you mead.’
‘What?’
‘I see what you mead.’
‘Good,’ she said with a sigh of
relief, ‘I’m glad that worked. My horoscope this morning said that virtually
everything I decided today would be wrong.’
‘Yes, well you don’t want to believe
all that rubbish,’ said Dirk sharply.
‘I don’t,’ said Satly.
‘Particularly not The Great
Zaganza.’
‘Oh, you read it too, did you?’
‘No. That is, well, not for the same
reason.’
‘My reason was that a patient asked
me to read his horoscope to him this morning just before he died. What was
yours?’
‘Er, a very complicated one.’
‘I see,’ said Sally, sceptically.
‘What’s this?’
‘It’s a calculator,’ said Dirk.
‘Well, look, I mustn’t keep you. I am indebted to you, my dear lady, for the tenderness of your ministrations
and the loan of your coffee, but lo! the day wears on, and I am sure you have a
heavy schedule of grievous bodily harm to attend to.’
‘Not at all. I came off night duty
at nine o’clock this morning, and all I have to do all day is keep awake so
that I can sleep normally tonight. I have nothing better to do than to sit around
talking to strangers in cafés. You, on the other hand, should get yourself to a
casualty department as soon as possible. As soon as you’ve paid my bill, in
fact.’
She leant over to the table she had
originally been sitting at and picked up the running-total lying by her plate.
She looked at it, shaking her head disapprovingly.
‘Five cups of coffee, I’m afraid. It
was a long night on the wards. All sorts of comings and goings in the middle of
it. One patient in a coma who had to be moved to a private hospital in the early
hours. God knows why it had to be done at that time of night. Just creates unnecessary
trouble. I wouldn’t pay for the second croissant if I were you. I ordered it
but it never came.’
She pushed the bill across to Dirk
who picked it up with a reluctant sigh.
‘Inordinate,’ he said, ‘larcenously inordinate. And, in the circumstances,
adding a 15 per cent service charge is tantamount to jeering at you. I bet they
won’t even bring me a knife.’
He turned and tried, without any
real hope of success, to summon any of the gaggle of waiters lounging among the
sugar bowls at the back.
Sally Mills took her bill and Dirk’s
and attempted to add them up on Dirk’s calculator.
‘The total seems to come to “A
Suffusion of Yellow”,’ she said.
‘Thank you, I’ll take that,’ said
Dirk turning bask crossly and relieving her of the electronic I Ching set which
he put into his pocket. He resumed his hapless waving at the tableau of
waiters.
‘What do you want a knife for,
anyway?’ asked Sally.
‘To open this,’ said Dirk, waggling the
large, heavily Sellotaped envelope at her.
‘I’ll get you one,’ she said. A
young man sitting on his own at another nearby table was looking away at that moment,
so Sally quickly leaned across and nabbed his knife.
‘I am indebted to you,’ said Dirk
and put out his hand to take the knife from her.
She held it away from him.
‘What’s in the envelope?’ she said.
‘You are an extremely inquisitive and
presumptuous young lady,’ exclaimed Dirk.
‘And you,’ said Sally Mills, ‘are
very strange.’
‘Only,’ said Dirk, ‘as strange as I
need to be.’
‘Humph,’ said Sally. ‘What’s in the
envelope?’ She still wouldn’t give him the knife.
‘The envelope is not yours,’
proclaimed Dirk, ‘and its contents are not your concern.’
‘It looks very interesting though.
What’s in it?’
‘Well, I won’t know till I’ve opened
it!’
She looked at him suspiciously, then
snatched the envelope from him.
‘I insist that you --’ expostulated
Dirk, incompletely.
‘What’s your name?’ demanded Sally.
‘My name is Gently. Mr Dirk Gently.’
‘And not Geoffrey Anstey, or any of
these other names that have been crossed out?’ She frowned, briefly, looking at
them.
‘No,’ said Dirk. ‘Certainly not.’
‘So you mean the envelope is not
yours either?’
‘I -- that is --’
‘Aha! So you are also being
extremely...what was it?’
‘Inquisitive and presumptuous. I do
not deny it. But I am a private detective. I am paid to be inquisitive and
presumptuous. Not as often or copiously as I would wish, but I am nevertheless
inquisitive and presumptuous on a professional basis.’
‘How sad. I think it’s much more fun being inquisitive and presumptuous as a
hobby. So you are a professional while I am merely an amateur of Olympic
standard. You don’t look like a private detective.’
‘No private detective looks like a
private detective. That’s one of the first rules of private detection.’
‘But if no private detective looks
like a private detective, how does a private detective know what it is he’s supposed
not to look like? Seems to me there’s a problem there.’
‘Yes, but it’s not one that keeps me
awake at nights,’ said Dirk in exasperation. ‘Anyway, I am not as other private
detectives. My methods are holistic and, in a very proper sense of the word, chaotic.
I operate by investigating the fundamental interconnectedness of all things.’
Sally Mills merely blinked at him.
‘Every particle in the universe,’
continued Dirk, warming to his subject and beginning to stare a bit, ‘affects
every other particle, however faintly or obliquely. Everything interconnects
with everything. The beating of a butterfly’s wings in China can affect the
course of an Atlantic hurricane. If I could interrogate this table-leg in a way
that made sense to me, or to the table-leg, then it could provide me with the
answer to any question about the universe. I could ask anybody I liked, chosen
entirely by chance, any random question I cared to think of, and their answer,
or lack of it, would in some way bear upon the problem to which I am seeking a
solution. It is only a question of knowing how to interpret it. Even you, whom I
have met entirely by chance, probably know things that are vital to my investigation,
if only I knew what to ask you, which I don’t, and if only I could be bothered
to, which I can’t.’
He paused, and said, ‘Please will
you let me have the envelope and the knife?’
‘You make it sound as if someone’s
life depends on it.’
Dirk dropped his eyes for a moment.
‘I rather think somebody’s life did
depend on it,’ he said. He said it in such a way that a cloud seemed to pass
briefly over them.
Sally Mills relented and passed the envelope
and the knife over to Dirk. A spark seemed to go out of her.
The knife was too blunt and the
Sellotape too thickly applied. Dirk struggled with it for a few seconds but was
unable to slice through it. He sat back in his seat feeling tired and
irritable.
He said, ‘I’ll go and ask them if they’ve
got anything sharper,’ and stood up, clutching the envelope.
‘You should go and get your nose
fixed,’ said Sally Mills quietly.
‘Thank you,’ said Dirk and bowed
very slightly to her.
He picked up the bills and set out
to visit the exhibition of waiters mounted at the rear of the cafe. He encountered
a certain coolness when he was disinclined to augment the mandatory 15 per cent
service charge with any voluntary additional token of his personal appreciation,
and was told that no, that was the only type of knife they had and that’s all
there was to it.
Dirk thanked them and walked back
through the café.
Sitting in his seat talking to Sally
Mills was the young man whose knife she had purloined. He nodded to her, but
she was deeply engrossed in conversation with her new friend and did not
notice.
‘...in a coma,’ she was saying, ‘who
had to be moved to a private hospital in the early hours. God knows why it had
to be done at that time of night. Just creates unnecessary trouble. Excuse me
rabbiting on, but the patient had his own personal Coca-Cola machine and
sledge- hammer with him, and that sort of thing is all very well in a private hospital,
but on a short-staffed NHS ward it just makes me tired, and I talk too much
when I’m tired. If I suddenly fall insensible to the floor, would you let me
know?’
Dirk walked on, and then noticed that
Sally Mills had left the book she had been reading on her original table, and
something about it caught his attention.
It was a large book, called /Run
Like the Devil/. In fact it was extremely large and a little dog-eared, looking
more like a puff pastry cliff than a book. The bottom half of the cover featured
the normal woman-in-cocktail-dress-framed-in-the-sights-of-a-gun, while the top half was entirely taken up with
the author’s name, Howard Bell, embossed in silver.
Dirk couldn’t immediately work out what
it was about the book that had caught his eye, but he knew that some detail of
the cover had struck a chord with him somewhere. He gave a circumspect glance
at the girl whose coffee he had purloined, and whose five coffees and two croissants,
one undelivered and uneaten, he had subsequently paid for. She wasn’t looking,
so he purloined her book as well and slipped it into the pocket of his leather
coat.
He stepped out on to the street,
where a passing eagle swooped out of the sky at him, nearly forcing him into the
path of a cyclist, who cursed and swore at him from a moral high ground that cyclists
alone seem able to inhabit.
[::: CHAPTER 11
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
Into the well-kempt grounds that lay
just on the outskirts of a well-kempt village on the fringes of the well-kempt
Cotswolds turned a less than well-kempt car.
It was a battered yellow Citroën 2CV
which had had one careful owner but also three suicidally reckless ones. It made
its way up the driveway with a reluctant air as if all it asked for from life
was to be tipped into a restful ditch in one of the adjoining meadows and there
allowed to settle in graceful abandonment, instead of which here it was being
asked to drag itself all the way up this long gravelled drive which it would no
doubt soon be called upon to drag itself all the way back down again, to what
possible purpose it was beyond its wit to imagine.
It drew to a halt in front of the
elegant stone entrance to the main building, and then began to trundle slowly backwards
again until its occupant yanked on the handbrake, which evoked from the car a
sort of strangled ‘eek’.
A door flopped open, wobbling perilously
on its one remaining hinge, and there emerged from the car a pair of the sort of
legs which soundtrack editors are unable to see without needing to slap a smoky
saxophone solo all over, for reasons which no one besides soundtrack editors
has ever been able to understand. In this particular case, however, the
saxophone would have been silenced by the proximity of the kazoo which the same
soundtrack editor would almost certainly have slapped all over the progress of
the vehicle.
The owner of the legs followed them
in the usual manner, closed the car door tenderly, and then made her way into
the building.
The car remained parked in front of
it.
After a few minutes a porter came
out and examined it, adopted a disapproving manner and then, for lack of
anything more positive to do, went back in.
A short time later, Kate was shown
into the office of Mr Ralph Standish, the Chief Consultant Psychologist and one
of the directors of the Woodshead Hospital, who was just completing a telephone conversation.
‘Yes, it is true,’ he was saying, ‘that sometimes unusually intelligent
and sensitive children can appear to be stupid. But, Mrs Benson, stupid children
can sometimes appear to be stupid as well. I think that’s something you might
have to consider. I know it’s very painful, yes. Good day, Mrs Benson.’
He put the phone away into a desk drawer
and spent a couple of seconds collecting his thoughts before looking up.
‘This is very short notice, Miss,
er, Schechter,’ he said to her at last.
In fact what he had said was, ‘This
is very short notice, Miss, er - -’ and then he had paused and peered into
another of his desk drawers before saying ‘Schechter’.
It seemed to Kate that it was very
odd to keep your visitors’ names in a drawer, but then he clearly disliked
having things cluttering up his fine, but severely designed, black ash desk
because there was nothing on it at all. It was completely blank, as was every
other surface in his office. There was nothing on the small neat steel and glass
coffee table which sat squarely between two Barcelona chairs. There was nothing
on top of the two expensive-looking filing cabinets which stood at the back of
the room.
There were no bookshelves -- if there
were any books they were presumably hidden away behind the white doors of the large
blank built- in cupboards -- and although there was one plain black picture
frame hanging on the wall, this was presumably a temporary aberration because there
was no picture in it.
Kate looked around her with a
bemused air.
‘Do you have no ornaments in here at
all, Mr Standish?’ she asked.
He was, for a moment, somewhat taken
aback by her transatlantic directness, but then answered her.
‘Indeed I have ornaments,’ he said,
and pulled open another drawer. He pulled out from this a small china model of a
kitten playing with a ball of wool and put it firmly on the desk in front of
him.
‘As a psychologist I am aware of the important role that
ornamentation plays in nourishing the human spirit,’ he pronounced.
He put the china kitten back in the drawer
and slid it closed with a smooth click.
‘Now.’
He clasped his hands together on the
desk in front of him, and looked at her enquiringly.
‘It’s very good of you to see me at
short notice, Mr Standish --’
‘Yes, yes, we’ve established that.’
‘-- but I’m sure you know what
newspaper deadlines are like.’
‘I know at least as much as I would ever
care to know about newspapers, Miss, er --’
He opened his drawer again.
‘Miss Schechter, but --’
‘Well that’s partly what made me approach you,’ lied Kate charmingly.
‘I know that you have suffered from some, well, unfortunate publicity here, and
thought you might welcome the opportunity to talk about some of the more enlightening
aspects of the work at the Woodshead Hospital.’ She smiled very sweetly.
‘It’s only because you come to me
with the highest recommendation from my very good friend and colleague Mr, er
--’
‘Franklin, Alan Franklin,’ prompted Kate,
to save the psychologist from having to open his drawer again. Alan Franklin was
a therapist whom Kate had seen for a few sessions after the loss of her husband
Luke. He had warned her that Standish, though brilliant, was also peculiar,
even by the high standards set by his profession.
‘Franklin,’ resumed Standish, ‘that
I agreed to see you. Let me warn you instantly that if I see any resumption of
this “Something nasty in the Woodshead” mendacity appearing in the papers as a
result of this interview I will, I will --’
‘“ -- do such things --
“What they are yet I know not -- but they shall be
“The terror of the Earth”,’ said Kate, brightly.
Standish narrowed his eyes.
‘/Lear/, Act 2, Scene 4,’ he said. ‘And
I think you’ll find it’s “terrors” and not “terror”.’
‘Do you know, I think you’re right?’
replied Kate.
Thank you, Alan, she thought. She
smiled at Standish, who relaxed into pleased superiority. It was odd, Kate
reflected, that people who needed to bully you were the easiest to push around.
‘So you would like to know precisely
what, Miss Schechter?’
‘Assume,’ said Kate, ‘that I know
nothing.’
Standish smiled, as if to signify
that no assumption could possibly give him greater pleasure.
‘Very well,’ he said. ‘The Woodshead
is a research hospital. We specialise in the care and study of patients with
unusual or previously unknown conditions, largely in the psychological or psychiatric
fields. Funds are raised in various ways. One of our chief methods is quite simply
to take in private patients at exorbitantly high fees, which they are happy to
pay, or at least happy to complain about. There is in fact nothing to complain about
because patients who come to us privately are made fully aware of why our fees
are so high. For the money they are paying, they are, of course, perfectly entitled
to complain -- the right to complain is one of the privileges they are paying
for. In some cases we come to a special arrangement under which, in return for
being made the sole beneficiaries of a patient’s estate, we will guarantee to
look after that patient for the rest of his or her life.’
‘So in effect you are in the business
of giving scholarships to people with particularly gifted diseases?’
‘Exactly. A very good way of
expressing it. We are in the business of giving scholarships to people with
particularly gifted diseases. I must make a note of that. Miss Mayhew!’
He had opened a drawer, which
clearly contained his office intercom. In response to his summons one of the
cupboards opened, and turned out to be a door into a side office -- a feature
which must have appealed to some architect who had conceived an ideological
dislike of doors. From this office there emerged obediently a thin and rather
blank-faced woman in her mid-forties.
‘Miss Mayhew,’ said Mr Standish, ‘we
are in the business of giving scholarships to people with particularly gifted
diseases.’
‘Very good, Mr Standish,’ said Miss
Mayhew, and retreated backwards into her office, pulling the door closed after
her. Kate wondered if it was perhaps a cupboard after all.
‘And we do have some patients with
some really quite outstanding diseases at the moment,’ enthused the psychologist.
‘Perhaps you would care to come and see one or two of our current stars?’
‘Indeed I would. That would be most interesting,
Mr Standish, you’re very kind,’ said Kate.
‘You have to be kind in this job,’ Standish
replied, and flicked a smile on and off at her.
Kate was trying to keep some of the
impatience she was feeling out of her manner. She did not take to Mr Standish,
and was beginning to feel that there was a kind of Martian quality to him.
Furthermore, the only thing she was actually interested in was discovering whether
or not the hospital had accepted a new admission in the early hours of the morning,
and if so, where he was and whether she could see him.
She had originally tried the direct
approach but had been rebuffed by a mere telephone receptionist on the grounds
that she didn’t have a name to ask for. Simply asking if they had any tall, well-built,
blond men in residence had seemed to create entirely the wrong impression. At least,
she insisted to herself that it was entirely
the wrong impression. A quick phone call to Alan Franklin had set her up for this
altogether more subtle approach.
‘Good!’ A look of doubt passed
momentarily over Mr Standish’s face, and he summoned Miss Mayhew from out of
her cupboard again.
‘Miss Mayhew, that last thing I just
said to you --’
‘Yes, Mr Standish?’
‘I assume you realised that I wished
you to make a note of it for me?’
‘No, Mr Standish, but I will be
happy to do so.’
‘Thank you,’ said Mr Standish with a
slightly tense look. ‘And tidy up in here please. The place looks a --’
He wanted to say that the place
looked a mess, but was frustrated by its air of clinical sterility.
‘Just tidy up generally,’ he
concluded.
‘Yes, Mr Standish.’
The psychologist nodded tersely,
brushed a non-existent speck of dust off the top of his desk, flicked another
brief smile on and off at Kate and then escorted her out of his office into the
corridor which was immaculately laid with the sort of beige carpet which gave
everyone who walked on it electric shocks.
‘Here, you see,’ said Standish, indicating
part of the wall they were walking past with an idle wave of his hand, but not
making it in any way clear what it was he wished her to see or what she was
supposed to understand from it.
‘And this,’ he said, apparently
pointing at a door hinge.
‘Ah,’ he added, as the door swung open
towards them. Kate was alarmed to find herself giving a little expectant start
every time a door opened anywhere in this place. This was not the sort of behaviour
she expected of a worldly-wise New Yorker journalist, even if she didn’t
actually live in New York and only wrote travel articles for magazines. It
still was not right for her to be looking for large blond men every time a door
opened.
There was no large blond man. There
was instead a small, sandy- haired girl of about ten years old, being pushed
along in a wheelchair. She seemed very pale, sick and withdrawn, and was
murmuring something soundlessly to herself. Whatever it was she was murmuring
seemed to cause her worry and agitation, and she would flop this way then that
in her chair as if trying to escape from the words coming out of her mouth. Kate
was instantly moved by the sight of her, and on an impulse asked the nurse who
was pushing her along to stop.
She squatted down to look kindly
into the girl’s face, which seemed to please the nurse a little, but Mr
Standish less so.
Kate did not try to demand the girl’s
attention, merely gave her an open and friendly smile to see if she wanted to
respond, but the girl seemed unwilling or unable to. Her mouth worked away endlessly,
appearing almost to lead an existence that was independent of the rest of her
face.
Now that Kate looked at her more
closely it seemed that she looked not so much sick and withdrawn as weary, harassed
and unutterably fed up. She needed a little rest, she needed peace, but her mouth
kept motoring on.
For a fleeting instant her eyes caught
Kate’s, and the message Kate received was along the lines of ‘I’m sorry but
you’ll just have to excuse me while all this is going on’. The girl took a deep
breath, half-closed her eyes in resignation and continued her relentless silent
murmuring.
Kate leant forward a little in an attempt
to catch any actual words, but she couldn’t make anything out. She shot an
enquiring look up at Standish.
He said, simply, ‘Stock market
prices.’
A look of amazement crept over
Kate’s face.
Standish added with a wry shrug,
‘Yesterday’s, I’m afraid.’
Kate flinched at having her reaction
so wildly misinterpreted, and hurriedly looked back at the girl in order to
cover her confusion.
‘You mean,’ she said, rather
redundantly, ‘she’s just sitting here reciting yesterday’s stock market prices?’
The girl rolled her eyes past Kate’s.
‘Yes,’ said Standish. ‘It took a lip
reader to work out what was going on. We all got rather excited, of course, but
then closer examination revealed that they were only yesterday’s which was a
bit of a disappointment. Not that significant
a case really. Aberrant behaviour.
Interesting to know why she does it, but --’
‘Hold on a moment,’ said Kate, trying
to sound very interested rather than absolutely horrified, ‘are you saying that
she is reciting -- what? -- the closing prices over and over, or --’
‘No. That’s an interesting feature
of course. She pretty much keeps pace with movements in the market over the
course of a whole day. Just twenty-four hours out of step.’
‘But that’s extraordinary, isn’t
it?’
‘Oh yes. Quite a feat.’
‘A /feat/?’
‘Well, as a scientist, I have to
take the view that since the information is freely available, she is acquiring
it through normal channels. There’s no necessity in this case to invent any
supernatural or paranormal dimension. Occam’s razor. Shouldn’t needlessly
multiply entities.’
‘But has anyone seen her studying the
newspapers, or copying stuff down over the phone?’
She looked up at the nurse, who
shook her head, dumbly.
‘No, never actually caught her at
it,’ said Standish. ‘As I said, it’s quite a feat. I’m sure a stage magician or
memory man could tell you how it was done.’
‘Have you asked one?’
‘No. Don’t hold with such people.’
‘But do you really think that she could
possibly be doing this deliberately?’ insisted Kate.
‘Believe me, if you understood as
much about people as I do, Miss, er -- you would believe anything,’ said Standish,
in his most professionally reassuring
tone of voice.
Kate stared into the tired, wretched
face of the young girl and said nothing.
‘You have to understand,’ said Standish,
‘that we have to be rational about this. If it was tomorrow’s stock market
prices, it would be a different story. That would be a phenomenon of an entirely
different character which would merit and demand the most rigorous study. And
I’m sure we’d have no difficulty in funding the research. There would be
absolutely no problem about that.’
‘I see,’ said Kate, and meant it.
She stood up, a little stiffly, and
brushed down her skirt.
‘So,’ she said, and felt ashamed of
herself, ‘who is your newest patient? Who has arrived most recently, then?’ She
shuddered at the crassness of the /non sequitur/, but reminded herself that she
was there as a journalist, so it would not seem odd.
Standish waved the nurse and the
wheelchair with its sad charge on their way. Kate glanced back at the girl
once, and then followed Standish through the swing-doors and into the next section
of corridor, which was identical to the previous one.
‘Here, you see,’ said Standish again,
this time apparently in relation to a window frame.
‘And this,’ he said, pointing at a
light.
He had obviously either not heard her
question or was deliberately ignoring it. Perhaps, thought Kate, he was simply
treating it with the contempt it deserved.
It suddenly dawned on her what all
this /Here you see/, and /And this/ing was about. He was asking her to admire the
quality of the decor. The windows were sashes, with finely made and beautifully
painted beads; the light fittings were of a heavy dull metal, probably nickel-plated
-- and so on.
‘Very fine,’ she said
accommodatingly, and then noticed that this had sounded an odd thing to say in
her American accent.
‘Nice place you’ve got here,’ she
added, thinking that that would please him.
It did. He allowed himself a subdued
beam of pleasure.
‘We like to think of it as a quality
caring environment,’ he said.
‘You must get a lot of people
wanting to come here,’ Kate continued, plugging away at her theme. ‘How often
do you admit new patients? When was the last --?’
With her left hand she carefully
restrained her right hand which wanted to strangle her at this moment.
A door they were passing was slightly ajar, and she tried,
unobtrusively, to look in.
‘Very well, we’ll take a look in
here,’ said Standish immediately, pushing the door fully open, on what
transpired to be quite a small room.
‘Ah yes,’ Standish said, recognising
the occupant. He ushered Kate in.
The occupant of the room was another
non-large, non-blond person. Kate was beginning to find the whole visit to be
something of an emotionally wearing experience, and she had a feeling that
things were not about to ease up in that respect.
The man sitting in the bedside chair
while his bed was being made up by a hospital orderly was one of the most deeply
and disturbingly tousled people that Kate had ever seen. In fact it was only
his hair that was tousled, but it was tousled to such an extreme degree that it
seemed to draw all of his long face up into its distressed chaos.
He seemed quite content to sit where
he was, but there was something tremendously vacant about his contentedness -- he
seemed literally to be content about nothing. There was a completely empty
space hanging in the air about eighteen inches in front of his face, and his
contentedness, if it sprang from anything, sprang from staring at that.
There was also a sense that he was
waiting for something. Whether it was something that was about to happen at any
moment, or something that was going to happen later in the week, or even
something that was going to happen some little while after hell iced over and
British Telecom got the phones fixed was by no means apparent because it seemed
to be all the same to him. If it happened he was ready for it and if it didn’t
-- he was content.
Kate found such contentedness almost
unbearably distressing.
‘What’s the matter with him?’ she
said quietly, and then instantly realised that she was talking as if he wasn’t there
when he could probably speak perfectly well for himself. Indeed, at that
moment, he suddenly did speak.
‘Oh, er, hi,’ he said. ‘OK, yeah,
thank you.’
‘Er, hello,’ she said, in response,
though it didn’t seem quite to fit. Or rather, what he had said didn’t seem
quite to fit. Standish made a gesture to her to discourage her from speaking.
‘Er, yeah, a bagel would be fine,’
said the contented man. He said it in a flat kind of tone, as if merely repeating
something he had been given to say.
‘Yeah, and maybe some juice,’ he added.
‘OK, thanks.’ He then relaxed into his state of empty watchfulness.
‘A very unusual condition,’ said
Standish, ‘that is to say, we can only believe that it is entirely unique. I’ve
certainly never heard of anything remotely like it. It has also proved virtually
impossible to verify beyond question that it is what it appears to be, so I’m
glad to say that we have been spared the embarrassment of attempting to give the
condition a name.’
‘Would you like me to help Mr Elwes
back to bed?’ asked the orderly of Standish. Standish nodded. He didn’t bother to
waste words on minions.
The orderly bent down to talk to the
patient.
‘Mr Elwes?’ he said quietly.
Mr Elwes seemed to swim up out of a
reverie.
‘Mmmm?’ he said, and suddenly looked
around. He seemed confused.
‘Oh! Oh? What?’ he said faintly.
‘Would you like me to help you back
to bed?’
‘Oh. Oh, thank you, yes. Yes, that
would be kind.’
Though clearly dazed and bewildered,
Mr Elwes was quite able to get himself back into bed, and all the orderly needed
to supply was reassurance and encouragement. Once Mr Elwes was well settled, the
orderly nodded politely to Standish and Kate and made his exit.
Mr Elwes quickly lapsed back into his
trancelike state, lying propped up against an escarpment of pillows. His head
dropped forward slightly and he stared at one of his knees, poking up bonily
from under the covers.
‘Get me New York,’ he said.
Kate shot a puzzled glance at Standish,
hoping for some kind of explanation, but got none.
‘Oh, OK,’ said Mr Elwes, ‘it’s 541 something.
Hold on.’ He spoke another four digits of a number in his dead, flat voice.
‘What is happening here?’ asked Kate
at last.
‘It took us rather a long time to
work it out. It was only quite by the remotest chance that someone discovered
it. That television was on in the room...’
He pointed to the small portable set
off to one side of the bed.
‘...tuned to one of those chat
programme things, which happened to be going out live. Most extraordinary thing.
Mr Elwes was sitting here muttering about how much he hated the BBC -- don’t
know if it was the BBC, perhaps it was one of those other channels they have now
-- and was expressing an opinion about the host of the programme, to the effect
that he considered him to be a rectum of some kind, and saying furthermore that
he wished the whole thing was over and that, yes, all right he was coming, and then
suddenly what he was saying and what was on the television began in some extraordinary way almost to synchronise.’
‘I don’t understand what you mean,’
said Kate.
‘I’d be surprised if you did,’ said
Standish. ‘Everything that Elwes said was then said just a moment later on the
television by a gentleman by the name of Mr Dustin Hoffman. It seems that Mr
Elwes here knows everything that this Mr Hoffman is going to say just a second
or so before he says it. It is not, I have to say, something that Mr Hoffman would
be very pleased about if he knew. Attempts have been made to alert the
gentleman to the problem, but he has proved to be somewhat difficult to reach.’
‘Just what the shit is going on
here?’ asked Mr Elwes placidly.
‘Mr Hoffman is, we believe,
currently making a film on location somewhere on the west coast of America.’
He looked at his watch.
‘I think he has probably just woken
up in his hotel and is making his early morning phone calls,’ he added.
Kate was gazing with astonishment between Standish and the extraordinary
Mr Elwes.
‘How long has the poor man been like
this?’
‘Oh, about five years I think. Started
absolutely out of the blue. He was sitting having dinner with his family one
day as usual when suddenly he started complaining about his caravan. And then shortly
afterwards about how he was being shot. He then spent the entire night talking
in his sleep, repeating the same apparently meaningless phrases over and over again
and also saying that he didn’t think much of the way they were written. It was
a very trying time for his family, as you can imagine, living with such a
perfectionist actor and not even realising it. It now seems very surprising how
long it took them to identify what was occurring. Particularly when he once
woke them all up in the early hours of the morning to thank them and the producer
and the director for his Oscar.’
Kate, who didn’t realise that the
day was still only softening her up for what was to come, made the mistake of
thinking that it had just reached a climax of shock.
‘The poor man,’ she said in a hushed
voice. ‘What a pathetic state to be in. He’s just living as someone else’s
shadow.’
‘I don’t think he’s in any pain.’
Mr Elwes appeared to be quietly
locked in a bitter argument which seemed to touch on the definitions of the
words ‘points’, ‘gross’, ‘profits’ and ‘limo’.
‘But the implications of this are
/extraordinary/ aren’t they?’ said Kate. ‘He’s actually saying these things moments
/before/ Dustin Hoffman?’
‘Well, it’s all conjecture of course.
We’ve only got a few clear instances of absolute correlation and we just haven’t got the opportunity to do more thorough research. One has to recognise
that those few instances of direct correlation
were not rigorously documented and could more simply be explained as
coincidence. The rest could be merely the product of an elaborate fantasy.’
‘But if you put this case next to
that of the girl we just saw...’
‘Ah, well we can’t do that you see.
We have to judge each case on its own merits.’
‘But they’re both in the same
world...’
‘Yes, but there are separate issues.
Obviously, if Mr Elwes here could demonstrate significant precognition of, for
instance, the head of the Soviet Union or, better still, the President of the United
States, then clearly there would be important defence issues involved and one
might be prepared to stretch a point on the question of what is and what is not
coincidence and fantasy, but for a mere screen actor -- that is, a screen actor
with no apparent designs on political office -- I think that, no, we have to
stick to the principles of rigorous science.
‘So,’ he added, turning to leave,
and drawing Kate with him, ‘I think that in the cases of both Mr Elwes and, er,
what-was-her-name, the charming girl in the wheelchair, it may be that we are
not able to be of much more help to them, and we may need the space and
facilities for more deserving cases.’
Kate could think of nothing to say to
this and followed, seething dumbly.
‘Ah, now here we have an altogether much
more interesting and promising case,’ said Standish, forging on ahead through the
next set of double doors.
Kate was trying to keep her reactions under control,
but nevertheless even someone as glassy
and Martian as Mr Standish could not help but detect that his audience was not
absolutely with him. A little extra brusqueness and impatience crept into his
demeanour, to join forces with the large quantities of brusqueness and impatience
which were already there.
They paced down the corridor for a few
seconds in silence. Kate was looking for other ways of casually introducing the
subject of recent admissions, but was forced to concede to herself that you cannot
attempt to introduce the same subject three times in a row without beginning to
lose that vital quality of casualness. She glanced as surreptitiously as she could
at each door they passed, but most were firmly closed, and the ones that were
not revealed nothing of interest.
She glanced out of a window as they
walked past it and noticed a van turning into a rear courtyard. It caught her attention
in the brief instant that it was within her view because it very clearly wasn’t
a baker’s van or a laundry van. Baker’s vans and laundry vans advertise their
business and have words like ‘Bakery’ and ‘Laundry’ painted on them, whereas
this van was completely blank. It had absolutely nothing to say to anyone and
it said it loudly and distinctly.
It was a large, heavy, serious-looking
van that was almost on the verge of being an actual lorry, and it was painted
in a uniform dark metallic grey. It reminded Kate of the huge gun-metal-grey freight
lorries which thunder through Bulgaria and Yugoslavia on their way from Albania
with nothing but the word ‘Albania’ stencilled on their sides. She remembered wondering
what it was that the Albanians exported in such an anonymous way, but when on
one occasion she had looked it up, she found that their only export was
electricity -- which, if she remembered her high school physics correctly, was unlikely
to be moved around in lorries.
The large, serious-looking van
turned and started to reverse towards a rear entrance to the hospital. Whatever
it was that the van usually carried, Kate thought, it was about either to pick
it up or deliver it. She moved on.
A few moments later Standish arrived
at a door, knocked at it gently and looked enquiringly into the room within. He
then beckoned to Kate to follow him in.
This was a room of an altogether
different sort. Immediately within the door was an ante-room with a very large
window through which the main room could be seen. The two rooms were clearly sound-proofed
from each other, because the ante-room was decked out with monitoring equipment
and computers, not one of which but didn’t hum loudly to itself, and the main
room contained a woman lying in bed, asleep.
‘Mrs Elspeth May,’ said Standish, and
clearly felt that he was introducing the top of the bill. Her room was
obviously a very good one -- spacious and furnished comfortably and
expensively. Fresh flowers stood on every surface, and the bedside table on which
Mrs May’s knitting lay was of mahogany.
She herself was a comfortably shaped,
silver-haired lady of late middle age, and she was lying asleep half propped up
in bed on a pile of pillows, wearing a pink woolly cardigan. After a moment it became
clear to Kate that though she was asleep she was by no means inactive. Her head
lay back peacefully with her eyes closed, but her right hand was clutching a
pen which was scribbling away furiously on a large pad of paper which lay
beside her. The hand, like the wheelchair girl’s mouth, seemed to lead an independent
and feverishly busy existence. Some small pinkish electrodes were taped to Mrs
May’s forehead just below her hairline, and Kate assumed that these were
providing some of the readings which danced across the computer screens in the
ante-room in which she and Standish stood. Two white-coated men and a woman sat
monitoring the equipment, and a nurse stood watching through the window.
Standish exchanged a couple of brief words with them on the current state of
the patient, which was universally agreed to be excellent.
Kate could not escape the impression
that she ought to know who Mrs May was, but she didn’t and was forced to ask.
‘She is a medium,’ said Standish a
little crossly, ‘as I assumed you would know. A medium of prodigious powers.
She is currently in a trance and engaged in automatic writing. She is taking dictation.
Virtually every piece of dictation she receives is of inestimable value. You
have not heard of her?’
Kate admitted that she had not.
‘Well, you are no doubt familiar
with the lady who claimed that Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert were dictating
music to her?’
‘Yes, I did hear about that. There
was a lot of stuff in colour supplements about her a few years ago.’
‘Her claims were, well, interesting,
if that’s the sort of thing you’re interested in. The music was certainly more
consistent with what might be produced by each of those gentlemen quickly and before
breakfast, than it was with what you would expect from a musically unskilled
middle-aged housewife.’
Kate could not let this pomposity
pass.
‘That’s a rather sexist viewpoint,’ she
said, ‘George Eliot was a middle-aged housewife.’
‘Yes, yes,’ said Standish testily, ‘but
she wasn’t taking musical dictation from the deceased Wolfgang Amadeus. That’s the
point I’m making. Please try and follow the logic of this argument and do not introduce
irrelevancies. If I felt for a moment that the example of George Eliot could
shed any light on our present problem, you could rely on me to introduce it
myself.
‘Where was I?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘Mabel. Doris? Was that her name?
Let us call her Mabel. The point is that the easiest way of dealing with the
Doris problem was simply to ignore it. Nothing very important hinged on it at
all. A few concerts. Second rate material. But here, here we have something of
an altogether different nature.’
He said this last in hushed tones
and turned to study a TV monitor which stood among the bank of computer
screens. It showed a close-up of Mrs May’s hand scuttling across her pad of paper.
Her hand largely obscured what she had written, but it appeared to be
mathematics of some kind.
‘Mrs May is, or so she claims,
taking dictation from some of the greatest physicists. From Einstein and from
Heisenberg and Planck. And it is very hard to dispute her claims, because the
information being produced here, by automatic writing, by this...untutored
lady, is in fact physics of a very profound order.
‘From the late Einstein we are
getting more and more refinements to our picture of how time and space work at
a macroscopic level, and from the late Heisenberg and Planck we are increasing
our understanding of the fundamental structures of matter at a quantum level.
And there is absolutely no doubt that this information is edging us closer and closer
towards the elusive goal of a Grand Unified Field Theory of Everything.
‘Now this produces a very interesting,
not to say somewhat embarrassing situation for scientists because the means
by which the information is reaching us seems to be completely contrary to the meaning
of the information.’
‘It’s like Uncle Henry,’ said Kate,
suddenly.
Standish looked at her blankly.
‘Uncle Henry thinks he’s a chicken,’
Kate explained.
Standish looked at her blankly
again.
‘You must have heard it,’ said Kate.
‘“We’re terribly worried about Uncle Henry. He thinks he’s a chicken.” “Well,
why don’t you send him to the doctor?” “Well, we would only we need the eggs.”’
Standish stared at her as if a small
but perfectly formed elderberry tree had suddenly sprung unbidden from the
bridge of her nose.
‘Say that again,’ he said in a
small, shocked voice.
‘What, all of it?’
‘All of it.’
Kate stuck her fist on her hip and
said it again, doing the voices with a bit more dash and Southern accents this
time.
‘That’s brilliant,’ Standish
breathed when she had done.
‘You must have heard it before,’ she
said, a little surprised by this response. ‘It’s an old joke.’
‘No,’ he said, ‘I have not. We need
the eggs. We need the /eggs/. We /need/ the eggs. “We can’t send him to the
doctor because /we need the eggs/.” An astounding insight into the central
paradoxes of the human condition and of our indefatigable facility for constructing
adaptive rationales to account for it. Good God.’
Kate shrugged.
‘And you say this is a joke?’
demanded Standish incredulously.
‘Yes. It’s very old, really.’
‘And are they all like that? I never
realised.’
‘Well --’
‘I’m astounded,’ said Standish,
‘utterly astounded. I thought that jokes were things that fat people said on television
and I never listened to them. I feel that people have been keeping something
from me. Nurse!’
The nurse who had been keeping watch
on Mts May through the window jumped at being barked at unexpectedly like this.
‘Er, yes, Mr Standish?’ she said. He
clearly made her nervous.
‘Why have you never told me any
jokes?’
The nurse stared at him, and
quivered at the impossibility of even knowing how to think about answering such
a question.
‘Er, well...’
‘Make a note of it will you? In
future I will require you and all the other staff in this hospital to tell me
all the jokes you have at your disposal, is that understood?’
‘Er, yes, Mr Standish --’
Standish looked at her with doubt
and suspicion.
‘You do know some jokes do you,
nurse?’ he challenged her.
‘Er, yes, Mr Standish, I think, yes
I do.’
‘Tell me one.’
‘What, er, now, Mr Standish?’
‘This instant.’
‘Er, well, um -- there’s one which
is that a patient wakes up after having, well, that is, he’s been to, er, to
surgery, and he wakes up and, it’s not very good, but anyway, he’s been to
surgery and he says to the doctor when he wakes up, “Doctor, doctor, what’s
wrong with me, I can’t feel my legs.” And the doctor says, “Yes, I’m afraid
we’ve had to amputate both your arms.” And that’s it really. Er, that’s why he couldn’t
feel his legs, you see.’
Mr Standish looked at her levelly
for a moment or two.
‘You’re on report, nurse,’ he said.
‘Yes, Mr Standish.’
He turned to Kate.
‘Isn’t there one about a chicken crossing
a road or some such thing?’
‘Er, yes,’ said Kate, doubtfully.
She felt she was caught in a bit of a situation here.
‘And how does that go?’
‘Well,’ said Kate, ‘it goes “Why did
the chicken cross the road?”’
‘Yes? And?’
‘And the answer is “To get to the
other side”.’
‘I see.’ Standish considered things
for a moment. ‘And what does this chicken do when it arrives at the other side
of the road?’
‘History does not relate,’ replied
Kate promptly. ‘I think that falls outside the scope of the joke, which really
only concerns itself with the journey of the chicken across the road and the chicken’s
reasons for making it. It’s a little like a Japanese /haiku/ in that respect.’
Kate suddenly found she was enjoying
herself. She managed a surreptitious wink
at the nurse, who had no idea what to make of anything at all.
‘I see,’ said Standish once again,
and frowned. ‘And do these, er, jokes require the preparatory use of any form
of artificial stimulant?’
‘Depends on the joke, depends on who
it’s being told to.’
‘Hmm, well I must say, you’ve certainly
opened up a rich furrow for me, Miss, er. It seems to me that the whole field
of humour could benefit from close and immediate scrutiny. Clearly we need to
sort out the jokes which have any kind of genuine psychological value from
those which merely encourage drug abuse and should be stopped. Good.’
He turned to address the
white-coated researcher who was studying the TV monitor on which Mrs May’s
scribblings were being tracked.
‘Anything fresh of value from Mr
Einstein?’ he asked.
The researcher did not move his eyes
from the screen. He replied, ‘It says “How would you like your eggs? Poached or
boiled?”’
Again, Standish paused.
‘Interesting,’ he said, ‘very interesting.
Continue to make at careful note of everything she writes. Come.’ This last he
said to Kate, and made his way out of the room.
‘Very strange people, physicists,’
he said as soon as they were outside again. ‘In my experience the ones who
aren’t actually dead are in some way very ill. Well, the afternoon presses on
and I’m sure that you are keen to get away and write your article, Miss, er. I
certainly have things urgently awaiting my attention and patients awaiting my care.
So, if you have no more questions --’
‘There is just one thing, Mr
Standish.’ Kate decided, to hell with it. ‘We need to emphasise that it’s up to
the minute. Perhaps if you could spare a couple more minutes we could go and
see whoever is your most recent admission.’
‘I think that would be a little
tricky. Our last admission was about a month ago and she died of pneumonia two
weeks after admission.’
‘Oh, ah. Well, perhaps that isn’t so thrilling. So. No new admissions in the
last couple of days. No admissions of anyone particularly large or blond or Nordic,
with a fur coat or a sledge- hammer perhaps. I mean, just for instance.’ An
inspiration struck her. ‘A re-admission perhaps?’
Standish regarded her with deepening
suspicion.
‘Miss, er --’
‘Schechter.’
‘Miss Schechter, I begin to get the impression
that your interests in the hospital are not --’
He was interrupted at that moment by
the swing-doors just behind them in the corridor being pushed open. He looked
up to see who it was, and as he did so his manner changed.
He motioned Kate sharply to stand
aside while a large trolley bed was wheeled through the doors by an orderly. A
sister and another nurse followed in attendance, and gave the impression that
they were the entourage in a procession rather than merely nurses about their
normal business.
The occupant of the trolley was a
delicately frail old man with skin like finely veined parchment.
The rear section of the trolley was inclined
upwards at a very slight angle so that the old man could survey the world as it
passed him, and he surveyed it with a kind of quiet, benevolent horror. His mouth
hung gently open and his head lolled very slightly, so that every slightest bump
in the progress of the trolley caused it to roll a little to one side or the other.
Yet in spite of his fragile listlessness, the air he emanated was that of very
quietly, very gently, owning everything.
It was the one eye which conveyed
this. Each thing it rested on, whether it was the view through a window, or the
nurse who was holding back the door so that the trolley could move through it without
impediment, or whether it was on Mr Standish, who suddenly was all obsequious
charm and obeisance, all seemed instantly gathered up into the domain ruled by
that eye.
Kate wondered for a moment how it was
that eyes conveyed such an immense amount of information about their owners. They
were, after all, merely spheres of white gristle. They hardly changed as they
got older, apart from getting a bit redder and a bit runnier. The iris opened
and closed a bit, but that was all. Where did all this flood of information come
from? Particularly in the case of a man with only one of them and only a sealed
up flap of skin in place of the other.
She was interrupted in this line of
thought by the fact that at that instant the eye in question moved on from
Standish and settled on her. The grip it exerted was so startling that she
almost yelped.
With the frailest of faint motions the
old man signalled to the orderly who was pushing the trolley to pause. The trolley
drew to a halt and when the noise of its rolling wheels was stilled there was, for
a moment, no other noise to be heard other than the distant hum of an elevator.
Then the elevator stopped.
Kate returned his look with a little
smiling frown as if to say, ‘Sorry, do I know you?’ and then wondered to
herself if in fact she did. There was some fleeting familiarity about his face,
but she couldn’t quite catch it. She was impressed to notice that though this was
only a trolley bed he was in, the bed linen that his hands lay on was real
linen, freshly laundered and ironed.
Mr Standish coughed slightly and
said, ‘Miss, er, this is one of our most valued and, er, cherished patients, Mr
--’
‘Are you quite comfortable, Mr Odwin?’
interrupted the Sister helpfully. But there was no need. This was one patient whose
name Standish most certainly knew.
Odin quieted her with the slightest
of gestures.
‘Mr Odwin,’ said Standish, ‘this is
Miss, er --’
Kate was about to introduce herself once
more when she was suddenly taken completely by surprise.
‘I know exactly who she is,’ said
Odin in a quiet but distinct voice, and there was in his eye for a moment the
sense of an aerosol looking meaningfully at a wasp.
She tried to be very formal and
English.
‘I’m afraid,’ she said stiffly,
‘that you have the advantage of me.’
‘Yes,’ said Odin.
He gestured to the orderly, and together they resumed their leisurely
passage down the corridor. Glances were exchanged between Standish and the Sister,
and then Kate was startled to notice that there was someone else standing in
the corridor there with them.
He had not, presumably, appeared there
by magic. He had merely stood still when the trolley moved on, and his height, or
rather his lack of it, was such that he had simply hitherto been hidden behind
it.
Things had been much better when he
had been hidden.
There are some people you like
immediately, some whom you think you might learn to like in the fullness of time,
and some that you simply want to push away from you with a sharp stick. It was
instantly apparent into which category, for Kate, the person of Toe Rag fell.
He grinned and stared at her, or rather, appeared to stare at some invisible
fly darting round her head.
He ran up, and before she could
prevent him, grabbed hold of her right hand in his and shook it wildly up and
down.
‘I, too, have the advantage of you,
Miss Schechter,’ he said, and gleefully skipped away up the corridor.
[::: CHAPTER 12
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
The large, serious-looking grey van moved smoothly down the driveway, emerged through the stone gates
and dipped sedately as it turned off the gravel and on to the asphalt of the
public road. The road was a windy country lane lined with the wintry
silhouettes of leafless oaks and dead elms. Grey clouds were piled high as
pillows in the sky. The van made its stately progress away down the lane and
soon was lost among its further twists and turns.
A few minutes later the yellow Citroën
made its less stately appearance between the gates. It turned its splayed
wheels up on to the camber of the lane and set off at a slow but difficult rate
in the same direction.
Kate was rattled.
The last few minutes had been rather
unpleasant. Standish was clearly an oddly behaved man at the best of times, but
after their encounter with the patient named Odwin, he had turned unequivocally
hostile. It was the frightening hostility of one who was himself frightened --
of what, Kate did not know.
Who was she? he had demanded to know.
How had she wheedled a reference out of Alan Franklin, a respected man in the
profession? What was she after? What -- and this seemed to be the big one --
had she done to arouse the disapprobation of Mr Odwin?
She held the car grimly to the road
as it negotiated the bends with considerable difficulty and the straight sections
with only slightly less. The car had landed her in court on one occasion when
one of its front wheels had sailed off on a little expedition of its own and nearly
caused an accident. The police witness in court had referred to her beloved
Citroën as ‘the alleged car’ and the name had subsequently stuck. She was particularly
fond of the alleged car for many reasons. If one of its doors, for instance, fell
off she could put it back on herself, which is more than you could say for a
BMW.
She wondered if she looked as pale
and wan as she felt, but the rear-view mirror was rattling around under the seat
so she was spared the knowledge.
Standish himself had become quite
white and shaky at the very idea of anybody crossing Mr Odwin and had dismissed
out of hand Kate’s attempts to deny that she knew anything of him at all. If
that were the case, he had demanded of her, why then had Mr Odwin made it
perfectly clear that he knew her? Was she accusing Mr Odwin of being a liar? If
she was then she should have a care for herself.
Kate did not know. The encounter with
Mr Odwin was completely inexplicable to her. But she could not deny to herself
that the man packed some kind of punch. When he looked at you you stayed looked
at. But beneath the disturbing quality of his steady gaze had lain some even
more disturbing undercurrents. They were more disturbing because they were
undercurrents of weakness and fear.
And as for the other creature...
Clearly he was the cause of the
stories that had arisen recently in the more extremely abhorrent sectors of the
tabloid press about there being ‘Something Nasty in the Woodshead’. The stories
had, of course, been offensive and callously insensitive and had largely been
ignored by everybody in the country except for those very few millions who were
keen on offensive and callously insensitive things.
The stories had claimed that people in the area had been
‘terrorised’ by some repulsively deformed ‘goblin-like’ creature who regularly
broke out of the Woodshead and committed an impressively wide range of
unspeakable acts.
Like most people, Kate had assumed,
insofar as she had thought about it at all, that what had actually happened was
that some poor bewildered mental patient had wandered out of the grounds and given
a couple of passing old ladies a bit of a turn, and that the slavering hacks of
Wapping had done the rest. Now she was a little more shaky and a little less
sure.
He -- it -- had known her name.
What could she make of that?
What she made of it was a wrong turning.
In her preoccupation she missed the turning that would take her on to the main road
back to London, and then had to work out what to do about it. She could simply do
a three-point turn and go back, but it was a long time since she had last put
the car into reverse gear, and she was frankly a bit nervous about how it would
take to it.
She tried taking the next two right
turns to see if that would set her straight, but she had no great hopes of this
actually working, and was right not to have. She drove on for two or three
miles, knowing that she was on the wrong road but at least, judging from the
position of the lighter grey smear in the grey clouds, going in the right direction.
After a while she settled down to this
new route. A couple of signposts she passed made it clear to her that she was merely
taking the B route back to London now, which she was perfectly happy to do. If she
had thought about it in advance, she would probably have chosen to do so anyway
in preference to the busy trunk road.
The trip had been a total failure, and
she would have done far better simply to have stayed soaking in the bath all afternoon.
The whole experience had been thoroughly
disturbing, verging on the frightening, and she had drawn a complete blank as far
as her actual objective was concerned. It was bad enough having an objective
that she could hardly bring herself to admit to, without having it completely fall
apart on her as well. A sense of stale futility gradually closed in on her
along with the general greyness of the sky.
She wondered if she was going very slightly
mad. Her life seemed to have drifted completely out of her control in the last
few days, and it was distressing to realise just how fragile her grip was when
it could so easily be shattered by a relatively minor thunderbolt or meteorite or
whatever it was.
The word ‘thunderbolt’ seemed to have
arrived in the middle of that thought without warning and she didn’t know what
to make of it, so she just let it lie there at the bottom of her mind, like the
towel lying on her bathroom floor that she hadn’t been bothered to pick up.
She longed for some sun to break through.
The miles ground along under her wheels, the clouds ground her down, and she found
herself increasingly thinking of penguins. At last she felt she could stand it no
more and decided that a few minutes’ walk was what she needed to shake her out
of her mood.
She stopped the car at the side of
the road, and the elderly Jaguar which had been following her for the last
seventeen miles ran straight into the back of her, which worked just as well.
[::: CHAPTER 13 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
With a delicious shock of rage Kate
leapt, invigorated, out of her car and ran to harangue the driver of the other car
who was, in turn, leaping out of his in order to harangue her.
‘Why don’t you look where you’re
going?’ she yelled at him. He was a rather overweight man who had been driving wearing
a long leather coat and a rather ugly red hat, despite the discomfort this
obviously involved. Kate warmed to him for it.
‘Why don’t I look where I’m going?’
he replied heatedly. ‘Don’t you look in your rear-view mirror?’
‘No,’ said Kate, putting her fists
on her hips.
‘Oh,’ said her adversary. ‘Why not?’
‘Because it’s under the seat.’
‘I see,’ he replied grimly. ‘Thank
you for being so frank with me. Do you have a lawyer?’
‘Yes I do, as a matter of fact,’
said Kate. She said it with vim and hauteur.
‘Is he any good?’ said the man in
the hat. ‘I’m going to need one. Mine’s popped into prison for a while.’
‘Well, you certainly can’t have
mine.’
‘Why not?’
‘Don’t be absurd. It would be a
clear conflict of interest.’
Her adversary folded his arms and leant
back against the bonnet of his car. He took his time to survey the surroundings.
The lane was growing dim as the early winter evening began to settle on the
land. He then leant into his car to turn on his hazard warning indicators. The rear
amber lights winked prettily on the scrubby grass of the roadside. The front
lights were buried in the rear of Kate’s Citroën and were in no fit state to
wink.
He resumed his leaning posture and looked Kate up and down appraisingly.
‘You are a driver,’ he said, ‘and I
use the word in the loosest possible sense, i.e. meaning merely somebody who
occupies the driving seat of what I will for the moment call -- but I use the
term strictly without prejudice -- a car while it is proceeding along the road,
of stupendous, I would even say verging on the superhuman, lack of skill. Do
you catch my drift?’
‘No.’
‘I mean you do not drive well. Do
you know you’ve been all over the road for the last seventeen miles?’
‘Seventeen miles!’ exclaimed Kate.
‘Have you been following me?’
‘Only up to a point,’ said Dirk.
‘I’ve tried to stay on this side of the road.’
‘I see. Well, thank you in turn for
being so frank with me. This, I need hardly tell you, is an outrage. You’d better
get yourself a damn good lawyer, because mine’s going to stick red-hot skewers
in him.’
‘Perhaps I should get myself a kebab
instead.’
‘You look as if you’ve had quite enough
kebabs. May I ask you why you were following me?’
‘You looked as if you knew where you
were going. To begin with at least. For the first hundred yards or so.’
‘What the hell’s it got to do with
you where I was going?’
‘Navigational technique of mine.’
Kate narrowed her eyes.
She was about to demand a full and instant
explanation of this preposterous remark when a passing white Ford Sierra slowed
down beside them.
The driver wound down the window and
leant out. ‘Had a crash then?’ he shouted at them.
‘Yes.’
‘Ha!’ he said and drove on.
A second or two later a Peugeot
stopped by them.
‘Who was that just now?’ the driver
asked them, in reference to the previous driver who had just stopped.
‘I don’t know,’ said Dirk.
‘Oh,’ said the driver. ‘You look as if
you’ve bad a crash of some sort.’
‘Yes,’ said Dirk.
‘Thought so,’ said the driver and
drove on.
‘You don’t get the same quality of passers-by
these days, do you?’ said Dirk to Kate.
‘You get hit by some real dogs,
too,’ said Kate. ‘I still want to know why you were following me. You realise
that it’s hard for me not to see you in the role of an extremely sinister sort
of a person.’
‘That’s easily explained,’ said Dirk.
‘Usually I am. On this occasion, however, I simply got lost. I was forced to take
evasive action by a large grey oncoming van which took a proprietorial view of the
road. I only avoided it by nipping down a side lane in which I was then unable
to reverse. A few turnings later and I was thoroughly lost. There is a school
of thought which says that you should consult a map on these occasions, but to
such people I merely say, “Ha! What if you have no map to consult? What if you have
a map but it’s of the Dordogne?” My own strategy is to find a car, or the
nearest equivalent, which looks as if it knows where it’s going and follow it.
I rarely end up where I was intending to go, but often I end up somewhere that
I needed to be. So what do you say to that?’
‘Piffle.’
‘A robust response. I salute you.’
‘I was going to say that I do the same
thing myself sometimes, but I’ve decided not to admit that yet.’
‘Very wise,’ said Dirk. ‘You don’t want
to give away too much at this point. Play it enigmatic is my advice.’
‘I don’t want your advice. Where were
you trying to get before suddenly deciding that driving seventeen miles in the opposite direction would help you get there?’
‘A place called the Woodshead.’
‘Ah, the mental hospital.’
‘You know it?’
‘I’ve been driving away from it for
the last seventeen miles and I wish it was further. Which ward will you be in?
I need to know where to send the repair bill.’
‘They don’t have wards,’ said Dirk. ‘And
I think they would be distressed to hear you call it a mental hospital.’
‘Anything that distresses ‘em is
fine by me.’
Dirk looked about him.
‘A fine evening,’ he said.
‘No it isn’t.’
‘I see,’ said Dirk. ‘You have, if I
may say so, the air of one to whom her day has not been a source of joy or
spiritual enrichment.’
‘Too damn right, it hasn’t,’ said
Kate. ‘I’ve had the sort of day that would make St Francis of Assisi kick
babies. Particularly if you include Tuesday in with today, which is the last time
I was actually conscious. And now look. My beautiful car. The only thing I can
say in favour of the whole shebang is that at least I’m not in Oslo.’
‘I can see how that might cheer
you.’
‘I didn’t say it cheered me. It just
about stops me killing myself. I might as well save myself the bother anyway,
with people like you so keen to do it for me.’
‘You were my able assistant, Miss
Schechter.’
‘/Stop doing that!/’
‘Stop doing what?’
‘My name! Suddenly every stranger I meet
knows my name. Would you guys please just quit knowing my name for one second?
How can a girl be enigmatic under these conditions? The only person I met who
didn’t seem to know my name was the only one I actually introduced myself to.
All right,’ she said, pointing an accusing finger at Dirk, ‘you’re not supernatural,
so just tell me how you knew my name. I’m not letting go of your tie till you
tell me.’
‘You haven’t got hold of --’
‘I have now, buster.’
‘Unhand me!’
‘Why were you following me?’ insisted
Kate. ‘How do you know my name?’
‘I was following you for exactly the
reasons stated. As for your name, my dear lady, you practically told me
yourself.’
‘I did not.’
‘I assure you, you did.’
‘I’m still holding your tie.’
‘If you are meant to be in Oslo but
have been unconscious since Tuesday, then presumably you were at the incredible
exploding check-in counter at Heathrow Terminal Two. It was widely reported in
the press. I expect you missed it through being unconscious. I myself missed it
through rampant apathy, but the events of today have rather forced it on my
attention.’
Kate grudgingly let go of his tie, but
continued to eye him with suspicion.
‘Oh yeah?’ she said. ‘What events?’
‘Disturbing ones,’ said Dirk,
brushing himself down. ‘Even if what you had told me yourself had not been
enough to identify you, then the fact of your having also been today to visit
the Woodshead clinched it for me. I gather from your mood of belligerent
despondency that the man you were seeking was not there.’
‘/What?/’
‘Please, have it,’ said Dirk, rapidly
pulling off his tie and handing it to her. ‘By chance I ran into a nurse from
your hospital earlier today. My first encounter with her was one which, for
various reasons, I was anxious to terminate abruptly. It was only while I was standing
on the pavement a minute or two later, fending off the local wildlife, that one
of the words I had heard her say struck me, I may say, somewhat like a
thunderbolt. The idea was fantastically, wildly improbable. But like most
fantastically, wildly improbable ideas it was at least as worthy of
consideration as a more mundane one to which the facts had been strenuously
bent to fit.
‘I returned to question her further,
and she confirmed that a somewhat unusual patient had, in the early hours of
the morning, been transferred from the hospital, apparently to the Woodshead.
‘She also confided to me that
another patient had been almost indecently curious to find out what had become
of him. That patient was a Miss Kate Schechter, and I think you will agree,
Miss Schechter, that my methods of navigation have their advantages. I may not have
gone where I intended to go, but I think I have ended up where I needed to be.’
[::: CHAPTER 14 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
After about half an hour a hefty man
from the local garage arrived with a pick-up truck, a tow-rope and a son. Having
looked at the situation he sent his son and the pick-up truck away to deal with
another job, attached the tow-rope to Kate’s now defunct car and pulled it away
to the garage himself.
Kate was a little quiet about this for
a minute or two, and then said, ‘He wouldn’t have done that if I hadn’t been an
American.’
He had recommended to them a small local
pub where he would come and look for them when he had made his diagnosis on the
Citroën. Since Dirk’s Jaguar had only lost its front right indicator light, and
Dirk insisted that he hardly ever turned right anyway, they drove the short distance
there. As Kate, with some reluctance, climbed into Dirk’s car she found the
Howard Bell book which Dirk had purloined from Sally Mills in the café, and
pounced on it. A few minutes later, walking into the pub, she was still trying
to work out if it was one she had read or not.
The pub combined all the traditional
English qualities of horse brasses, Formica and surliness. The sound of Michael
Jackson in the other bar mingled with the mournful intermittence of the
glass-cleaning machine in this one to create an aural ambience which perfectly
matched the elderly paintwork in its dinginess.
Dirk bought himself and Kate a drink
each, and then joined her at the small corner table she had found away from the
fat, T-shirted hostility of the bar.
‘I have read it,’ she announced,
having thumbed her way by now through most of /Run Like the Devil/. ‘At least,
I started it and read the first couple of chapters. A couple of months ago, in
fact. I don’t know why I still read his books. It’s perfectly clear that his
editor doesn’t.’ She looked up at Dirk. ‘I wouldn’t have thought it was your sort
of thing. From what little I know of you.’
‘It isn’t,’ said Dirk. ‘I, er,
picked it up by mistake.’
‘That’s what everyone says,’ replied
Kate. ‘He used to be quite good,’ she added ‘if you liked that sort of thing. My
brother’s in publishing in New York, and he says Howard Bell’s gone very
strange nowadays. I get the feeling that they’re all a little afraid of him and
he quite likes that. Certainly no one seems to have the guts to tell him he
should cut chapters ten to twenty-seven inclusive. And all the stuff about the goat.
The theory is that the reason he sells so many millions of copies is that
nobody ever does read them. If everyone who bought them actually read them
they’d never bother to buy the next one and his career would be over.’
She pushed it away from her.
‘Anyway,’ she said, ‘you’ve very
cleverly told me why I went to the Woodshead; you haven’t told me why you were
going there yourself.’
Dirk shrugged. ‘To see what it was
like,’ he said, non-commitally.
‘Oh yes? Well, I’ll save you the bother.
The place is quite horrible.’
‘Describe it. In fact start with the
airport.’
Kate took a hefty swig at her Bloody
Mary and brooded silently for a moment while the vodka marched around inside
her.
‘You want to hear about the airport
as well?’ she said at last.
‘Yes.’
Kate drained the rest of her drink.
‘I’ll need another one, then,’ she said
and pushed the empty glass across at him.
Dirk braved the bug-eyedness of the barman
and returned a minute or two later with a refill for Kate.
‘OK,’ said Kate. ‘I’ll start with
the cat.’
‘What cat?’
‘The cat I needed to ask the
next-door neighbour to look after for me.’
‘Which next-door neighbour?’
‘The one that died.’
‘I see,’ said Dirk. ‘Tell you what,
why don’t I just shut up and let you tell me?’
‘Yes,’ said Kate, ‘that would be
good.’
Kate recounted the events of the last
few days, or at least, those she was conscious for, and then moved on to her impressions
of the Woodshead.
Despite the distaste with which she
described it, it sounded to Dirt like exactly the sort of place he would love
to retire to, if possible tomorrow. It combined a dedication to the inexplicable,
which was his own persistent vice (he could only think of it as such, and sometimes
would rail against it with the fury of an addict), with a pampered self-indulgence
which was a vice to which he would love to be able to aspire if he could ever
but afford it.
At last Kate related her disturbing
encounter with Mr Odwin and his repellent minion, and it was as a result of this
that Dirk remained sunk in a frowning silence for a minute afterwards. A large part
of this minute was in fact taken up with an internal struggle about whether or
not he was going to cave in and have a cigarette. He had recently foresworn
them and the struggle was a regular one and he lost it regularly, often without
noticing.
He decided, with triumph, that he
would not have one, and then took one out anyway. Fishing out his lighter from the
capacious pocket of his coat involved first taking out the envelope he had
removed from Geoffrey Aristey’s bathroom. He put it on the table next to the book
and lit his cigarette.
‘The check-in girl at the
airport...’ he said at last.
‘She drove me mad,’ said Kate,
instantly. ‘She just went through the motions of doing her job like some kind of
blank machine. Wouldn’t listen, wouldn’t think. I don’t know where they find
people like that.’
‘She used to be my secretary, in fact,’
said Dirk. ‘They don’t seem to know where to find her now, either.’
‘Oh. I’m sorry,’ said Kate immediately,
and then reflected for a moment.
‘I expect you’re going to say that
she wasn’t like that really,’ she continued. ‘Well, that’s possible. I expect
she was just shielding herself from the frustrations of her job. It must drive
you insensible working at an airport. I think I would have sympathised if I
hadn’t been so goddamn frustrated myself. I’m sorry, I didn’t know. So that’s what
you’re trying to find out about.’
Dirk gave a non-committal type of nod.
‘Amongst other things,’ he said. Then he added, ‘I’m a private detective.’
‘Oh?’ said Kate in surprise, and
then looked puzzled.
‘Does that bother you?’
‘It’s just that I have a friend who
plays the double bass.’
‘I see,’ said Dirk.
‘Whenever people meet him and he’s
struggling around with it, they all say the same thing, and it drives him
crazy. They all say, “I bet you wished you played the piccolo.” Nobody ever works
out that that’s what everybody else says. I was just trying to work out if
there was something that everybody would always say to a private detective, so that
I could avoid saying it.’
‘No. What happens is that everybody
looks very shifty for a moment, and you got that very well.’
‘I see.’ Kate looked disappointed.
‘Well, do you have any clues -- that is to say, any idea about what’s happened
to your secretary?’
‘No,’ said Dirk, ‘no idea. Just a
vague image that I don’t know what to make of.’ He toyed thoughtfully with his
cigarette, and then let his gaze wander over the table again and on to the
book.
He picked it up and looked it over,
wondering what impulse had made him pick it up in the first place.
‘I don’t really know anything about
Howard Bell,’ he said.
Kate was surprised at the way he
suddenly changed the subject, but also a little relieved.
‘I only know,’ said Dirk, ‘that he
sells a lot of books and that they all look pretty much like this. What should
I know?’
‘Well, there are some very strange
stories about him.’
‘Like what?’
‘Like what he gets up to in hotel
suites all across America. No one knows the details, of course, they just get
the bills and pay them because they don’t like to ask. They feel they’re on
safer ground if they don’t know. Particularly about the chickens.’
‘Chickens?’ said Dirk. ‘What
chickens?’
‘Well apparently,’ said Kate,
lowering her voice and leaning forward a little, ‘he’s always having live
chickens delivered to his hotel room.’
Dirk frowned.
‘What on earth for?’ he said.
‘Nobody knows. Nobody ever knows
what happens to them. Nobody ever sees them again. Not,’ she said, leaning even
further forward, and dropping her voice still further, ‘a single feather.’
Dirk wondered if he was being
hopelessly innocent and naïve.
‘So what do people think he’s doing
with them?’ he asked.
‘Nobody,’ Kate said, ‘has the faintest
idea. They don’t even /want/ to have the faintest idea. They just don’t know.’
She shrugged and picked the book up
again herself.
‘The other thing David -- that’s my brother
-- says about him is that he has the absolute perfect bestseller’s name.’
‘Really?’ said Dirk. ‘In what way?’
‘David says it’s the first thing any
publisher looks for in a new author. Not, “Is his stuff any good?” or, “Is his
stuff any good once you get rid of all the adjectives?” but, “Is his last name
nice and short and his first name just a bit longer?” You see? The “Bell” is done
in huge silver letters, and the “Howard” fits neatly across the top in slightly
narrower ones. Instant trade mark. It’s publishing magic. Once you’ve got a name
like that then whether you can actually write or not is a minor matter. Which
in Howard Bell’s case is now a significant bonus. But it’s a very ordinary name
if you write it down in the normal way, like it is here you see.’
‘What?’ said Dirk.
‘Here on this envelope of yours.’
‘Where? Let me see.’
‘That’s his name there, isn’t it?
Crossed out.’
‘Good heavens, you’re right,’ said
Dirk, peering at the envelope. ‘I suppose I didn’t recognise it without its
trade mark shape.’
‘Is this something to do with him, then?’
asked Kate, picking it up and looking it over.
‘I don’t know what it is, exactly,’
said Dirk. ‘It’s something to do with a contract, and it may be something to do
with a record.’
‘I can see it might be to do with a
record.’
‘How can you see that?’ asked Dirk,
sharply.
‘Well, this name here is Dennis
Hutch, isn’t it? See?’
‘Oh yes. Yes, I do,’ said Dirk,
examining it for himself. ‘Er, should I know that name?’
‘Well,’ said Kate slowly, ‘it
depends if you’re alive or not, I suppose. He’s the head of the Aries Rising Record
Group. Less famous than the Pope, I grant you, but -- you know of the Pope I
take it?’
‘Yes, yes,’ said Dirk impatiently,
‘white-haired chap.’
‘That’s him. He seems to be about the
only person of note this envelope hasn’t been addressed to at some time. Here’s
Stan Dubcek, the head of Dubcek, Danton, Heidegger, Draycott. I know they
handle the ARRGH! account.’
‘The...?’
‘ARRGH! Aries Rising Record Group
Holdings. Getting that account made the agency’s fortunes.’
She looked at Dirk.
‘You have the air,’ she stated, ‘of one
who knows little of the record business or the advertising business.’
‘I have that honour,’ said Dirk,
graciously inclining his head.
‘So what are you doing with this?’
‘When I manage to get it open, I’ll know,’
said Dirk. ‘Do you have a knife on you?’
Kate shook her head.
‘Who’s Geoffrey Anstey, then?’ she asked.
‘He’s the only name not crossed out. Friend of yours?’
Dirk paled a little and didn’t immediately
answer. Then he said, ‘This strange person you mentioned, this “Something Nasty
in the Woodshead” creature. Tell me again what he said to you.’
‘He said, “I, too, have the
advantage of you, Miss Schechter.”’ Kate tried to shrug.
Dirk weighed his thoughts
uncertainly for a moment.
‘I think it is just possible,’ he
said at last, ‘that you may be in some kind of danger.’
‘You mean it’s possible that passing
lunatics may crash into me in the road? That kind of danger?’
‘Maybe even worse.’
‘Oh yeah?’
‘Yes.’
‘And what makes you think that?’
‘It’s not entirely clear to me yet,’
replied Dirk with a frown. ‘Most of the ideas I have at the moment have to do
with things that are completely impossible, so I am wary about sharing them. They
are, however, the only thoughts I have.’
‘I’d get some different ones, then,’
said Kate. ‘What was the Sherlock Holmes principle? “Once you have discounted the
impossible, then whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.”’
‘I reject that entirely,’ said Dirk,
sharply. ‘The impossible often has a kind of integrity to it which the merely
improbable lacks. How often have you been presented with an apparently rational
explanation of something which works in all respects other than one, which is
just that it is hopelessly improbable? Your instinct is to say, “Yes, but he or
she simply wouldn’t do that.”’
‘Well, it happened to me today, in
fact,’ replied Kate.
‘Ah yes,’ said Dirk, slapping the
table and making the glasses jump, ‘your girl in the wheelchair -- a perfect example.
The idea that she is somehow receiving yesterday’s stock market prices
apparently out of thin air is merely impossible, and therefore /must/ be the case,
because the idea that she is maintaining an immensely complex and laborious
hoax of no benefit to herself is hopelessly improbable. The first idea merely
supposes that there is something we don’t know about, and God knows there are enough
of those. The second, however, runs contrary to something fundamental and human
which we do know about. We should therefore be very suspicious of it and all its
specious rationality.’
‘But you won’t tell me what you
think.’
‘No.’
‘Why not?’
‘Because it sounds ridiculous. But I
think you are in danger. I think you might be in horrible danger.’
‘Great. So what do you suggest I do
about it?’ said Kate taking a sip of her second drink, which otherwise had
stayed almost untouched.
‘I suggest,’ said Dirk seriously,
‘that you come back to London and spend the night in my house.’
Kate hooted with laughter and then
had to fish out a Kleenex to wipe tomato juice off herself.
‘I’m sorry, what is so extraordinary
about that?’ demanded Dirk, rather taken aback.
‘It’s just the most wonderfully
perfunctory pick-up line I’ve ever heard.’ She smiled at him. ‘I’m afraid the
answer is a resounding “no”.’
He was, she thought, interesting, entertaining
in an eccentric kind of way, but also hideously unattractive to her.
Dirk felt very awkward. ‘I think there
has been some appalling misunderstanding,’ he said. ‘Allow me to explain that
--’
He was interrupted by the sudden arrival
in their midst of the mechanic from the garage with news of Kate’s car.
‘Fixed it,’ he said. ‘In fact there were
nothing to fix other than the bumper. Nothing new that is. The funny noise you mentioned
were just the engine. But it’ll go all right. You just have to rev her up, let
in the clutch, and then wait for a little bit longer than you might normally
expect.’
Kate thanked him a little stiffly
for this advice and then insisted on allowing Dirk to pay the £25 he was
charging for it.
Outside, in the car park, Dirk
repeated his urgent request that Kate should go with him, but she was adamant
that all she needed was a good night’s sleep and that everything would look bright
and clear and easily capable of being coped with in the morning.
Dirk insisted that they should at
least exchange phone numbers. Kate agreed to this on condition that Dirk found another
route back to London and didn’t sit on her tail.
‘Be very careful,’ Dirk called to
her as her car grumbled out on to the road.
‘I will,’ shouted Kate, ‘and if anything
impossible happens, I promise you’ll be the first to know.’
For a brief moment, the yellow
undulations of the car gleamed dully in the light leaking from the pub windows and
stood out against the heavily hunched greyness of the night sky which soon
swallowed it up.
Dirk tried to follow her, but his
car wouldn’t start.
[::: CHAPTER 15
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
The clouds sank more heavily over
the land, clenching into huge sullen towers, as Dirk, in a sudden excess of alarm,
had to call out the man from the garage once again. He was slower to arrive
with his truck this time and bad-tempered with drink when at last he did.
He emitted a few intemperate barks
of laughter at Dirk’s predicament, then fumbled the bonnet of his car
open and subjected him to all kinds of muttered talk about manifolds, pumps, alternators
and starlings and resolutely would not be drawn on whether or not he was going
to be able to get the thing to go again that night.
Dirk was unable to get a meaningful
answer, or at least an answer that meant anything to him, as to what was causing
the rumpus in the alternator, what ailed the fuel pump, in what way the operation
of the starter motor was being disrupted and why the timing was off.
He did at last understand that the
mechanic was also claiming that a family of starlings had at some time in the
past made their nest in a sensitive part of the engine’s workings and had
subsequently perished horribly, taking sensitive parts of the engine with them,
and at this point Dirk began to cast about himself desperately for what to do.
He noticed that the mechanic’s
pick-up truck was standing nearby with its engine still running, and elected to
make off with this instead. Being a slightly less slow and cumbersome runner than
the mechanic he was able to put this plan into operation with a minimum of difficulty.
He swung out into the lane, drove
off into the night and parked three miles down the road. He left the van’s lights
on, let down its tyres and hid himself behind a tree. After about ten minutes
his Jaguar came hurtling round the corner, passed the van, hauled itself to an abrupt
halt and reversed wildly back towards it. The mechanic threw open the door, leapt
out and hurried over to reclaim his property, leaving Dirk with the opportunity
he needed to leap from behind the tree and reclaim his own.
He spun his wheels pointedly and drove
off in a kind of grim triumph, still haunted, nevertheless, by anxieties to which
he was unable to give a name or shape.
Kate, in the meantime, had joined the
dimly glowing yellow stream that led on eventually through the western suburbs
of Acton and Ealing and into the heart of London. She crawled up over the Westway
flyover and soon afterwards turned north up towards Primrose Hill and home.
She always enjoyed driving up
alongside the park, and the dark night shapes of the trees soothed her and made
her long for the quietness of her bed.
She found the nearest parking space she
could to her front door, which was about thirty yards distant. She climbed out of
the car and carefully omitted to lock it. She never left anything of value in it,
and she found that it was to her advantage if people didn’t have to break
anything in order to find that out. The car had been stolen twice, but on each occasion
it had been found abandoned twenty yards away.
She didn’t go straight home but set off
instead in the opposite direction to get some milk and bin liners from the
small corner shop in the next street. She agreed with the gentle-faced Pakistani
who ran it that she did indeed look tired, and should have an early night, but
on the way back she made another small diversion to go and lean against the
railings of the park, gaze into its darkness for a few minutes, and breathe in some
of its cold, heavy night air. At last she started to head back towards her
flat. She turned into her own road and as she passed the first street lamp it flickered
and went out, leaving her in a small pool of darkness.
That sort of thing always gives one
a nasty turn.
It is said that there is nothing
surprising about the notion of, for instance, a person suddenly thinking about someone
they haven’t thought about for years, and then discovering the next day that
the person has in fact just died. There are always lots of people suddenly
remembering people they haven’t thought about for ages, and always lots of
people dying. In a population the size of, say, America the law of averages means
that this particular coincidence must happen at least ten times a day, but it
is none the less spooky to anyone who experiences it.
By the same token, there are light
bulbs burning out in street lamps all the time, and a fair few of them must go
pop just as someone is passing beneath them. Even so, it still gives the person
concerned a nasty turn, especially when the very next street lamp they pass under
does exactly the same thing.
Kate stood rooted to the spot.
If one coincidence can occur, she told
herself, then another coincidence can occur. And if one coincidence happens to occur
just after another coincidence, then that is just a coincidence. There was absolutely
nothing to feel alarmed about in having a couple of street lamps go pop. She
was in a perfectly normal friendly street with houses all around her with their
lights on. She looked up at the house next to her, unfortunately just as the
lights in its front window chanced to go out. This was presumably because the
occupants happened to choose that moment to leave the room, but though it just went
to show what a truly extraordinary thing coincidence can be it did tittle to
improve her state of mind.
The rest of the street was still
bathed in a dim yellow glow. It was only the few feet immediately around her
that were suddenly dark. The next pool of light was just a few footsteps away
in front of her. She took a deep breath, pulled herself together, and walked towards
it, reaching its very centre at the exact instant that it, too, extinguished itself.
The occupants of the two houses she
had passed on the way also happened to choose that moment to leave their front
rooms, as did their neighbours on the opposite side of the street.
Perhaps a popular television show
had just finished. That’s what it was. Everyone was getting up and turning off
their TV sets and lights simultaneously, and the resulting power surge was
blowing some of the street lamps. Something like that. The resulting power surge
was also making her blood pound a little. She moved on, trying to be calm. As soon
as she got home she’d have a look in the paper to see what the programme had
been that had caused three street lamps to blow.
Four.
She stopped and stood absolutely still
under the dark lamp. More houses were darkening. What she found particularly alarming
was that they darkened at the very moment that she looked at them.
Glance -- /pop/.
She tried it again.
Glance -- /pop/.
Each one she looked at darkened
instantly.
Glance -- /pop/.
She realised with a sudden start of
fear that she must stop herself looking at the ones that were still lit. The rationalisations
she had been trying to construct were now running around inside her head screaming
to be let out and she let them go. She tried to lock her eyes to the ground for
fear of extinguishing the whole street, but couldn’t help tiny glances to see
if it was working.
Glance -- /pop/.
She froze her gaze, down on to the
narrow path forward. Most of the road was dark now.
There were three remaining street lamps
between her and the front door which led to her own flat. Though she kept her
eyes averted, she thought she could detect on the periphery of her vision that
the lights of the flat downstairs from hers were lit.
Neil lived there. She couldn’t
remember his last name, but he was a part-time bass-player and antiques dealer who used to give her decorating advice
she didn’t want and also stole her milk -- so her relationship with him had
always remained at a slightly frosty level. Just at the moment, though, she was
praying that he was there to tell her what was wrong with her sofa, and that
his light would not go out as her eyes wavered from the pavement in front of
her, with its three remaining pools of light spaced evenly along the way she
had to tread.
For a moment she tried turning, and looked
back the way she had come. All was darkness, shading off into the blackness of the
park which no longer calmed but menaced her, with hideously imagined thick, knotted
roots and treacherous, dark, rotting litter.
Again she turned, sweeping her eyes
low.
Three pools of light.
The street lights did not extinguish
as she looked at them, only as she passed.
She squeezed her eyes closed and
visualised exactly where the lamp of the next street light was, above and in
front of her. She raised her head, and carefully opened her eyes again, staring
directly into the orange glow radiating through the thick glass.
It shone steadily.
With her eyes locked fast on it so
that it burnt squiggles on her retina, she moved cautiously forward, step by
step, exerting her will on it to stay burning as she approached. It continued
to glow.
She stepped forward again. It
continued to glow. Again she stepped, still it glowed. Now she was almost
beneath it, craning her neck to keep it in focus.
She moved forward once more, and saw
the filament within the glass flicker and quickly die away, leaving an after-image
prancing madly in her eyes.
She dropped her eyes now and tried
looking steadily forward, but wild shapes were leaping everywhere and she felt she
was losing control. The next lamp she took a lunging run towards, and again, sudden
darkness enveloped her arrival. She stopped there panting, and blinking, trying
to calm herself again and get her vision sorted out. Looking towards the last street
lamp, she thought she saw a figure standing beneath it. It was a large form, silhouetted
with jumping orange shadows. Huge horns stood upon the figure’s head.
She stated with mad intensity into
the billowing darkness, and suddenly screamed at it, ‘Who are you?’
There was a pause, and then a deep
answering voice said, ‘Do you have anything that can get these bits of
floorboard off my back?’
[::: CHAPTER 16
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
There was another pause, of a
different and slightly disordered quality.
It was a long one. It hung there nervously,
wondering which direction it was going to get broken from. The darkened street
took on a withdrawn, defensive aspect.
‘What?’ Kate screamed back at the figure, at last. ‘I said.../what/?’
The great figure stirred. Kate still
could not see him properly because her eyes were still dancing with blue
shadows, seared there by the orange light.
‘I was,’ said the figure, ‘glued to
the floor. My father --’
‘Did /you/...are /you/...’ Kate
quivered with incoherent rage ‘are you responsible...for all /this/?’ She turned
and swept an angry hand around the street to indicate the nightmare she had
just traversed.
‘It is important that you know who I
am.’
‘Oh yeah?’ said Kate. ‘Well let’s get
the name down right now so I can take it straight to the police and get you done
for breach of something wilful or other. Intimidation. Interfering with --’
‘I am Thor. I am the God of Thunder.
The God of Rain. The God of the High Towering Clouds. The God of Lightning. The
God of the Flowing Currents. The God of the Particles. The God of the Shaping
and the Binding Forces. The God of the Wind. The God of the Growing Crops. The God
of the Hammer Mjollnir.’
‘Are you?’ simmered Kate. ‘Well,
I’ve no doubt that if you’d picked a slack moment to mention all that, I might have
taken an interest, but right now it just makes me very angry. Turn the damn
lights on!’
‘I am --’
‘I said turn the lights on!’
With something of a sheepish glow, the
streetlights all came back on, and the windows of the houses all quietly
illuminated themselves once more. The lamp above Kate popped again almost immediately.
She shot him a warning look.
‘It was an old light, and infirm,’
he said.
She simply continued to glare at
him.
‘See,’ he said, ‘I have your
address.’ He held out the piece of paper she had given him at the airport, as
if that somehow explained everything and put the world to rights.
‘I --’
‘Back!’ he shouted, throwing up his
arms in front of his face.
‘What?’
With a huge rush of wind a swooping eagle
dropped from out of the night sky, with its talons outspread to catch at him. Thor
beat and thrashed at it until the great bird flailed backwards, turned, nearly crashed
to the ground, recovered itself, and with great slow beats of its wings, heaved
itself back up through the air and perched on top of the street lamp. It grasped
the lamp hard with its talons and steadied itself, making the whole lamppost
quiver very slightly in its grip.
‘Go!’ shouted Thor at it.
The eagle sat there and peered down
at him. A monstrous creature made more monstrous by the effect of the orange
light on which it perched, casting huge, flapping shadows on the nearby houses,
it had strange circular markings on its wings. These were markings that Kate wondered
if she had seen before, only in a nightmare, but then again, she was by no
means certain that she was not in a nightmare now.
There was no doubt that she had
found the man she was looking for. The same huge form, the same glacial eyes,
the same look of arrogant exasperation and slight muddle, only this time his
feet were plunged into huge hide boots, great furs, straps and thongs hung from
his shoulders, a huge steel horned helmet stood on his head, and his exasperation
was directed this time not at an airline check-in girl but at a huge eagle
perched on a lamppost in the middle of Primrose Hill.
‘Go,’ he shouted at it again. ‘The
matter is beyond my power! All that I can do I have done! Your family is
provided for. You I can do nothing more for! I myself am powerless and sick.’
Kate was suddenly shocked to see
that there were great gouges on the big man’s left forearm where the eagle had
got its talons into him and ripped them through his skin. Blood was welling up out
of them like bread out of a baking tin.
‘Go!’ he shouted again. With the edge
of one hand he scraped the blood off his other arm and flung the heavy drops at
the eagle, which reared back, flapping, but retained its hold. Suddenly the man
leapt high into the air and grappled himself to the top of the lamppost, which now
began to shake dangerously under their combined weight. With loud cries the eagle
pecked viciously at him while he tried with great swings of his free arm to
sweep it from its perch.
A door opened. It was the front door
of Kate’s house and a man with grey-rimmed spectacles and a neat moustache
looked out. It was Neil, Kate’s downstairs neighbour, in a mood.
‘Look, I really think --’ he started.
However, it quickly became clear that he simply didn’t know what to think and retreated
back indoors, taking his mood, unsatisfied, with him.
The big man braced himself, and with
a huge leap hurled himself through the air and landed with a slight, controlled
wobble on top of the next lamppost, which bent slightly under his weight. He
crouched, glaring at the eagle, which glared back.
‘Go!’ he shouted again, brandishing
his arm at it.
‘Gaarh!’ it screeched back at him.
With another swing of his arm he pulled
from under his furs a great short-handled sledge-hammer and hefted its great
weight meaningfully from one hand to another. The head of the hammer was a
roughly cast piece of iron about the size and shape of a pint of beer in a big
glass mug, and its shaft was a stocky, wrist- thick piece of ancient oak with leather
strapping bound about its handle.
‘Gaaarrrh!’ screeched the eagle
again, but regarded the sledgehammer with keen-eyed suspicion. As Thor began
slowly to swing the hammer, the eagle shifted its weight tensely from one leg
to the other, in time to the rhythm of the swings.
‘Go!’ said Thor again, more, quietly,
but with greater menace. He rose to his full height on top of the lamppost, and
swung the hammer faster and faster in a great circle. Suddenly he hurled it directly
towards the eagle. In the same instant a bolt of high voltage electricity
erupted from the lamp on which the eagle was sitting, causing it to leap with loud
cries wildly into the air. The hammer sailed harmlessly under the lamp, swung up
into the air and out over the darkness of the park, while Thor, released of its
weight, wobbled and tottered on top of his lamppost, spun round and regained his
balance. Flailing madly at the air with its huge wings, the eagle, too, regained
control of itself, flew upwards, made one last diving attack on Thor, which the
god leapt backwards off the lamppost to avoid, and then climbed up and away
into the night sky in which it quickly became a small, dark speck, and then at
last was gone.
The hammer came bounding back from
out of the sky, scraped flying sparks from the paving-stones with its head,
turned over twice in the air and then dropped its head back to the ground next to
Kate and nested its shaft gently against her leg.
An elderly lady who had been waiting
patiently with her dog in the shadows beneath the street lamp, which was now defunct,
sensed, correctly, that all of the excitement was now over and proceeded quietly
past them. Thor waited politely till they had passed and then approached Kate, who
stood with her arms folded watching him. After all the business of the last two
or three minutes he seemed suddenly not to have the faintest idea what to say
and for the moment merely gazed thoughtfully into the middle distance.
Kate formed the distinct impression that
thinking was, for him, a separate activity from everything else, a task that needed
its own space. It could not easily be combined with other activities such as walking
or talking or buying airline tickets.
‘We’d better take a look at your arm,’
she said, and led the way up the steps to her house. He followed, docile.
As she opened the front door she
found Neil in the hall leaning his back against the wall and looking with grim
pointedness at a Coca-Cola vending machine standing against the opposite wall and
taking up an inordinate amount of space in the hallway.
‘I don’t know what we’re going to do
about this, I really don’t,’ he said.
‘What’s it doing there?’ asked Kate.
‘Well, that’s what I’m asking you, I’m
afraid,’ said Neil. ‘I don’t know how you’re going to get it up the stairs. Don’t
see how it can be done to be perfectly frank with you. And let’s face it, I
don’t think you’re going to like it once you’ve got it up there. I know it’s
very modern and American, but think about it, you’ve got that nice French cherrywood
table, that sofa which will be very nice once you’ve taken off that dreadful
Collier Campbell covering like I keep on saying you should, only you won’t
listen, and I just don’t see that it’s going to fit in, not in either sense.
And I’m not even sure that I should allow it, I mean it’s a very heavy object
and you know what I’ve said to you about the floors in this house. I’d think
again, I really would, you know.’
‘Yes, Neil, how did it get here?’
‘Well, your friend here delivered it
just an hour or so ago. I don’t know where he’s been working out, but I must
say I wouldn’t mind paying his gym a visit. I said I thought the whole thing
was very doubtful but he would insist and in the end I even had to give him a
hand. But I must say that I think we need to have a very serious think about the
whole topic. I asked your friend if he liked Wagner but he didn’t respond very
well. So, I don’t know, what do you want to do about it?’
Kate took a deep breath. She
suggested to her huge guest that he carry on upstairs and she would see him in
just a moment. Thor lumbered past, and was an absurd figure mounting the stairs.
Neil watched Kate’s eyes very closely
for a clue as to what, exactly, was going on, but Kate was as blank as she knew
how.
‘I’m sorry, Neil,’ she said, matter-of-factly.
‘The Coke machine will go. It’s all a misunderstanding. I’ll get this sorted
out by tomorrow.’
‘Yes, that’s all very well,’ said Neil,
‘but where does all this leave me? I mean, you see my problem.’
‘No, Neil, I don’t.’
‘Well, I’ve got this...thing out here,
you’ve got that...person upstairs, and the whole thing is just a total
disruption.’
‘Is there anything I can do to make
anything any better?’
‘Well it’s not as easy as that, is
it? I mean, I think you should just think about it a bit, that’s all. I mean,
all this. You told me you were going away. I heard the bath running this afternoon.
What was I to think? And after you had gone on about the cat, and you know I won’t
work with cats.’
‘I know, Neil. That’s why I asked
Mrs Grey next door to look after her.’
‘Yes, and look what happened to her.
Died of a heart attack. Mr Grey’s very upset, you know.’
‘I don’t think it had anything to do
with me asking her if she would look after my cat.’
‘Well, all I can say is that he’s
/very/ upset.’
‘Yes, Neil. His wife’s died.’
‘Well, I’m not saying anything. I’m
just saying I think you should think about it. And what on earth are we going
to do about all this?’ he added, re-addressing his attention to the Coca-Cola
machine.
‘I’ve said that I will make sure
it’s gone in the morning, Neil,’ said Kate. ‘I’m quite happy to stand here and
scream very loudly if you think it will help in any way, but --’
‘Listen, love, I’m only making the point.
And I hope you’re not going to be making a lot of noise up there because I’ve
got to practise my music tonight, and you know that I need quiet to
concentrate.’ He gave Kate a meaningful look over the top of his glasses and
disappeared into his flat.
Kate stood and silently counted as much
of one to ten as she could currently remember and then headed staunchly up the
stairs in the wake of the God of Thunder, feeling that she was not in a mood for
either weather or theology. The house began to throb and shake to the sound of the
main theme of /The Ride of the Valkyries/ being played on a Fender Precision
bass.
[::: CHAPTER 17
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
As Dirk edged his way along the
Euston Road, caught in the middle of a rush hour traffic jam that had started in
the late nineteen seventies and which, at a quarter to ten on this Thursday
evening, still showed no signs of abating, he thought he caught sight of something
he recognised.
It was his subconscious which told
him this -- that infuriating part of a person’s brain which never responds to
interrogation, merely gives little meaningful nudges and then sits humming quietly
to itself, saying nothing.
‘Well of course I’ve just seen
something I recognise,’ Dirk muttered mentally to his subconscious. ‘I drive along this benighted thoroughfare
twenty times a month. I expect I recognise every single matchstick lying in the
gutter. Can’t you be a little more specific?’ His subconscious would not be hectored
though, and was dumb. It had nothing further to add. The city was probably full
of grey vans anyway. Very unremarkable.
‘Where?’ muttered Dirk to himself fiercely,
twisting round in his seat this way and that. ‘Where did I see a grey van?’
Nothing.
He was thoroughly hemmed in by the
traffic and could not manoeuvre in any direction, least of all forward. He erupted
from his car and started to jostle his way back through the jammed cars bobbing
up and down to try and see where, if anywhere, he might have caught a glimpse of
a grey van. If he had seen one, it eluded him now. His subconscious sat and
said nothing.
The traffic was still not moving, so
he tried to thread his way further back, but was obstructed by a large
motorcycle courier edging his way forward on a huge grimy Kawasaki. Dirk engaged
in a brief altercation with the courier, but lost it because the courier was unable
to hear Dirk’s side of the altercation;
eventually Dirk retreated through the tide of traffic which now was beginning
slowly to move in all lanes other than the one in which his car sat,
driverless, immobile and hooted at.
He felt suddenly elated by the
braying of the motor horns, and as he swayed and bobbed his way back through
the snarled up columns of cars, he suddenly found that he reminded himself of
the crazies he had seen on the streets of New York, who would career out into the
road to explain to the oncoming traffic about the Day of Judgement, imminent alien
invasions and incompetence and corruption in the Pentagon. He put his hands above
his head and started to shout out, ‘The Gods are walking the Earth! The Gods
are walking the Earth!’
This further inflamed the feelings
of those who were beeping their horns at his stationary car, and quickly the
whole rose through a crescendo of majestic cacophony, with Dirk’s voice ringing
out above it.
‘The Gods are walking the Earth! The
Gods are walking the Earth!’ he hollered. ‘The Gods are walking the Earth!
Thank you!’ he added, and ducked down into his car, put it into Drive and
pulled away, allowing the whole jammed mass at last to seethe easily forward.
He wondered why he was so sure. An
‘Act of God’. Merely a chance, careless phrase by which people were able to dispose
conveniently of awkward phenomena that would admit of no more rational
explanation. But it was the chance carelessness of it which particularly
appealed to Dirk because words used carelessly, as if they did not matter in
any serious way, often allowed otherwise well-guarded truths to seep through.
An inexplicable disappearance. Oslo and
a hammer: a tiny, tiny coincidence which struck a tiny, tiny note. However, it was
a note which sang in the midst of the daily hubbub of white noise, and other tiny
notes were singing at the same pitch. An Act of God, Oslo, and a hammer. A man with
a hammer, trying to go to Norway, is prevented, loses his temper, and as a
result there is an ‘Act of God’.
If, thought Dirk, if a being were
immortal he would still be alive today. That, quite simply, was what ‘immortal’
meant.
How would an immortal being have a
passport?
Quite simply, how? Dirk tried to
imagine what might happen if -- to pick a name quite at random -- the God Thor,
he of the Norwegian ancestry and the great hammer, were to arrive at the
passport office and try to explain who he was and how come he had no birth
certificate. There would be no shock, no horror, no loud exclamations of astonishment, just
blank, bureaucratic impossibility. It wouldn’t be a matter of whether anybody
believed him or not, it would simply be a question of producing a valid birth certificate.
He could stand there wreaking miracles all day if he liked but at close of business,
if he didn’t have a valid birth certificate, he would simply be asked to leave.
And credit cards.
If, to sustain for a moment the same
arbitrary hypothesis, the God Thor were alive and for some reason at large in
England, then he would probably be the only person in the country who did not receive
the constant barrage of invitations to apply for an American Express card, crude
threats by the same post to take their American Express cards away, and gift catalogues
full of sumptuously unpleasant things, lavishly tooled in naff brown plastic.
Dirk found the idea quite
breathtaking.
That is, if he were the only god at
large -- which, once you were to accept the first extravagant hypothesis, was
hardly likely to be the case.
But imagine for a moment such a person
attempting to leave the country, armed with no passport, no credit cards,
merely the power to throw thunderbolts and who knew what else. You would
probably have to imagine a scene very similar to the one that did in fact occur
at Terminal Two, Heathrow.
But why, if you were a Norse god,
would you be needing to leave the country by means of a scheduled airline?
Surely there were other means? Dirk rather thought that one of the perks of
being an immortal divine might be the ability to fly under your own power. From
what he remembered of his reading of the Norse legends many years ago, the gods
were continually flying all over the place and there was never any mention of
them hanging around in departure lounges eating crummy buns. Admittedly, the world
was not, in those days, bristling with air- traffic controllers, radar, missile
warning systems and such like. Still, a quick hop across the North Sea
shouldn’t be that much of a problem for a god, particularly if the weather was in
your favour, which, if you were the God of Thunder, you would pretty much
expect it to be, or want to know the reason why. Should it?
Another tiny note sang in the back
of Dirk’s mind and then was lost in the hubbub.
He wondered for a moment what it was
like to be a whale. Physically, he thought, he was probably well placed to get
some good insights, though whales were better adapted for their lives of
gliding about in the vast pelagic blueness than he was for his of struggling up
through the Pentonville Road traffic in a weary old Jaguar -- but what he was thinking
of, in fact, was the whales’ songs. In the past the whales had been able to sing
to each other across whole oceans, even from one ocean to another because sound
travels such huge distances underwater. But now, again because of the way in which
sound travels, there is no part of the ocean that is not constantly jangling
with the hubbub of ships’ motors, through which it is now virtually impossible
for the whales to hear each other’s songs or messages.
So fucking what, is pretty much the way
that people tend to view this problem, and understandably so, thought Dirk.
After all, who wants to hear a bunch of fat fish, oh all right, mammals,
burping at each other?
But for a moment Dirk had a sense of
infinite loss and sadness that somewhere amongst the frenzy of information noise
that daily rattled the lives of men he thought he might have heard a few notes that
denoted the movements of gods.
As he turned north into Islington
and began the long haul up past the pizza restaurants and estate agents, he felt
almost frantic at the idea of what their lives must now be like.
[::: CHAPTER 18
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
Thin fingers of lightning spread out
across the heavy underside of the great clouds which hung from the sky like a sagging
stomach. A small crack of fretful thunder nagged at it and dragged from it a
few mean drops of greasy drizzle.
Beneath the sky ranged a vast
assortment of wild turrets, gnarled spires and pinnacles which prodded at it,
goaded and inflamed it till it seemed it would burst and drown them in a flood
of festering horrors.
High in the flickering darkness, silent
figures stood guard behind long shields, dragons crouched gaping at the foul sky
as Odin, father of the Gods of Asgard, approached the great iron portals
through which led to his domain and on into the vaulted halls of Valhalla. The air
was full of the noiseless howls of great winged dogs, welcoming their master to
the seat of his rule. Lightning searched among the towers and turrets.
The great, ancient and immortal God
of Asgard was returning to the current site of his domain in a manner that
would have surprised even him centuries ago in the years of the prime of his
life -- for even the immortal gods have their primes, when their powers are
rampant and they both nourish and hold sway over the world of men, the world
whose needs give them birth -- he was returning in a large, unmarked grey
Mercedes van.
The van drew to a halt in a secluded
area.
The cab door opened and there
climbed down from it a dull, slow- faced man in an unmarked grey uniform. He
was a man who was charged with the work he did in life because he was not one
to ask questions -- not so much on account of any natural quality of discretion
as because he simply could never think of any questions to ask. Moving with a slow,
rolling gait, like a paddle being pulled through porridge, he made his way to
the rear of the van and opened the rear doors -- an elaborate procedure involving
the co-ordinated manipulation of many sliders and levers.
At length the doors swung open, and if
Kate had been present she might for a moment have been jolted by the thought
that perhaps the van was carrying Albanian electricity after all. A haze of light
greeted Hillow -- the man’s name was Hillow -- but nothing about this struck him
as odd. A haze of light was simply what he expected to see whenever he opened
this door. The first time ever he had opened it he had simply thought to himself,
‘Oh. A haze of light. Oh well,’ and more or less left it at that, on the strength
of which he had guaranteed himself regular employment for as long as he cared
to live.
The haze of light subsided and coalesced
into the shape of an old, old man in a trolley bed attended by a short little
figure whom Hillow would probably have thought was the most evil-looking person
he had ever seen if he had had a mind to recall the other people he had seen in
his life and run through them all one by one, making the comparison. That,
however, was harder than Hillow wished to work. His only concern at present was
to assist the small figure with the decanting of the old man’s bed on to ground
level.
This was fluently achieved. The legs
and wheels of the bed were a miracle of
smoothly operating stainless steel technology.
They unlocked, rolled, swivelled, in
elaborately interlocked movements which made the negotiating of steps or bumps all
part of the same fluid, gliding motion.
To the right of this area lay a
large ante-chamber panelled in finely carved wood with great marble torch holders
standing proudly from the walls. This in turn led into the great vaulted hall
itself. To the left, however, lay the entrance to the majestic inner chambers where
Odin would go to prepare himself for the encounters of the night.
He hated all this. Hounded from his
bed, he muttered to himself, though in truth he was bringing his bed with him.
Made to listen once again to all kinds of self indulgent clap-trap from his bone-headed
thunderous son who would not accept, could not accept, simply did not have the intelligence
to accept the new realities of life. If he would not accept them then he must
be extinguished, and tonight Asgard would see the extinction of an immortal
god. It was all, thought Odin fractiously, too much for someone at his time of life,
which was extremely advanced, but not in any particular direction.
He wanted merely to stay in his
hospital, which he loved. The arrangement which had brought him to that place
was of the sweetest kind and though it was not without its cost, it was a cost
that simply had to be borne and that was all there was to it. There were new realities,
and he had learned to embrace them. Those who did not would simply have to suffer
the consequences. Nothing came of nothing, even for a god.
After tonight he could return to his life in the Woodshead indefinitely,
and that would be good. He said as much to Hillow.
‘Clean white sheets,’ he said to
Hillow, who merely nodded, blankly. ‘Linen sheets. Every day, clean sheets.’
Hillow manoeuvred the bed around and
up a step.
‘Being a god, Hillow,’ continued
Odin, ‘being a god, well, it was unclean, you hear what I’m saying? There was
no one who took care of the sheets. I mean really took care of them. Would you
think that? In a situation like mine? Father of the Gods? There was no one,
absolutely no one, who came in and said, “Mr Odwin,”’ -- he chuckled to himself
-- ‘they call me Mr Odwin there, you know. They don’t quite know who they’re dealing
with. I don’t think they could handle it, do you, Hillow? But there was no one in
all that time who came in and said, “Mr Odwin, I have changed your bed and you have
clean sheets.” No one. There was constant talk about hewing things and ravaging
things and splitting things asunder. Lots of big talk of things being mighty,
and of things being riven, and of things being in thrall to other things, but
very little attention given, as I now realise, to the laundry. Let me give you
an example...’
His reminiscences were for a moment interrupted,
however, by the arrival of his vehicle at a great doorway which was guarded by
a great sweaty splodge of a being who stood swaying, arms akimbo, in their path.
Toe Rag, who had been preserving an intense silence as he stalked along just
ahead of the bed, hurried forward and had a quick word with the sweating
creature, who had to bend, red-faced, to hear him. Then instantly the sweaty creature shrank back with glistening obsequiousness into its yellow
lair, and the sacred trolley rolled forward into the great halls, chambers and
corridors from which great gusty echoes roared and fetid odours blew.
‘Let me give you an example,
Hillow,’ continued Odin. ‘Take this place for example. Take Valhalla...’
[::: CHAPTER 19 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
Turning north was a manoeuvre which normally
had the effect of restoring a sense of reason and sanity to things, but Dirk could
not escape a sense of foreboding.
Furthermore it came on to rain a
little, which should have helped, but it was such mean and wretched rain to
come from such a heavy sky that it only increased the sense of claustrophobia and
frustration which gripped the night. Dirk turned on the car wipers which grumbled
because they didn’t have quite enough rain to wipe away, so he turned them off
again. Rain quickly speckled the windscreen.
He turned on the wipers again, but
they still refused to feel that the exercise was worthwhile, and scraped and squeaked
in protest. The streets turned treacherously slippery.
Dirk shook his head. He was being
quite absurd, he told himself, in the worst possible way. He had allowed
himself to become fanciful in a manner that he quite despised. He astounded himself
at the wild fantasies he had built on the flimsiest amount of, well he would
hardly call it evidence, mere conjecture.
An accident at an airport. Probably
a simple explanation.
A man with a hammer. So what?
A grey van which Kate Schechter had
seen at the hospital. Nothing unusual about that. Dirk had nearly collided with
it, but again, that was a perfectly commonplace occurrence.
A Coca-Cola machine: he hadn’t taken
that into account.
Where did a Coca-Cola machine fit
into these wild notions about ancient gods? The only idea he had about that was
simply too ridiculous for words and he refused even to acknowledge it to
himself.
At that point Dirk found himself
driving past the house where, that very morning, he had encountered a client of
his who had had his severed head placed on a revolving record turntable by a
green-eyed devil-figure waving a scythe and a blood-signed contract who had then
vanished into thin air.
He peered at it as he passed, and
when a large dark-blue BMW pulled out from the kerb just ahead of him he ran straight
into the back of it, and for the second time that day he had to leap out of his
car, already shouting.
‘For God’s sake can’t you look where
you’re going?’ he exclaimed, in the hope of bagging his adversary’s best lines
from the outset. ‘Stupid people!’ he continued, without pausing for breath. ‘Careering
all over the place. Driving without due care and attention! Reckless assault!’ Confuse
your enemy, he thought. It was a little like phoning somebody up, and saying
‘Yes? Hello?’ in a testy voice when they answered, which was one of Dirk’s
favourite methods of whiling away long, hot summer afternoons. He bent down and
examined the palpable dent in the rear of the BMW, which was quite obviously,
damn it, a brand new one. Blast and bugger it, thought Dirk.
‘Look what you’ve done to my bumper!’
he cried. ‘I hope you have a good lawyer!’
‘I am a good lawyer,’ said a quiet
voice which was followed by a quiet click. Dirk looked up in momentary
apprehension. The quiet click was only the sound of the car door closing.
The man was wearing an Italian suit,
which was also quiet. He had quiet glasses, quietly cut hair, and though a
bow-tie is not, by its very nature, a quiet object, the particular bow-tie he wore
was, nevertheless, a very quietly spotted example of the genre. He drew a slim wallet
from his pocket and also a slim silver pencil. He walked without fuss to the rear
of Dirk’s Jaguar and made a note of the registration number.
‘Do you have a card?’ he enquired as
he did so, without looking up. ‘Here’s mine,’ he added, taking one from his
wallet. He made a note on the back of it. ‘My registration number,’ he said,
‘and the name of my insurance company. Perhaps you would be good enough to let
me have the name of yours. If you don’t have it with you, I’ll got my girl to
call you.’
Dirk sighed, and decided there was
no point in putting up a fight on this one. He fished out his wallet and leafed
through the various business cards that seemed to accumulate in it as if from
nowhere. He toyed for a second with the idea of being Wesley Arlott, an ocean-going
yacht navigation consultant from, apparently,
Arkansas, but then thought better of it. The man had, after all, taken his
registration number, and although Dirk had no particular recollection of paying
an insurance premium of late, he also had no particular recollection of not
paying one either, which was a reasonably promising sign. He handed over a
bona- fide card with a wince. The man looked at it.
‘Mr Gently,’ he said. ‘Private investigator.
I’m sorry, private /holistic/ investigator. OK.’
He put the card away, taking no
further interest.
Dirk had never felt so patronised in
his life. At that moment there was another quiet click from the other side of the
car. Dirk looked across to see a woman with red spectacles standing there
giving him a frozen half smile. She was the woman he had spoken with over Geoffrey
Anstey’s garden wall this morning, and the man, Dirk therefore supposed, was probably her husband. He
wondered for a second whether he should wrestle them to the ground and question
them rigorously and violently, but he was suddenly feeling immensely tired and
run down.
He acknowledged the woman in red
spectacles with a minute inclination of
his head.
‘All done, Cynthia,’ said the man
and flicked a smile on and off at her. ‘It’s all taken care of.’
She nodded faintly, and the two of
them climbed back into their BMW and after a moment or two pulled away without
fuss and disappeared away down the road. Dirk looked at the card in his hand.
Clive Draycott. He was with a good firm of City solicitors. Dirk stuck the card
away in his wallet, climbed despondently back into his car, and drove on back to
his house, where he found a large golden eagle sitting patiently on his
doorstep.
[::: CHAPTER 20
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
Kate rounded on her guest as soon as
they were both inside her flat with the door closed and Kate could be reasonably
certain that Neil wasn’t going to sneak back out of his flat and lurk
disapprovingly half way up the stairs. The continuing thumping of his bass was
at least her guarantee of privacy.
‘All right,’ she said fiercely, ‘so
what is the deal with the eagle then? What is the deal with all the street
lights? Huh?’
The Norse God of Thunder looked at her
awkwardly. He had to remove his great horned helmet because it was banging
against the ceiling and leaving scratch marks in the plaster. He tucked it
under his arm.
‘What is the deal,’ continued Kate, ‘with
the Coca-Cola machine? What is the deal with the hammer? What, in short, is the
big deal? Huh?’
Thor said nothing. He frowned for a
second in arrogant irritation, then frowned in something that looked somewhat
like embarrassment, and then simply stood there and bled at her.
For a few seconds she resisted the impending
internal collapse of her attitude, and then realised it was just going to go to
hell anyway so she might as well go with it.
‘OK,’ she muttered, ‘let’s get all that
cleaned up. I’ll find some antiseptic.’
She went to rummage in the kitchen
cupboard and returned with a bottle to find Thor saying ‘No’ at her.
‘No what?’ she said crossly, putting
the bottle down on the table with a bit of a bang.
‘That,’ said Thor, and pushed the
bottle back at her. ‘No.’
‘What’s the matter with it?’
Thor just shrugged and stared
moodily at a corner of the room. There was nothing that could be considered remotely
interesting in that corner of the room, so he was clearly looking at it out of
sheer bloody-mindedness.
‘Look, buster,’ said Kate, ‘if I can
call you buster, what --’
‘Thor,’ said Thor, ‘God of --’
‘Yes,’ said Kate, ‘you’ve told me
all the things you’re God of. I’m trying to clean up your arm.’
‘Sedra,’ said Thor, holding his
bleeding arm out, but away from her. He peered at it anxiously.
‘What?’
‘Crushed leaves of sedra. Oil of the
kernel of the apricot. Infusion of bitter orange blossom. Oil of almonds. Sage
and comfrey. Not this.’
He pushed the bottle of antiseptic
off the table and sank into a mood.
‘Right!’ said Kate, picked up the
bottle and hurled it at him. It rebounded off his cheekbone leaving an instant
red mark. Thor lunged forward in a rage, but Kate simply stood her ground with a
finger pointed at him.
‘You stay right there, buster!’ she
said, and he stopped. ‘Anything special you need for that?’
Thor looked puzzled for a moment.
‘That!’ said Kate, pointing at the
blossoming bruise on his cheek.
‘Vengeance,’ said Thor.
‘I’ll have to see what I can do,’
said Kate. She turned on her heel and stalked out of the room.
After about two minutes of unseen activity
Kate returned to the room, trailed by wisps of steam.
‘All right,’ she said, ‘come with
me.’
She led him into her bathroom. He
followed her with a great show of reluctance, but he followed her. Kate had been
trailed by wisps of steam because the bathroom was full of it. The bath itself was
overflowing with bubbles and gunk.
There were some bottles and pots,
mostly empty, lined up along a small shelf above the bath. Kate picked them up one
by one and displayed them at him.
‘Apricot kernel oil,’ she said, and turned
it upside down to emphasise its emptiness. ‘All in there,’ she added, pointing
at the foaming bath.
‘Neroli oil,’ she said, picking up
the next one, ‘distilled from the blossom of bitter oranges. All in there.’
She picked up the next one. ‘Orange
cream bath oil. Contains almond oil. All in there.’
She picked up the pots.
‘Sage and comfrey,’ she said of one,
‘and sedra oil. One of them’s a hand cream and the other’s hair conditioner,
but they’re all in there, along with a tube of Aloe Lip Preserver, some
Cucumber Cleansing Milk, Honeyed Beeswax and Jojoba Oil Cleanser, Rhassoul Mud,
Seaweed and Birch Shampoo, Rich Night Cream with Vitamin E, and a very great
deal of cod liver oil. I’m afraid I haven’t got anything called “Vengeance”, but
here’s some Calvin Klein “Obsession”.’
She took the stopper from a bottle of
perfume and threw the bottle in the bath.
‘I’ll be in the next room when
you’re done.’
With that she marched out, and
slammed the door on him. She waited in the other room, firmly reading a book.
[::: CHAPTER 21
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
For about a minute Dirk remained
sitting motionless in his car a few yards away from his front door. He wondered
what his next move should be. A small, cautious one, he rather thought. The
last thing he wanted to have to contend with at the moment was a startled
eagle.
He watched it intently. It stood there
with a pert magnificence about its bearing, its talons gripped tightly round the
edge of the stone step. From time to time it preened itself, and then peered sharply
up the street and down the street, dragging one of its great talons across the stone
in a deeply worrying manner. Dirk admired the creature greatly for its size and
its plumage and its general sense of extreme air-worthiness, but, asking
himself if he liked the way that the light from the street lamp glinted in its great
glassy eye or on the huge hook of its beak, he had to admit that he did not.
The beak was a major piece of
armoury.
It was a beak that would frighten
any animal on earth, even one that was already dead and in a tin. Its talons
looked as if they could rip up a small Volvo. And it was sitting waiting on Dirk’s
doorstep, looking up and down the street with a gaze that was at once
meaningful and mean.
Dirk wondered if he should simply
drive off and leave the country. Did he have his passport? No. It was at home.
It was behind the door which was behind the eagle, in a drawer somewhere or,
more likely, lost.
He could sell up. The ratio of estate
agents to actual houses in the area was rapidly approaching parity. One of their
lot could come and deal with the house. He’d had enough of it, with its fridges
and its wildlife and its ineradicable position on the mailing lists of the American
Express company.
Or he could, he supposed with a
slight shiver, just go and see what it was the eagle wanted. There was a
thought. Rats, probably, or a small whippet. All Dirk had, to his knowledge,
was some Rice Krispies and an old muffin, and he didn’t see those appealing to this magisterial creature
of the air. He rather fancied that he could make out fresh blood congealing on
the bird’s talons, but he told himself firmly not to be so ridiculous.
He was just going to have to go and
face up to the thing, explain that he was fresh out of rats and take the
consequences.
Quietly, infinitely quietly, he
pushed open the door of his car, and stole out of it, keeping his head down. He
peered at it from over the bonnet of the car. It hadn’t moved. That is to say,
it hadn’t left the district. It was still looking this way and that around
itself with, possibly, a heightened sense of alertness. Dirk didn’t know in
what remote mountain eyrie the creature had learnt to listen out for the sound of
Jaguar car door hinges revolving in their sockets, but the sound had clearly
not escaped its attention.
Cautiously, Dirk bobbed along behind
the line of cars that had prevented him from being able to park directly
outside his own house. In a couple of seconds all that separated him from the extraordinary
creature was a small, blue Renault.
What next?
He could simply stand up and, as it were,
declare himself. He would be saying, in effect, ‘Here I am, do what you will.’ Whatever
then transpired, the Renault could probably bear the brunt.
There was always the possibility, of
course, that the eagle would be pleased to see him, that all this swooping it
had been directing at him had been just its way of being matey. Assuming, of
course, that it was the same eagle. That was not such an enormous assumption.
The number of golden eagles at large in North London at any one time was, Dirk guessed,
fairly small.
Or maybe it was just nesting on his
doorstep completely by chance, enjoying a quick breather prior to having
another hurtle through the sky in pursuit of whatever it is that eagles hurtle
through the sky after.
Whatever the explanation, now, Dirk
realised, was the time that he had simply to take his chances. He steeled
himself, took a deep breath and arose from behind the Renault, like a spirit
rising from the deep.
The eagle was looking in another
direction at the time, and it was a second or so before it looked back to the
front and saw him, at which point it reacted with a loud screech and stepped
back an inch or two, a reaction which Dirk felt a little put out by. It then
blinked rapidly a few times and adopted a sort of perky expression of which
Dirk did not have the faintest idea what to make.
He waited for a second or two, until
he felt the situation had settled down again after all the foregoing
excitement, and then stopped forward tentatively, round the front of the
Renault. A number of quiet, interrogative cawing noises seemed to float
uncertainly through the air, and then after a moment Dirk realised that he was
making them himself and made himself stop. This was an eagle he was dealing
with, not a budgie.
It was at this point that he made
his mistake.
With his mind entirely taken up with
eagles, the possible intentions of eagles, and the many ways in which eagles
might be considered to differ from small kittens, he did not concentrate enough
on what he was doing as he stepped up out of the road and on to a pavement that
was slick with the recent drizzle. As he brought his rear foot forward it caught
on the bumper of the car he wobbled, slipped, and then did that thing which one
should never do to a large eagle of uncertain temper, which was to fling
himself headlong at it with his arms outstretched.
The eagle reacted instantly.
Without a second’s hesitation it
hopped neatly aside and allowed Dirk the space he needed to collapse heavily on
to his own doorstep. It then peered down at him with a scorn that would have
withered a lesser man, or at least a man that had been looking up at that
moment.
Dirk groaned.
He had sustained a blow to the
temple from the edge of the step, and it was a blow, he felt, that he could
just as easily have done without this evening. He lay there gasping for a second
or two, then at last rolled over heavily, clasping one hand to his forehead,
the other to his nose, and looked up at the great bird in apprehension,
reflecting bitterly on the conditions under which he was expected to work.
When it became clear to him that he
appeared for the moment to have nothing to fear from the eagle, who was merely regarding
him with a kind of quizzical, blinking doubt, he sat up, and then slowly
dragged himself back to his feet and wiped and smacked some of the dirt off his
coat. Then he hunted through his pockets for his keys and unlocked the front door,
which seemed a little loose. He waited to see what the eagle would do next.
With a slight rustle of its wings it
hopped over the lintel and into his hall. It looked around itself, and seemed
to regard what it saw with a little distaste. Dirk didn’t know what it was that
eagles expected of people’s hallways, but had to admit to himself that it wasn’t
only the eagle which reacted like that. The disorder was not that great, but
there was a grimness to it which tended to cast a pall over visitors, and the
eagle was clearly not immune to this effect.
Dirk picked up a large flat envelope
lying on his doormat, looked inside it to check that it was what he had been
expecting, then noticed that a picture was missing from the wall. It wasn’t a particularly
wonderful picture, merely a small Japanese print that he had found in Camden
Passage and quite liked, but the point was that it was missing. The hook on the
wall was empty. There was a chair missing as well, he realised.
The possible significance of this
suddenly struck him, and he hurried through to the kitchen. Many of his
assorted kitchen implements had clearly gone. The rack of largely unused
Sabatier knives, the food processor and his radio cassette player had all
vanished, but he did, however, have a new fridge. It had obviously been delivered
by Nobby Paxton’s felonious thugs and he would just have to make the usual little
list.
Still, he had a new fridge and that was
a considerable load off his mind. Already the whole atmosphere in the kitchen seemed
easier. The tension had lifted. There was a new sense of lightness and
springiness in the air which had even communicated itself to the pile of old pizza
boxes which seemed now to recline at a jaunty rather than an oppressive angle.
Dirk cheerfully threw open the door to
the new fridge and was delighted to find it completely and utterly empty. Its
inner light shone on perfectly clean blue and white walls and on gleaming
chrome shelves. He liked it so much that he instantly determined to keep it like
that. He would put nothing in it at all. His food would just have to go off in
plain view.
Good. He closed it again.
A screech and a flap behind him
reminded him that he was entertaining a visiting eagle. He turned to find it
glaring at him from on top of the kitchen table.
Now that he was getting a little more
accustomed to it, and had not actually been viciously attacked as he had
suspected he might be, it seemed a little less fearsome than it had at first.
It was still a serious amount of eagle, but perhaps an eagle was a slightly more
manageable proposition than he had originally supposed. He relaxed a little and
took off his hat, pulled off his coat, and threw them on to a chair.
The eagle seemed at this juncture to
sense that Dirk might be getting the wrong idea about it and flexed one of its
claws at him. With sudden alarm Dirk saw that it did indeed have something that
closely resembled congealed blood on the talons. He backed away from it hurriedly.
The eagle then rose up to its full height on its talons and began to spread its
great wings out, wider and wider, beating them very slowly and leaning forward
so as to keep its balance. Dirk did the only thing he could think to do under
the cincumstances and bolted from the room, slamming the door behind him and jamming
the hall table up against it.
A terrible cacophony of screeching and
scratching and buffeting arose instantly from behind it. Dirk sat leaning back against
the table, panting and trying to catch his breath, and then after a while began
to get a worrying feeling about what the bird was up to now.
It seemed to him that the eagle was
actually dive-bombing itself against the door. Every few seconds the pattern
would repeat itself -- first a great beating of wings, then a rush, then a terrible
cracking thud. Dirk didn’t think it would get through the door, but was alarmed
that it might beat itself to death trying. The creature seemed to be quite frantic
about something, but what, Dirk could not even begin to imagine. He tried to calm
himself down and think clearly, to work out what he should do next.
He should phone Kate and make
certain she was all right.
/Whoosh, thud!/
He should finally open up the
envelope he had been carrying with him all day and examine its contents.
/Whoosh, thud!/
For that he would need a sharp
knife.
/Whoosh, thud!/
Three rather awkward thoughts then struck
him in fairly quick succession.
/Whoosh, thud!/
First, the only sharp knives in the
place, assuming Nobby’s removal people had left him with any at all, were in
the kitchen.
/Whoosh, thud!/
That didn’t matter so much in
itself, because he could probably find something in the house that would do.
/Whoosh, thud!/
The second thought was that the
actual envelope itself was in the pocket of his coat which he had left lying
over the back of a chair in the kitchen.
/Whoosh, thud!/
The third thought was very similar to
the second and had to do with the location of the piece of paper with Kate’s
telephone number on it.
/Whoosh, thud!/
Oh God.
/Whoosh, thud!/
Dirk began to feel very, very tired
at the way the day was working out. He was deeply worried by the sense of
impending calamity, but was still by no means able to divine what lay at the
root of it.
/Whoosh, thud!/
Well, he knew what he had to do
now...
/Whoosh, thud!/
...so there was no point in not getting
on with it. He quietly pulled the table away from the door.
/Whoosh --/
He ducked and yanked the door open,
passing smoothly under the eagle as it hurtled out into the hallway and hit the
opposite wall. He slammed the door closed behind him from inside the kitchen,
pulled his coat off the chair and jammed the chair back up under the handle.
/Whoosh, thud!/
The damage done to the door on this
side was both considerable and impressive, and Dirk began seriously to worry
about what this behaviour said about the bird’s state of mind, or what the
bird’s state of mind might become if it maintained this behaviour for very much
longer.
/Whoosh...scratch.../
The same thought seemed to have
occurred to the bird at that moment, and after a brief flurry of screeching and
of scratching at the door with its talons it lapsed into a grumpy and defeated silence,
which after it had been going on for about a minute became almost as disturbing
as the previous batterings.
Dirk wondered what it was up to.
He approached the door cautiously
and very, very quietly moved the chair back a little so that he could see
through the keyhole. He squatted down and peered through it. At first it seemed
to him that he could see nothing through it, that it must be blocked by something.
Then, a slight flicker and glint close up on the other side suddenly revealed
the startling truth, which was that the eagle also had an eye up at the keyhole
and was busy looking back at him. Dirk almost toppled backwards with the shock
of the realisation, and backed away from the door with a sense of slight horror
and revulsion.
This was extremely intelligent
behaviour for an eagle wasn’t it? Was it? How could he find out? He couldn’t
think of any ornithological experts to phone. All his reference books were
piled up in other rooms of the house, and he didn’t think he’d be able to keep on
pulling off the same stunt with impunity, certainly not when he was dealing
with an eagle which had managed to figure out what keyholes were for.
He retreated to the kitchen sink and
found some kitchen towel. He folded it into a wad, soaked it, and dabbed it
first on his bleeding temple, which was swelling up nicely, and then on his
nose which was still very tender, and had been a considerable size for most of
the day now. Maybe the eagle was an eagle of delicate sensibilities and had reacted
badly to the sight of Dirk’s face in its current, much abused, state and had
simply lost its mind. Dirk sighed and sat down.
Kate’s telephone, which was the next
thing he turned his attention to, was answered by a machine when he tried to
ring it. Her voice told him, very sweetly, that he was welcome to leave a message
after the beep, but warned that she hardly ever listened to them and that it was
much better to talk to her directly, only he couldn’t because she wasn’t in, so
he’d best try again.
Thank you very much, he thought, and
put the phone down.
He realised that the truth of the matter
was this: he had spent the day putting off opening the envelope because of what
he was worried about finding in it. It wasn’t that the idea was frightening,
though indeed it was frightening that a man should sell his soul to a green- eyed
man with a scythe, which is what circumstances were trying very hard to suggest
had happened. It was just that it was extremely depressing that he should sell it
to a green-eyed man with a scythe in exchange for a share in the royalties of a
hit record.
That was what it looked like on the
face of it. Wasn’t it?
Dirk picked up the other envelope, the
one which had been waiting for him on his doormat, delivered there by courier
from a large London bookshop where Dirk had an account. He pulled out the contents,
which were a copy of the sheet music of /Hot Potato/, written by Colin Paignton,
Phil Mulville and Geoff Anstey.
The lyrics were, well, straightforward.
They provided a basic repetitive bit of funk rhythm and a simple sense of
menace and cheerful callousness which had caught the mood of last summer. They
went:
/Hot Potato,
Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
it up.
Quick, pass it on, pass it on, pass
it on.
You don’t want to get caught, get
caught, get caught.
Drop it on someone. Who? Who?
Anybody.
You better not have it when the big
one comes.
I said you better not have it when
the big one comes.
It’s a Hot Potato./
And so on. The repeated phrases got
tossed back and forward between the two members of the band, the drum machine got
heavier and heavier, and there had been a dance video.
Was that all it was going to be? Big
deal. A nice house in Lupton Street with polyurethaned floors and a broken
marriage?
Things had certainly come down a
long way since the great days of Faust and Mephistopheles, when a man could gain
all the knowledge of the universe, achieve all the ambitions of his mind and all
the pleasures of the flesh for the price of his soul. Now it was a few record
royalties, a few pieces of trendy furniture, a trinket to stick on your bathroom
wall and, whap, your head comes off.
So what exactly was the deal? What
was the /Potato/ contract? Who was getting what and why?
Dirk rummaged through a drawer for the
breadknife, sat down once more, took the envelope from his coat pocket and ripped
through the congealed strata of Sellotape which held the end of it together.
Out fell a thick bundle of papers.
[::: CHAPTER 22
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
At exactly the moment that the telephone
rang, the door to Kate’s sitting-room opened. The Thunder God attempted to
stomp in through it, but in fact he wafted. He had clearly soaked himself very thoroughly
in the stuff Kate had thrown into the bath, then redressed, and torn up a nightgown
of Kate’s to bind his forearm with. He casually tossed a handful of softened oak
shards away into the corner of the room. Kate decided for the moment to ignore
both the deliberate provocations and the telephone. The former she could deal
with and the latter she had a machine for dealing with.
‘I’ve been reading about you,’ she
challenged the Thunder God. ‘Where’s your beard?’
He took the book, a one volume
encyclopaedia, from her hands and glanced at it before tossing it aside
contemptuously.
‘Ha,’ he said, ‘I shaved it off.
When I was in Wales.’ He scowled at the memory.
‘What were you doing in Wales for
heaven’s sake?’
‘Counting the stones,’ he said with a
shrug, and went to stare out of the window.
There was a huge, moping anxiety in his
bearing. It suddenly occurred to Kate with a spasm of something not entirely unlike
fear, that sometimes when people got like that, it was because they had picked
up their mood from the weather. With a Thunder God it presumably worked the other
way round. The sky outside certainly had a restless and disgruntled look.
Her reactions suddenly started to
become very confused.
‘Excuse me if this sounds like a
stupid question,’ said Kate, ‘but I’m a little at sea here. I’m not used to
spending the evening with someone who’s got a whole day named after them. What stones
were you counting in Wales?’
‘All of them,’ said Thor in a low growl.
‘All of them between this size...’ he held the tip of his forefinger and thumb
about a quarter of an inch apart, ‘...and this size.’ He held his two hands
about a yard apart, and then put them down again.
Kate stared at him blankly.
‘Well...how many were there?’ she
asked. It seemed only polite to ask.
He rounded on her angrily.
‘Count them yourself if you want to
know!’ he shouted. ‘What’s the point in my spending years and years and years
counting them, so that I’m the only person who knows, and who will ever know,
if I just go and tell somebody else? Well?’
He turned back to the window.
‘Anyway,’ he said, ‘I’ve been worried
about it. I think I may have lost count somewhere in Mid-Glamorgan. But I’m
not,’ he shouted, ‘going to do it again!’
‘Well, why on earth would you do
such an extraordinary thing in the first place?’
‘It was a burden placed on me by my
father. A punishment. A penance.’ He glowered.
‘Your father?’ said Kate. ‘Do you
mean Odin?’
‘The All-Father,’ said Thor. ‘Father
of the Gods of Asgard.’
‘And you’re saying he’s alive?’
Thor turned to look at her as if she
was stupid.
‘We are immortals,’ he said, simply.
Downstairs, Neil chose that moment to
conclude his thunderous performance on the bass, and the house seemed to sing
in its aftermath with an eerie silence.
‘Immortals are what you wanted,’ said
Thor in a low, quiet voice. ‘Immortals are what you got. It is a little hard on
us. You wanted us to be for ever, so we are for ever. Then you forget about us.
But still we are for ever. Now at last, many are dead, many dying,’ he then
added in a quiet voice, ‘but it takes a special effort.’
‘I can’t even begin to understand what
you’re talking about,’ said Kate, ‘you say that I, we --’
‘You /can/ begin to understand,’ said
Thor, angrily, ‘which is why I have come to you. Do you know that most people
hardly see me? Hardly notice me at all? It is not that we are hidden. We are
here. We move among you. My people. Your gods. You gave birth to us. You made
us be what you would not dare to be yourselves. Yet you will not acknowledge us.
If I walk along one of your streets in this...world you have made for
yourselves without us, then barely an eye will once flicker in my direction.’
‘Is this when you’re wearing the
helmet?’
‘Especially when I’m wearing the
helmet!’
‘Well --’
‘You make fun of me!’ roared Thor.
‘You make it very easy for a girl,’
said Kate. ‘I don’t know what -- ’
Suddenly the room seemed to quake
and then to catch its breath. All of Kate’s insides wobbled violently and then
held very still. In the sudden horrible silence, a blue china table lamp slowly
toppled off the table, hit the floor, and crawled off to a dark corner of the room
where it sat in a worried little defensive huddle.
Kate stared at it and tried to be calm
about it. She felt as if cold, soft jelly was trickling down her skin.
‘Did you do that?’ she said shakily.
Thor was looking livid and confused.
He muttered, ‘Do not make me angry with you. You were very lucky.’ He looked
away.
‘What are you /saying/?’
‘I’m saying that I wish you to come
with me.’
‘What? What about /that/?’ She
pointed at the small befuddled kitten under the table which had so recently and
so confusingly been a blue china table lamp.
‘There’s nothing I can do for it.’
Kate was suddenly so tired and confused
and frightened that she found she was nearly in tears. She stood biting her lip
and trying to be as angry as she could.
‘Oh yeah?’ she said. ‘I thought you
were meant to be a god. I hope you haven’t got into my home under false
pretences, I...’ She stumbled to a halt, and then resumed in a different tone
of voice.
‘Do you mean,’ she said, in a small voice,
‘that you have been here, in the world, /all this time/?’
‘Here, and in Asgard,’ said Thor.
‘Asgard,’ said Kate. ‘The home of
the gods?’
Thor was silent. It was a grim
silence that seemed to be full of something that bothered him deeply.
‘Where is Asgard?’ demanded Kate.
Again Thor did not speak. He was a man
of very few words and enormously long pauses. When at last he did answer, it
wasn’t at all clear whether he had been thinking all that time or just standing
there.
‘Asgard is also here,’ he said. ‘All
worlds are here.’
He drew out from under his furs his
great hammer and studied its head deeply and with an odd curiosity, as if something
about it was very puzzling. Kate wondered where she found such a gesture
familiar from. She found that it instinctively made her want to duck. She stepped
back very slightly and was watchful.
When he looked up again, there was an
altogether new focus and energy in his eyes, as if he was gathering himself up
to hurl himself at something.
‘Tonight I must be in Asgard,’ he
said. ‘I must confront my father Odin in the great hall of Valhalla and bring
him to account for what he has done.’
‘You mean, for making you count
Welsh pebbles?’
‘No!’ said Thor. ‘For making the
Welsh pebbles not worth counting!’
Kate shook her head in exasperation.
‘I simply don’t know what to make of you at all,’ she said. ‘I think I’m just
too tired. Come back tomorrow. Explain it all in the morning.’
‘No,’ said Thor. ‘You must see Asgard
yourself, and then you will understand. You must see it tonight.’ He gripped
her by the arm.
‘I don’t want to go to Asgard,’ she insisted.
‘I don’t go to mythical places with strange men. You go. Call me up and tell me
how it went in the morning. Give him hell about the pebbles.’
She wrested her arm from his grip.
It was very, very clear to her that she only did this with his permission.
‘Now please, go, and let me sleep!’
She glared at him.
At that moment the house seemed to
erupt as Neil launched into a thumping bass rendition of Siegfried’s Rheinfahrt
from Act 1 of /Götterdämmerung/, just to prove it could be done. The walls
shook, the windows rattled. From under the table the sound of the table lamp mewing
pathetically could just be heard.
Kate tried to maintain her furious
glare, but it simply couldn’t be kept up for very long in the circumstances.
‘OK,’ she said at last, ‘how do we
get to this place?’
‘There are as many ways as there are
tiny pieces.’
‘I beg your pardon?’
‘Tiny things.’ He held up his thumb
and forefinger again to indicate something very small. ‘Molecules,’ he added, seeming to be uncomfortable with the word. ‘But first
let us leave here.’
‘Will I need a coat in Asgard?’
‘As you wish.’
‘Well, I’ll take one anyway. Wait a
minute.’
She decided that the best way to
deal with the astonishing rigmarole which currently constituted her life was to
be businesslike about it. She found her coat, brushed her hair, left a new
message on her telephone answering machine and put a saucer of milk firmly
under the table.
‘Right,’ she said, and led the way out
of the flat, locking it carefully after them, and making shushing noises as
they passed Neil’s door. For all the uproar he was currently making he was almost
certainly listening out for the slightest sound, and would be out in a moment
if he heard them going by to complain about the Coca-Cola machine, the lateness
of the hour, man’s inhumanity to man, the weather, the noise, and the colour of
Kate’s coat, which was a shade of blue that Neil for some reason disapproved of
most particularly. They stole past successfully and closed the front door
behind them with the merest click.
[::: CHAPTER 23
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
The sheets which tumbled out on to
Dirk’s kitchen table were made of thick heavy paper, folded together, and had obviously
been much handled.
He sorted them out, one by one, separating
them from each other, smoothing them out with the flat of his hand and laying
them out neatly in rows on the kitchen table, clearing a space, as it became
necessary, among the old newspapers, ashtrays and dirty cereal bowls which
Elena the cleaner always left exactly where they were, claiming, when challenged
on this, that she thought he had put them there specially.
He pored over the papers for several
minutes, moving from one to another, comparing them with each other, studying
them carefully, page by page, paragraph by paragraph, line by line.
He couldn’t understand a word of
them.
It should have occurred to him, he realised,
that the green-eyed, hairy, scythe-waving giant might differ from him not only in
general appearance and personal habits, but also in such matters as the alphabet
he favoured.
He sat back in his seat, disgruntled
and thwarted, and reached for a cigarette, but the packet in his coat was now
empty. He picked up a pencil and tapped it in a cigarette-like way, but it
wasn’t able to produce the same effect.
After a minute or two he became
acutely conscious of the fact that he was probably still being watched through the
keyhole by the eagle and he found that this made it impossibly hard to
concentrate on the problem before him, particularly without a cigarette. He
scowled to himself. He knew there was still a packet upstairs by his bed, but
he didn’t think he could handle the sheer ornithology involved in going to get
it.
He tried to stare at the papers for a
little longer. The writing, apart from being written in some kind of small, crabby and indecipherable runic script, was mostly hunched up
towards the left- hand side of the paper as if swept there by a tide. The
right-hand side was largely clear except for an occasional group of characters which
were lined up underneath each other. All of it, except for a slight sense of undefinable
familiarity about the layout, was completely meaningless to Dirk.
He turned his attention back to the envelope
instead and tried once more to examine some of the names which had been so
heavily crossed out.
Howard Bell, the incredibly wealthy
bestselling novelist who wrote bad books which sold by the warehouse-load despite
-- or perhaps because of -- the fact that nobody read them.
Dennis Hutch, record company
magnate. Now that he had a context for the name, Dirk knew it perfeetly well.
The Aries Rising Record Group which had been founded on Sixties ideals, or at
least on what passed for ideals in the Sixties, grown in the Seventies and then
embraced the materialism of the Eighties without missing a beat, was now a
massive entertainment conglomerate on both sides of the Atlantic. Dennis Hutch had
stepped up into the top seat when its founder had died of a lethal overdose of
brick wall, taken while under the influence of a Ferrari and a bottle of
tequila. ARRGH! was also the record label on which /Hot Potato/ had been
released.
Stan Dubcek, senior partner in the
advertising company with the silly name which now owned most of the British and
American advertising companies which had not had names which were quite as silly,
and had therefore been swallowed whole.
And here, suddenly, was another name that was instantly recognisable, now that Dirk was
attuned to the sort of names he should be looking for. Roderick Mercer, the world’s
greatest publisher of the world’s sleaziest newspapers. Dirk hadn’t at first
spotted the name with the unfamiliar ‘...erick’ in place after the ‘Rod’. Well,
well, well...
Now here were people, thought Dirk
suddenly, who had really got something. Certainly they had got rather more than
a nice little house in Lupton Road with some dried flowers lying around the
place. They also had the great advantage of having heads on their shoulders as well,
unless Dirk had missed something new and dramatic on the news. What did that
all mean? What was this contract? How come everybody whose hands it had been
through had been so astoundingly successful except for one, Geoffrey Anstey? Everybody
whose hands it had passed through had benefited from it except for the one who
had it last. Who had still got it.
It was a hot potato...
/You better not have it when the big
one comes./
The notion suddenly formed in Dirk’s
mind that it might have been Geoffrey Anstey himself who had overheard a
conversation about a hot potato, about getting rid of it, passing it on. If he remembered
correctly the interview he had read with Pain, he didn’t say that he himself
had overheard the conversation.
/You better not have it when the big
one comes./
The notion was a horrible one and
ran on like this: Geoffrey Anstey had been pathetically naïve. He had overheard
this conversation, between -- who? Dirk picked up the envelope and ran over the
list of names -- and had thought that it had a good dance rhythm. He had not for
a moment realised that what he was listening to was a conversation that would
result in his own hideous death. He had got a hit record out of it, and when
the real hot potato was actually handed to him he had picked it up.
/Don’t pick it up, pick it up, pick
it up./
And instead of taking the advice he
had recorded in the words of the song...
/Quick, pass it on, pass it on, pass
it on./
...he had stuck it behind the gold record
award on his bathroom wall.
/You better not have it when the big
one comes./
Dirk frowned and took a long, slow
thoughtful drag on his pencil.
This was ridiculous.
He had to get some cigarettes if he
was going to think this through with any intellectual rigour. He pulled on his
coat, stuffed his hat on his head and made for the window.
The window hadn’t been opened for --
well, certainly not during his ownership of the house, and it struggled and screamed
at the sudden unaccustomed invasion of its space and independence. Once he had
forced it wide enough, Dirk struggled out on to the windowsill, pulling swathes
of leather coat out with him. From here it was a bit of a jump to the pavement
since there was a lower ground floor to the house with a narrow flight of steps
leading down to it in the front. A line of iron railings separated these from
the pavement, and Dirk had to get clear over these.
Without hesitating for a moment he made
the jump, and it was in mid- bound that he realised he had not picked up his car
keys from the kitchen table where he’d left them.
He considered as he sailed
gracelessly through the air whether or not to execute a wild mid-air twist,
make a desperate grab backwards for the window and hope that he might just
manage to hold on to the sill, but decided on mature reflection that an error
at this point might just conceivably kill him whereas the walk would probably
do him good.
He landed heavily on the far side of
the railings, but the tails of his coat became entangled with them and he had to
pull them off, tearing part of the lining in the process. Once the ringing
shock in his knees had subsided and he had recovered what little composure the events
of the day had left him with, he realised that it was now well after eleven o’clock
and the pubs would be shut, and he might have a longer walk than he had
bargained for to find some cigarettes.
He considered what to do.
The current outlook and state of mind
of the eagle was a major factor to be taken into account here. The only way to
get his car keys now was back through the front door into his eagle-infested
hallway.
Moving with great caution he
tip-toed back up the steps to his front door, squatted down and, hoping that
the damn thing wasn’t going to squeak, gently pushed up the flap of the
letter-box and peered through.
In an instant a talon was hooked
into the back of his hand and a great screeching beak slashed at his eye, narrowly
missing it but scratching a great gouge across his much abused nose.
Dirk howled with pain and lurched
backwards, not getting very far because he still had a talon hooked in his hand.
He lashed out desperately and hit at the talon, which hurt him considerably,
dug the sharp point even further into his flesh and caused a great, barging flurry
on the far side of the door, each tiniest movement of which tugged heavily in
his hand.
He grabbed at the great claw with his
free hand and tried to tug it back out of himself. It was immensely strong, and
was shaking with the fury of the eagle, which was as trapped as he was. At
last, quivering with pain, he managed to release himself, and pulled his injured
hand back, nursing and cuddling it with the other.
The eagle pulled its claw back
sharply, and Dirk heard it flapping away back down his hallway, emitting
terrible screeches and cries, its great wings colliding with and scraping the
walls.
Dirk toyed with the idea of burning the
house down, but once the throbbing in his hand had begun to subside a little he
calmed down and tried, if he could, to see things from the eagle’s point of
view.
He couldn’t.
He had not the faintest idea how
things appeared to eagles in general, much less to this particular eagle, which
seemed to be a seriously deranged example of the species.
After a minute or so more of nursing
his hand, curiosity -- allied to a strong sense that the eagle had definitely
retreated to the far end of the hall and stayed there -- overcame him, and he
bent down once more to the letter-box. This time he used his pencil to push the
flap back upwards and scanned the hallway from a safe position a good few inches
back.
The eagle was clearly in view, perched
on the end of the bannister rail, regarding him with resentment and opprobrium,
which Dirk felt was a little rich coming from a creature which had only a
moment or two ago been busily engaged in trying to rip his hand off.
Then, once the eagle was certain
that it had got Dirk’s attention, it slowly raised itself up on its feet and
slowly shook its great wings out, beating them gently for balance. It was this gesture
that had previously caused Dirk to bolt prudently from the room. This time, however,
he was safely behind a couple of good solid inches of wood and he stood, or
rather, squatted his ground. The eagle stretched its neck upwards as well, jabbing
its tongue out at the air and cawing plaintively, which surprised Dirk.
Then he noticed something else
rather surprising about the eagle, which was that its wings had strange, un-eaglelike
markings on them. They were large concentric circles.
The differences of coloration which
delineated the circles were very slight, and it was only the absolute geometric
regularity of them which made them stand out as clearly as they did. Dirk had
the very clear sense that the eagle was showing him these circles, and that
that was what it had wanted to attract his attention to all along. Each time
the bird had dived at him, he realised as he thought back, it had then started on
a strange kind of flapping routine which had involved opening its wings right
out. However, each time it had happened Dirk had been too busily engaged with
the business of turning round and running away to pay this exhibition the
appropriate attention.
‘Have you got the money for a cup of
tea, mate?’
‘Er, yes thank you,’ said Dirk, ‘I’m
fine.’ His attention was fully occupied with the eagle, and he didn’t
immediately look round.
‘No, I meant can you spare me a bob
or two, just for a cup of tea?’
‘What?’ This time Dirk looked round,
irritably.
‘Or just a fag, mate. Got a fag you
can spare?’
‘No, I was just going to go and get
some myself,’ said Dirk.
The man on the pavement behind him
was a tramp of indeterminate age. He was standing there, slightly wobbly, with a
look of wild and continuous disappointment bobbing in his eyes.
Not getting an immediate response from
Dirk, the man dropped his eyes to the ground about a yard in front of him, and
swayed back and forth a little. He was holding his arms out, slightly open,
slightly away from his body, and just swaying. Then he frowned suddenly at the ground.
Then he frowned at another part of the ground. Then, holding himself steady while
he made quite a major realignment of his head, he frowned away down the street.
‘Have you lost something?’ said
Dirk.
The man’s head swayed back towards
him.
‘Have I /lost/ something?’ he said
in querulous astonishment. ‘Have I /lost/ something?’
It seemed to be the most astounding
question he had ever heard. He looked away again for a while, and seemed to be
trying to balance the question in the general scale of things. This involved a
fair bit more swaying and a fair few more frowns. At last he seemed to come up
with something that might do service as some kind of answer.
‘The sky?’ he said, challenging Dirk
to find this a good enough answer. He looked up towards it, carefully, so as not
to lose his balance. He seemed not to like what he saw in the dim, orange,
street- lit pallor of the clouds, and slowly looked back down again till he was
staring at a point just in front of his feet.
‘The ground?’ he said, with evident
great dissatisfaction, and then was struck with a sudden thought.
‘Frogs?’ he said, wobbling his gaze up
to meet Dirk’s rather bewildered one. ‘I used to like...frogs,’ he said, and left
his gaze sitting on Dirk as if that was all he had to say, and the rest was entirely
up to Dirk now.
Dirk was completely flummoxed. He
longed for the times when life had been easy, life had been carefree, the great
times he’d had with a mere homicidal eagle, which seemed now to be such an
easygoing and amiable companion. Aerial attack he could cope with, but not this
nameless roaring guilt that came howling at him out of nowhere.
‘What do you want?’ he said in a
strangled voice.
‘Just a fag, mate,’ said the tramp,
‘or something for a cup of tea.’
Dirk pressed a pound coin into the
man’s hand and lunged off down the street in a panic, passing, twenty yards
further on, a builder’s skip from which the shape of his old fridge loomed at
him menacingly.
[::: CHAPTER 24
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
As Kate came down the steps from her
house she noticed that the temperature had dropped considerably. The clouds sat
heavily on the land and loured at it. Thor set off briskly in the direction of
the park, and Kate trotted along in his wake.
As he strode along, an extraordinary
figure on the streets of Primrose Hill, Kate could not help but notice that he
had been right. They passed three different people on the way, and she saw
distinctly how their eyes avoided looking at him, even as they had to make allowance
for his great bulk as he passed them. He was not invisible, far from it. He
simply didn’t fit.
The park was closed for the night,
but Thor leapt quickly over the spiked railings and then lifted her over in
turn as lightly as if she had been a bunch of flowers.
The grass was damp and mushy, but still
worked its magic on city feet. Kate did what she always did when entering the
park, which was to bob down and put the flats of her hands down on the ground
for a moment. She had never quite worked out why she did this, and often she would
adjust a shoe or pick up a piece of litter as a pretext for the movement, but
all she really wanted was to feel the grass and the wet earth on her palms.
The park from this viewpoint was
simply a dark shoulder that rose up before them, obscuring itself. They mounted
the hill and stood on the top of it, looking over the darkness of the rest of
the park to where it shaded off into the hazy light of the heart of London
which lay to the south. Ugly towers and blocks stuck yobbishly up out of the skyline,
dominating the park, the sky, and the city.
A cold, damp wind moved across the
park, flicking at it from time to time like the tail of a dark and broody
horse. There was an unsettled, edgy quality to it. In fact the night sky seemed
to Kate to be like a train of restless, irritable horses, their traces flapping
and slapping in the wind. It also seemed to her as if the traces all radiated loosely
from a single centre, and that the centre was very close by her. She reprimanded herself for absurd suggestibility, but nevertheless,
it still seemed that all the weather was gathered and circling around them,
waiting on them.
Thor once more drew out his hammer,
and held it before him in the thoughtful and abstracted manner she had seen a
few minutes before in her flat. He frowned, and seemed to be picking tiny
invisible pieces of dust off it. It was a little like a chimpanzee grooming its
mate, or -- that was it! -- the comparison was extraordinary, but it explained
why she had tensed herself so watchfully when last he had done it. It was like
Jimmy Connors minutely adjusting the strings of his racquet before preparing to
serve.
He looked up sharply once again,
drew his arm back, turned fully once, twice, three times, twisting his heels
heavily in the mud, and then hurled his hammer with astonishing force up to the
heavens.
It vanished almost instantly into
the murky haze of the sky. Damp flashes sparked deep within the clouds,
tracking its path in a long parabola through the night. At the furthest extent of
the parabola it swung down out of the clouds, a distant tiny pinpoint moving
slowly now, gathering and redirecting its momentum for the return flight. Kate watched,
breathless, as the speck crept behind the dome of St Paul’s. It then seemed
almost as if it had halted altogether, hanging silently and improbably in the air,
before gradually beginning to increase microscopically in size as it
accelerated back towards them.
Then, as it returned, it swung aside
in its path, no longer describing a simple parabola, but following instead a new
path which seemed to lie along the perimeter of a gigantic Mobius strip which
took it round the other side of the Telecom Tower. Then suddenly it was swinging
back in a path directly towards them, hurtling out of the night with impossible
weight and speed like a piston in a shaft of light. Kate swayed and nearly
dropped in a dead faint out of its path, when Thor stepped forward and caught
it with a grunt.
The jolt of it sent a single heavy
shudder down into the earth, and then the thing was resting quietly in Thor’s
grip. His arm quivered slightly and was still.
Kate felt quite dizzy. She didn’t
know exactly what it was that had just happened, but she felt pretty damn
certain that it was the sort of experience that her mother would not have approved
of on a first date.
‘Is this all part of what we have to
do to go to Asgard?’ she said. ‘Or are you just fooling around?’
‘We will go to Asgard...now,’ he
said.
At that moment he raised his hand as
if to pluck an apple, but instead of plucking he made a tiny, sharp turning
movement. The effect was as if he had twisted the entire world through a
billionth part of a billionth part of a degree. Everything shifted, was for a moment
minutely out of focus, and then snapped back again as a suddenly different
world.
This world was a much darker one and
colder still.
A bitter, putrid wind blew sharply,
and made every breath gag in the throat. The ground beneath their feet was no longer
the soft muddy grass of the hill, but a foul-smelling, oozing slush. Darkness
lay over all the horizon with a few small exceptional fires dotted here and there
in the distance, and one great blaze of light about a mile and a half away to
the south-east.
Here, great fantastical towers
stabbed at the night; huge pinnacles and turrets flickered in the firelight
that surged from a thousand windows. It was an edifice that mocked reason,
ridiculed reality and jeered wildly at the night.
‘My father’s palace,’ said Thor,
‘the Great Hall of Valhalla where we must go.’
It was just on the tip of Kate’s
tongue to say that something about the place was oddly familiar when the sound
of horses’ hooves pounding through the mud came to them on the wind. At a
distance, between where they stood and the Great Hall of Valhalla, a small number
of flickering torches could be seen jolting towards them.
Thor once more studied the head of
his hammer with interest, brushed it with his forefinger and rubbed it with his
thumb. Then slowly he looked up, again he twisted round once, then twice and a
third time and then hurled the missile into the sky. This time, however, he
continued to hold on to its shaft with his right hand, while with his left he held
Kate’s waist in his grasp.
[::: CHAPTER 25
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
Cigarettes clearly intended to make themselves
a major problem for Dirk tonight.
For most of the day, except for when
he’d woken up, and except for again shortly after he’d woken up, and except for
when he had just encountered the revolving head of Geoffrey Anstey, which was understandable, and also except for
when he’d been in the pub with Kate, he had had absolutely no cigarettes at
all.
Not one. They were out of his life, foresworn
utterly. He didn’t need them. He could do without them. They merely nagged at
him like mad and made his life a living hell, but he decided he could handle
that.
Now, however, just when he had
suddenly decided, coolly, rationally, as a clear, straightforward decision rather
than merely a feeble surrender to craving, that he would, after all, have a cigarette,
could he find one? He could not.
The pubs by this stage of the night
were well closed. The late night corner shop obviously meant something
different by ‘late night’ than Dirk did, and though Dirk was certain that he could
convince the proprietor of the rightness of his case through sheer linguistic and
syllogistic bravado, the wretched man wasn’t there to undergo it.
A mile away there was a 24-hour
filling station, but it turned out just to have sustained an armed robbery. The
plate glass was shattered and crazed round a tiny hole, police were swarming
over the place. The attendant was apparently not badly injured, but he was
still losing blood from a wound in his arm, having hysterics and being treated for
shock, and no one would sell Dirk any cigarettes. They simply weren’t in the
mood.
‘You could buy cigarettes in the blitz,’
protested Dirk. ‘People took a pride in it. Even with the bombs falling and the
whole city ablaze you could still get served. Some poor fellow, just lost two daughters
and a leg, would still say “Plain or filter tipped?” if you asked him.’
‘I expect you would, too,’ muttered
a white-faced young policeman.
‘It was the spirit of the age,’ said
Dirk.
‘Bug off,’ said the policeman.
And that, thought Dirk to himself, was
the spirit of this. He retreated, miffed, and decided to prowl the streets with
his hands in his pockets for a while.
Camden Passage. Antique clocks.
Antique clothes. No cigarettes.
Upper Street. Antique buildings
being ripped apart. No sign of cigarette shops being put up in their place.
Chapel Market, desolate at night. Wet
litter wildly flapping. Cardboard boxes, egg boxes, paper bags and cigarette
packets -- empty ones.
Pentonville Road. Grim concrete
monoliths, eyeing the new spaces in Upper Street where they hoped to spawn
their horrid progeny.
King’s Cross station. They must have
cigarettes, for heaven’s sake. Dirk hurried on down towards it.
The old frontage to the station
reared up above the area, a great yellow brick wall with a clock tower and two
huge arches fronting the two great train sheds behind. In front of this lay the
one-storey modern concourse which was already far shabbier than the building, a
hundred years its senior, which it obscured and generally messed up. Dirk
imagined that when the designs for the modern concourse had been drawn up the
architects had explained that it entered into an exciting and challenging
dialogue with the older building.
King’s Cross is an area where terrible
things happen to people, to buildings, to cars, to trains, usually while you
wait, and if you weren’t careful you could easily end up involved in a piece of
exciting and challenging dialogue yourself. You could have a cheap car radio fitted
while you waited, and if you turned your back for a couple of minutes, it would
be removed while you waited as well. Other things you could have removed while you
waited were your wallet, your stomach lining, your mind and your will to live.
The muggers and pushers and pimps and hamburger salesmen, in no particular
order, could arrange all these things for you.
But could they arrange a packet of
cigarettes, thought Dirk, with a mounting sense of tension. He crossed York
Way, declined a couple of surprising offers on the grounds that they did not
involve cigarettes in any immediately obvious way, hurried past the closed
bookshop and in through the main concourse doors, away from the life of the
street and into the safer domain of British Rail.
He looked around him.
Here things seemed rather strange and
he wondered why, but he only wondered this very briefly because he was also wondering
if there was anywhere open selling cigarettes and there wasn’t.
He sagged forlornly. It seemed to him
that he had been playing catch-up with the world all day. The morning had started
in about as disastrous a way as it was possible for a morning to start, and he had
never managed to get a proper grip on it since. He felt like somebody trying to
ride a bolting horse, with one foot in a stirrup and the other one still
bounding along hopefully on the ground behind. And now even as simple a thing
as a cigarette was proving to be beyond his ability to get hold of.
He sighed and found himself a seat,
or at least, room on a bench.
This was not an immediately easy
thing to do. The station was more crowded than he had expected to find it at --
what was it? he looked up at the clock -- one o’clock in the morning. What in
the name of God was he doing on King’s Cross station at one o’clock in the
morning, with no cigarette and no home that he could reasonably expect to get
into without being hacked to death by a homicidal bird?
He decided to feel sorry for himself.
That would pass the time. He looked around himself, and after a while the
impulse to feel sorry for himself gradually subsided as he began to take in his
surroundings.
What was strange about it was seeing
such an immediately familiar place looking so unfamiliar. There was the ticket office,
still open for ticket sales, but looking sombre and beleaguered and wishing it
was closed.
There was the W.H.Smith, closed for
the night. No one would be needing any further newspapers or magazines tonight, except for purposes of accommodation,
and old ones would do just as well for sleeping under.
The pimps and hookers, drug-pushers
and hamburger salesmen were all outside in the streets and in the hamburger bars.
If you wanted quick sex or a dirty fix or, God help you, a hamburger, that was
where you went to get it.
Here were the people that nobody wanted
anything from at all. This was where they gathered for shelter until they were
periodically shooed out. There was something people wanted from them, in fact --
their absence. That was in hot demand, but not easily supplied. Everybody has to
be somewhere.
Dirk looked from one to another of the
men and women shuffling round or sitting hunched in seats or struggling to try
and sleep across benches that were specifically designed to prevent them from doing
exactly that.
‘Got a fag, mate?’
‘What? No, I’m sorry. No, I haven’t got
one,’ replied Dirk, awkwardly patting his coat pockets in embarrassment, as if
to suggest the making of a search which he knew would be fruitless. He was startled
to be summoned out of his reverie like this.
‘Here you are, then.’ The old man
offered him a beat-up one from a beat-up packet.
‘What? Oh. Oh -- thanks. Thank you.’
Momentarily taken aback by the offer, Dirk nevertheless accepted the cigarette
gratefully, and took a light from the tip of the cigarette the old man was
smoking himself.
‘What you come here for then?’ asked
the old man -- not challenging, just curious.
Dirk tried to look at him without making
it seem as if he was looking him up and down. The man was wildly bereft of teeth,
had startled and matted hair, and his old clothes were well mulched down around
him, but the eyes which sagged out of his face were fairly calm. He wasn’t
expecting anything worse than he could deal with to happen to him.
‘Well, just this in fact,’ said
Dirt, twiddling the cigarette. ‘Thanks. Couldn’t find one anywhere.’
‘Oh ah,’ said the old man.
‘Got this mad bird at home,’ said
Dirk. ‘Kept attacking me.’
‘Oh ah,’ said the man, nodding
resignedly.
‘I mean an actual bird,’ said Dirk,
‘an eagle.’
‘Oh ah.’
‘With great wings.’
‘Oh ah.’
‘Got hold of me with one of its
talons through the letter-box.’
‘Oh ah.’
Dirk wondered if it was worth pursuing
the conversation much further. He lapsed into silence and looked around.
‘You’re lucky it didn’t slash at you
with its beak as well,’ said the old man after a while. ‘An eagle will do that
when roused.’
‘It did!’ said Dirk. ‘It did! Look,
right here on my nose. That was through the letter-box as well. You’d scarcely
believe it! Talk about grip! Talk about reach! Look at what it did to my hand!’
He held it out for sympathy. The old
man gave it an appraising look.
‘Oh ah,’ he said at last, and
retreated into his own thoughts.
Dirk drew his injured hand back.
‘Know a lot about eagles, then, do
you?’
The man didn’t answer, but seemed
instead to retreat still further.
‘Lot of people here tonight,’ Dirk
ventured again, after a while.
The man shrugged. He took a long
drag on his cigarette, half closing his eyes against the smoke.
‘Is it always like this? I mean, are
there always so many people here at night?’
The man merely looked down, slowly releasing
the smoke from his mouth and nostrils.
Yet again, Dirk looked around. A man
a few feet away, not so old- looking as Dirk’s companion but wildly deranged in
his demeanour, had sat nodding hectically over a bottle of cooking brandy all this
time. He slowly stopped his nodding, screwed with difficulty a cap on to the bottle,
and slipped it into the pocket of his ragged old coat. An old fat woman who had
been fitfully browsing through the bulging black bin liner of her possessions began
to twist the top of it together and fold it.
‘You’d almost think that something was
about to happen,’ said Dirk.
‘Oh ah,’ said his companion. He put
his hands on his knees, bent forward and raised himself painfully to his feet.
Though he was bent and slow, and though his clothes were dirt-ridden and tattered,
there was some little power and authority there in his bearing.
The air which he unsettled as he
stood, which flowed out from the folds of his skin and clothes, was richly pungent
even to Dirk’s numbed nostrils. It was a smell that never stopped coming at you
-- just as Dirk thought it must have peaked, so it struck on upwards with
renewed frenzy till Dirk thought that his very brain would vaporise.
He tried not to choke, indeed he
tried to smile courteously without allowing his eyes to run as the man turned
to him and said, ‘Infuse some blossom of the bitter orange. Add some
sprinklings of sage while it is still warm. This is very good for eagle wounds.
There are those who will add apricot and almond oil and even, the heavens
defend us, sedra. But then there are always those that will overdo things. And sometimes
we have need of them. Oh ah.’
With that he turned away once more
and joined the growing stream of pathetic, hunched and abused bodies that were
heading for the front exit from the station. In all about two, maybe three dozen
were leaving. Each seemed to be leaving separately, each for his or her entirely
independent reasons, and not following too fast the one upon the other, and yet
it was not hard to tell, for anyone who cared to watch these people that no one
cared to watch or see, that they were leaving together and in a stream.
Dirk carefulty nursed his cigarette
for a minute or so and watched them intently as one by one they left. Once he
was certain that there were no more to go, and that the last two or three of
them were at the door, he dropped the cigarette and ground it out with his
heel. Then he noticed that the old man had left behind his crumpled cigarette
packet. Dirk looked inside and saw that there were still two bedraggled cigarettes
left. He pocketed it, stood up, and quietly followed at a distance that he
thought was properly respectful.
Outside on the Euston Road the night air was grumbling and
unsettled. He loitered idly by the doorway, watching which way they went -- to
the west. He took one of the cigarettes out and lit it and then idled off
westwards himself, around the taxi rank and towards St Pancras Street.
On the west side of St Pancras
Street, just a few yards north of the Euston Road, a flight of steps leads up to
the forecourt of the old Midland Grand Hotel, the huge, dark gothic fantasy of
a building which stands, empty and desolate, across the front of St Pancras railway
station.
Over the top of the steps, picked
out in gold letters on wrought- iron-work, stands the name of the station. Taking
his time, Dirk followed the last of the band of old tramps and derelicts up these
steps, which emerged just to the side of a small, squat, brick building which
was used as a car-park. To the right, the great dark hulk of the old hotel
spread off into the night, its roofline a vast assortment of wild turrets,
gnarled spires and pinnacles which seemed to prod at and goad the night sky.
High in the dim darkness, silent stone
figures stood guard behind long shields, grouped around pilasters behind
wrought-iron railings. Carved dragons crouched gaping at the sky as Dirk Gently,
in his flapping leather coat, approached the great iron portals which led to the
hotel, and to the great vaulted train shed of St Pancras station. Stone figures
of winged dogs crouched down from the top of pillars.
Here, in the bridged area between
the hotel entrance and the station booking hall, was parked a large unmarked
grey Mercedes van. A quick glance at the front of it was enough to tell Dirk
that it was the same one which had nearly forced him off the road several hours
earlier in the Cotswolds.
Dirk walked into the booking hall, a
large space with great panelled walls along which were spaced fat marble columns
in the form of torch holders.
At this time of night the ticket
office was closed -- trains do not run all night from St Pancras -- and beyond
it the vast chamber of the station itself, the great Victorian train shed, was shrouded
in darkness and shadow.
Dirk stood quietly secluded in the
entrance to the booking hall and watched as the old tramps and bag ladies, who had
entered the station by the main entrance from the forecourt, mingled together in
the dimness. There were now many more than two dozen of them, perhaps as many as
a hundred, and there seemed to be about them an air of repressed excitement and
tension.
As they moved about it seemed to
Dirk after a while that, though he had been surprised at how many of them there
had been when he first arrived, there seemed now to be fewer and fewer of them.
He peered into the gloom trying to make out what was happening. He detached
himself from his seclusion in the entrance to the booking hall and entered the main
vault, but kept himself nevertheless as close to the side wall as possible as
he ventured in towards them.
There were definitely fewer still of
them now, a mere handful left. He had a distinct sense of people slipping away
into the shadows and not re-emerging from them.
He frowned at them.
The shadows were deep but they
weren’t that deep. He began to hurry forward, and quickly threw all caution aside
to reach the small remaining group. But by the time he reached the centre of
the concourse where they had been gathered there were none remaining at all and
he was left whirling round in confusion in the middle of the great, dark, empty
railway station.
[::: CHAPTER 26 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
The only thing which prevented Kate
screaming was the sheer pressure of air rushing into her lungs as she hurtled
into the sky.
When, a few seconds later, the
blinding acceleration eased a little, she found she was gulping and choking,
her eyes were stinging and streaming to the extent that she could hardly see,
and there was hardly a muscle in her body which wasn’t gibbering with shock as
waves of air pummelled past her, tearing at her hair and clothes and making her
knees, knuckles and teeth batter at each other.
She had to struggle with herself to
suppress her urge to struggle. On the one hand she absolutely certainly did not
want to be let go of. Insofar as she had any understanding at all of what was
happening to her she knew that she did not want to be let go of. On the other
hand the physical shock of it was facing some stiff competition from her sheer
affronted rage at being suddenly hauled into the sky without warning. The result
of this was that she struggled rather feebly and was angry at herself for doing
so. She ended up clinging to Thor’s arm in the most abject and undignified way.
The night was dark, and the blessing
of this, she supposed, was that she could not see the ground. The lights she had
seen dotted here and there in the distance now swung sickeningly away beneath
her, but her instincts would not identify them as representing ground. Already the
flickering beacons which shone from the insanely turreted building she had
glimpsed seconds before this outrage occurred were swaying away behind her now
at an increasing distance.
They were still ascending.
She could not struggle, she could not
speak. She could probably, if she tried, bite the stupid brute’s arm, but she
contented herself with the idea of this rather than the actual deed.
The air was bad and rasped in her lungs.
Her nose and eyes were streaming, and this made it impossible for her to look
forward. When she did try it, just once, she caught a momentary blurred glimpse
of the head of the hammer streaking out through the dark air ahead of them, of Thor’s
arm grasping its stunted handle and being pulled forward by it. His other arm
was gripped around her waist. The strength of him defied her imagination but
did not make her any the less angry.
She got the feeling that they were now
skimming along just beneath the clouds. Every now and then they would be buffeted
by damp clamminess, and breathing would become yet harder and more noxious. The
wet air tasted bitter, and deadly cold, and her streaming wet hair lashed and
slammed about her face.
She decided that the cold was definitely
going to kill her, and after a while was convinced that she was beginning to lose consciousness. In fact she realised she was actually
trying to lose consciousness but she couldn’t. Time slipped into a greyness
though, and she was less aware of how much of it was passing.
At last she began to sense that they
were slowing and that they were beginning to curve back downwards. This
precipitated fresh waves of nausea and disorientation in her, and she felt that
her stomach was being slowly turned through a mangle.
The air was, if anything, getting worse.
It smelled worse, tasted more acrid and seemed to be getting a great deal more
turbulent. They were definitely slowing now, and the going was becoming more and
more difficult. The hammer was clearly pointing downwards now, and finding its
way along rather than surging ahead.
Down still further they went,
battling through the thickening clouds that swirled round them till it seemed
that they must now reach all the way down to the ground.
Their speed had dropped to the point
where Kate felt able to look ahead now, though the acridity of the air was such
that she was only able to manage a very brief glance. In the moment that she glanced,
Thor released the hammer. She couldn’t believe it. He released it only for a
fraction of a second, just to change his grip on the thing, so that they were now
hanging from the shaft as it flew slowly forward, rather than being pulled
along by it. As he redistributed his weight into this new posture he hoisted
Kate firmly upwards as if pulling up a sock. Down they went, and down further
and further.
There was now a roaring crashing sound
borne in on them by the wind from up ahead, and suddenly Thor was running,
leaping over rocky, sandy scrubland, dancing through the knotted tussocks, and finally
pounding and drumming his feet to a halt.
They stood still at last, swaying, but
the ground on which they stood was solid.
Kate breathed for a few seconds,
bending over to catch her breath. She then pulled herself up to her full height
and was about to deliver a full account of her feelings concerning these events
at the top of her voice, when she suddenly got an alarming sense of where she
was standing.
Though the night was dark, the wind
whipping at her and the pungent smell of it told her that some kind of sea was
very close by. The sound of wild crashing breakers told her that in fact it was
more or less beneath her, that they were standing very near to the edge of a
cliff. She gripped the arm of the insufferable god who had brought her here and
hoped, vainly, that it hurt him.
As her reeling senses began
gradually to calm down she noticed that there was a dim light spreading away
before her, and after a while she realised that this was coming off the sea.
The whole sea was glowing like an infection.
It was rearing itself up in the night, lunging and thrashing in a turmoil of
itself and then smashing itself to pieces in a frenzy of pain against the rocks
of the coast. Sea and sky seethed at each other in a poisonous fury.
Kate watched it speechlessly, and
then became aware of Thor standing at her shoulder.
‘I met you at an airport,’ he said,
his voice breaking up in the wind. ‘I was trying to get home to Norway by
plane.’ He pointed out to sea. ‘I wanted you to see why I couldn’t come this
way.’
‘Where are we? What is this?’ asked
Kate fearfully.
‘In your world, this is the North Sea,’
said Thor and turned away inland again, walking heavily and dragging his hammer
behind him.
Kate pulled her wet coat close
around her and hurried after him.
‘Well, why didn’t you just fly home
the way we just did but in, well, in our world?’
The rage in her had subsided into
vague worries about vocabulary.
‘I tried,’ responded Thor, still
walking away.
‘Well, what happened?’
‘I don’t want to talk about it.’
‘What on earth’s the point of that?’
‘I’m not going to discuss it.’
Kate shuddered in exasperation. ‘Is
this godlike behaviour?’ she shouted. ‘It bothers you so you won’t talk about
it?’
‘Thor! Thor! Is it you?’
This last was a thin voice trailing
over the wind. Kate peered into the wind. Through the darkness a lantern was
bobbing towards them from behind a low rise.
‘Is that you, Thor?’ A little old lady
came into view, holding a lantern above her head, hobbling enthusiastically. ‘I
thought that must be your hammer I saw. Welcome!’ she chirruped. ‘Oh, but you
come in dismal times. I was just putting the pot on and thinking of having a cup
of something and then perhaps killing myself, but then I said to myself, just
wait a couple of days longer, Tsuliwa..., Tsuwila..., Swuli..., Tsuliwaënsis --
I can never pronounce my own name properly when I’m talking to myself, and it
drives me hopping mad, as I’m sure you can imagine, such a bright boy as I’ve always
maintained, never mind what those others say, so I said to myself,
Tsuliwaënsis, see if anyone comes along, and if they don’t, well, then might be
a good time to think about killing myself. And look! Now here you are! Oh, but
you are welcome, welcome! And I see you’ve brought a little friend. Are you going
to introduce me? Hello, my dear, hello! My name’s Tsuliwaënsis and I won’t be at
all offended if you stutter.’
‘I...I’m, er, Kate,’ said Kate,
totally flummoxed.
‘Yes, well I’m sure that will be all
right,’ said the old woman sharply. ‘Anyway, come along if you’re coming. If
you’re going to hang around out here all night I may as well just get straight on
with killing myself now and let you get your own tea when you’re quite ready.
Come along!’
She hurried on ahead, and in a very few
yards they reached a terrible kind of ramshackle structure of wood and mud
which looked as if it had become unaccountably stuck while half-way through
collapsing. Kate glanced at Thor, hoping to read some kind of reaction from him
to give her a bearing on the situation, but he was occupied with his own thoughts
and was clearly not about to share them. There seemed to her to be a difference
in the way he moved, though. In the brief experience she had of him he seemed
constantly to be struggling with some internal and constrained anger, and this,
she felt, had lifted. Not gone away, just lifted. He stood aside to allow her
to enter Tsuliwaënsis’s shack, and brusquely gestured her to go in. He
followed, ducking absurdly, a few seconds later, having paused for a moment
outside to survey what little could be seen of the surrounding landscape.
Inside was tiny. A few boards with
straw for a bed, a simmering pot hung over a fire, and a box tucked away in the
corner for sitting on.
‘And this is the knife I was thinking
of using, you see,’ said Tsuliwaënsis, fussing around. ‘Just been sharpening it
up nicely, you see. It comes up very nice if you get a nice sweeping action
with the stone, and I was thinking here would be a good place, you see? Here on
the wall, I can stick the handle in this crack so it’s held nice and firm, and
then just go /fling!/ And fling myself at it. /Fling!/ You see? I wonder,
should it be a little lower, what do you think, my dear? Know about these
things, do you?’
Kate explained that she did not, and
managed to sound reasonably calm about it.
‘Tsuliwaënsis,’ said Thor, ‘we have
come not to stay but to...Tsuli -- please put the knife down.’
Tsuliwaënsis was standing looking up
at them quite chirpily, but she was also holding the knife, with its great
heavy sweeping blade, poised over her own left wrist.
‘Don’t mind me, dears,’ she said,
‘I’m quite comfortable. I can just pop off any time I’m ready. Happy to. These
times are not to live in. Oh, no. You go off and be happy. I won’t disturb your
happiness with the sound of me screaming. I’ll hardly make a sound with the
knife as you go.’ She stood quivering and challenging.
Carefully, almost gently, Thor
reached out and drew the knife away and out of her shaking hand. The old woman
seemed to crumple as it went, and all the performance faded out of her. She sat
back in a heap on her box. Thor squatted down in front of her, slowly drew her
to him and hugged her. She gradually seemed to come back to life, and eventually
pushed him away telling him not to be so stupid, and then made a bit of a fuss
of smoothing out her hopelessly ragged and dirty black dress.
When once she had composed herself
properly she turned her attention to Kate and looked her up and down.
‘You’re a mortal, dear, aren’t you?’
she said at last.
‘Well...yes,’ said Kate.
‘I can tell it from your fancy
dress. Oh, yes. Well, now you see what the world looks like from the other
side, don’t you, dear? What do you think then?’
Kate explained that she did not yet
know what to think. Thor sat himself down on the floor and leant his big head
back against the wall, half-closing his eyes. Kate had the sense that he was
preparing himself for something.
‘It used to be things were not so different,’
continued the old woman. ‘Used to be lovely here, you know, all lovely. Bit of
give and take between us. Terrible rows, of course, terrible fights, but really
it was all lovely. Now?’ She let out a long and tired sigh, and brushed a bit
of nothing much off the wall.
‘Oh, things are bad,’ she said,
‘things are very bad. You see things get affected by things. Our world affects your
world, your world affects our world. Sometimes it is hard to know exactly what that
effect is. Very often it is hard to like it, either. Most of them, these days,
are difficult and bad. But our worlds are so nearly the same in so many ways.
Where in your world you have a building there will be a structure here as well.
Maybe it will be a small muddy hillock, or a beehive, or an abode like this one.
Maybe it will be something a little grander, but it will be something. You all
right, Thor, dear?’
The Thunder God closed his eyes and
nodded. His elbows lay easily across his knees. The ragged strips of Kate’s
nightgown bound about his left forearm were limp and wet. He idly pushed them
off.
‘And where there is something which
is not dealt with properly in your world,’ the old lady prattled on, ‘as like
as not it will emerge in ours. Nothing disappears. No guilty secret. No
unspoken thought. It may be a new and mighty god in our world, or it may be
just a gnat, but it will be here. I might add that these days it is more often
a gnat than a new and mighty god. Oh, there are so many more gnats and fewer immortal
gods than once there were.’
‘How can there be fewer immortals?’
asked Kate. ‘I don’t want to be pedantic about it, but --’
‘Well, there’s being immortal, dear,
and then again there’s being immortal. I mean, if I could just get this knife
properly secured and then work up a really good fling, we’d soon see who was
immortal and who wasn’t.’
‘Tsuli...’ admonished Thor, but
didn’t open his eyes to do it.
‘One by one we’re going, though. We
are, Thor. You’re one of the few that care. There’s few enough now that haven’t
succumbed to alcoholism or the onx.’
‘What is that? Some kind of
disease?’ asked Kate. She was beginning to feel cross again. Having been
dragged unwillingly from her flat and hurled across the whole of East Anglia on
the end of a hammer, she was irritated at being then just abandoned to a
conversation with an insanely suicidal old woman while Thor just sat and looked
content with himself, leaving her to make an effort she was not in a mood to
make.
‘It’s an affliction, dear, which
only gods get. It really means that you can’t take being a god any more, which
is why only gods get it you see.’
‘I see.’
‘In the final stages of it you
simply lie on the ground and after a while a tree grows out of your head and then
it’s all over. You rejoin the earth, seep into its bowels, flow through its vital
arteries, and eventually emerge as a great pure torrent of water, and as like
as not get a load of chemical waste dumped into you. It’s a grim business being
a god nowadays, even a dead god.
‘Well,’ she said, patting her knees.
Her eyes hovered on Thor, who had opened his eyes but was only using them to stare
at his own knuckles and fingertips. ‘Well, I hear you have an appointment
tonight, Thor.’
‘Hmm,’ grunted Thor, without moving.
‘I hear you’ve called together the
Great Hall for the Challenging Hour, is that right?’
‘Hmm,’ said Thor.
‘The Challenging Hour, hmm? Well, I
know that things have not been too good between you and your father for a long
time. Hmm?’
Thor wasn’t going to be drawn. He
said nothing.
‘I thought it was quite dreadful about Wales,’
continued Tsuliwaënsis. ‘Don’t know why you stood for it. Of course I realise that
he’s your father and the All-Father which makes it difficult. But, Odin, Odin
-- I’ve known him for so long. You know that he made a deal once to sacrifice one
of his own eyes in exchange for wisdom? Of course you do, dear, you’re his son,
aren’t you? Well, what I’ve always said is he should stand up and make a fuss about
that particular deal, demand his eye back. Do you know what I mean by that,
Thor? And that horrible Toe Rag. There’s someone to be careful of, Thor, very
careful indeed. Well, I expect I shall hear all about it in the morning, won’t I?’
Thor slid his back up the wall and stood
up. He clasped the old woman warmly by the hands and smiled a tight smile, but
said nothing. With a slight nod he gestured to Kate that they were leaving.
Since leaving was what she most wanted in all the world to do she resisted the
temptation to say ‘Oh yeah?’ and kick up a fuss about being treated like this.
Meekly she bade a polite farewell to the old woman and made her way out into
the murky night. Thor followed her.
She folded her arms and said, ‘Well?
Where now? What other great social events have you got in store for me this
evening?’
Thor prowled around a little, examining
the ground. He pulled out his hammer, and weighed it appreciatively in his
hands. He peered out into the night, and swung the hammer a couple of times,
idly. He swung himself round a couple of times, again not hard. He loosed the
hammer, which bounded off into the night and split open a casually situated rock
a couple of dozen yards away and then bounded back. He caught it easily, tossed
it up into the air and caught it easily again.
Then he turned to her and looked her
in the eye for the first time.
‘Would you like to see something?’
he asked.
[::: CHAPTER 27
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
A gust of wind blew through the huge
vaults of the empty station and nearly provoked in Dirk a great howl of
frustration at the trail that had so suddenly gone cold on him. The cold moonlight
draped itself through the long ranges of glass panels that extended the length
of the St Pancras station roof.
It fell on empty rails, and
illuminated them. It fell on the train departures board, it fell on the sign
which explained that today was a Blue Saver Day and illuminated them both.
Framed in the archway formed by the
far end of the vaulted roof were the fantastical forms of five great
gasometers, the supporting superstructures of which seemed in their adumbrations
to be tangled impossibly with each other, like the hoops of an illusionist’s conjuring trick. The moonlight illuminated
these as well, but Dirk it did not illuminate.
He had watched upwards of a hundred
people or so simply vanish into thin air in a way that was completely
impossible. That in itself did not give him a problem. The impossible did not
bother him unduly. If it could not possibly be done, then obviously it had been
done impossibly. The question was how?
He paced the area of the station which
they had all vanished from, and scanned everything that could be seen from
every vantage point within it, looking for any clue, any anomaly, anything that
might let him pass into whatever it was he had just seen a hundred people pass into
as if it was nothing. He had the sense of a major party taking place in the near
vicinity, to which he had not been invited. In desperation he started to spin
around with his arms outstretched, then decided this was completely futile and
lit a cigarette instead.
He noticed that as he had pulled out
the packet, a piece of paper had fluttered from his pocket, which, once the
cigarette was burning well, he stooped to retrieve.
It was nothing exciting, just the
bill he had picked up from the stroppy nurse in the café. ‘Outrageous,’ he
thought about each of the items in turn as he scanned down them, and was about
to screw it up and throw it away when a thought struck him about the general
layout of the document.
The items charged were listed down the
left hand side, and the actual charges down the right.
On his own bills when he issued
them, when he had a client, which was rare at the moment, and the ones he did
have seemed unable to stay alive long enough to receive his bills and be outraged
by them, he usually went to a little trouble about the items charged. He constructed
essays, little paragraphs to describe them. He liked the client to feel that he
or she was getting his or her money’s worth in this respect at least.
In short, the bills he issued corresponded
in layout almost exactly to the wad of papers with indecipherable runic scripts
which he had been unable to make head or tail of a couple of hours previously.
Was that helpful? He didn’t know. If the wad was not a contract but a bill, what
might it be the bill for? What services had been performed? They must certainly
have been intricate services. Or at least, intricately described services.
Which professions might that apply to? It was at least something to think about.
He screwed up the café bill and moved off to throw it into a bin.
As it happened, this was a
fortuitous move.
It meant that he was away from the central
open space of the station, and near a wall against which he could press himself inconspicuously when he suddenly
heard the sound of two pairs of feet crossing the forecourt outside.
In a few seconds, they entered the
main part of the station, by which time Dirk was well out of sight round the
angle of a wall.
Being well out of sight worked less
well for him in another respect, which was that for a while he was unable to
see the owners of the feet. By the time he caught a glimpse of them, they had
reached exactly the same area where a few minutes previously a small horde of
people had, quietly and without fuss, vanished.
He was surprised by the red
spectacles of the woman and the quietly tailored Italian suit of the man, and
also the speed with which they themselves then immediately vanished.
Dirk stood speechless. The same two damn
people who had been the bane of his life for the entire day (he allowed himself
this slight exaggeration on the grounds of extreme provocation) had now flagrantly
and deliberately disappeared in front of his eyes.
Once he was quite certain that they
had absolutely definitely vanished and were not merely hiding behind each
other, he ventured out once more into the mysterious space.
It was bafflingly ordinary. Ordinary
tarmacadam, ordinary air, ordinary everything. And yet a quantity of people
that would have kept the Bermuda triangle industry happy for an entire decade had
just vanished in it within the space of five minutes.
He was deeply aggravated.
He was so deeply aggravated that he
thought he would share the sense of aggravation by phoning someone up and
aggravating them -- as it would be almost certain to do at twenty past one in
the morning.
This wasn’t an entirely arbitrary thought
-- he was still anxious concerning the safety of the American girl, Kate
Schechter, and had not been at all reassured to have been answered by her
machine when last he had called. By now she should surely be at home and in bed
asleep, and would be reassuringly livid to be woken by a meddling phone call at
this time.
He found a couple of coins and a
working telephone and dialled her number. He got her answering machine again.
It said that she had just out for
the night to Asgard. She wasn’t certain which parts of Asgard they were going to
but they would probably swing by Valhalla later, if the evening was up to it. If
he cared to leave a message she would deal with it in the morning if she was
still alive and in the mood. There were some beeps, which rang on in Dirk’s ear
for seconds after he heard them.
‘Oh,’ he said, realising that the
machine was currently busy taping him, ‘good heavens. Well, I thought the
arrangement was that you were going to call me before doing anything
impossible.’
He put the phone down, his head
spinning angrily. Valhalla, eh? Was that where everybody was going to tonight except
him? He had a good mind to go home, go to bed and wake up in the grocery
business.
Valhalla.
He looked about him once again, with
the name Valhalla ringing in his ears. There was no doubt, he felt, that a space
this size would make a good feasting hall for gods and dead heroes, and that
the empty Midland Grand Hotel would be almost worth moving the shebang from Norway
for.
He wondered if it made any difference
knowing what it was you were walking into.
Nervously, tentatively, he walked
across and through the space in question. Nothing. Oh well. He turned, and
stood surveying it for a moment or two while he took a couple of slow drags on
the cigarette he had got from the tramp. The space didn’t look any different.
He walked back through it again, this time a little less tentatively,
but with slow positive steps. Once again, nothing happened, but then just as he was
moving out of it at the end he half fancied that he half heard a half moment of
some kind of raucous sound, like a burst of white noise on a twisted radio
dial. He turned once more, and headed back into the space, moving his head
carefully round trying to pick up the slightest sound. For a while he didn’t catch
it, then suddenly there was a snatch of it that burst around him and was gone.
A movement and another snatch. He moved very, very slowly and carefully. With the
most slight and gentle movements, trying to catch at the sound he moved his
head round what seemed like a billionth part of a billionth part of a degree,
slipped behind a molecule and was gone.
He had instantly to duck to avoid a
great eagle swooping out of the vast space at him.
[::: CHAPTER 28 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
It was another eagle, a different eagle.
The next one was a different eagle too, and the next. The air seemed to be thick
with eagles, and it was obviously impossible to enter Valhalla without getting
swooped on by at least half a dozen of them. Even eagles were being swooped on
by eagles.
Dirk threw up his arms over his head
to fend off the wild, beating flurries, turned, tripped and fell down behind a
huge table on to a floor of heavy, damp, earthy straw. His hat rolled under the
table. He scrambled after it, stuffed it back firmly on his head, and slowly peered
up over the table.
The hall was dark, but alive with
great bonfires.
Noise and woodsmoke filled the air,
and the smells of roasting pigs, roasting sheep, roasting boar, and sweat and reeking
wine and singed eagle wings.
The table he was crouched behind was
one of countless slabs of oak on trestles that stretched in every direction,
laden with steaming hunks of dead animals, huge breads, great iron beakers
slopping with wine and candles like wax anthills. Massive sweaty figures seethed
around them, on them, eating, drinking, fighting over the food, fighting in the
food, fighting with the food.
A yard or so from Dirk, a warrior was
standing on top of a table fighting a pig which had been roasting for six hours,
and he was clearly losing, but losing with vim and spirit and being cheered on
by other warriors who were dousing him down with wine from a trough.
The roof -- as much of it as could
be made out at this distance, and by the dark and flickering light of the
bonfires -- was made of lashed- together shields.
Dirk clutched his hat, kept his head
down and ran, trying to make his way towards the side of the hall. As he ran,
feeling himself to be virtually invisible by reason of being completely sober
and, by his own lights, normally dressed, he seemed to pass examples of every
form of bodily function imaginable, other than actual teeth-cleaning.
The smell, like that of the tramp in
King’s Cross station, who must surely be here participating, was one that never
stopped coming at you. It grew and grew until it seemed that your head had to
become bigger and bigger to accommodate it. The din of sword on sword, sword on
shield, sword on flesh, flesh on flesh was one that made the eardrums reel and quiver
and want to cry. He was pummelled, tripped, elbowed, shoved and drenched with wine
as he scurried and pushed through the wild throng, but arrived at last at a
side wall -- massive slabs of wood and stone faced with sheets of stinking cow
hide.
Panting, he stopped for a moment,
looked back and surveyed the scene with amazement.
It was Valhalla.
Of that there would be absolutely no
question. This was not something that could be mocked up by a catering company.
And the whole seething, wild mass of carousing gods and warriors and their
caroused- at ladies, with their shields and fires and boars did seem to fill a space
that must be something approaching the size of St Pancras station. The sheer
heat that rose off it all seemed as if it should suffocate the flocks of
deranged eagles which thrashed through the air above them.
And maybe it was. He was by no means
certain that a flock of enraged eagles which thought that they might be suffocating
would behave significantly differently from many of the eagles he was currently
watching.
There was something he had been
putting off wondering while he had fought his way through the mass, but the
time had come to wonder it now.
What, he wondered, about the
Draycotts?
What could the Draycotts possibly be
doing here? And where, in such a mêlée, could the Draycotts possibly be?
He narrowed his eyes and peered into
the heaving throng, trying to see if he could locate anywhere a pair of red designer
spectacles or a quiet Italian suit mingling out there with the clanging
breastplates and the sweaty leathers, knowing that the attempt was futile but feeling
that it should be made.
No, he decided, he couldn’t see them.
Not, he felt, their kind of party. Further reflections along these lines were
cut short by a heavy short-handled axe which hurtled through the air and buried
itself with an astounding thud in the wall about three inches from his left ear
and for a moment blotted out all thought.
When he recovered from the shock of
it, and let his breath out, he thought that it was probably not something that
had been thrown at him with malicious intent, but was merely warriorly high spirits. Nevertheless, he was not in a partying
mood and decided to move on. He edged his way along the wall in the direction
which, had this actually been St Pancras station rather than the hall of
Valhalla, would have led to the ticket office. He didn’t know what he would
find there, but he reckoned that it must be different to this, which would be
good.
It seemed to him that things were
generally quieter here, out on the periphery.
The biggest and best of the good times
seemed to be concentrated more strongly towards the middle of the hall, whereas
the tables he was passing now seemed to be peopled with those who looked as if they
had reached that season in their immortal lives when they preferred to contemplate
the times when they used to wrestle dead pigs, and to pass appreciative
comments to each other about the finer points of dead pig wrestling technique,
than actually to wrestle with one again themselves just at the moment.
He overheard one remark to his companion
that it was the left-handed three-fingered flat grip on the opponent’s sternum
that was all- important at the crucial moment of finally not quite falling over
in a complete stupor, to which his companion responded with a benign ‘Oh ah.’
Dirk stopped, looked and
backtracked.
Sitting hunched in a thoughtful posture
over his iron plate, and clad in heavily stained and matted furs and buckles
which were, if anything, more rank and stinking than the ensemble Dirk had last
encountered him in, was Dirk’s companion from the concourse at King’s Cross
station.
Dirk wondered how to approach him. A
quick backslap and a ‘Hey! Good party. Lot of energy,’ was one strategy, but
Dirk didn’t think it was the right one.
While he was wondering, an eagle
suddenly swooped down from out of the air and, with a lot of beating and thrashing,
landed on the table in front of the old man, folded its wings and advanced on him,
demanding to be fed. Easily, the old man pulled a bit of meat off a bone and
held it up to the great bird, which pecked it sharply but accurately out of his
fingers.
Dirk thought that this was the key
to a friendly approach. He leant over the table and picked up a small hunk of
meat and offered it in turn to the bird. The bird attacked him and went for his
neck, forcing him to try and beat the savage creature off with his hat, but the
introduction was made.
‘Oh ah,’ said the man, shooed the
eagle away and shifted a couple of inches along the bench. Though it was not a
fulsome invitation, it was at least an invitation. Dirk clambered over the
bench and sat down.
‘Thank you,’ said Dirk, puffing.
‘Oh ah.’
‘If you remember, we --’
At that moment the most tremendous
reverberating thump sounded out across Valhalla. It was the sound of a drum being
beaten, but it sounded like a drum of immense proportions, as it had to be to make
itself heard over the tumult of noise with which the hall was filled. The drum
sounded three times, in slow and massive beats, like the heartbeat of the hall
itself.
Dirk looked up to see where the
sound might have come from. He noticed for the first time that at the south end
of the hall, to which he had been heading, a great balcony or bridge extended
across most of its width. There were some figures up there, dimly visible
through the heat haze and the eagles, but Dirk had a sense that whoever was up there
presided over whoever was down here.
Odin, thought Dirk. Odin the
All-Father must be up on the balcony.
The sound of the revels died down
quickly, though it was several seconds before the reverberations of the noise
finally fell away.
When all was quiet, but expectant, a
great voice rang out from the balcony and through the hall.
The voice said, ‘The time of the
Challenging Hour is nearly at an end. The Challenging Hour has been called by the
God Thor. For the third time of asking, where is Thor?’
A murmuring throughout the hall suggested
that nobody knew where Thor was and why he had not come to make his challenge.
The voice said, ‘This is a very
grave affront to the dignity of the All-Father. If there is no challenge before
the expiration of the hour, the penalty for Thor shall be correspondingly
grave.’
The drum beat again three times, and
the consternation in the hall increased. Where was Thor?
‘He’s with some girl,’ said a voice
above the rest, and there were loud shouts of laughter, and a return to the
hubbub of before.
‘Yes.’ said Dirk, quietly, ‘I expect
he probably is.’
‘Oh ah.’
Dirk had supposed that he was
talking to himself and was surprised to have elicited a response from the man, though
not particularly surprised at the response that had been elicited.
‘Thor called this meeting tonight?’
Dirk asked him.
‘Oh ah.’
‘Bit rude not to turn up.’
‘Oh ah.’
‘I expect everyone’s a bit upset.’
‘Not as long as there’s enough pigs
to go round.’
‘Pigs?’
‘Oh ah.’
Dirk didn’t immediately know how to
go on from here.
‘Oh ah,’ he said, resignedly.
‘It’s only Thor as really cares, you
see,’ said the old man. ‘Keeps on issuing his challenge, then not being able to
prove it. Can’t argue. Gets all confused and angry, does something stupid,
can’t sort it out and gets made to do a penance. Everybody else just turns up for
the pigs.’
‘Oh ah.’ Dirk was learning a whole
new conversational technique and was astonished at how successful it was. He regarded
the man with a new-found respect.
‘Do you know how many stones there are
in Wales?’ asked the man suddenly.
‘Oh ah,’ said Dirk warily. He didn’t
know this joke.
‘Nor do I. He won’t tell anybody. Says
count ‘em yourself and goes off in a sulk.’
‘Oh ah.’ He didn’t think it was a
very good one.
‘So this time he hasn’t even turned
up. Can’t say I blame him. But I’m sorry, because I think he might be right.’
‘Oh ah.’
The man lapsed into silence.
Dirk waited.
‘Oh ah,’ he said again, hopefully.
Nothing.
‘So, er,’ said Dirk, going for a
cautious prompt, ‘you think he might be right, eh?’
‘Oh ah.’
‘So. Old Thor might be right, eh?
That’s the story,’ said Dirk.
‘Oh ah.’
‘In what way,’ said Dirk, running
out of patience at last, ‘do you think he might be right?’
‘Oh, every way.’
‘Oh ah,’ said Dirk, defeated.
‘It’s no secret that the gods have
fallen on hard times,’ said the old man, grimly. ‘That’s clear for all to see,
even for the ones who only care about the pigs, which is most of ‘em. And when
you feel you’re not needed any more it can be hard to think beyond the next
pig, even if you used to have the whole world there with you. Everyone just accepts
it as inevitable. Everyone except Thor, that is. And now he’s given up. Hasn’t even
bothered to turn up and break a pig with us. Given up his challenge. Oh ah.’
‘Oh ah,’ said Dirk.
‘Oh ah.’
‘So, er, Thor’s challenge then,’
said Dirk tentatively.
‘Oh ah.’
‘What was it?’
‘Oh ah.’
Dirk lost his patience entirely and
rounded on the man.
‘What was Thor’s challenge to Odin?’
he insisted angrily.
The man looked round at him in slow
surprise, looked him up and down with his big sagging eyes.
‘You’re a mortal, aren’t you?’
‘Yes,’ said Dirk testily, ‘I’m a
mortal. Of course I’m a mortal. What has being a mortal got to do with it?’
‘How did you get here?’
‘I followed you.’ He pulled the screwed
up, empty cigarette packet out of his pocket and put it on the table. ‘Thanks,’
he said, ‘I owe you.’
It was a pretty feeble type of
apology, he thought, but it was the best he could manage.
‘Oh ah.’ The man looked away.
‘What was Thor’s challenge to Odin?’
said Dirk, trying hard to keep the impatience out of his voice this time.
‘What does it matter to you?’ the old
immortal said bitterly. ‘You’re a mortal. Why should you care? You’ve got what
you want out of it, you and your kind, for what little it’s now worth.’
‘Got what we want out of what?’
‘The deal,’ said the old immortal.
‘The contract that Thor claims Odin has entered into.’
‘Contract?’ said Dirk. ‘What
contract?’
The man’s face filled with an
expression of slow anger. The bonfires of Valhalla danced deeply in his eyes as
he looked at Dirk.
‘The sale,’ he said darkly, ‘of an
immortal soul.’
‘What?’ said Dirk. He had already considered
this idea and discounted it. ‘You mean a man has sold his soul to him?
What man? It doesn’t make sense.’
‘No,’ said the man, ‘that wouldn’t make
sense at all. I said an immortal soul. Thor says that Odin has sold his soul to
Man.’
Dirk stared at him with horror and
then slowly raised his eyes to the balcony. Something was happening there. The great
drum beat out again, and the hall of Valhalla began to hush itself once more. But
a second or third drumbeat failed to come. Something unexpected seemed to have
occurred, and the figures on the balcony were moving in some confusion. The Challenging
Hour was just expiring, but a challenge of some kind seemed to have arrived.
Dirk beat his palms to his forehead
and swayed where he sat as all kinds of realisations finally dawned on him.
‘Not to Man,’ he said, ‘but to a
man, and a woman. A lawyer and an advertiser. I said it was all her fault the
moment I saw her. I didn’t realise I might actually be right.’ He rounded on his
companion urgently. ‘I have to get up there,’ he said, ‘for Gods’ sake, help
me.’
[::: CHAPTER 29
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
‘O...ddddiiiiiiinnnnnn!!!!!’
Thor let out a bellow of rage which
made the sky shake. The heavy clouds let out a surprised grunt of thunder at the
sheer volume of air that moved beneath them. Kate started back, white with fear
and shock, with her ears ringing.
‘Toe /Rag/!!!!!!’
He hurled his hammer to the ground
right at his very feet with both hands. He hurled it this short distance with
such astounding force that it hit and rebounded into the air up to about a
hundred feet.
‘Ggggrrrraaaaaaaaah!!!!!!’ With an
immense explosion of air from his lungs he hurled himself up into the air after
it, caught it just as it was beginning to drop, and hurled it straight back
down at the ground again, catching it again as it bounded back up, twisting violently
round in mid-air and hurling it with all the force he could muster out to sea
before falling to the ground himself on his back, and pounding the earth with
his ankles, elbows and fists in an incredible tattoo of rage.
The hammer shot out over the sea on
a very low trajectory. The head went down into the water and planed through it at
a constant depth of about six inches. A sharp ripple opened slowly but easily
across its surface, extending eventually to about a mile as the hammer sliced its
way through it like a surgeon’s knife. The inner walls of the ripple deepened
smoothly in its wake, falling away from the sheer force of the hammer, till a
vast valley had opened in the face of the sea. The walls of the valley wobbled and
swayed uncertainly, then folded up and crashed together in crazed and foaming tumult.
The hammer lifted its head and swung up high into the air. Thor leapt to his
feet and watched it, still pounding his feet on the ground like a boxer, but like
a boxer who was perhaps about to precipitate a major earthquake. When the hammer
reached the top of its trajectory, Thor hurled his fist downwards like a
conductor, and the hammer hurtled down into the crashing mass of sea.
That seemed to calm the sea for a
moment in the same way that a smack in the face will calm a hysteric. The
moment passed. An immense column of water erupted out of the smack, and seconds
later the hammer exploded upwards out of its centre, pulling another huge column
of water up from the middle of the first one.
The hammer somersaulted at the top
of its rise, turned, spun, and rushed back to its owner like a wildly
over-excited puppy. Thor caught at it, but instead of stopping it he allowed it
to carry him backwards, and together they tumbled back through the rocks for
about a hundred yards and scuffled to a halt in some soft earth.
Instantly, Thor was back on his feet
again. He turned round and round, bounding from one leg to the other with strides
of nearly ten feet, swinging the hammer round him at arm’s length. When he
released it again it raced out to sea once more, but this time it tore round
the surface in a giant semicircle, causing the sea to rear up around its circumference
to form for a moment a gigantic amphitheatre of water. When it fell forward it crashed
like a tidal wave, ran forward and threw itself, enraged, against the short
wall of the cliff.
The hammer returned to Thor, who threw
it off again instantly in a great overarm. It flew into a rock, hitting off a
fat angry spark. It bounded off further and hit a spark off another rock, and
another. Thor threw himself forward on to his knees, and with each rock the
hammer hit he pounded the ground with his fist to make the rock rise to meet the
hammer. Spark after spark erupted from the rocks. The hammer hit each successive
one harder and harder, until one spark provoked a warning lick of lightning
from the clouds.
And then the sky began to move,
slowly, like a great angry animal uncoiling in its lair. The pounding sparks
flew faster and heavier from the hammer, more lightning licks arced down to
meet them from the sky, and the whole earth was beginning to tremble in
something very like fearful excitement.
Thor hauled his elbows up above his
head and then thrust them hard down with another ringing bellow at the sky.
‘O...ddddiiiiiiinnnnnn!!!!!’
The sky seemed about to crack open.
‘Toe Raaaaagggggggg!!!!!!!!’
Thor throw himself into the ground,
heaving aside about two skipsful of rocky earth. He shook with expanding rage.
With a deep groan the whole of the side of the cliff began slowly to lean
forward into the sea as he pushed and shook. In a few seconds more it tumbled
heavily into the seething torment beneath it as Thor clambered back, seized a rock
the size of a grand piano and held it above his head.
Everything seemed still for a
fleeting moment.
Thor hurled the rock into the sea.
He regained his hammer.
‘O...!’ he bellowed.
‘...Ddddddddinnnnnnnnnn!!!!!!!!!!’
His hammer cracked down.
A torrent of water erupted from the ground,
and the sky exploded. Lightning flickered down like a white wall of light for miles
along the coast in either direction. Thunder roared like colliding worlds and
the clouds vomited rain that shattered the ground. Thor stood exulting in the
torrent.
A few minutes later and the violence
abated. A strong and steady rain continued to fall. The clouds were cleansing themselves
and the weak rays of the early morning light began to find their way through the
thinning cover.
Thor trudged back up from where he
had been standing, slapping and washing the mud from his hands. He caught at
his hammer when it flew to him.
He found Kate standing watching him,
shivering with astonishment, fear and fury.
‘What was /that/ all about?’ she
yelled at him.
‘I just needed to be able to lose my
temper properly,’ he said. When this didn’t seem to satisfy her he added, ‘A
god can show off once in a while can’t he?’
The huddled figure of Tsuliwaënsis came
hurrying out through the rain towards them.
‘You’re a noisy boy, Thor,’ she scolded,
‘a noisy boy.’
But Thor was gone. When they looked,
they guessed that he must be the tiny speck hurtling northwards through the
clearing sky.
[::: CHAPTER 30
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
Cynthia Draycott peered over the
balcony at the scene below them with distaste. Valhalla was back in full swing.
‘I hate this,’ she said, ‘I don’t
want this going on in my life.’
‘You don’t have to, my darling,’ said
Clive Draycott quietly from behind her, with his hands on her shoulders. ‘It’s all
going to be taken care of right now, and it’s going to work out just fine.
Couldn’t be better in fact. It’s just what we wanted. You know, you look fantastic
in those glasses? They really suit you. I mean really. They’re /very/ chic.’
‘Clive, it was meant to have been taken
care of originally. The whole point was that we weren’t to be troubled, we could
just do it, deal with it, and forget about it. That was the whole point. I’ve put
up with enough shit in my life. I just wanted it to be good, 100 per cent. I
don’t want all this.’
‘Exactly. And that’s why this is so
perfect for us. So perfect. Clear breach of contract. We get everything we
wanted now, and we’re released from all obligations. Perfecto. We come out of
it smelling of roses, and we have a life that is just 100 per cent good. 100
per cent. And clean. Just exactly as you wanted it. Really, it couldn’t be better
for us. Trust me.’
Cynthia Draycott hugged herself
irritably.
‘So what about this new...person?
Something else we have to deal with.’
‘It’ll be so easy. So easy. Listen,
this is nothing. We either cut him in to it, or we cut him /right/ out. It’ll
be taken care of before we leave here. We’ll buy him something. A new coat.
Maybe we’ll have to buy him a new house. Know what that’ll cost us?’ He gave a charming
laugh. ‘It’s nothing. You won’t ever even need to think about it. You won’t ever
even need to think about not thinking
about it. It’s...that...easy. OK?’
‘Hm.’
‘OK. I’ll be right back.’
He turned and headed back into the
ante-chamber of the hall of the All-Father, smiling all the way.
‘So, Mr...’ he made a show of
looking at the card again ‘...Gently. You want to act for these people do you?’
‘These immortal gods,’ said Dirk.
‘OK, gods,’ said Draycott. ‘That’s
fine. Perhaps you’ll do a better job than the manic little hustler I had to
deal with first time out. You know, he’s really quite a little character, our Mr
Rag, Mr /Rag/. You know, that guy was really quite amazing. He did everything
he could, tried every oldest trick in the book to freak me out, and give me the
run-around. You know how I deal with people like that? Simple. I ignore it. I
just...ignore it. If he wants to play around and threaten and screech, and
shovel in five hundred and seventeen subclauses that he thinks he’s going to
catch me out on, that’s OK. He’s just taking up time, but so what? I’ve got time.
I’ve got plenty of time for people like Mr Rag. Because you know what the
really crazy thing is? You know what’s /really/ crazy? The guy cannot draw up an
actual contract to save his life. Really. To save...his...life. And I tell you
something, that’s fine by me. He can thrash around and spit all he likes --
when he gets tired I just reel him in. Listen. I draw up contracts in the record
business. These guys are just minnows by comparison. They’re primitive savages.
You’ve met them. You’ve dealt with them. They’re primitive savages. Well,
aren’t they? Like the Red Indians. They don’t even know what they’ve got. You know,
these people are lucky they didn’t meet some real shark. I mean it. You know
what America cost? You know what the whole United States of America actually /cost/?
You don’t, and neither do I. And shall I tell you why? The sum is so negligible
that someone could tell us what it was and two minutes later we would have
forgotten. It would have gone clean out of our minds.
‘Now, compared with that, let me
tell you, I am /providing/. I am /really/ providing. A private suite in the Woodshead
Hospital? Lavish attention, food, sensational quantities of linen. /Sensational/.
You could practically buy the United States of America at today’s prices for what
that’s all costing. But you know what? I said, if he wants the linen, let him
have the linen. Just let him have it. It’s fine. The guy’s earned it. He can
have all the linen...he...wants. Just don’t fuck with me is all.
‘Now let me tell you, this guy has a
nice life. A /nice/ life. And I think that’s what we all want, isn’t it. A nice
life. This guy certainly did. And he didn’t know how to have it. None of these
guys did. They’re just kind of helpless in the modern world. It’s kind of tough
for them and I’m just trying to help out. Let me tell you how naïve they are,
and I mean /naïve/.
‘My wife, Cynthia, you’ve met her, and
let me tell you, she is the best. I tell you, my relationship with Cynthia is
/so/ good --’
‘I don’t want to hear about your
relationship with your wife.’
‘OK. That’s fine. That’s absolutely
fine. I just think maybe it’s worth you getting to know a few things. But
whatever you want is fine. OK. Cynthia’s in advertising. You know that. She is
a senior partner in a major agency. Major. They did some big campaign, really big,
a few years back in which some actor is playing a god in this commercial. And he’s
endorsing something, I don’t know, a soft drink, you know, tooth rot for kids.
And Odin at this time is just a down
and out. He’s living on the streets. He simply can’t get anything together, because
he’s just adapted not for this world. All that power, but he doesn’t know how
to make it work for him here, today. Now here’s the crazy part.
‘Odin sees this commercial on the television
and he thinks to himself, “Hey, I could do that, I’m a god.” He thinks maybe he
could get paid for being in a commercial. And you know what that would be. Pays
even less than the United States of America cost, you follow me? Think about
it. Odin, the chief and fount of all the power of all of the Norse gods,
/thinks he might be able to get paid for being in a television commercial to
sell soft drinks/.
‘And this guy, this /god/, literally
goes out and tries to find someone who’ll let him in a TV commercial. /Pathetically/
naïve. But also greedy -- let’s not forget greedy.
‘Anyway, he happens to come to
Cynthia’s attention. She’s just a lowly account executive at the time, doesn’t
pay any attention, thinks he’s just a whacko, but then she gets kind of
fascinated by how odd he is, and I get to see him. And you know what? It dawns
on us he’s for real. The guy is for real. A real actual god with the whole
panoply of divine powers. And not only a god, but like, the main one. The one
all the others depend on for their power. And he wants to be in a commercial.
Let’s just say the word again shall we? A /commercial/.
‘The idea was dumbfounding. Didn’t the
guy know what he had? Didn’t he realise what his power could get him?
‘Apparently not. I have to tell you,
this was the most astounding moment in our lives. A...stoun...ding. Let me tell
you, Cynthia and I have always known that we were, well, special people, and that
something special would happen to us, and here it was. Something special.
‘But look. We’re not greedy. We
don’t want all that power, all that wealth. And I mean, we’re looking at the world here. The whole...fucking...world. We could
own the world if we wanted to. But who wants to own the world? Think of the
trouble. We don’t even want huge wealth, all those lawyers accountants to deal
with, and let me tell you, /I’m/ a lawyer. OK, so you can hire people to look
after your lawyers and accountants for you, but who are those people going to
be? Just more lawyers and accountants. And you know, we don’t even want the responsibility
for it all. It’s too much.
‘So then I have this idea. It’s like
you buy a big property, and then you sell on what you don’t want. That way you
get what you want, and a lot of other people get what they want, only they get
it through you, and they feel a little obligated to you, and they remember who they
got it through because they sign a piece of paper which says how obligated they
feel to you. And money flows back to pay for our Mr Odin’s very, very, very
expensive private medical care.
‘So we don’t have much, Mr Gently.
One or two modestly nice houses. One or two modestly nice cars. We have a very
nice life. Very, very nice indeed. We don’t need much because anything we need
is always made available to us, it’s taken care of. All we demanded, and it was
a very reasonable demand in the circumstances, was that we didn’t want to know any
more about it. We take our modest requirements and we bow out. We want nothing more
than absolute peace and absolute quiet, and a nice life because Cynthia’s
sometimes a little nervous. OK.
‘And then what happens this morning?
Right on our own doorstep. Pow. It’s disgusting. I mean it is really a
disgusting little number. And you know how it happened?
‘Here’s how it happened. It’s our friend
Mr Rag again, and he’s tried to be a clever tricky little voodoo lawyer. It’s
so pathetic. He has fun trying to waste my time with all his little tricks and
games and run-arounds, and then he tries to faze me by presenting me with a bill
for his time. That’s nothing. It’s work creation. All lawyers do it. OK. So I
say, I’ll take your bill. I’ll take it, I don’t care what it is. You give me
your bill and I’ll see it’s taken care of. It’s OK. So he gives it to me.
‘It’s only later I see it’s got this
tricky kind of subtotal thing in it. So what? He’s trying to be clever. He’s
given me a hot potato. Listen, the record business is full of hot potatoes. You
just get them taken care of. There are always people happy to take care of
things for you when they want to make their way up the ladder. If they’re
worthy of their place on the ladder, well, they’ll get it taken care of in return.
You get a hot potato, you pass it on. I passed it on. Listen, there were a lot
of people who are /very/ happy to get things taken care of for me. Hey, you know?
It was really funny seeing how far and how fast that particular potato got
passed on. That told me a lot about who was bright and who was not. But then it
lands up in my back garden, and that’s a penalty clause job I’m afraid. The
Woodshead stuff is a /very/ expensive little number, and I think your clients
may have blown it on that particular score. We have the whip hand here. We can
just cancel this whole thing. Believe me, I have everything I could /possibly/
want now.
‘But listen, Mr Gently. I think you
understand my position. We’ve been pretty frank with each other and I’ve felt good
about that. There are certain sensitivities involved, of course, and I’m also in
a position to be able to make a lot of things happen. So perhaps we can come to
any one of a number of possible accommodations. Anything you want, Mr Gently,
it can be made to happen.’
‘Just to see you dead, Mr Draycott,’
said Dirk Gently, ‘just to see you dead.’
‘Well fuck you, too.’
Dirk Gently turned and left the room
and went to tell his new client that he thought they might have a problem.
[::: CHAPTER 31
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
A tittle while later a dark-blue BMW
pulled quietly away from the otherwise deserted forecourt of St Pancras station
and moved off up the quiet streets.
Somewhat dejected, Dirk Gently put
on his hat and left his newly acquired and newly relinquished client who said
that he wished to be alone now and maybe turn into a rat or something like some
other people he could mention.
He closed the great doors behind him
and walked slowly out on to the balcony overlooking the great vaulted hall of gods and heroes, Valhalla. He arrived just
as the last few stragglers of the revels were fading away, presumably to emerge
at the same moment in the great vaulted train shed of St Pancras station. He
stayed staring for a while at the empty hall, in which the bonfires now were
just fading embers.
It then took the very slightest flicker
of his head for him to perform the same transition himself, and he found
himself standing in a gusty and dishevelled corridor of the empty Midland Grand
Hotel. Out in the great dark concourse of St Pancras station he saw again the last
stragglers from Valhalla shuffling away and out into the cold streets of London
to find benches that were designed not to be slept on, and to try to sleep on
them.
He sighed and tried to find his way
out of the derelict hotel, a task that proved more difficult than he anticipated,
as immense and as dark and as labyrinthine as it was. He found at last the
great winding gothic staircase which led all the way down to the huge arches of
the entrance lobby, decorated with carvings of dragons and griffins and heavy
ornamental ironwork. The main front entrance was locked as it had been for
years, and eventually Dirk found his way down a side corridor to an exit manned
by a great sweaty splodge of a man who guarded it at night. He demanded to know
how Dirk had gained entrance to the hotel and refused to be satisfied by any of
his explanations. In the end he had simply to allow Dirk to leave, since there
was little else he could do.
Dirk crossed from this entrance to
the entrance into the station booking hall, and then into the station itself.
For a while he simply stood there looking around, and then he left via the main
station entrance, and descended the steps which led down on to the St Pancras Road.
As he emerged on to the street he was so surprised not to be instantly swooped
upon by a passing eagle that he tripped and stumbled and was run over by the first
of the early morning’s motorcycle couriers.
[::: CHAPTER 32 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
With a huge crash, Thor surged through
the wall at the far end of the great hall of Valhalla and stood ready to
proclaim to the assembled gods and heroes that he had finally managed to break
through to Norway and had found a copy of the contract Odin had signed buried
deep in the side of a mountain, but he couldn’t because they’d all gone and there
was no one there.
‘There’s no one here,’ he said to Kate,
releasing her from his huge grip, ‘they’ve all gone.’
He slumped in disappointment.
‘Wh --’ said Kate.
‘We’ll try the old man’s chambers,’
said Thor and hurled his hammer up to the balcony, with themselves in tow.
He stalked through the great chambers,
ignoring Kate’s pleas, protests and general abuse.
He wasn’t there.
‘He’s here somewhere,’ said Thor
angrily, trailing his hammer behind him.
‘We’ll go through the world divide,’
he said, and took hold of Kate again. They flicked themselves through.
They were in a large bedroom suite
in the hotel.
Litter and scraps of rotting carpet covered
the floors, the windows were grimy with years of neglect. Pigeon droppings were
everywhere, and the peeling paintwork made it look as if several small families
of starfish had exploded on the walls.
There was an abandoned trolleybed in
the middle of the floor in which an old man lay in beautifully laundered linen,
weeping from his one remaining eye.
‘I found the contract, you bastard,’
raged Thor, waving it at him. ‘I found the deal you did. You /sold/ all our
power to...to a lawyer and a...an advertiser and, and all sorts of other
people. You stole our power! You couldn’t steal all of mine because I’m too
strong, but you kept me bewildered and confused, and made bad things happen
every time I got angry. You prevented me getting back home to Norway by every method
you could, because you knew I’d find /this/! You and that poison dwarf Toe Rag.
You’ve been abusing and humiliating me for years, and -- ’
‘Yes, yes, we know all that,’ said
Odin.
‘Well...Good!’
‘Thor --’ said Kate.
‘Well I’ve shaken all that off now!’
shouted Thor.
‘Yes, I see --’
‘I went somewhere I could get good and
angry in peace, when I knew you’d be otherwise occupied and expecting me to be here,
and I had a hell of a good shout and blew things up a bit, and I’m all right now!
And I’m going to tear this up for a start!’
He ripped right through the
contract, threw the pieces in the air and incinerated them with a look.
‘Thor --’ said Kate.
‘And I’m going to put right all the
things you made happen so I’d be afraid of getting angry. The poor girl at the airline
check-in desk that got turned into a drink machine. Woof! Wham! She’s back! The
jet fighter that tried to shoot me down when I was flying to Norway! Woof! Wham!
It’s back! See, I’m back in control of myself!’
‘What jet fighter?’ asked Kate. ‘You
haven’t told me about a jet fighter.’
‘It tried to shoot me down over the
North Sea. We had a scrap and in the heat of the moment I, well, I turned it
into an eagle, and it’s been bothering me ever since. So now that’s dealt with.
Don’t look at me like that. I did what I could. I took care of his wife by
fixing one of those lottery things. Look,’ he added angrily, ‘all this has been
very difficult for me, you know. All right. What else?’
‘My table lamp,’ said Kate quietly.
‘And Kate’s table lamp! It shall be
a small kitten no more! Woof! Wham! Thor speaks and it is so! What was that
noise?’
A ruddy glow was spreading across
the London skyline.
‘Thor, I think there’s something
wrong with your father.’
‘I should bloody well hope so. Oh.
What’s wrong? Father? Are you all right?’
‘I have been so very, very foolish and
unwise,’ wept Odin, ‘I have been so wicked and evil, and --’
‘Yes, well that’s what I think,
too,’ said Thor and sat on the end of his bed. ‘So what are we going to do?’
‘I don’t think I could live without
my linen, and my Sister Bailey, and...It’s been so, so, so long, and I’m so, so
old. Toe Rag said I should kill you, but I...I would rather have killed myself.
Oh, Thor...’
‘Oh,’ said Thor. ‘I see. Well. I
don’t know what to do now. Blast. Blast everything.’
‘Thor --’
‘Yes, yes, what is it?’
‘Thor, it’s very simple what you do about
your father and the Woodshead,’ said Kate.
‘Oh yes? What then?’
‘I’ll tell you on one condition.’
‘Oh really? And what’s that?’
‘That you tell me how many stones
there are in Wales.’
‘What!’ exclaimed Thor in outrage. ‘Away
from me! That’s years of my life you’re talking about!’
Kate shrugged.
‘No!’ said Thor. ‘Anything but that!
Anyway,’ he added sullenly, ‘I told you.’
‘No you didn’t.’
‘Yes I did. I said I lost count
somewhere in Mid-Glamorgan. Well, I was hardly going to start again, was I?
Think, girl, think!’
[::: CHAPTER 33
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
Beating a path through the difficult
territory to the north-east of Valhalla -- a network of paths that seemed to
lead only to other paths and then back to the first paths again for another try
-- went two figures, one a big, stupid, violent creature with green eyes and a scythe
which hung from its belt and often seriously impeded its progress, the other a
small crazed creature who clung on to the back of the bigger one, manically
urging him on while actually impeding his progress still further.
They attained at last a long, low, smelly
building into which they hurried shouting for horses. The old stable master came
forward, recognised them and, having heard already of their disgrace, was at first
disinclined to help them on their way. The scythe flashed through the air and
the stable master’s head started upwards in surprise while his body took an
affronted step backwards, swayed uncertainly, and then for lack of any further instructions
to the contrary keeled over backwards in its own time. His head bounded into
the hay.
His assailants hurriedly lashed up two
horses to a cart and clattered away out
of the stable yard and along the broader thoroughfare which led upwards to
the north.
They made rapid progress up the road
for a mile, Toe Rag urging the horses on frantically with a long and cruel whip.
After a few minutes, however, the horses began to slow down and to look about
them uneasily. Toe Rag lashed them all the harder, but they became more anxious
still then suddenly lost all control and reared in terror, turning over the cart
and tipping its occupants out on the ground, from which they instantly sprang
up in a rage.
Toe Rag screamed at the terrified
horses and then, out of the corner of his eye, caught sight of what had so
disturbed them.
It wasn’t so terrifying. It was just
a large, white, metal box, upturned on a pile of rubbish by the roadside and
rattling itself.
The horses were rearing and trying
to bolt away from the big white rattling thing but they were impossibly
entangled in their traces. They were only working themselves up into a
thrashing lather of panic. Toe Rag quickly realised that there would be no
calming them until the box was dealt with.
‘Whatever it is,’ he screeched at the
green-eyed creature, ‘kill it!’
Green-eye unhooked his scythe from
his belt once more and clambered up the pile of rubbish to where the box was
rattling. He kicked it and it only rattled the more. He got his foot behind it and
with a heavy thrust shoved it away down the heap. The big white box slithered a
foot or so then turned over and toppled to the ground. It rested there for a moment
and then a door, finally freed, flew open. The horses screamed in fear.
Toe Rag and his green-eyed thug
approached the thing with worried curiosity, then staggered back in horror as a
great and powerful new god erupted from its innards.
[::: CHAPTER 34
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
The following afternoon, at a
comfortable distance from all these events, set at a comfortable distance from
a well-proportioned window through which the afternoon light was streaming, lay
an elderly one- eyed man in a white bed. A newspaper sat like a half-collapsed
tent on the floor, where it had been hurled two minutes before.
The man was awake but not glad to be.
His exquisitely frail hands lay slightly curled on the pure white linen sheets
and quivered very faintly.
His name was variously given as Mr Odwin,
or Wodin, or Odin. He was -- is -- a god, and furthermore he was a confused and
startled god.
He was confused and startled because
of the report he had just been reading on the front page of the newspaper,
which was that another god had been cutting loose and making a nuisance of
himself. It didn’t say so in so many words of course, it merely described what
had happened last night when a missing jet fighter aircraft had mysteriously
erupted under full power from out of a house in North London into which it could
not conceivably have been thought to have fitted. It had instantly lost its
wings and gone into a screaming dive and crashed and exploded in a main road.
The pilot had managed to eject during the few seconds he had had in the air,
and had landed, shaken, bruised, but otherwise unharmed, and babbling about strange
men with hammers flying over the North Sea.
Luckily, because of the time at
which the inexplicable disaster had occurred, the roads were almost deserted,
and apart from massive damage to property, the only fatalities to have occurred
were the as yet unidentified occupants of a car which was thought to have been
possibly a BMW and possibly blue, though because of the rather extreme nature
of the accident it was rather hard to tell.
He was very, very tired and did not
want to think about it, did not want to think about last night, did not want to
think of anything other than linen sheets and how wonderful it was when Sister
Bailey patted them down around him as she had just now, just five minutes ago,
and again just ten minutes before that.
The American girl, Kate something,
came into his room. He wished she would just let him sleep. She was going on
about something being all fixed up. She congratulated him on having extremely high
blood pressure, high cholesterol levels
and a very dicky heart, as a consequence of which the hospital would be very glad
to accept him as a lifelong patient in return for his entire estate. They
didn’t even care to know what his estate was worth, because it would clearly be
sufficient to cover a stay as brief as his was likely to be.
She seemed to expect him to be pleased,
so he nodded amiably, thanked her vaguely and drifted, drifted happily off to
sleep.
[::: CHAPTER 35
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::]
The same afternoon Dirk Gently awoke,
also in hospital, suffering from mild concussion, scrapes and bruises and a
broken leg. He had had the greatest difficulty in explaining, on admittance,
that most of his injuries had been caused by a small boy and an eagle, and that
really, being run over by a motorcycle courier was a relatively restful experience
since it mostly involved lying down a lot and not being swooped on every two
minutes.
He was kept under sedation -- in other
words, he slept -- for most of the morning, suffering terrible dreams in which
Toe Rag and a green- eyed, scythe-bearing giant made their escape to the north-east
from Valhalla, where they were unexpectedly accosted and consumed by a newly created,
immense Guilt God which had finally escaped from what looked suspiciously like
an upturned refrigerator on a skip.
He was relieved to be woken at last
from this by a cheery, ‘Oh it’s you, is it? You nicked my book.’
He opened his eyes and was greeted
by the sight of Sally Mills, the girl he had been violently accosted by the
previous day in the café, for no better reason than that he had, prior to nicking
her book, nicked her coffee.
‘Well, I’m glad to see you took my advice
and came in to have your nose properly attended to,’ she said as she fussed around
him. ‘Pretty roundabout way you seem to have taken but you’re here and that’s
the main thing. You caught up with the girl you were interested in did you? Oddly
enough, you’re in the very bed that she was in. If you see her again, perhaps
you could give her this pizza which she arranged to have delivered before checking
herself out. It’s all cold now, but the courier did insist that she was very
adamant it should be delivered.
‘I don’t mind you nicking the book,
really, though. I don’t know why I buy them really, they’re not very good, only
everyone always does, don’t they? Somebody told me there’s a rumour he had
entered into a pact with the devil or something. I think that’s nonsense,
though I did hear another story about him which I much preferred. Apparently he’s
always having these mysterious deliveries of chickens to his hotel rooms, and no
one dares to ask why or even guess what it is he wants them for, because nobody
ever sees a single scrap of them again. Well, I met somebody who knows exactly
what he wants them for. The somebody I met once had the job of secretly
smuggling the chickens straight back out of his rooms again. What Howard Bell
gets out of it is a reputation for being a very strange and demonic man and
everybody buys his books. Nice work if you can get it is what I say. Anyway, I
expect you don’t want to have me nattering to you alt afternoon, and even if
you do I’ve got better things to do. Sister says you’ll probably be discharged
this evening so you can go to your own home and sleep in your own bed, which I’m
sure you’ll much prefer. Anyway, hope you feel better, here’s a couple of
newspapers.’
Dirk took the papers, glad to be
left alone at last.
He first turned to see what The
Great Zaganza had to say about his day. The Great Zaganza said, ‘You are very fat
and stupid and persistently wear a ridiculous hat which you should be ashamed
of.’
He grunted slightly to himself about
this, and turned to the horoscope in the other paper.
It said, ‘Today is a day to enjoy
home comforts.’
Yes, he thought, he would be glad to
get back home. He was still strangely relieved about getting rid of his old fridge
and looked forward to enjoying a new phase of fridge ownership with the
spanking new model currently sitting in his kitchen at home.
Then was the eagle to think about,
but he would worry about that later, when he got home.
He turned to the front page to see if
there was any interesting news. ========================================================================