Sotto voce, Guy asked God to give him strength. âAll right,' he said, âI give in, now tell me what it is before I go completely round the bend.'
âShank,' said Isoud proudly.
âShank?'
âThe shank,' Isoud explained, âof the lock. I told you it was a clever one.'
âVery clever indeed,' said the voice, âif I may make so bold.'
âShank?'
âThere is such a word,' Isoud said defensively.
âYes,' Guy replied, âbut you can't see it.'
âYes I can.'
âThen you must have bloody good eyesight,' Guy snapped, âbecause the shank is part of the works, ergo it's inside the lock, ergo you couldn't see it from here even if it wasn't as dark as a bag in here, which it is. I win.'
âBe like that, then.'
âActually ...' said the voice, and then became aware, no doubt by some form of low-level telepathy, that he was being glowered at by both parties. âSorry,' he said, and went back to plaiting spiders' webs.
âMy go,' said Guy firmly.
âIt's not,' Isoud said, âyou cheated.'
âI did not cheat,' Guy said. âA shank is part of the works of a lock, ask anybody. If you like, I'll call the warder. He should know about locks if anybody does.'
âI'm not playing with you any more.'
âGood.'
A rat nuzzled affectionately up to Guy's hand and was both shocked and profoundly disillusioned when the hand tried to swat him. He retreated into a distant part of the cell and, since rodents can't cry, started to gnaw at a splinter of wood.
âOf course,' Guy said suddenly, âit could be that we've been missing something important here.'
âOh yes?' said the voice eagerly. âDo tell.'
Guy reached inside his jacket and felt for something. To his great relief it was still there. âAll we have to do in order to get out of here,' he said, âis to open the door, right?'
âThat would help, certainly,' the voice agreed. âBut, and far be it from me to play devil's advocate or anything, isn't that going to beâ'
âNot,' Guy said, âif I shoot the lock off.'
âGosh!' The voice sounded impressed. âCan you do that?' it asked.
Guy drew his revolver and screwed up his eyes. There was just enough light to see that it was loaded. âDon't see why not,' he said. âStay well back, everyone.'
He advanced to the door, felt for the lock, placed the muzzle next to it, and fired. The noise, which was ear-splitting in the confines of the cell, slowly died away. From the other side of the door came the sound of someone saying, âLook, do you mind?' in a querulous tone. Guy tried the door. It was solid. There was a bullet-hole clean through the wood about an inch above the lockplate.
The peephole in the door slid back, filling the cell (or so it seemed) with a beam of blinding light.
âSee that?' said the warder.
âPardon?'
âThat's a brand new hat, that is,' the warder went on. âAnd now look at it.'
Guy blushed. âSorry,' he said.
âBloke can't pull up a chair and take forty winks in this place without getting holes in his hat,' the warder grumbled. âWhat's the world coming to, that's what I want to know.'
âIt was an accident,' Guy said. âHonest.'
âOh yes?' The warder didn't sound impressed.
âIt was,' Guy insisted. âI was trying to, er, shoot off the lock, and I must have ...' He closed his eyes and tried to swallow the shame. âMissed.'
There was a long silence.
âMissed.'
âMust have.'
âI see.'
âGood.'
âI was,' the warder went on, âgoing to come in there and take that thing off you as an offensive weapon. Still, seeing as how you can't even hit a lock, I don't think I'll bother.' The peephole cover slid back, flooding the cell with darkness, and Guy put his revolver back in its holster. More than anything else in the world, he realised, he hated hats.
Â
Blondel opened his eyes and looked round. To his relief, he found that he wasn't there any more.
Lying next to him, however, were a large number of recumbent bodies; about thirty of them. They looked as if they'd been in a fight.
One of them groaned and lifted its head slightly. The effort proved too great, however, and it sagged back.
âHello,' Blondel said, âwhat happened to you?'
The soldier looked up and instinctively reached for something at his side. Blondel put his foot on it and smiled.
âNot now,' he said. âWhat happened?'
âIt was those other blokes,' the soldier said.
âWhat other blokes?'
âThe ones who came down the corridor a few minutes after we got here,' the soldier replied. âWe were just about to take you into custody when they got here and started arguing the toss. Said it was their collar and why didn't we back off. Well, we weren't standing for that. There's a reward.'
âOh yes?'
âToo right.' The soldier grinned. âWe showed them all right,' he said, and fainted.
Blondel sighed. It was at times like this that he wondered why he bothered. He had this strong suspicion that all he really had to do was wait quietly and everybody would beat the springs out of everybody else without him having to lift a finger.
He stood up and counted the bodies. It came to an odd number. Not so good.
In the distance, he could hear the sound of running feet.
âListen,' he said out loud, and pointed towards the direction the sound was coming from. âYou go that way, right?' Then he picked up his feet and ran the other way.
He hadn't gone far when he stopped. Not voluntarily; there was this door in the way.
Blondel picked himself up off the ground, rubbed his nose and looked at the door warily. Something told him that whatever there was on the other side wasn't going to be friendly. It had that sort of look about it.
Behind him he could hear footsteps, getting closer. They sounded like the footsteps of heavily armed men who have just had a fight with themselves and are dying to vent their embarrassment on an unarmed and vulnerable third party.
On the other hand, it was perhaps the least prepossessing door he'd ever seen, in quite possibly a uniquely wide experience of the subject. Not only did it have the words No
Entry
written on it, but also the word
Honestly.
Behind him, Blondel could hear voices. They seemed to be discussing, in a breathless but enthusiastic way, who was going to have the privilege of mutilating which part of him.
When is a door not a door?
When it's a jar.
Obviously.
Â
â... Which, together with a balanced portfolio of Beaumont Street Gilt and Fixed Income Trust units and a modest cash balance in, say, the Beaumont Equitable Building Society, provides for maximum income potential without undue prejudice to long-term capital growth. What do you say?'
âNo.'
Giovanni sighed. It was cold down here in the cellars and he was getting cramp. On the other hand, he enjoyed a challenge. âFair enough,' he said. âHow about putting the bulk of the capital sum into Carribeanis 9½% Convertible Treasury Stock, and investing the balance in something like, oh, I don't know, Second Crusade 3½% Loan Stock 1192? Now you can't say fairer than that. Safe as the Bank of England, that is.' He remembered the investment package he'd worked out for the Chancellor of the Exchequer back in 2343. âSafer,' he added firmly.
âNo.'
âIt so happens,' he said, âI know of this horse running in the 2.15 at Doncaster. When I say running, what I really mean is ran, of course ...'
âNo.'
There are times when even the most persistent financial adviser has to call it a day. âAh well,' he said, âit's entirely up to you, naturally. If you don't want to provide for your old age ...'
âTalk sense,' the Antichrist replied.
It was raining. It was coming down in bucketfuls and nobody had invented the umbrella yet. Mountjoy, who generally insisted on dressing in period (âWhen in the Renaissance, do as the Renaissancers do') looked out from under the soggy top edge of his cowl and blew a raindrop off the end of his nose.
âHe's late,' he said,
âWith respect, sir.'
Slowly, the Anti-Chaplain turned his head and scowled at his chief henchman. Acting Chief Henchman; he'd asked for White Herald, but apparently Maintenance were all out of 63B knee joints.
âYou said something?'
âYes, sir,' Clarenceaux replied. âWith respect, sir, given that we are presently in a temporal anomaly, with respect, um, how
can
he be late, sir? I mean ...'
Mountjoy let him tail off without interrupting. He felt it would-be more humiliating. âHave you quite finished?'
âSir.'
âThen shut up.'
Clarenceaux mouthed the word Sir and continued to stand to attention. After all, he said to himself, I may be the lowest form of life and completely unintelligent and little better than a robot, but at least I've got the sense to wear oilskins.
Mountjoy was just beginning to suspect that this was some sort of practical joke when a small figure appeared on the opposite side of the bridge. He was carrying an umbrella. Typical.
âSorry to have kept you,' Blondel sang out as he approached, splashing through the puddles in his green Wellington boots. âI got held up on the way here.' He turned his head and nodded to the castle on the other side of the river. âNot there, of course, but the castellan turned out to be a fan and they insisted I stay for a glass of mead. One does like to be polite, you know.'
Mountjoy glowed peevishly, evaporating a pint or so of rain out of his cowl. âIt doesn't matter,' he replied, âyou're here now.'
âSo I am, yes,' Blondel said. âLook, do you think we could just step in out of the wet somewhere? This is my sister's umbrella, and it's a bit small for me.'
They found a degree of shelter under a small tree, and Blondel put the umbrella down. It was a sort of beige-fawn colour with rather restrained black patterns, Mountjoy noticed. So that was what women went in for. One of these days, it might be quite intriguing to meet one. Or maybe not. He flickered in the cold, and cleared his throat.
âRight,' he said, âlet's get down to business, shall we?'
âWith pleasure,' Blondel opened the flap of the small leather satchel he was carrying round his neck and produced a tape recorder. âYou don't mind if I take notes, do you?' he said. âI find my memory isn't what it was these days.'
âPlease yourself,' Mountjoy replied frostily. âI had assumed that we could trust one another, butâ'
âI know,' Blondel replied. âWretched, isn't it? Actually, it wasn't my idea, it was my agent's. There's a born negotiator for you. Spent the last few days trying to sell your boss life insurance.'
Mountjoy looked down his nose. âUnsuccessfully, I assume.'
Blondel grinned. âNot entirely,' he replied. âDidn't manage to kid him into taking out any life cover, but he did manage to interest him in an accident policy. He's now fully covered in the event of loss of limb.'
That, Mountjoy decided, was enough small talk. It was time to show his hand.
âIt might interest you to know,' he said, wiping rain out of his eyes with the heel of his hand, âthat we have some guests staying at the Chastel at the moment.'
âOh yes.'
âFriends of yours,' Mountjoy said. âOr rather, one friend and one relative.' He smiled stroboscopically (a neat trick, if you manage it. Being two-faced, like Mountjoy, does of course help).
If Blondel was disconcerted for a moment, he recovered quickly. Someone who can teach themselves tightrope walking at the first attempt shouldn't have any problem with mere mental agility.
âOh,' he said, âyou mean that Goodlet chap and my sister Isoud. Perhaps I ought to warn you that unless Isoud has a cup of tea first thing after waking up she's about as sociable as a puma. Or have you found that out already?'
âLa Beale Isoud,' Mountjoy replied, âhas the sense to realise that she has more pressing things to worry about than where her next cup of tea is coming from.'
âAre you sure we're talking about the same person?' Blondel said. âAbout this height, sort of mousy blond, keen on carbohydrate-rich foodstuffs?'
Mountjoy ignored him. âI am told,' he went on, âthat they have already made one fumbling attempt at escape, which naturally ended in failure. You may be sure that they won't be in a hurry to try again.'